13356 lines
626 KiB
C
13356 lines
626 KiB
C
/*
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** 2001-09-15
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**
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** The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of
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** a legal notice, here is a blessing:
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**
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** May you do good and not evil.
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** May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
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** May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
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**
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*************************************************************************
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** This header file defines the interface that the SQLite library
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** presents to client programs. If a C-function, structure, datatype,
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** or constant definition does not appear in this file, then it is
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** not a published API of SQLite, is subject to change without
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** notice, and should not be referenced by programs that use SQLite.
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**
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** Some of the definitions that are in this file are marked as
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** "experimental". Experimental interfaces are normally new
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** features recently added to SQLite. We do not anticipate changes
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** to experimental interfaces but reserve the right to make minor changes
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** if experience from use "in the wild" suggest such changes are prudent.
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**
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** The official C-language API documentation for SQLite is derived
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** from comments in this file. This file is the authoritative source
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** on how SQLite interfaces are supposed to operate.
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**
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** The name of this file under configuration management is "sqlite.h.in".
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** The makefile makes some minor changes to this file (such as inserting
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** the version number) and changes its name to "sqlite3.h" as
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** part of the build process.
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*/
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#ifndef SQLITE3_H
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#define SQLITE3_H
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#include <stdarg.h> /* Needed for the definition of va_list */
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/*
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** Make sure we can call this stuff from C++.
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*/
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#ifdef __cplusplus
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extern "C" {
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#endif
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/*
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** Facilitate override of interface linkage and calling conventions.
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** Be aware that these macros may not be used within this particular
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** translation of the amalgamation and its associated header file.
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**
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** The SQLITE_EXTERN and SQLITE_API macros are used to instruct the
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** compiler that the target identifier should have external linkage.
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**
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** The SQLITE_CDECL macro is used to set the calling convention for
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** public functions that accept a variable number of arguments.
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**
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** The SQLITE_APICALL macro is used to set the calling convention for
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** public functions that accept a fixed number of arguments.
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**
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** The SQLITE_STDCALL macro is no longer used and is now deprecated.
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**
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** The SQLITE_CALLBACK macro is used to set the calling convention for
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** function pointers.
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**
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** The SQLITE_SYSAPI macro is used to set the calling convention for
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** functions provided by the operating system.
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**
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** Currently, the SQLITE_CDECL, SQLITE_APICALL, SQLITE_CALLBACK, and
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** SQLITE_SYSAPI macros are used only when building for environments
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** that require non-default calling conventions.
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*/
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#ifndef SQLITE_EXTERN
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# define SQLITE_EXTERN extern
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#endif
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#ifndef SQLITE_API
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# define SQLITE_API
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#endif
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#ifndef SQLITE_CDECL
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# define SQLITE_CDECL
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#endif
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#ifndef SQLITE_APICALL
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# define SQLITE_APICALL
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#endif
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#ifndef SQLITE_STDCALL
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# define SQLITE_STDCALL SQLITE_APICALL
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#endif
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#ifndef SQLITE_CALLBACK
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# define SQLITE_CALLBACK
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#endif
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#ifndef SQLITE_SYSAPI
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# define SQLITE_SYSAPI
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#endif
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/*
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** These no-op macros are used in front of interfaces to mark those
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** interfaces as either deprecated or experimental. New applications
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** should not use deprecated interfaces - they are supported for backwards
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** compatibility only. Application writers should be aware that
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** experimental interfaces are subject to change in point releases.
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**
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** These macros used to resolve to various kinds of compiler magic that
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** would generate warning messages when they were used. But that
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** compiler magic ended up generating such a flurry of bug reports
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** that we have taken it all out and gone back to using simple
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** noop macros.
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*/
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#define SQLITE_DEPRECATED
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#define SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL
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/*
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** Ensure these symbols were not defined by some previous header file.
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*/
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#ifdef SQLITE_VERSION
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# undef SQLITE_VERSION
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#endif
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#ifdef SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER
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# undef SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER
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#endif
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: Compile-Time Library Version Numbers
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**
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** ^(The [SQLITE_VERSION] C preprocessor macro in the sqlite3.h header
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** evaluates to a string literal that is the SQLite version in the
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** format "X.Y.Z" where X is the major version number (always 3 for
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** SQLite3) and Y is the minor version number and Z is the release number.)^
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** ^(The [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER] C preprocessor macro resolves to an integer
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** with the value (X*1000000 + Y*1000 + Z) where X, Y, and Z are the same
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** numbers used in [SQLITE_VERSION].)^
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** The SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER for any given release of SQLite will also
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** be larger than the release from which it is derived. Either Y will
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** be held constant and Z will be incremented or else Y will be incremented
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** and Z will be reset to zero.
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**
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** Since [version 3.6.18] ([dateof:3.6.18]),
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** SQLite source code has been stored in the
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** <a href="http://www.fossil-scm.org/">Fossil configuration management
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** system</a>. ^The SQLITE_SOURCE_ID macro evaluates to
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** a string which identifies a particular check-in of SQLite
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** within its configuration management system. ^The SQLITE_SOURCE_ID
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** string contains the date and time of the check-in (UTC) and a SHA1
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** or SHA3-256 hash of the entire source tree. If the source code has
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** been edited in any way since it was last checked in, then the last
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** four hexadecimal digits of the hash may be modified.
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**
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** See also: [sqlite3_libversion()],
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** [sqlite3_libversion_number()], [sqlite3_sourceid()],
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** [sqlite_version()] and [sqlite_source_id()].
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*/
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#define SQLITE_VERSION "3.45.0"
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#define SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER 3045000
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#define SQLITE_SOURCE_ID "2024-01-15 17:01:13 1066602b2b1976fe58b5150777cced894af17c803e068f5918390d6915b46e1d"
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Library Version Numbers
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** KEYWORDS: sqlite3_version sqlite3_sourceid
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**
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** These interfaces provide the same information as the [SQLITE_VERSION],
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** [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER], and [SQLITE_SOURCE_ID] C preprocessor macros
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** but are associated with the library instead of the header file. ^(Cautious
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** programmers might include assert() statements in their application to
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** verify that values returned by these interfaces match the macros in
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** the header, and thus ensure that the application is
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** compiled with matching library and header files.
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**
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** <blockquote><pre>
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** assert( sqlite3_libversion_number()==SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER );
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** assert( strncmp(sqlite3_sourceid(),SQLITE_SOURCE_ID,80)==0 );
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** assert( strcmp(sqlite3_libversion(),SQLITE_VERSION)==0 );
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** </pre></blockquote>)^
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**
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** ^The sqlite3_version[] string constant contains the text of [SQLITE_VERSION]
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** macro. ^The sqlite3_libversion() function returns a pointer to the
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** to the sqlite3_version[] string constant. The sqlite3_libversion()
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** function is provided for use in DLLs since DLL users usually do not have
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** direct access to string constants within the DLL. ^The
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** sqlite3_libversion_number() function returns an integer equal to
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** [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER]. ^(The sqlite3_sourceid() function returns
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** a pointer to a string constant whose value is the same as the
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** [SQLITE_SOURCE_ID] C preprocessor macro. Except if SQLite is built
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** using an edited copy of [the amalgamation], then the last four characters
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** of the hash might be different from [SQLITE_SOURCE_ID].)^
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**
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** See also: [sqlite_version()] and [sqlite_source_id()].
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*/
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SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXTERN const char sqlite3_version[];
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SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_libversion(void);
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SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_sourceid(void);
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SQLITE_API int sqlite3_libversion_number(void);
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Library Compilation Options Diagnostics
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**
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** ^The sqlite3_compileoption_used() function returns 0 or 1
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** indicating whether the specified option was defined at
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** compile time. ^The SQLITE_ prefix may be omitted from the
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** option name passed to sqlite3_compileoption_used().
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**
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** ^The sqlite3_compileoption_get() function allows iterating
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** over the list of options that were defined at compile time by
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** returning the N-th compile time option string. ^If N is out of range,
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** sqlite3_compileoption_get() returns a NULL pointer. ^The SQLITE_
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** prefix is omitted from any strings returned by
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** sqlite3_compileoption_get().
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**
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** ^Support for the diagnostic functions sqlite3_compileoption_used()
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** and sqlite3_compileoption_get() may be omitted by specifying the
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** [SQLITE_OMIT_COMPILEOPTION_DIAGS] option at compile time.
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**
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** See also: SQL functions [sqlite_compileoption_used()] and
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** [sqlite_compileoption_get()] and the [compile_options pragma].
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*/
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#ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_COMPILEOPTION_DIAGS
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SQLITE_API int sqlite3_compileoption_used(const char *zOptName);
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SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_compileoption_get(int N);
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#else
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# define sqlite3_compileoption_used(X) 0
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# define sqlite3_compileoption_get(X) ((void*)0)
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#endif
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: Test To See If The Library Is Threadsafe
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**
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** ^The sqlite3_threadsafe() function returns zero if and only if
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** SQLite was compiled with mutexing code omitted due to the
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** [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] compile-time option being set to 0.
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**
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** SQLite can be compiled with or without mutexes. When
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** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] C preprocessor macro is 1 or 2, mutexes
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** are enabled and SQLite is threadsafe. When the
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** [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] macro is 0,
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** the mutexes are omitted. Without the mutexes, it is not safe
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** to use SQLite concurrently from more than one thread.
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**
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** Enabling mutexes incurs a measurable performance penalty.
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** So if speed is of utmost importance, it makes sense to disable
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** the mutexes. But for maximum safety, mutexes should be enabled.
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** ^The default behavior is for mutexes to be enabled.
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**
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** This interface can be used by an application to make sure that the
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** version of SQLite that it is linking against was compiled with
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** the desired setting of the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] macro.
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**
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** This interface only reports on the compile-time mutex setting
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** of the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] flag. If SQLite is compiled with
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** SQLITE_THREADSAFE=1 or =2 then mutexes are enabled by default but
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** can be fully or partially disabled using a call to [sqlite3_config()]
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** with the verbs [SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD], [SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD],
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** or [SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED]. ^(The return value of the
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** sqlite3_threadsafe() function shows only the compile-time setting of
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** thread safety, not any run-time changes to that setting made by
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** sqlite3_config(). In other words, the return value from sqlite3_threadsafe()
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** is unchanged by calls to sqlite3_config().)^
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**
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** See the [threading mode] documentation for additional information.
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*/
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SQLITE_API int sqlite3_threadsafe(void);
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: Database Connection Handle
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** KEYWORDS: {database connection} {database connections}
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**
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** Each open SQLite database is represented by a pointer to an instance of
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** the opaque structure named "sqlite3". It is useful to think of an sqlite3
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** pointer as an object. The [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()], and
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** [sqlite3_open_v2()] interfaces are its constructors, and [sqlite3_close()]
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** and [sqlite3_close_v2()] are its destructors. There are many other
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** interfaces (such as
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** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()], [sqlite3_create_function()], and
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** [sqlite3_busy_timeout()] to name but three) that are methods on an
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** sqlite3 object.
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*/
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typedef struct sqlite3 sqlite3;
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: 64-Bit Integer Types
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** KEYWORDS: sqlite_int64 sqlite_uint64
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**
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** Because there is no cross-platform way to specify 64-bit integer types
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** SQLite includes typedefs for 64-bit signed and unsigned integers.
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**
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** The sqlite3_int64 and sqlite3_uint64 are the preferred type definitions.
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** The sqlite_int64 and sqlite_uint64 types are supported for backwards
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** compatibility only.
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**
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** ^The sqlite3_int64 and sqlite_int64 types can store integer values
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** between -9223372036854775808 and +9223372036854775807 inclusive. ^The
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** sqlite3_uint64 and sqlite_uint64 types can store integer values
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** between 0 and +18446744073709551615 inclusive.
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*/
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#ifdef SQLITE_INT64_TYPE
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typedef SQLITE_INT64_TYPE sqlite_int64;
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# ifdef SQLITE_UINT64_TYPE
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typedef SQLITE_UINT64_TYPE sqlite_uint64;
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# else
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typedef unsigned SQLITE_INT64_TYPE sqlite_uint64;
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# endif
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__BORLANDC__)
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typedef __int64 sqlite_int64;
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typedef unsigned __int64 sqlite_uint64;
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#else
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typedef long long int sqlite_int64;
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typedef unsigned long long int sqlite_uint64;
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#endif
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typedef sqlite_int64 sqlite3_int64;
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typedef sqlite_uint64 sqlite3_uint64;
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/*
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** If compiling for a processor that lacks floating point support,
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** substitute integer for floating-point.
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*/
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#ifdef SQLITE_OMIT_FLOATING_POINT
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# define double sqlite3_int64
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#endif
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: Closing A Database Connection
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** DESTRUCTOR: sqlite3
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**
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** ^The sqlite3_close() and sqlite3_close_v2() routines are destructors
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** for the [sqlite3] object.
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** ^Calls to sqlite3_close() and sqlite3_close_v2() return [SQLITE_OK] if
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** the [sqlite3] object is successfully destroyed and all associated
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** resources are deallocated.
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**
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** Ideally, applications should [sqlite3_finalize | finalize] all
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** [prepared statements], [sqlite3_blob_close | close] all [BLOB handles], and
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** [sqlite3_backup_finish | finish] all [sqlite3_backup] objects associated
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** with the [sqlite3] object prior to attempting to close the object.
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** ^If the database connection is associated with unfinalized prepared
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** statements, BLOB handlers, and/or unfinished sqlite3_backup objects then
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** sqlite3_close() will leave the database connection open and return
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** [SQLITE_BUSY]. ^If sqlite3_close_v2() is called with unfinalized prepared
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** statements, unclosed BLOB handlers, and/or unfinished sqlite3_backups,
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** it returns [SQLITE_OK] regardless, but instead of deallocating the database
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** connection immediately, it marks the database connection as an unusable
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** "zombie" and makes arrangements to automatically deallocate the database
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** connection after all prepared statements are finalized, all BLOB handles
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** are closed, and all backups have finished. The sqlite3_close_v2() interface
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** is intended for use with host languages that are garbage collected, and
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** where the order in which destructors are called is arbitrary.
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**
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** ^If an [sqlite3] object is destroyed while a transaction is open,
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** the transaction is automatically rolled back.
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**
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** The C parameter to [sqlite3_close(C)] and [sqlite3_close_v2(C)]
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** must be either a NULL
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** pointer or an [sqlite3] object pointer obtained
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** from [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()], or
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** [sqlite3_open_v2()], and not previously closed.
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** ^Calling sqlite3_close() or sqlite3_close_v2() with a NULL pointer
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** argument is a harmless no-op.
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*/
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SQLITE_API int sqlite3_close(sqlite3*);
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SQLITE_API int sqlite3_close_v2(sqlite3*);
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/*
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** The type for a callback function.
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** This is legacy and deprecated. It is included for historical
|
|
** compatibility and is not documented.
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*/
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typedef int (*sqlite3_callback)(void*,int,char**, char**);
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: One-Step Query Execution Interface
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** METHOD: sqlite3
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**
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** The sqlite3_exec() interface is a convenience wrapper around
|
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** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()], [sqlite3_step()], and [sqlite3_finalize()],
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** that allows an application to run multiple statements of SQL
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** without having to use a lot of C code.
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**
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** ^The sqlite3_exec() interface runs zero or more UTF-8 encoded,
|
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** semicolon-separate SQL statements passed into its 2nd argument,
|
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** in the context of the [database connection] passed in as its 1st
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** argument. ^If the callback function of the 3rd argument to
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** sqlite3_exec() is not NULL, then it is invoked for each result row
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|
** coming out of the evaluated SQL statements. ^The 4th argument to
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** sqlite3_exec() is relayed through to the 1st argument of each
|
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** callback invocation. ^If the callback pointer to sqlite3_exec()
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** is NULL, then no callback is ever invoked and result rows are
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** ignored.
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**
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|
** ^If an error occurs while evaluating the SQL statements passed into
|
|
** sqlite3_exec(), then execution of the current statement stops and
|
|
** subsequent statements are skipped. ^If the 5th parameter to sqlite3_exec()
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|
** is not NULL then any error message is written into memory obtained
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|
** from [sqlite3_malloc()] and passed back through the 5th parameter.
|
|
** To avoid memory leaks, the application should invoke [sqlite3_free()]
|
|
** on error message strings returned through the 5th parameter of
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|
** sqlite3_exec() after the error message string is no longer needed.
|
|
** ^If the 5th parameter to sqlite3_exec() is not NULL and no errors
|
|
** occur, then sqlite3_exec() sets the pointer in its 5th parameter to
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|
** NULL before returning.
|
|
**
|
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** ^If an sqlite3_exec() callback returns non-zero, the sqlite3_exec()
|
|
** routine returns SQLITE_ABORT without invoking the callback again and
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** without running any subsequent SQL statements.
|
|
**
|
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** ^The 2nd argument to the sqlite3_exec() callback function is the
|
|
** number of columns in the result. ^The 3rd argument to the sqlite3_exec()
|
|
** callback is an array of pointers to strings obtained as if from
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** [sqlite3_column_text()], one for each column. ^If an element of a
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** result row is NULL then the corresponding string pointer for the
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** sqlite3_exec() callback is a NULL pointer. ^The 4th argument to the
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** sqlite3_exec() callback is an array of pointers to strings where each
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** entry represents the name of corresponding result column as obtained
|
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** from [sqlite3_column_name()].
|
|
**
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** ^If the 2nd parameter to sqlite3_exec() is a NULL pointer, a pointer
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** to an empty string, or a pointer that contains only whitespace and/or
|
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** SQL comments, then no SQL statements are evaluated and the database
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** is not changed.
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**
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** Restrictions:
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**
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** <ul>
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** <li> The application must ensure that the 1st parameter to sqlite3_exec()
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** is a valid and open [database connection].
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** <li> The application must not close the [database connection] specified by
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** the 1st parameter to sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running.
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** <li> The application must not modify the SQL statement text passed into
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** the 2nd parameter of sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running.
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** </ul>
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*/
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SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec(
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sqlite3*, /* An open database */
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const char *sql, /* SQL to be evaluated */
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int (*callback)(void*,int,char**,char**), /* Callback function */
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void *, /* 1st argument to callback */
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char **errmsg /* Error msg written here */
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);
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/*
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** CAPI3REF: Result Codes
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** KEYWORDS: {result code definitions}
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**
|
|
** Many SQLite functions return an integer result code from the set shown
|
|
** here in order to indicate success or failure.
|
|
**
|
|
** New error codes may be added in future versions of SQLite.
|
|
**
|
|
** See also: [extended result code definitions]
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_OK 0 /* Successful result */
|
|
/* beginning-of-error-codes */
|
|
#define SQLITE_ERROR 1 /* Generic error */
|
|
#define SQLITE_INTERNAL 2 /* Internal logic error in SQLite */
|
|
#define SQLITE_PERM 3 /* Access permission denied */
|
|
#define SQLITE_ABORT 4 /* Callback routine requested an abort */
|
|
#define SQLITE_BUSY 5 /* The database file is locked */
|
|
#define SQLITE_LOCKED 6 /* A table in the database is locked */
|
|
#define SQLITE_NOMEM 7 /* A malloc() failed */
|
|
#define SQLITE_READONLY 8 /* Attempt to write a readonly database */
|
|
#define SQLITE_INTERRUPT 9 /* Operation terminated by sqlite3_interrupt()*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR 10 /* Some kind of disk I/O error occurred */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CORRUPT 11 /* The database disk image is malformed */
|
|
#define SQLITE_NOTFOUND 12 /* Unknown opcode in sqlite3_file_control() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_FULL 13 /* Insertion failed because database is full */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN 14 /* Unable to open the database file */
|
|
#define SQLITE_PROTOCOL 15 /* Database lock protocol error */
|
|
#define SQLITE_EMPTY 16 /* Internal use only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_SCHEMA 17 /* The database schema changed */
|
|
#define SQLITE_TOOBIG 18 /* String or BLOB exceeds size limit */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT 19 /* Abort due to constraint violation */
|
|
#define SQLITE_MISMATCH 20 /* Data type mismatch */
|
|
#define SQLITE_MISUSE 21 /* Library used incorrectly */
|
|
#define SQLITE_NOLFS 22 /* Uses OS features not supported on host */
|
|
#define SQLITE_AUTH 23 /* Authorization denied */
|
|
#define SQLITE_FORMAT 24 /* Not used */
|
|
#define SQLITE_RANGE 25 /* 2nd parameter to sqlite3_bind out of range */
|
|
#define SQLITE_NOTADB 26 /* File opened that is not a database file */
|
|
#define SQLITE_NOTICE 27 /* Notifications from sqlite3_log() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_WARNING 28 /* Warnings from sqlite3_log() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_ROW 100 /* sqlite3_step() has another row ready */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DONE 101 /* sqlite3_step() has finished executing */
|
|
/* end-of-error-codes */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Extended Result Codes
|
|
** KEYWORDS: {extended result code definitions}
|
|
**
|
|
** In its default configuration, SQLite API routines return one of 30 integer
|
|
** [result codes]. However, experience has shown that many of
|
|
** these result codes are too coarse-grained. They do not provide as
|
|
** much information about problems as programmers might like. In an effort to
|
|
** address this, newer versions of SQLite (version 3.3.8 [dateof:3.3.8]
|
|
** and later) include
|
|
** support for additional result codes that provide more detailed information
|
|
** about errors. These [extended result codes] are enabled or disabled
|
|
** on a per database connection basis using the
|
|
** [sqlite3_extended_result_codes()] API. Or, the extended code for
|
|
** the most recent error can be obtained using
|
|
** [sqlite3_extended_errcode()].
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_ERROR_MISSING_COLLSEQ (SQLITE_ERROR | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_ERROR_RETRY (SQLITE_ERROR | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_ERROR_SNAPSHOT (SQLITE_ERROR | (3<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_READ (SQLITE_IOERR | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHORT_READ (SQLITE_IOERR | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_WRITE (SQLITE_IOERR | (3<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_FSYNC (SQLITE_IOERR | (4<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_DIR_FSYNC (SQLITE_IOERR | (5<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_TRUNCATE (SQLITE_IOERR | (6<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_FSTAT (SQLITE_IOERR | (7<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_UNLOCK (SQLITE_IOERR | (8<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_RDLOCK (SQLITE_IOERR | (9<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_DELETE (SQLITE_IOERR | (10<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED (SQLITE_IOERR | (11<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_NOMEM (SQLITE_IOERR | (12<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_ACCESS (SQLITE_IOERR | (13<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_CHECKRESERVEDLOCK (SQLITE_IOERR | (14<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_LOCK (SQLITE_IOERR | (15<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_CLOSE (SQLITE_IOERR | (16<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_DIR_CLOSE (SQLITE_IOERR | (17<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMOPEN (SQLITE_IOERR | (18<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMSIZE (SQLITE_IOERR | (19<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMLOCK (SQLITE_IOERR | (20<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMMAP (SQLITE_IOERR | (21<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_SEEK (SQLITE_IOERR | (22<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_DELETE_NOENT (SQLITE_IOERR | (23<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_MMAP (SQLITE_IOERR | (24<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_GETTEMPPATH (SQLITE_IOERR | (25<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_CONVPATH (SQLITE_IOERR | (26<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_VNODE (SQLITE_IOERR | (27<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_AUTH (SQLITE_IOERR | (28<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_BEGIN_ATOMIC (SQLITE_IOERR | (29<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_COMMIT_ATOMIC (SQLITE_IOERR | (30<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_ROLLBACK_ATOMIC (SQLITE_IOERR | (31<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_DATA (SQLITE_IOERR | (32<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_CORRUPTFS (SQLITE_IOERR | (33<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOERR_IN_PAGE (SQLITE_IOERR | (34<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_LOCKED_SHAREDCACHE (SQLITE_LOCKED | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_LOCKED_VTAB (SQLITE_LOCKED | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_BUSY_RECOVERY (SQLITE_BUSY | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_BUSY_SNAPSHOT (SQLITE_BUSY | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_BUSY_TIMEOUT (SQLITE_BUSY | (3<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_NOTEMPDIR (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_ISDIR (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_FULLPATH (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (3<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_CONVPATH (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (4<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_DIRTYWAL (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (5<<8)) /* Not Used */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_SYMLINK (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (6<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CORRUPT_VTAB (SQLITE_CORRUPT | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CORRUPT_SEQUENCE (SQLITE_CORRUPT | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CORRUPT_INDEX (SQLITE_CORRUPT | (3<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_READONLY_RECOVERY (SQLITE_READONLY | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_READONLY_CANTLOCK (SQLITE_READONLY | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_READONLY_ROLLBACK (SQLITE_READONLY | (3<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_READONLY_DBMOVED (SQLITE_READONLY | (4<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_READONLY_CANTINIT (SQLITE_READONLY | (5<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_READONLY_DIRECTORY (SQLITE_READONLY | (6<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_ABORT_ROLLBACK (SQLITE_ABORT | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_CHECK (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_COMMITHOOK (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_FOREIGNKEY (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (3<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_FUNCTION (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (4<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_NOTNULL (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (5<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_PRIMARYKEY (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (6<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_TRIGGER (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (7<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_UNIQUE (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (8<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_VTAB (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (9<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_ROWID (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT |(10<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_PINNED (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT |(11<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_DATATYPE (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT |(12<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_NOTICE_RECOVER_WAL (SQLITE_NOTICE | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_NOTICE_RECOVER_ROLLBACK (SQLITE_NOTICE | (2<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_NOTICE_RBU (SQLITE_NOTICE | (3<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_WARNING_AUTOINDEX (SQLITE_WARNING | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_AUTH_USER (SQLITE_AUTH | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_OK_LOAD_PERMANENTLY (SQLITE_OK | (1<<8))
|
|
#define SQLITE_OK_SYMLINK (SQLITE_OK | (2<<8)) /* internal use only */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Flags For File Open Operations
|
|
**
|
|
** These bit values are intended for use in the
|
|
** 3rd parameter to the [sqlite3_open_v2()] interface and
|
|
** in the 4th parameter to the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] method.
|
|
**
|
|
** Only those flags marked as "Ok for sqlite3_open_v2()" may be
|
|
** used as the third argument to the [sqlite3_open_v2()] interface.
|
|
** The other flags have historically been ignored by sqlite3_open_v2(),
|
|
** though future versions of SQLite might change so that an error is
|
|
** raised if any of the disallowed bits are passed into sqlite3_open_v2().
|
|
** Applications should not depend on the historical behavior.
|
|
**
|
|
** Note in particular that passing the SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE flag into
|
|
** [sqlite3_open_v2()] does *not* cause the underlying database file
|
|
** to be opened using O_EXCL. Passing SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE into
|
|
** [sqlite3_open_v2()] has historically be a no-op and might become an
|
|
** error in future versions of SQLite.
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY 0x00000001 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE 0x00000002 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE 0x00000004 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE 0x00000008 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE 0x00000010 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_AUTOPROXY 0x00000020 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_URI 0x00000040 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_MEMORY 0x00000080 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_DB 0x00000100 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_DB 0x00000200 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_TRANSIENT_DB 0x00000400 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_JOURNAL 0x00000800 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_JOURNAL 0x00001000 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_SUBJOURNAL 0x00002000 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_SUPER_JOURNAL 0x00004000 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_NOMUTEX 0x00008000 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_FULLMUTEX 0x00010000 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE 0x00020000 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_PRIVATECACHE 0x00040000 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_WAL 0x00080000 /* VFS only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_NOFOLLOW 0x01000000 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_EXRESCODE 0x02000000 /* Extended result codes */
|
|
|
|
/* Reserved: 0x00F00000 */
|
|
/* Legacy compatibility: */
|
|
#define SQLITE_OPEN_MASTER_JOURNAL 0x00004000 /* VFS only */
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Device Characteristics
|
|
**
|
|
** The xDeviceCharacteristics method of the [sqlite3_io_methods]
|
|
** object returns an integer which is a vector of these
|
|
** bit values expressing I/O characteristics of the mass storage
|
|
** device that holds the file that the [sqlite3_io_methods]
|
|
** refers to.
|
|
**
|
|
** The SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC property means that all writes of
|
|
** any size are atomic. The SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMICnnn values
|
|
** mean that writes of blocks that are nnn bytes in size and
|
|
** are aligned to an address which is an integer multiple of
|
|
** nnn are atomic. The SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND value means
|
|
** that when data is appended to a file, the data is appended
|
|
** first then the size of the file is extended, never the other
|
|
** way around. The SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL property means that
|
|
** information is written to disk in the same order as calls
|
|
** to xWrite(). The SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE property means that
|
|
** after reboot following a crash or power loss, the only bytes in a
|
|
** file that were written at the application level might have changed
|
|
** and that adjacent bytes, even bytes within the same sector are
|
|
** guaranteed to be unchanged. The SQLITE_IOCAP_UNDELETABLE_WHEN_OPEN
|
|
** flag indicates that a file cannot be deleted when open. The
|
|
** SQLITE_IOCAP_IMMUTABLE flag indicates that the file is on
|
|
** read-only media and cannot be changed even by processes with
|
|
** elevated privileges.
|
|
**
|
|
** The SQLITE_IOCAP_BATCH_ATOMIC property means that the underlying
|
|
** filesystem supports doing multiple write operations atomically when those
|
|
** write operations are bracketed by [SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE] and
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_ATOMIC_WRITE].
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC 0x00000001
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC512 0x00000002
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC1K 0x00000004
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC2K 0x00000008
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC4K 0x00000010
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC8K 0x00000020
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC16K 0x00000040
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC32K 0x00000080
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC64K 0x00000100
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND 0x00000200
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL 0x00000400
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_UNDELETABLE_WHEN_OPEN 0x00000800
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE 0x00001000
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_IMMUTABLE 0x00002000
|
|
#define SQLITE_IOCAP_BATCH_ATOMIC 0x00004000
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: File Locking Levels
|
|
**
|
|
** SQLite uses one of these integer values as the second
|
|
** argument to calls it makes to the xLock() and xUnlock() methods
|
|
** of an [sqlite3_io_methods] object. These values are ordered from
|
|
** lest restrictive to most restrictive.
|
|
**
|
|
** The argument to xLock() is always SHARED or higher. The argument to
|
|
** xUnlock is either SHARED or NONE.
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_LOCK_NONE 0 /* xUnlock() only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_LOCK_SHARED 1 /* xLock() or xUnlock() */
|
|
#define SQLITE_LOCK_RESERVED 2 /* xLock() only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_LOCK_PENDING 3 /* xLock() only */
|
|
#define SQLITE_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE 4 /* xLock() only */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Synchronization Type Flags
|
|
**
|
|
** When SQLite invokes the xSync() method of an
|
|
** [sqlite3_io_methods] object it uses a combination of
|
|
** these integer values as the second argument.
|
|
**
|
|
** When the SQLITE_SYNC_DATAONLY flag is used, it means that the
|
|
** sync operation only needs to flush data to mass storage. Inode
|
|
** information need not be flushed. If the lower four bits of the flag
|
|
** equal SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL, that means to use normal fsync() semantics.
|
|
** If the lower four bits equal SQLITE_SYNC_FULL, that means
|
|
** to use Mac OS X style fullsync instead of fsync().
|
|
**
|
|
** Do not confuse the SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL and SQLITE_SYNC_FULL flags
|
|
** with the [PRAGMA synchronous]=NORMAL and [PRAGMA synchronous]=FULL
|
|
** settings. The [synchronous pragma] determines when calls to the
|
|
** xSync VFS method occur and applies uniformly across all platforms.
|
|
** The SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL and SQLITE_SYNC_FULL flags determine how
|
|
** energetic or rigorous or forceful the sync operations are and
|
|
** only make a difference on Mac OSX for the default SQLite code.
|
|
** (Third-party VFS implementations might also make the distinction
|
|
** between SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL and SQLITE_SYNC_FULL, but among the
|
|
** operating systems natively supported by SQLite, only Mac OSX
|
|
** cares about the difference.)
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL 0x00002
|
|
#define SQLITE_SYNC_FULL 0x00003
|
|
#define SQLITE_SYNC_DATAONLY 0x00010
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: OS Interface Open File Handle
|
|
**
|
|
** An [sqlite3_file] object represents an open file in the
|
|
** [sqlite3_vfs | OS interface layer]. Individual OS interface
|
|
** implementations will
|
|
** want to subclass this object by appending additional fields
|
|
** for their own use. The pMethods entry is a pointer to an
|
|
** [sqlite3_io_methods] object that defines methods for performing
|
|
** I/O operations on the open file.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct sqlite3_file sqlite3_file;
|
|
struct sqlite3_file {
|
|
const struct sqlite3_io_methods *pMethods; /* Methods for an open file */
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: OS Interface File Virtual Methods Object
|
|
**
|
|
** Every file opened by the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] method populates an
|
|
** [sqlite3_file] object (or, more commonly, a subclass of the
|
|
** [sqlite3_file] object) with a pointer to an instance of this object.
|
|
** This object defines the methods used to perform various operations
|
|
** against the open file represented by the [sqlite3_file] object.
|
|
**
|
|
** If the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] method sets the sqlite3_file.pMethods element
|
|
** to a non-NULL pointer, then the sqlite3_io_methods.xClose method
|
|
** may be invoked even if the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] reported that it failed. The
|
|
** only way to prevent a call to xClose following a failed [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen]
|
|
** is for the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] to set the sqlite3_file.pMethods element
|
|
** to NULL.
|
|
**
|
|
** The flags argument to xSync may be one of [SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL] or
|
|
** [SQLITE_SYNC_FULL]. The first choice is the normal fsync().
|
|
** The second choice is a Mac OS X style fullsync. The [SQLITE_SYNC_DATAONLY]
|
|
** flag may be ORed in to indicate that only the data of the file
|
|
** and not its inode needs to be synced.
|
|
**
|
|
** The integer values to xLock() and xUnlock() are one of
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_NONE],
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_SHARED],
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_RESERVED],
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_PENDING], or
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE].
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
** xLock() upgrades the database file lock. In other words, xLock() moves the
|
|
** database file lock in the direction NONE toward EXCLUSIVE. The argument to
|
|
** xLock() is always on of SHARED, RESERVED, PENDING, or EXCLUSIVE, never
|
|
** SQLITE_LOCK_NONE. If the database file lock is already at or above the
|
|
** requested lock, then the call to xLock() is a no-op.
|
|
** xUnlock() downgrades the database file lock to either SHARED or NONE.
|
|
* If the lock is already at or below the requested lock state, then the call
|
|
** to xUnlock() is a no-op.
|
|
** The xCheckReservedLock() method checks whether any database connection,
|
|
** either in this process or in some other process, is holding a RESERVED,
|
|
** PENDING, or EXCLUSIVE lock on the file. It returns true
|
|
** if such a lock exists and false otherwise.
|
|
**
|
|
** The xFileControl() method is a generic interface that allows custom
|
|
** VFS implementations to directly control an open file using the
|
|
** [sqlite3_file_control()] interface. The second "op" argument is an
|
|
** integer opcode. The third argument is a generic pointer intended to
|
|
** point to a structure that may contain arguments or space in which to
|
|
** write return values. Potential uses for xFileControl() might be
|
|
** functions to enable blocking locks with timeouts, to change the
|
|
** locking strategy (for example to use dot-file locks), to inquire
|
|
** about the status of a lock, or to break stale locks. The SQLite
|
|
** core reserves all opcodes less than 100 for its own use.
|
|
** A [file control opcodes | list of opcodes] less than 100 is available.
|
|
** Applications that define a custom xFileControl method should use opcodes
|
|
** greater than 100 to avoid conflicts. VFS implementations should
|
|
** return [SQLITE_NOTFOUND] for file control opcodes that they do not
|
|
** recognize.
|
|
**
|
|
** The xSectorSize() method returns the sector size of the
|
|
** device that underlies the file. The sector size is the
|
|
** minimum write that can be performed without disturbing
|
|
** other bytes in the file. The xDeviceCharacteristics()
|
|
** method returns a bit vector describing behaviors of the
|
|
** underlying device:
|
|
**
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC512]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC1K]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC2K]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC4K]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC8K]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC16K]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC32K]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC64K]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_UNDELETABLE_WHEN_OPEN]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_IMMUTABLE]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_BATCH_ATOMIC]
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
**
|
|
** The SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC property means that all writes of
|
|
** any size are atomic. The SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMICnnn values
|
|
** mean that writes of blocks that are nnn bytes in size and
|
|
** are aligned to an address which is an integer multiple of
|
|
** nnn are atomic. The SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND value means
|
|
** that when data is appended to a file, the data is appended
|
|
** first then the size of the file is extended, never the other
|
|
** way around. The SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL property means that
|
|
** information is written to disk in the same order as calls
|
|
** to xWrite().
|
|
**
|
|
** If xRead() returns SQLITE_IOERR_SHORT_READ it must also fill
|
|
** in the unread portions of the buffer with zeros. A VFS that
|
|
** fails to zero-fill short reads might seem to work. However,
|
|
** failure to zero-fill short reads will eventually lead to
|
|
** database corruption.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct sqlite3_io_methods sqlite3_io_methods;
|
|
struct sqlite3_io_methods {
|
|
int iVersion;
|
|
int (*xClose)(sqlite3_file*);
|
|
int (*xRead)(sqlite3_file*, void*, int iAmt, sqlite3_int64 iOfst);
|
|
int (*xWrite)(sqlite3_file*, const void*, int iAmt, sqlite3_int64 iOfst);
|
|
int (*xTruncate)(sqlite3_file*, sqlite3_int64 size);
|
|
int (*xSync)(sqlite3_file*, int flags);
|
|
int (*xFileSize)(sqlite3_file*, sqlite3_int64 *pSize);
|
|
int (*xLock)(sqlite3_file*, int);
|
|
int (*xUnlock)(sqlite3_file*, int);
|
|
int (*xCheckReservedLock)(sqlite3_file*, int *pResOut);
|
|
int (*xFileControl)(sqlite3_file*, int op, void *pArg);
|
|
int (*xSectorSize)(sqlite3_file*);
|
|
int (*xDeviceCharacteristics)(sqlite3_file*);
|
|
/* Methods above are valid for version 1 */
|
|
int (*xShmMap)(sqlite3_file*, int iPg, int pgsz, int, void volatile**);
|
|
int (*xShmLock)(sqlite3_file*, int offset, int n, int flags);
|
|
void (*xShmBarrier)(sqlite3_file*);
|
|
int (*xShmUnmap)(sqlite3_file*, int deleteFlag);
|
|
/* Methods above are valid for version 2 */
|
|
int (*xFetch)(sqlite3_file*, sqlite3_int64 iOfst, int iAmt, void **pp);
|
|
int (*xUnfetch)(sqlite3_file*, sqlite3_int64 iOfst, void *p);
|
|
/* Methods above are valid for version 3 */
|
|
/* Additional methods may be added in future releases */
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Standard File Control Opcodes
|
|
** KEYWORDS: {file control opcodes} {file control opcode}
|
|
**
|
|
** These integer constants are opcodes for the xFileControl method
|
|
** of the [sqlite3_io_methods] object and for the [sqlite3_file_control()]
|
|
** interface.
|
|
**
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE] opcode is used for debugging. This
|
|
** opcode causes the xFileControl method to write the current state of
|
|
** the lock (one of [SQLITE_LOCK_NONE], [SQLITE_LOCK_SHARED],
|
|
** [SQLITE_LOCK_RESERVED], [SQLITE_LOCK_PENDING], or [SQLITE_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE])
|
|
** into an integer that the pArg argument points to.
|
|
** This capability is only available if SQLite is compiled with [SQLITE_DEBUG].
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT] opcode is used by SQLite to give the VFS
|
|
** layer a hint of how large the database file will grow to be during the
|
|
** current transaction. This hint is not guaranteed to be accurate but it
|
|
** is often close. The underlying VFS might choose to preallocate database
|
|
** file space based on this hint in order to help writes to the database
|
|
** file run faster.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_LIMIT]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_LIMIT] opcode is used by in-memory VFS that
|
|
** implements [sqlite3_deserialize()] to set an upper bound on the size
|
|
** of the in-memory database. The argument is a pointer to a [sqlite3_int64].
|
|
** If the integer pointed to is negative, then it is filled in with the
|
|
** current limit. Otherwise the limit is set to the larger of the value
|
|
** of the integer pointed to and the current database size. The integer
|
|
** pointed to is set to the new limit.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE] opcode is used to request that the VFS
|
|
** extends and truncates the database file in chunks of a size specified
|
|
** by the user. The fourth argument to [sqlite3_file_control()] should
|
|
** point to an integer (type int) containing the new chunk-size to use
|
|
** for the nominated database. Allocating database file space in large
|
|
** chunks (say 1MB at a time), may reduce file-system fragmentation and
|
|
** improve performance on some systems.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER] opcode is used to obtain a pointer
|
|
** to the [sqlite3_file] object associated with a particular database
|
|
** connection. See also [SQLITE_FCNTL_JOURNAL_POINTER].
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_JOURNAL_POINTER]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_JOURNAL_POINTER] opcode is used to obtain a pointer
|
|
** to the [sqlite3_file] object associated with the journal file (either
|
|
** the [rollback journal] or the [write-ahead log]) for a particular database
|
|
** connection. See also [SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER].
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED]]
|
|
** No longer in use.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC] opcode is generated internally by SQLite and
|
|
** sent to the VFS immediately before the xSync method is invoked on a
|
|
** database file descriptor. Or, if the xSync method is not invoked
|
|
** because the user has configured SQLite with
|
|
** [PRAGMA synchronous | PRAGMA synchronous=OFF] it is invoked in place
|
|
** of the xSync method. In most cases, the pointer argument passed with
|
|
** this file-control is NULL. However, if the database file is being synced
|
|
** as part of a multi-database commit, the argument points to a nul-terminated
|
|
** string containing the transactions super-journal file name. VFSes that
|
|
** do not need this signal should silently ignore this opcode. Applications
|
|
** should not call [sqlite3_file_control()] with this opcode as doing so may
|
|
** disrupt the operation of the specialized VFSes that do require it.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_PHASETWO]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_PHASETWO] opcode is generated internally by SQLite
|
|
** and sent to the VFS after a transaction has been committed immediately
|
|
** but before the database is unlocked. VFSes that do not need this signal
|
|
** should silently ignore this opcode. Applications should not call
|
|
** [sqlite3_file_control()] with this opcode as doing so may disrupt the
|
|
** operation of the specialized VFSes that do require it.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY]]
|
|
** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY] opcode is used to configure automatic
|
|
** retry counts and intervals for certain disk I/O operations for the
|
|
** windows [VFS] in order to provide robustness in the presence of
|
|
** anti-virus programs. By default, the windows VFS will retry file read,
|
|
** file write, and file delete operations up to 10 times, with a delay
|
|
** of 25 milliseconds before the first retry and with the delay increasing
|
|
** by an additional 25 milliseconds with each subsequent retry. This
|
|
** opcode allows these two values (10 retries and 25 milliseconds of delay)
|
|
** to be adjusted. The values are changed for all database connections
|
|
** within the same process. The argument is a pointer to an array of two
|
|
** integers where the first integer is the new retry count and the second
|
|
** integer is the delay. If either integer is negative, then the setting
|
|
** is not changed but instead the prior value of that setting is written
|
|
** into the array entry, allowing the current retry settings to be
|
|
** interrogated. The zDbName parameter is ignored.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL]]
|
|
** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL] opcode is used to set or query the
|
|
** persistent [WAL | Write Ahead Log] setting. By default, the auxiliary
|
|
** write ahead log ([WAL file]) and shared memory
|
|
** files used for transaction control
|
|
** are automatically deleted when the latest connection to the database
|
|
** closes. Setting persistent WAL mode causes those files to persist after
|
|
** close. Persisting the files is useful when other processes that do not
|
|
** have write permission on the directory containing the database file want
|
|
** to read the database file, as the WAL and shared memory files must exist
|
|
** in order for the database to be readable. The fourth parameter to
|
|
** [sqlite3_file_control()] for this opcode should be a pointer to an integer.
|
|
** That integer is 0 to disable persistent WAL mode or 1 to enable persistent
|
|
** WAL mode. If the integer is -1, then it is overwritten with the current
|
|
** WAL persistence setting.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE]]
|
|
** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE] opcode is used to set or query the
|
|
** persistent "powersafe-overwrite" or "PSOW" setting. The PSOW setting
|
|
** determines the [SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE] bit of the
|
|
** xDeviceCharacteristics methods. The fourth parameter to
|
|
** [sqlite3_file_control()] for this opcode should be a pointer to an integer.
|
|
** That integer is 0 to disable zero-damage mode or 1 to enable zero-damage
|
|
** mode. If the integer is -1, then it is overwritten with the current
|
|
** zero-damage mode setting.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE]]
|
|
** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE] opcode is invoked by SQLite after opening
|
|
** a write transaction to indicate that, unless it is rolled back for some
|
|
** reason, the entire database file will be overwritten by the current
|
|
** transaction. This is used by VACUUM operations.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME]]
|
|
** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME] opcode can be used to obtain the names of
|
|
** all [VFSes] in the VFS stack. The names are of all VFS shims and the
|
|
** final bottom-level VFS are written into memory obtained from
|
|
** [sqlite3_malloc()] and the result is stored in the char* variable
|
|
** that the fourth parameter of [sqlite3_file_control()] points to.
|
|
** The caller is responsible for freeing the memory when done. As with
|
|
** all file-control actions, there is no guarantee that this will actually
|
|
** do anything. Callers should initialize the char* variable to a NULL
|
|
** pointer in case this file-control is not implemented. This file-control
|
|
** is intended for diagnostic use only.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_VFS_POINTER]]
|
|
** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_VFS_POINTER] opcode finds a pointer to the top-level
|
|
** [VFSes] currently in use. ^(The argument X in
|
|
** sqlite3_file_control(db,SQLITE_FCNTL_VFS_POINTER,X) must be
|
|
** of type "[sqlite3_vfs] **". This opcodes will set *X
|
|
** to a pointer to the top-level VFS.)^
|
|
** ^When there are multiple VFS shims in the stack, this opcode finds the
|
|
** upper-most shim only.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]]
|
|
** ^Whenever a [PRAGMA] statement is parsed, an [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]
|
|
** file control is sent to the open [sqlite3_file] object corresponding
|
|
** to the database file to which the pragma statement refers. ^The argument
|
|
** to the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control is an array of
|
|
** pointers to strings (char**) in which the second element of the array
|
|
** is the name of the pragma and the third element is the argument to the
|
|
** pragma or NULL if the pragma has no argument. ^The handler for an
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control can optionally make the first element
|
|
** of the char** argument point to a string obtained from [sqlite3_mprintf()]
|
|
** or the equivalent and that string will become the result of the pragma or
|
|
** the error message if the pragma fails. ^If the
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control returns [SQLITE_NOTFOUND], then normal
|
|
** [PRAGMA] processing continues. ^If the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]
|
|
** file control returns [SQLITE_OK], then the parser assumes that the
|
|
** VFS has handled the PRAGMA itself and the parser generates a no-op
|
|
** prepared statement if result string is NULL, or that returns a copy
|
|
** of the result string if the string is non-NULL.
|
|
** ^If the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control returns
|
|
** any result code other than [SQLITE_OK] or [SQLITE_NOTFOUND], that means
|
|
** that the VFS encountered an error while handling the [PRAGMA] and the
|
|
** compilation of the PRAGMA fails with an error. ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]
|
|
** file control occurs at the beginning of pragma statement analysis and so
|
|
** it is able to override built-in [PRAGMA] statements.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_BUSYHANDLER]]
|
|
** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_BUSYHANDLER]
|
|
** file-control may be invoked by SQLite on the database file handle
|
|
** shortly after it is opened in order to provide a custom VFS with access
|
|
** to the connection's busy-handler callback. The argument is of type (void**)
|
|
** - an array of two (void *) values. The first (void *) actually points
|
|
** to a function of type (int (*)(void *)). In order to invoke the connection's
|
|
** busy-handler, this function should be invoked with the second (void *) in
|
|
** the array as the only argument. If it returns non-zero, then the operation
|
|
** should be retried. If it returns zero, the custom VFS should abandon the
|
|
** current operation.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_TEMPFILENAME]]
|
|
** ^Applications can invoke the [SQLITE_FCNTL_TEMPFILENAME] file-control
|
|
** to have SQLite generate a
|
|
** temporary filename using the same algorithm that is followed to generate
|
|
** temporary filenames for TEMP tables and other internal uses. The
|
|
** argument should be a char** which will be filled with the filename
|
|
** written into memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc()]. The caller should
|
|
** invoke [sqlite3_free()] on the result to avoid a memory leak.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE] file control is used to query or set the
|
|
** maximum number of bytes that will be used for memory-mapped I/O.
|
|
** The argument is a pointer to a value of type sqlite3_int64 that
|
|
** is an advisory maximum number of bytes in the file to memory map. The
|
|
** pointer is overwritten with the old value. The limit is not changed if
|
|
** the value originally pointed to is negative, and so the current limit
|
|
** can be queried by passing in a pointer to a negative number. This
|
|
** file-control is used internally to implement [PRAGMA mmap_size].
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_TRACE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_TRACE] file control provides advisory information
|
|
** to the VFS about what the higher layers of the SQLite stack are doing.
|
|
** This file control is used by some VFS activity tracing [shims].
|
|
** The argument is a zero-terminated string. Higher layers in the
|
|
** SQLite stack may generate instances of this file control if
|
|
** the [SQLITE_USE_FCNTL_TRACE] compile-time option is enabled.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_HAS_MOVED]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_HAS_MOVED] file control interprets its argument as a
|
|
** pointer to an integer and it writes a boolean into that integer depending
|
|
** on whether or not the file has been renamed, moved, or deleted since it
|
|
** was first opened.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_GET_HANDLE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_GET_HANDLE] opcode can be used to obtain the
|
|
** underlying native file handle associated with a file handle. This file
|
|
** control interprets its argument as a pointer to a native file handle and
|
|
** writes the resulting value there.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_SET_HANDLE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_SET_HANDLE] opcode is used for debugging. This
|
|
** opcode causes the xFileControl method to swap the file handle with the one
|
|
** pointed to by the pArg argument. This capability is used during testing
|
|
** and only needs to be supported when SQLITE_TEST is defined.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_WAL_BLOCK]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_WAL_BLOCK] is a signal to the VFS layer that it might
|
|
** be advantageous to block on the next WAL lock if the lock is not immediately
|
|
** available. The WAL subsystem issues this signal during rare
|
|
** circumstances in order to fix a problem with priority inversion.
|
|
** Applications should <em>not</em> use this file-control.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_ZIPVFS]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_ZIPVFS] opcode is implemented by zipvfs only. All other
|
|
** VFS should return SQLITE_NOTFOUND for this opcode.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_RBU]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_RBU] opcode is implemented by the special VFS used by
|
|
** the RBU extension only. All other VFS should return SQLITE_NOTFOUND for
|
|
** this opcode.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE]]
|
|
** If the [SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE] opcode returns SQLITE_OK, then
|
|
** the file descriptor is placed in "batch write mode", which
|
|
** means all subsequent write operations will be deferred and done
|
|
** atomically at the next [SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_ATOMIC_WRITE]. Systems
|
|
** that do not support batch atomic writes will return SQLITE_NOTFOUND.
|
|
** ^Following a successful SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE and prior to
|
|
** the closing [SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_ATOMIC_WRITE] or
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_ROLLBACK_ATOMIC_WRITE], SQLite will make
|
|
** no VFS interface calls on the same [sqlite3_file] file descriptor
|
|
** except for calls to the xWrite method and the xFileControl method
|
|
** with [SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT].
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_ATOMIC_WRITE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_ATOMIC_WRITE] opcode causes all write
|
|
** operations since the previous successful call to
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE] to be performed atomically.
|
|
** This file control returns [SQLITE_OK] if and only if the writes were
|
|
** all performed successfully and have been committed to persistent storage.
|
|
** ^Regardless of whether or not it is successful, this file control takes
|
|
** the file descriptor out of batch write mode so that all subsequent
|
|
** write operations are independent.
|
|
** ^SQLite will never invoke SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_ATOMIC_WRITE without
|
|
** a prior successful call to [SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE].
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_ROLLBACK_ATOMIC_WRITE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_ROLLBACK_ATOMIC_WRITE] opcode causes all write
|
|
** operations since the previous successful call to
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE] to be rolled back.
|
|
** ^This file control takes the file descriptor out of batch write mode
|
|
** so that all subsequent write operations are independent.
|
|
** ^SQLite will never invoke SQLITE_FCNTL_ROLLBACK_ATOMIC_WRITE without
|
|
** a prior successful call to [SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE].
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCK_TIMEOUT]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCK_TIMEOUT] opcode is used to configure a VFS
|
|
** to block for up to M milliseconds before failing when attempting to
|
|
** obtain a file lock using the xLock or xShmLock methods of the VFS.
|
|
** The parameter is a pointer to a 32-bit signed integer that contains
|
|
** the value that M is to be set to. Before returning, the 32-bit signed
|
|
** integer is overwritten with the previous value of M.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_DATA_VERSION]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_DATA_VERSION] opcode is used to detect changes to
|
|
** a database file. The argument is a pointer to a 32-bit unsigned integer.
|
|
** The "data version" for the pager is written into the pointer. The
|
|
** "data version" changes whenever any change occurs to the corresponding
|
|
** database file, either through SQL statements on the same database
|
|
** connection or through transactions committed by separate database
|
|
** connections possibly in other processes. The [sqlite3_total_changes()]
|
|
** interface can be used to find if any database on the connection has changed,
|
|
** but that interface responds to changes on TEMP as well as MAIN and does
|
|
** not provide a mechanism to detect changes to MAIN only. Also, the
|
|
** [sqlite3_total_changes()] interface responds to internal changes only and
|
|
** omits changes made by other database connections. The
|
|
** [PRAGMA data_version] command provides a mechanism to detect changes to
|
|
** a single attached database that occur due to other database connections,
|
|
** but omits changes implemented by the database connection on which it is
|
|
** called. This file control is the only mechanism to detect changes that
|
|
** happen either internally or externally and that are associated with
|
|
** a particular attached database.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_START]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_START] opcode is invoked from within a checkpoint
|
|
** in wal mode before the client starts to copy pages from the wal
|
|
** file to the database file.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_DONE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_DONE] opcode is invoked from within a checkpoint
|
|
** in wal mode after the client has finished copying pages from the wal
|
|
** file to the database file, but before the *-shm file is updated to
|
|
** record the fact that the pages have been checkpointed.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_EXTERNAL_READER]]
|
|
** The EXPERIMENTAL [SQLITE_FCNTL_EXTERNAL_READER] opcode is used to detect
|
|
** whether or not there is a database client in another process with a wal-mode
|
|
** transaction open on the database or not. It is only available on unix.The
|
|
** (void*) argument passed with this file-control should be a pointer to a
|
|
** value of type (int). The integer value is set to 1 if the database is a wal
|
|
** mode database and there exists at least one client in another process that
|
|
** currently has an SQL transaction open on the database. It is set to 0 if
|
|
** the database is not a wal-mode db, or if there is no such connection in any
|
|
** other process. This opcode cannot be used to detect transactions opened
|
|
** by clients within the current process, only within other processes.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_CKSM_FILE]]
|
|
** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_CKSM_FILE] opcode is for use internally by the
|
|
** [checksum VFS shim] only.
|
|
**
|
|
** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_RESET_CACHE]]
|
|
** If there is currently no transaction open on the database, and the
|
|
** database is not a temp db, then the [SQLITE_FCNTL_RESET_CACHE] file-control
|
|
** purges the contents of the in-memory page cache. If there is an open
|
|
** transaction, or if the db is a temp-db, this opcode is a no-op, not an error.
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE 1
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_GET_LOCKPROXYFILE 2
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SET_LOCKPROXYFILE 3
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_LAST_ERRNO 4
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT 5
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE 6
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER 7
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED 8
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY 9
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL 10
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE 11
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME 12
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE 13
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA 14
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_BUSYHANDLER 15
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_TEMPFILENAME 16
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE 18
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_TRACE 19
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_HAS_MOVED 20
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC 21
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_PHASETWO 22
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_SET_HANDLE 23
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_WAL_BLOCK 24
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_ZIPVFS 25
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_RBU 26
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_VFS_POINTER 27
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_JOURNAL_POINTER 28
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_GET_HANDLE 29
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_PDB 30
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_BEGIN_ATOMIC_WRITE 31
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_ATOMIC_WRITE 32
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_ROLLBACK_ATOMIC_WRITE 33
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCK_TIMEOUT 34
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_DATA_VERSION 35
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_LIMIT 36
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_DONE 37
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_RESERVE_BYTES 38
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_START 39
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_EXTERNAL_READER 40
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_CKSM_FILE 41
|
|
#define SQLITE_FCNTL_RESET_CACHE 42
|
|
|
|
/* deprecated names */
|
|
#define SQLITE_GET_LOCKPROXYFILE SQLITE_FCNTL_GET_LOCKPROXYFILE
|
|
#define SQLITE_SET_LOCKPROXYFILE SQLITE_FCNTL_SET_LOCKPROXYFILE
|
|
#define SQLITE_LAST_ERRNO SQLITE_FCNTL_LAST_ERRNO
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Mutex Handle
|
|
**
|
|
** The mutex module within SQLite defines [sqlite3_mutex] to be an
|
|
** abstract type for a mutex object. The SQLite core never looks
|
|
** at the internal representation of an [sqlite3_mutex]. It only
|
|
** deals with pointers to the [sqlite3_mutex] object.
|
|
**
|
|
** Mutexes are created using [sqlite3_mutex_alloc()].
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct sqlite3_mutex sqlite3_mutex;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Loadable Extension Thunk
|
|
**
|
|
** A pointer to the opaque sqlite3_api_routines structure is passed as
|
|
** the third parameter to entry points of [loadable extensions]. This
|
|
** structure must be typedefed in order to work around compiler warnings
|
|
** on some platforms.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct sqlite3_api_routines sqlite3_api_routines;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: File Name
|
|
**
|
|
** Type [sqlite3_filename] is used by SQLite to pass filenames to the
|
|
** xOpen method of a [VFS]. It may be cast to (const char*) and treated
|
|
** as a normal, nul-terminated, UTF-8 buffer containing the filename, but
|
|
** may also be passed to special APIs such as:
|
|
**
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_filename_database()
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_filename_journal()
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_filename_wal()
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_uri_parameter()
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_uri_boolean()
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_uri_int64()
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_uri_key()
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef const char *sqlite3_filename;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: OS Interface Object
|
|
**
|
|
** An instance of the sqlite3_vfs object defines the interface between
|
|
** the SQLite core and the underlying operating system. The "vfs"
|
|
** in the name of the object stands for "virtual file system". See
|
|
** the [VFS | VFS documentation] for further information.
|
|
**
|
|
** The VFS interface is sometimes extended by adding new methods onto
|
|
** the end. Each time such an extension occurs, the iVersion field
|
|
** is incremented. The iVersion value started out as 1 in
|
|
** SQLite [version 3.5.0] on [dateof:3.5.0], then increased to 2
|
|
** with SQLite [version 3.7.0] on [dateof:3.7.0], and then increased
|
|
** to 3 with SQLite [version 3.7.6] on [dateof:3.7.6]. Additional fields
|
|
** may be appended to the sqlite3_vfs object and the iVersion value
|
|
** may increase again in future versions of SQLite.
|
|
** Note that due to an oversight, the structure
|
|
** of the sqlite3_vfs object changed in the transition from
|
|
** SQLite [version 3.5.9] to [version 3.6.0] on [dateof:3.6.0]
|
|
** and yet the iVersion field was not increased.
|
|
**
|
|
** The szOsFile field is the size of the subclassed [sqlite3_file]
|
|
** structure used by this VFS. mxPathname is the maximum length of
|
|
** a pathname in this VFS.
|
|
**
|
|
** Registered sqlite3_vfs objects are kept on a linked list formed by
|
|
** the pNext pointer. The [sqlite3_vfs_register()]
|
|
** and [sqlite3_vfs_unregister()] interfaces manage this list
|
|
** in a thread-safe way. The [sqlite3_vfs_find()] interface
|
|
** searches the list. Neither the application code nor the VFS
|
|
** implementation should use the pNext pointer.
|
|
**
|
|
** The pNext field is the only field in the sqlite3_vfs
|
|
** structure that SQLite will ever modify. SQLite will only access
|
|
** or modify this field while holding a particular static mutex.
|
|
** The application should never modify anything within the sqlite3_vfs
|
|
** object once the object has been registered.
|
|
**
|
|
** The zName field holds the name of the VFS module. The name must
|
|
** be unique across all VFS modules.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[sqlite3_vfs.xOpen]]
|
|
** ^SQLite guarantees that the zFilename parameter to xOpen
|
|
** is either a NULL pointer or string obtained
|
|
** from xFullPathname() with an optional suffix added.
|
|
** ^If a suffix is added to the zFilename parameter, it will
|
|
** consist of a single "-" character followed by no more than
|
|
** 11 alphanumeric and/or "-" characters.
|
|
** ^SQLite further guarantees that
|
|
** the string will be valid and unchanged until xClose() is
|
|
** called. Because of the previous sentence,
|
|
** the [sqlite3_file] can safely store a pointer to the
|
|
** filename if it needs to remember the filename for some reason.
|
|
** If the zFilename parameter to xOpen is a NULL pointer then xOpen
|
|
** must invent its own temporary name for the file. ^Whenever the
|
|
** xFilename parameter is NULL it will also be the case that the
|
|
** flags parameter will include [SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE].
|
|
**
|
|
** The flags argument to xOpen() includes all bits set in
|
|
** the flags argument to [sqlite3_open_v2()]. Or if [sqlite3_open()]
|
|
** or [sqlite3_open16()] is used, then flags includes at least
|
|
** [SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE] | [SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE].
|
|
** If xOpen() opens a file read-only then it sets *pOutFlags to
|
|
** include [SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY]. Other bits in *pOutFlags may be set.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^(SQLite will also add one of the following flags to the xOpen()
|
|
** call, depending on the object being opened:
|
|
**
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_DB]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_JOURNAL]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_DB]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_JOURNAL]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_TRANSIENT_DB]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_SUBJOURNAL]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_SUPER_JOURNAL]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_WAL]
|
|
** </ul>)^
|
|
**
|
|
** The file I/O implementation can use the object type flags to
|
|
** change the way it deals with files. For example, an application
|
|
** that does not care about crash recovery or rollback might make
|
|
** the open of a journal file a no-op. Writes to this journal would
|
|
** also be no-ops, and any attempt to read the journal would return
|
|
** SQLITE_IOERR. Or the implementation might recognize that a database
|
|
** file will be doing page-aligned sector reads and writes in a random
|
|
** order and set up its I/O subsystem accordingly.
|
|
**
|
|
** SQLite might also add one of the following flags to the xOpen method:
|
|
**
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE]
|
|
** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE]
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
**
|
|
** The [SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE] flag means the file should be
|
|
** deleted when it is closed. ^The [SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE]
|
|
** will be set for TEMP databases and their journals, transient
|
|
** databases, and subjournals.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The [SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE] flag is always used in conjunction
|
|
** with the [SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE] flag, which are both directly
|
|
** analogous to the O_EXCL and O_CREAT flags of the POSIX open()
|
|
** API. The SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE flag, when paired with the
|
|
** SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE, is used to indicate that file should always
|
|
** be created, and that it is an error if it already exists.
|
|
** It is <i>not</i> used to indicate the file should be opened
|
|
** for exclusive access.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^At least szOsFile bytes of memory are allocated by SQLite
|
|
** to hold the [sqlite3_file] structure passed as the third
|
|
** argument to xOpen. The xOpen method does not have to
|
|
** allocate the structure; it should just fill it in. Note that
|
|
** the xOpen method must set the sqlite3_file.pMethods to either
|
|
** a valid [sqlite3_io_methods] object or to NULL. xOpen must do
|
|
** this even if the open fails. SQLite expects that the sqlite3_file.pMethods
|
|
** element will be valid after xOpen returns regardless of the success
|
|
** or failure of the xOpen call.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[sqlite3_vfs.xAccess]]
|
|
** ^The flags argument to xAccess() may be [SQLITE_ACCESS_EXISTS]
|
|
** to test for the existence of a file, or [SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE] to
|
|
** test whether a file is readable and writable, or [SQLITE_ACCESS_READ]
|
|
** to test whether a file is at least readable. The SQLITE_ACCESS_READ
|
|
** flag is never actually used and is not implemented in the built-in
|
|
** VFSes of SQLite. The file is named by the second argument and can be a
|
|
** directory. The xAccess method returns [SQLITE_OK] on success or some
|
|
** non-zero error code if there is an I/O error or if the name of
|
|
** the file given in the second argument is illegal. If SQLITE_OK
|
|
** is returned, then non-zero or zero is written into *pResOut to indicate
|
|
** whether or not the file is accessible.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^SQLite will always allocate at least mxPathname+1 bytes for the
|
|
** output buffer xFullPathname. The exact size of the output buffer
|
|
** is also passed as a parameter to both methods. If the output buffer
|
|
** is not large enough, [SQLITE_CANTOPEN] should be returned. Since this is
|
|
** handled as a fatal error by SQLite, vfs implementations should endeavor
|
|
** to prevent this by setting mxPathname to a sufficiently large value.
|
|
**
|
|
** The xRandomness(), xSleep(), xCurrentTime(), and xCurrentTimeInt64()
|
|
** interfaces are not strictly a part of the filesystem, but they are
|
|
** included in the VFS structure for completeness.
|
|
** The xRandomness() function attempts to return nBytes bytes
|
|
** of good-quality randomness into zOut. The return value is
|
|
** the actual number of bytes of randomness obtained.
|
|
** The xSleep() method causes the calling thread to sleep for at
|
|
** least the number of microseconds given. ^The xCurrentTime()
|
|
** method returns a Julian Day Number for the current date and time as
|
|
** a floating point value.
|
|
** ^The xCurrentTimeInt64() method returns, as an integer, the Julian
|
|
** Day Number multiplied by 86400000 (the number of milliseconds in
|
|
** a 24-hour day).
|
|
** ^SQLite will use the xCurrentTimeInt64() method to get the current
|
|
** date and time if that method is available (if iVersion is 2 or
|
|
** greater and the function pointer is not NULL) and will fall back
|
|
** to xCurrentTime() if xCurrentTimeInt64() is unavailable.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The xSetSystemCall(), xGetSystemCall(), and xNestSystemCall() interfaces
|
|
** are not used by the SQLite core. These optional interfaces are provided
|
|
** by some VFSes to facilitate testing of the VFS code. By overriding
|
|
** system calls with functions under its control, a test program can
|
|
** simulate faults and error conditions that would otherwise be difficult
|
|
** or impossible to induce. The set of system calls that can be overridden
|
|
** varies from one VFS to another, and from one version of the same VFS to the
|
|
** next. Applications that use these interfaces must be prepared for any
|
|
** or all of these interfaces to be NULL or for their behavior to change
|
|
** from one release to the next. Applications must not attempt to access
|
|
** any of these methods if the iVersion of the VFS is less than 3.
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct sqlite3_vfs sqlite3_vfs;
|
|
typedef void (*sqlite3_syscall_ptr)(void);
|
|
struct sqlite3_vfs {
|
|
int iVersion; /* Structure version number (currently 3) */
|
|
int szOsFile; /* Size of subclassed sqlite3_file */
|
|
int mxPathname; /* Maximum file pathname length */
|
|
sqlite3_vfs *pNext; /* Next registered VFS */
|
|
const char *zName; /* Name of this virtual file system */
|
|
void *pAppData; /* Pointer to application-specific data */
|
|
int (*xOpen)(sqlite3_vfs*, sqlite3_filename zName, sqlite3_file*,
|
|
int flags, int *pOutFlags);
|
|
int (*xDelete)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, int syncDir);
|
|
int (*xAccess)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, int flags, int *pResOut);
|
|
int (*xFullPathname)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, int nOut, char *zOut);
|
|
void *(*xDlOpen)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zFilename);
|
|
void (*xDlError)(sqlite3_vfs*, int nByte, char *zErrMsg);
|
|
void (*(*xDlSym)(sqlite3_vfs*,void*, const char *zSymbol))(void);
|
|
void (*xDlClose)(sqlite3_vfs*, void*);
|
|
int (*xRandomness)(sqlite3_vfs*, int nByte, char *zOut);
|
|
int (*xSleep)(sqlite3_vfs*, int microseconds);
|
|
int (*xCurrentTime)(sqlite3_vfs*, double*);
|
|
int (*xGetLastError)(sqlite3_vfs*, int, char *);
|
|
/*
|
|
** The methods above are in version 1 of the sqlite_vfs object
|
|
** definition. Those that follow are added in version 2 or later
|
|
*/
|
|
int (*xCurrentTimeInt64)(sqlite3_vfs*, sqlite3_int64*);
|
|
/*
|
|
** The methods above are in versions 1 and 2 of the sqlite_vfs object.
|
|
** Those below are for version 3 and greater.
|
|
*/
|
|
int (*xSetSystemCall)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, sqlite3_syscall_ptr);
|
|
sqlite3_syscall_ptr (*xGetSystemCall)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName);
|
|
const char *(*xNextSystemCall)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName);
|
|
/*
|
|
** The methods above are in versions 1 through 3 of the sqlite_vfs object.
|
|
** New fields may be appended in future versions. The iVersion
|
|
** value will increment whenever this happens.
|
|
*/
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Flags for the xAccess VFS method
|
|
**
|
|
** These integer constants can be used as the third parameter to
|
|
** the xAccess method of an [sqlite3_vfs] object. They determine
|
|
** what kind of permissions the xAccess method is looking for.
|
|
** With SQLITE_ACCESS_EXISTS, the xAccess method
|
|
** simply checks whether the file exists.
|
|
** With SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE, the xAccess method
|
|
** checks whether the named directory is both readable and writable
|
|
** (in other words, if files can be added, removed, and renamed within
|
|
** the directory).
|
|
** The SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE constant is currently used only by the
|
|
** [temp_store_directory pragma], though this could change in a future
|
|
** release of SQLite.
|
|
** With SQLITE_ACCESS_READ, the xAccess method
|
|
** checks whether the file is readable. The SQLITE_ACCESS_READ constant is
|
|
** currently unused, though it might be used in a future release of
|
|
** SQLite.
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_ACCESS_EXISTS 0
|
|
#define SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE 1 /* Used by PRAGMA temp_store_directory */
|
|
#define SQLITE_ACCESS_READ 2 /* Unused */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Flags for the xShmLock VFS method
|
|
**
|
|
** These integer constants define the various locking operations
|
|
** allowed by the xShmLock method of [sqlite3_io_methods]. The
|
|
** following are the only legal combinations of flags to the
|
|
** xShmLock method:
|
|
**
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> SQLITE_SHM_LOCK | SQLITE_SHM_SHARED
|
|
** <li> SQLITE_SHM_LOCK | SQLITE_SHM_EXCLUSIVE
|
|
** <li> SQLITE_SHM_UNLOCK | SQLITE_SHM_SHARED
|
|
** <li> SQLITE_SHM_UNLOCK | SQLITE_SHM_EXCLUSIVE
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
**
|
|
** When unlocking, the same SHARED or EXCLUSIVE flag must be supplied as
|
|
** was given on the corresponding lock.
|
|
**
|
|
** The xShmLock method can transition between unlocked and SHARED or
|
|
** between unlocked and EXCLUSIVE. It cannot transition between SHARED
|
|
** and EXCLUSIVE.
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_SHM_UNLOCK 1
|
|
#define SQLITE_SHM_LOCK 2
|
|
#define SQLITE_SHM_SHARED 4
|
|
#define SQLITE_SHM_EXCLUSIVE 8
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Maximum xShmLock index
|
|
**
|
|
** The xShmLock method on [sqlite3_io_methods] may use values
|
|
** between 0 and this upper bound as its "offset" argument.
|
|
** The SQLite core will never attempt to acquire or release a
|
|
** lock outside of this range
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_SHM_NLOCK 8
|
|
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Initialize The SQLite Library
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_initialize() routine initializes the
|
|
** SQLite library. ^The sqlite3_shutdown() routine
|
|
** deallocates any resources that were allocated by sqlite3_initialize().
|
|
** These routines are designed to aid in process initialization and
|
|
** shutdown on embedded systems. Workstation applications using
|
|
** SQLite normally do not need to invoke either of these routines.
|
|
**
|
|
** A call to sqlite3_initialize() is an "effective" call if it is
|
|
** the first time sqlite3_initialize() is invoked during the lifetime of
|
|
** the process, or if it is the first time sqlite3_initialize() is invoked
|
|
** following a call to sqlite3_shutdown(). ^(Only an effective call
|
|
** of sqlite3_initialize() does any initialization. All other calls
|
|
** are harmless no-ops.)^
|
|
**
|
|
** A call to sqlite3_shutdown() is an "effective" call if it is the first
|
|
** call to sqlite3_shutdown() since the last sqlite3_initialize(). ^(Only
|
|
** an effective call to sqlite3_shutdown() does any deinitialization.
|
|
** All other valid calls to sqlite3_shutdown() are harmless no-ops.)^
|
|
**
|
|
** The sqlite3_initialize() interface is threadsafe, but sqlite3_shutdown()
|
|
** is not. The sqlite3_shutdown() interface must only be called from a
|
|
** single thread. All open [database connections] must be closed and all
|
|
** other SQLite resources must be deallocated prior to invoking
|
|
** sqlite3_shutdown().
|
|
**
|
|
** Among other things, ^sqlite3_initialize() will invoke
|
|
** sqlite3_os_init(). Similarly, ^sqlite3_shutdown()
|
|
** will invoke sqlite3_os_end().
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_initialize() routine returns [SQLITE_OK] on success.
|
|
** ^If for some reason, sqlite3_initialize() is unable to initialize
|
|
** the library (perhaps it is unable to allocate a needed resource such
|
|
** as a mutex) it returns an [error code] other than [SQLITE_OK].
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_initialize() routine is called internally by many other
|
|
** SQLite interfaces so that an application usually does not need to
|
|
** invoke sqlite3_initialize() directly. For example, [sqlite3_open()]
|
|
** calls sqlite3_initialize() so the SQLite library will be automatically
|
|
** initialized when [sqlite3_open()] is called if it has not be initialized
|
|
** already. ^However, if SQLite is compiled with the [SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOINIT]
|
|
** compile-time option, then the automatic calls to sqlite3_initialize()
|
|
** are omitted and the application must call sqlite3_initialize() directly
|
|
** prior to using any other SQLite interface. For maximum portability,
|
|
** it is recommended that applications always invoke sqlite3_initialize()
|
|
** directly prior to using any other SQLite interface. Future releases
|
|
** of SQLite may require this. In other words, the behavior exhibited
|
|
** when SQLite is compiled with [SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOINIT] might become the
|
|
** default behavior in some future release of SQLite.
|
|
**
|
|
** The sqlite3_os_init() routine does operating-system specific
|
|
** initialization of the SQLite library. The sqlite3_os_end()
|
|
** routine undoes the effect of sqlite3_os_init(). Typical tasks
|
|
** performed by these routines include allocation or deallocation
|
|
** of static resources, initialization of global variables,
|
|
** setting up a default [sqlite3_vfs] module, or setting up
|
|
** a default configuration using [sqlite3_config()].
|
|
**
|
|
** The application should never invoke either sqlite3_os_init()
|
|
** or sqlite3_os_end() directly. The application should only invoke
|
|
** sqlite3_initialize() and sqlite3_shutdown(). The sqlite3_os_init()
|
|
** interface is called automatically by sqlite3_initialize() and
|
|
** sqlite3_os_end() is called by sqlite3_shutdown(). Appropriate
|
|
** implementations for sqlite3_os_init() and sqlite3_os_end()
|
|
** are built into SQLite when it is compiled for Unix, Windows, or OS/2.
|
|
** When [custom builds | built for other platforms]
|
|
** (using the [SQLITE_OS_OTHER=1] compile-time
|
|
** option) the application must supply a suitable implementation for
|
|
** sqlite3_os_init() and sqlite3_os_end(). An application-supplied
|
|
** implementation of sqlite3_os_init() or sqlite3_os_end()
|
|
** must return [SQLITE_OK] on success and some other [error code] upon
|
|
** failure.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_initialize(void);
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_shutdown(void);
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_os_init(void);
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_os_end(void);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Configuring The SQLite Library
|
|
**
|
|
** The sqlite3_config() interface is used to make global configuration
|
|
** changes to SQLite in order to tune SQLite to the specific needs of
|
|
** the application. The default configuration is recommended for most
|
|
** applications and so this routine is usually not necessary. It is
|
|
** provided to support rare applications with unusual needs.
|
|
**
|
|
** <b>The sqlite3_config() interface is not threadsafe. The application
|
|
** must ensure that no other SQLite interfaces are invoked by other
|
|
** threads while sqlite3_config() is running.</b>
|
|
**
|
|
** The first argument to sqlite3_config() is an integer
|
|
** [configuration option] that determines
|
|
** what property of SQLite is to be configured. Subsequent arguments
|
|
** vary depending on the [configuration option]
|
|
** in the first argument.
|
|
**
|
|
** For most configuration options, the sqlite3_config() interface
|
|
** may only be invoked prior to library initialization using
|
|
** [sqlite3_initialize()] or after shutdown by [sqlite3_shutdown()].
|
|
** The exceptional configuration options that may be invoked at any time
|
|
** are called "anytime configuration options".
|
|
** ^If sqlite3_config() is called after [sqlite3_initialize()] and before
|
|
** [sqlite3_shutdown()] with a first argument that is not an anytime
|
|
** configuration option, then the sqlite3_config() call will return SQLITE_MISUSE.
|
|
** Note, however, that ^sqlite3_config() can be called as part of the
|
|
** implementation of an application-defined [sqlite3_os_init()].
|
|
**
|
|
** ^When a configuration option is set, sqlite3_config() returns [SQLITE_OK].
|
|
** ^If the option is unknown or SQLite is unable to set the option
|
|
** then this routine returns a non-zero [error code].
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_config(int, ...);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Configure database connections
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** The sqlite3_db_config() interface is used to make configuration
|
|
** changes to a [database connection]. The interface is similar to
|
|
** [sqlite3_config()] except that the changes apply to a single
|
|
** [database connection] (specified in the first argument).
|
|
**
|
|
** The second argument to sqlite3_db_config(D,V,...) is the
|
|
** [SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE | configuration verb] - an integer code
|
|
** that indicates what aspect of the [database connection] is being configured.
|
|
** Subsequent arguments vary depending on the configuration verb.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^Calls to sqlite3_db_config() return SQLITE_OK if and only if
|
|
** the call is considered successful.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_config(sqlite3*, int op, ...);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Memory Allocation Routines
|
|
**
|
|
** An instance of this object defines the interface between SQLite
|
|
** and low-level memory allocation routines.
|
|
**
|
|
** This object is used in only one place in the SQLite interface.
|
|
** A pointer to an instance of this object is the argument to
|
|
** [sqlite3_config()] when the configuration option is
|
|
** [SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC] or [SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC].
|
|
** By creating an instance of this object
|
|
** and passing it to [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC])
|
|
** during configuration, an application can specify an alternative
|
|
** memory allocation subsystem for SQLite to use for all of its
|
|
** dynamic memory needs.
|
|
**
|
|
** Note that SQLite comes with several [built-in memory allocators]
|
|
** that are perfectly adequate for the overwhelming majority of applications
|
|
** and that this object is only useful to a tiny minority of applications
|
|
** with specialized memory allocation requirements. This object is
|
|
** also used during testing of SQLite in order to specify an alternative
|
|
** memory allocator that simulates memory out-of-memory conditions in
|
|
** order to verify that SQLite recovers gracefully from such
|
|
** conditions.
|
|
**
|
|
** The xMalloc, xRealloc, and xFree methods must work like the
|
|
** malloc(), realloc() and free() functions from the standard C library.
|
|
** ^SQLite guarantees that the second argument to
|
|
** xRealloc is always a value returned by a prior call to xRoundup.
|
|
**
|
|
** xSize should return the allocated size of a memory allocation
|
|
** previously obtained from xMalloc or xRealloc. The allocated size
|
|
** is always at least as big as the requested size but may be larger.
|
|
**
|
|
** The xRoundup method returns what would be the allocated size of
|
|
** a memory allocation given a particular requested size. Most memory
|
|
** allocators round up memory allocations at least to the next multiple
|
|
** of 8. Some allocators round up to a larger multiple or to a power of 2.
|
|
** Every memory allocation request coming in through [sqlite3_malloc()]
|
|
** or [sqlite3_realloc()] first calls xRoundup. If xRoundup returns 0,
|
|
** that causes the corresponding memory allocation to fail.
|
|
**
|
|
** The xInit method initializes the memory allocator. For example,
|
|
** it might allocate any required mutexes or initialize internal data
|
|
** structures. The xShutdown method is invoked (indirectly) by
|
|
** [sqlite3_shutdown()] and should deallocate any resources acquired
|
|
** by xInit. The pAppData pointer is used as the only parameter to
|
|
** xInit and xShutdown.
|
|
**
|
|
** SQLite holds the [SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MAIN] mutex when it invokes
|
|
** the xInit method, so the xInit method need not be threadsafe. The
|
|
** xShutdown method is only called from [sqlite3_shutdown()] so it does
|
|
** not need to be threadsafe either. For all other methods, SQLite
|
|
** holds the [SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MEM] mutex as long as the
|
|
** [SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS] configuration option is turned on (which
|
|
** it is by default) and so the methods are automatically serialized.
|
|
** However, if [SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS] is disabled, then the other
|
|
** methods must be threadsafe or else make their own arrangements for
|
|
** serialization.
|
|
**
|
|
** SQLite will never invoke xInit() more than once without an intervening
|
|
** call to xShutdown().
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef struct sqlite3_mem_methods sqlite3_mem_methods;
|
|
struct sqlite3_mem_methods {
|
|
void *(*xMalloc)(int); /* Memory allocation function */
|
|
void (*xFree)(void*); /* Free a prior allocation */
|
|
void *(*xRealloc)(void*,int); /* Resize an allocation */
|
|
int (*xSize)(void*); /* Return the size of an allocation */
|
|
int (*xRoundup)(int); /* Round up request size to allocation size */
|
|
int (*xInit)(void*); /* Initialize the memory allocator */
|
|
void (*xShutdown)(void*); /* Deinitialize the memory allocator */
|
|
void *pAppData; /* Argument to xInit() and xShutdown() */
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Configuration Options
|
|
** KEYWORDS: {configuration option}
|
|
**
|
|
** These constants are the available integer configuration options that
|
|
** can be passed as the first argument to the [sqlite3_config()] interface.
|
|
**
|
|
** Most of the configuration options for sqlite3_config()
|
|
** will only work if invoked prior to [sqlite3_initialize()] or after
|
|
** [sqlite3_shutdown()]. The few exceptions to this rule are called
|
|
** "anytime configuration options".
|
|
** ^Calling [sqlite3_config()] with a first argument that is not an
|
|
** anytime configuration option in between calls to [sqlite3_initialize()] and
|
|
** [sqlite3_shutdown()] is a no-op that returns SQLITE_MISUSE.
|
|
**
|
|
** The set of anytime configuration options can change (by insertions
|
|
** and/or deletions) from one release of SQLite to the next.
|
|
** As of SQLite version 3.42.0, the complete set of anytime configuration
|
|
** options is:
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG
|
|
** <li> SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
**
|
|
** New configuration options may be added in future releases of SQLite.
|
|
** Existing configuration options might be discontinued. Applications
|
|
** should check the return code from [sqlite3_config()] to make sure that
|
|
** the call worked. The [sqlite3_config()] interface will return a
|
|
** non-zero [error code] if a discontinued or unsupported configuration option
|
|
** is invoked.
|
|
**
|
|
** <dl>
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD</dt>
|
|
** <dd>There are no arguments to this option. ^This option sets the
|
|
** [threading mode] to Single-thread. In other words, it disables
|
|
** all mutexing and puts SQLite into a mode where it can only be used
|
|
** by a single thread. ^If SQLite is compiled with
|
|
** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
|
|
** it is not possible to change the [threading mode] from its default
|
|
** value of Single-thread and so [sqlite3_config()] will return
|
|
** [SQLITE_ERROR] if called with the SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD
|
|
** configuration option.</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD</dt>
|
|
** <dd>There are no arguments to this option. ^This option sets the
|
|
** [threading mode] to Multi-thread. In other words, it disables
|
|
** mutexing on [database connection] and [prepared statement] objects.
|
|
** The application is responsible for serializing access to
|
|
** [database connections] and [prepared statements]. But other mutexes
|
|
** are enabled so that SQLite will be safe to use in a multi-threaded
|
|
** environment as long as no two threads attempt to use the same
|
|
** [database connection] at the same time. ^If SQLite is compiled with
|
|
** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
|
|
** it is not possible to set the Multi-thread [threading mode] and
|
|
** [sqlite3_config()] will return [SQLITE_ERROR] if called with the
|
|
** SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD configuration option.</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED</dt>
|
|
** <dd>There are no arguments to this option. ^This option sets the
|
|
** [threading mode] to Serialized. In other words, this option enables
|
|
** all mutexes including the recursive
|
|
** mutexes on [database connection] and [prepared statement] objects.
|
|
** In this mode (which is the default when SQLite is compiled with
|
|
** [SQLITE_THREADSAFE=1]) the SQLite library will itself serialize access
|
|
** to [database connections] and [prepared statements] so that the
|
|
** application is free to use the same [database connection] or the
|
|
** same [prepared statement] in different threads at the same time.
|
|
** ^If SQLite is compiled with
|
|
** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
|
|
** it is not possible to set the Serialized [threading mode] and
|
|
** [sqlite3_config()] will return [SQLITE_ERROR] if called with the
|
|
** SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED configuration option.</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^(The SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC option takes a single argument which is
|
|
** a pointer to an instance of the [sqlite3_mem_methods] structure.
|
|
** The argument specifies
|
|
** alternative low-level memory allocation routines to be used in place of
|
|
** the memory allocation routines built into SQLite.)^ ^SQLite makes
|
|
** its own private copy of the content of the [sqlite3_mem_methods] structure
|
|
** before the [sqlite3_config()] call returns.</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^(The SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC option takes a single argument which
|
|
** is a pointer to an instance of the [sqlite3_mem_methods] structure.
|
|
** The [sqlite3_mem_methods]
|
|
** structure is filled with the currently defined memory allocation routines.)^
|
|
** This option can be used to overload the default memory allocation
|
|
** routines with a wrapper that simulations memory allocation failure or
|
|
** tracks memory usage, for example. </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^The SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC option takes single argument of
|
|
** type int, interpreted as a boolean, which if true provides a hint to
|
|
** SQLite that it should avoid large memory allocations if possible.
|
|
** SQLite will run faster if it is free to make large memory allocations,
|
|
** but some application might prefer to run slower in exchange for
|
|
** guarantees about memory fragmentation that are possible if large
|
|
** allocations are avoided. This hint is normally off.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^The SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS option takes single argument of type int,
|
|
** interpreted as a boolean, which enables or disables the collection of
|
|
** memory allocation statistics. ^(When memory allocation statistics are
|
|
** disabled, the following SQLite interfaces become non-operational:
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> [sqlite3_hard_heap_limit64()]
|
|
** <li> [sqlite3_memory_used()]
|
|
** <li> [sqlite3_memory_highwater()]
|
|
** <li> [sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64()]
|
|
** <li> [sqlite3_status64()]
|
|
** </ul>)^
|
|
** ^Memory allocation statistics are enabled by default unless SQLite is
|
|
** compiled with [SQLITE_DEFAULT_MEMSTATUS]=0 in which case memory
|
|
** allocation statistics are disabled by default.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH</dt>
|
|
** <dd> The SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH option is no longer used.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^The SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE option specifies a memory pool
|
|
** that SQLite can use for the database page cache with the default page
|
|
** cache implementation.
|
|
** This configuration option is a no-op if an application-defined page
|
|
** cache implementation is loaded using the [SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2].
|
|
** ^There are three arguments to SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE: A pointer to
|
|
** 8-byte aligned memory (pMem), the size of each page cache line (sz),
|
|
** and the number of cache lines (N).
|
|
** The sz argument should be the size of the largest database page
|
|
** (a power of two between 512 and 65536) plus some extra bytes for each
|
|
** page header. ^The number of extra bytes needed by the page header
|
|
** can be determined using [SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ].
|
|
** ^It is harmless, apart from the wasted memory,
|
|
** for the sz parameter to be larger than necessary. The pMem
|
|
** argument must be either a NULL pointer or a pointer to an 8-byte
|
|
** aligned block of memory of at least sz*N bytes, otherwise
|
|
** subsequent behavior is undefined.
|
|
** ^When pMem is not NULL, SQLite will strive to use the memory provided
|
|
** to satisfy page cache needs, falling back to [sqlite3_malloc()] if
|
|
** a page cache line is larger than sz bytes or if all of the pMem buffer
|
|
** is exhausted.
|
|
** ^If pMem is NULL and N is non-zero, then each database connection
|
|
** does an initial bulk allocation for page cache memory
|
|
** from [sqlite3_malloc()] sufficient for N cache lines if N is positive or
|
|
** of -1024*N bytes if N is negative, . ^If additional
|
|
** page cache memory is needed beyond what is provided by the initial
|
|
** allocation, then SQLite goes to [sqlite3_malloc()] separately for each
|
|
** additional cache line. </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^The SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP option specifies a static memory buffer
|
|
** that SQLite will use for all of its dynamic memory allocation needs
|
|
** beyond those provided for by [SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE].
|
|
** ^The SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP option is only available if SQLite is compiled
|
|
** with either [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMSYS3] or [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMSYS5] and returns
|
|
** [SQLITE_ERROR] if invoked otherwise.
|
|
** ^There are three arguments to SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP:
|
|
** An 8-byte aligned pointer to the memory,
|
|
** the number of bytes in the memory buffer, and the minimum allocation size.
|
|
** ^If the first pointer (the memory pointer) is NULL, then SQLite reverts
|
|
** to using its default memory allocator (the system malloc() implementation),
|
|
** undoing any prior invocation of [SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC]. ^If the
|
|
** memory pointer is not NULL then the alternative memory
|
|
** allocator is engaged to handle all of SQLites memory allocation needs.
|
|
** The first pointer (the memory pointer) must be aligned to an 8-byte
|
|
** boundary or subsequent behavior of SQLite will be undefined.
|
|
** The minimum allocation size is capped at 2**12. Reasonable values
|
|
** for the minimum allocation size are 2**5 through 2**8.</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^(The SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX option takes a single argument which is a
|
|
** pointer to an instance of the [sqlite3_mutex_methods] structure.
|
|
** The argument specifies alternative low-level mutex routines to be used
|
|
** in place the mutex routines built into SQLite.)^ ^SQLite makes a copy of
|
|
** the content of the [sqlite3_mutex_methods] structure before the call to
|
|
** [sqlite3_config()] returns. ^If SQLite is compiled with
|
|
** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
|
|
** the entire mutexing subsystem is omitted from the build and hence calls to
|
|
** [sqlite3_config()] with the SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX configuration option will
|
|
** return [SQLITE_ERROR].</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^(The SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX option takes a single argument which
|
|
** is a pointer to an instance of the [sqlite3_mutex_methods] structure. The
|
|
** [sqlite3_mutex_methods]
|
|
** structure is filled with the currently defined mutex routines.)^
|
|
** This option can be used to overload the default mutex allocation
|
|
** routines with a wrapper used to track mutex usage for performance
|
|
** profiling or testing, for example. ^If SQLite is compiled with
|
|
** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
|
|
** the entire mutexing subsystem is omitted from the build and hence calls to
|
|
** [sqlite3_config()] with the SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX configuration option will
|
|
** return [SQLITE_ERROR].</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^(The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE option takes two arguments that determine
|
|
** the default size of lookaside memory on each [database connection].
|
|
** The first argument is the
|
|
** size of each lookaside buffer slot and the second is the number of
|
|
** slots allocated to each database connection.)^ ^(SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE
|
|
** sets the <i>default</i> lookaside size. The [SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE]
|
|
** option to [sqlite3_db_config()] can be used to change the lookaside
|
|
** configuration on individual connections.)^ </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^(The SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2 option takes a single argument which is
|
|
** a pointer to an [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] object. This object specifies
|
|
** the interface to a custom page cache implementation.)^
|
|
** ^SQLite makes a copy of the [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] object.</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^(The SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2 option takes a single argument which
|
|
** is a pointer to an [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] object. SQLite copies of
|
|
** the current page cache implementation into that object.)^ </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG</dt>
|
|
** <dd> The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG option is used to configure the SQLite
|
|
** global [error log].
|
|
** (^The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG option takes two arguments: a pointer to a
|
|
** function with a call signature of void(*)(void*,int,const char*),
|
|
** and a pointer to void. ^If the function pointer is not NULL, it is
|
|
** invoked by [sqlite3_log()] to process each logging event. ^If the
|
|
** function pointer is NULL, the [sqlite3_log()] interface becomes a no-op.
|
|
** ^The void pointer that is the second argument to SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG is
|
|
** passed through as the first parameter to the application-defined logger
|
|
** function whenever that function is invoked. ^The second parameter to
|
|
** the logger function is a copy of the first parameter to the corresponding
|
|
** [sqlite3_log()] call and is intended to be a [result code] or an
|
|
** [extended result code]. ^The third parameter passed to the logger is
|
|
** log message after formatting via [sqlite3_snprintf()].
|
|
** The SQLite logging interface is not reentrant; the logger function
|
|
** supplied by the application must not invoke any SQLite interface.
|
|
** In a multi-threaded application, the application-defined logger
|
|
** function must be threadsafe. </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_URI]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_URI
|
|
** <dd>^(The SQLITE_CONFIG_URI option takes a single argument of type int.
|
|
** If non-zero, then URI handling is globally enabled. If the parameter is zero,
|
|
** then URI handling is globally disabled.)^ ^If URI handling is globally
|
|
** enabled, all filenames passed to [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open_v2()],
|
|
** [sqlite3_open16()] or
|
|
** specified as part of [ATTACH] commands are interpreted as URIs, regardless
|
|
** of whether or not the [SQLITE_OPEN_URI] flag is set when the database
|
|
** connection is opened. ^If it is globally disabled, filenames are
|
|
** only interpreted as URIs if the SQLITE_OPEN_URI flag is set when the
|
|
** database connection is opened. ^(By default, URI handling is globally
|
|
** disabled. The default value may be changed by compiling with the
|
|
** [SQLITE_USE_URI] symbol defined.)^
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN
|
|
** <dd>^The SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN option takes a single integer
|
|
** argument which is interpreted as a boolean in order to enable or disable
|
|
** the use of covering indices for full table scans in the query optimizer.
|
|
** ^The default setting is determined
|
|
** by the [SQLITE_ALLOW_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN] compile-time option, or is "on"
|
|
** if that compile-time option is omitted.
|
|
** The ability to disable the use of covering indices for full table scans
|
|
** is because some incorrectly coded legacy applications might malfunction
|
|
** when the optimization is enabled. Providing the ability to
|
|
** disable the optimization allows the older, buggy application code to work
|
|
** without change even with newer versions of SQLite.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE]] [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE and SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE
|
|
** <dd> These options are obsolete and should not be used by new code.
|
|
** They are retained for backwards compatibility but are now no-ops.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG
|
|
** <dd>This option is only available if sqlite is compiled with the
|
|
** [SQLITE_ENABLE_SQLLOG] pre-processor macro defined. The first argument should
|
|
** be a pointer to a function of type void(*)(void*,sqlite3*,const char*, int).
|
|
** The second should be of type (void*). The callback is invoked by the library
|
|
** in three separate circumstances, identified by the value passed as the
|
|
** fourth parameter. If the fourth parameter is 0, then the database connection
|
|
** passed as the second argument has just been opened. The third argument
|
|
** points to a buffer containing the name of the main database file. If the
|
|
** fourth parameter is 1, then the SQL statement that the third parameter
|
|
** points to has just been executed. Or, if the fourth parameter is 2, then
|
|
** the connection being passed as the second parameter is being closed. The
|
|
** third parameter is passed NULL In this case. An example of using this
|
|
** configuration option can be seen in the "test_sqllog.c" source file in
|
|
** the canonical SQLite source tree.</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE
|
|
** <dd>^SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE takes two 64-bit integer (sqlite3_int64) values
|
|
** that are the default mmap size limit (the default setting for
|
|
** [PRAGMA mmap_size]) and the maximum allowed mmap size limit.
|
|
** ^The default setting can be overridden by each database connection using
|
|
** either the [PRAGMA mmap_size] command, or by using the
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE] file control. ^(The maximum allowed mmap size
|
|
** will be silently truncated if necessary so that it does not exceed the
|
|
** compile-time maximum mmap size set by the
|
|
** [SQLITE_MAX_MMAP_SIZE] compile-time option.)^
|
|
** ^If either argument to this option is negative, then that argument is
|
|
** changed to its compile-time default.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE
|
|
** <dd>^The SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE option is only available if SQLite is
|
|
** compiled for Windows with the [SQLITE_WIN32_MALLOC] pre-processor macro
|
|
** defined. ^SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE takes a 32-bit unsigned integer value
|
|
** that specifies the maximum size of the created heap.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ
|
|
** <dd>^The SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ option takes a single parameter which
|
|
** is a pointer to an integer and writes into that integer the number of extra
|
|
** bytes per page required for each page in [SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE].
|
|
** The amount of extra space required can change depending on the compiler,
|
|
** target platform, and SQLite version.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ
|
|
** <dd>^The SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ option takes a single parameter which
|
|
** is an unsigned integer and sets the "Minimum PMA Size" for the multithreaded
|
|
** sorter to that integer. The default minimum PMA Size is set by the
|
|
** [SQLITE_SORTER_PMASZ] compile-time option. New threads are launched
|
|
** to help with sort operations when multithreaded sorting
|
|
** is enabled (using the [PRAGMA threads] command) and the amount of content
|
|
** to be sorted exceeds the page size times the minimum of the
|
|
** [PRAGMA cache_size] setting and this value.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL
|
|
** <dd>^The SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL option takes a single parameter which
|
|
** becomes the [statement journal] spill-to-disk threshold.
|
|
** [Statement journals] are held in memory until their size (in bytes)
|
|
** exceeds this threshold, at which point they are written to disk.
|
|
** Or if the threshold is -1, statement journals are always held
|
|
** exclusively in memory.
|
|
** Since many statement journals never become large, setting the spill
|
|
** threshold to a value such as 64KiB can greatly reduce the amount of
|
|
** I/O required to support statement rollback.
|
|
** The default value for this setting is controlled by the
|
|
** [SQLITE_STMTJRNL_SPILL] compile-time option.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE option accepts a single parameter
|
|
** of type (int) - the new value of the sorter-reference size threshold.
|
|
** Usually, when SQLite uses an external sort to order records according
|
|
** to an ORDER BY clause, all fields required by the caller are present in the
|
|
** sorted records. However, if SQLite determines based on the declared type
|
|
** of a table column that its values are likely to be very large - larger
|
|
** than the configured sorter-reference size threshold - then a reference
|
|
** is stored in each sorted record and the required column values loaded
|
|
** from the database as records are returned in sorted order. The default
|
|
** value for this option is to never use this optimization. Specifying a
|
|
** negative value for this option restores the default behavior.
|
|
** This option is only available if SQLite is compiled with the
|
|
** [SQLITE_ENABLE_SORTER_REFERENCES] compile-time option.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE option accepts a single parameter
|
|
** [sqlite3_int64] parameter which is the default maximum size for an in-memory
|
|
** database created using [sqlite3_deserialize()]. This default maximum
|
|
** size can be adjusted up or down for individual databases using the
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_LIMIT] [sqlite3_file_control|file-control]. If this
|
|
** configuration setting is never used, then the default maximum is determined
|
|
** by the [SQLITE_MEMDB_DEFAULT_MAXSIZE] compile-time option. If that
|
|
** compile-time option is not set, then the default maximum is 1073741824.
|
|
** </dl>
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD 1 /* nil */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD 2 /* nil */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED 3 /* nil */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC 4 /* sqlite3_mem_methods* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC 5 /* sqlite3_mem_methods* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH 6 /* No longer used */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE 7 /* void*, int sz, int N */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP 8 /* void*, int nByte, int min */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS 9 /* boolean */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX 10 /* sqlite3_mutex_methods* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX 11 /* sqlite3_mutex_methods* */
|
|
/* previously SQLITE_CONFIG_CHUNKALLOC 12 which is now unused. */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE 13 /* int int */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE 14 /* no-op */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE 15 /* no-op */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG 16 /* xFunc, void* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_URI 17 /* int */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2 18 /* sqlite3_pcache_methods2* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2 19 /* sqlite3_pcache_methods2* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN 20 /* int */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG 21 /* xSqllog, void* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE 22 /* sqlite3_int64, sqlite3_int64 */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE 23 /* int nByte */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ 24 /* int *psz */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ 25 /* unsigned int szPma */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL 26 /* int nByte */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC 27 /* boolean */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE 28 /* int nByte */
|
|
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE 29 /* sqlite3_int64 */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Database Connection Configuration Options
|
|
**
|
|
** These constants are the available integer configuration options that
|
|
** can be passed as the second argument to the [sqlite3_db_config()] interface.
|
|
**
|
|
** New configuration options may be added in future releases of SQLite.
|
|
** Existing configuration options might be discontinued. Applications
|
|
** should check the return code from [sqlite3_db_config()] to make sure that
|
|
** the call worked. ^The [sqlite3_db_config()] interface will return a
|
|
** non-zero [error code] if a discontinued or unsupported configuration option
|
|
** is invoked.
|
|
**
|
|
** <dl>
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^This option takes three additional arguments that determine the
|
|
** [lookaside memory allocator] configuration for the [database connection].
|
|
** ^The first argument (the third parameter to [sqlite3_db_config()] is a
|
|
** pointer to a memory buffer to use for lookaside memory.
|
|
** ^The first argument after the SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE verb
|
|
** may be NULL in which case SQLite will allocate the
|
|
** lookaside buffer itself using [sqlite3_malloc()]. ^The second argument is the
|
|
** size of each lookaside buffer slot. ^The third argument is the number of
|
|
** slots. The size of the buffer in the first argument must be greater than
|
|
** or equal to the product of the second and third arguments. The buffer
|
|
** must be aligned to an 8-byte boundary. ^If the second argument to
|
|
** SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE is not a multiple of 8, it is internally
|
|
** rounded down to the next smaller multiple of 8. ^(The lookaside memory
|
|
** configuration for a database connection can only be changed when that
|
|
** connection is not currently using lookaside memory, or in other words
|
|
** when the "current value" returned by
|
|
** [sqlite3_db_status](D,[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_USED],...) is zero.
|
|
** Any attempt to change the lookaside memory configuration when lookaside
|
|
** memory is in use leaves the configuration unchanged and returns
|
|
** [SQLITE_BUSY].)^</dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_FKEY]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_FKEY</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^This option is used to enable or disable the enforcement of
|
|
** [foreign key constraints]. There should be two additional arguments.
|
|
** The first argument is an integer which is 0 to disable FK enforcement,
|
|
** positive to enable FK enforcement or negative to leave FK enforcement
|
|
** unchanged. The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which
|
|
** is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether FK enforcement is off or on
|
|
** following this call. The second parameter may be a NULL pointer, in
|
|
** which case the FK enforcement setting is not reported back. </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_TRIGGER]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_TRIGGER</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^This option is used to enable or disable [CREATE TRIGGER | triggers].
|
|
** There should be two additional arguments.
|
|
** The first argument is an integer which is 0 to disable triggers,
|
|
** positive to enable triggers or negative to leave the setting unchanged.
|
|
** The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which
|
|
** is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether triggers are disabled or enabled
|
|
** following this call. The second parameter may be a NULL pointer, in
|
|
** which case the trigger setting is not reported back.
|
|
**
|
|
** <p>Originally this option disabled all triggers. ^(However, since
|
|
** SQLite version 3.35.0, TEMP triggers are still allowed even if
|
|
** this option is off. So, in other words, this option now only disables
|
|
** triggers in the main database schema or in the schemas of ATTACH-ed
|
|
** databases.)^ </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_VIEW]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_VIEW</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^This option is used to enable or disable [CREATE VIEW | views].
|
|
** There should be two additional arguments.
|
|
** The first argument is an integer which is 0 to disable views,
|
|
** positive to enable views or negative to leave the setting unchanged.
|
|
** The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which
|
|
** is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether views are disabled or enabled
|
|
** following this call. The second parameter may be a NULL pointer, in
|
|
** which case the view setting is not reported back.
|
|
**
|
|
** <p>Originally this option disabled all views. ^(However, since
|
|
** SQLite version 3.35.0, TEMP views are still allowed even if
|
|
** this option is off. So, in other words, this option now only disables
|
|
** views in the main database schema or in the schemas of ATTACH-ed
|
|
** databases.)^ </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_FTS3_TOKENIZER]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_FTS3_TOKENIZER</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^This option is used to enable or disable the
|
|
** [fts3_tokenizer()] function which is part of the
|
|
** [FTS3] full-text search engine extension.
|
|
** There should be two additional arguments.
|
|
** The first argument is an integer which is 0 to disable fts3_tokenizer() or
|
|
** positive to enable fts3_tokenizer() or negative to leave the setting
|
|
** unchanged.
|
|
** The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which
|
|
** is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether fts3_tokenizer is disabled or enabled
|
|
** following this call. The second parameter may be a NULL pointer, in
|
|
** which case the new setting is not reported back. </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_LOAD_EXTENSION]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_LOAD_EXTENSION</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^This option is used to enable or disable the [sqlite3_load_extension()]
|
|
** interface independently of the [load_extension()] SQL function.
|
|
** The [sqlite3_enable_load_extension()] API enables or disables both the
|
|
** C-API [sqlite3_load_extension()] and the SQL function [load_extension()].
|
|
** There should be two additional arguments.
|
|
** When the first argument to this interface is 1, then only the C-API is
|
|
** enabled and the SQL function remains disabled. If the first argument to
|
|
** this interface is 0, then both the C-API and the SQL function are disabled.
|
|
** If the first argument is -1, then no changes are made to state of either the
|
|
** C-API or the SQL function.
|
|
** The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which
|
|
** is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether [sqlite3_load_extension()] interface
|
|
** is disabled or enabled following this call. The second parameter may
|
|
** be a NULL pointer, in which case the new setting is not reported back.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_MAINDBNAME]] <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_MAINDBNAME</dt>
|
|
** <dd> ^This option is used to change the name of the "main" database
|
|
** schema. ^The sole argument is a pointer to a constant UTF8 string
|
|
** which will become the new schema name in place of "main". ^SQLite
|
|
** does not make a copy of the new main schema name string, so the application
|
|
** must ensure that the argument passed into this DBCONFIG option is unchanged
|
|
** until after the database connection closes.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_NO_CKPT_ON_CLOSE]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_NO_CKPT_ON_CLOSE</dt>
|
|
** <dd> Usually, when a database in wal mode is closed or detached from a
|
|
** database handle, SQLite checks if this will mean that there are now no
|
|
** connections at all to the database. If so, it performs a checkpoint
|
|
** operation before closing the connection. This option may be used to
|
|
** override this behavior. The first parameter passed to this operation
|
|
** is an integer - positive to disable checkpoints-on-close, or zero (the
|
|
** default) to enable them, and negative to leave the setting unchanged.
|
|
** The second parameter is a pointer to an integer
|
|
** into which is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether checkpoints-on-close
|
|
** have been disabled - 0 if they are not disabled, 1 if they are.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_QPSG]] <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_QPSG</dt>
|
|
** <dd>^(The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_QPSG option activates or deactivates
|
|
** the [query planner stability guarantee] (QPSG). When the QPSG is active,
|
|
** a single SQL query statement will always use the same algorithm regardless
|
|
** of values of [bound parameters].)^ The QPSG disables some query optimizations
|
|
** that look at the values of bound parameters, which can make some queries
|
|
** slower. But the QPSG has the advantage of more predictable behavior. With
|
|
** the QPSG active, SQLite will always use the same query plan in the field as
|
|
** was used during testing in the lab.
|
|
** The first argument to this setting is an integer which is 0 to disable
|
|
** the QPSG, positive to enable QPSG, or negative to leave the setting
|
|
** unchanged. The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which
|
|
** is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether the QPSG is disabled or enabled
|
|
** following this call.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRIGGER_EQP]] <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRIGGER_EQP</dt>
|
|
** <dd> By default, the output of EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN commands does not
|
|
** include output for any operations performed by trigger programs. This
|
|
** option is used to set or clear (the default) a flag that governs this
|
|
** behavior. The first parameter passed to this operation is an integer -
|
|
** positive to enable output for trigger programs, or zero to disable it,
|
|
** or negative to leave the setting unchanged.
|
|
** The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which is written
|
|
** 0 or 1 to indicate whether output-for-triggers has been disabled - 0 if
|
|
** it is not disabled, 1 if it is.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_RESET_DATABASE]] <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_RESET_DATABASE</dt>
|
|
** <dd> Set the SQLITE_DBCONFIG_RESET_DATABASE flag and then run
|
|
** [VACUUM] in order to reset a database back to an empty database
|
|
** with no schema and no content. The following process works even for
|
|
** a badly corrupted database file:
|
|
** <ol>
|
|
** <li> If the database connection is newly opened, make sure it has read the
|
|
** database schema by preparing then discarding some query against the
|
|
** database, or calling sqlite3_table_column_metadata(), ignoring any
|
|
** errors. This step is only necessary if the application desires to keep
|
|
** the database in WAL mode after the reset if it was in WAL mode before
|
|
** the reset.
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_db_config(db, SQLITE_DBCONFIG_RESET_DATABASE, 1, 0);
|
|
** <li> [sqlite3_exec](db, "[VACUUM]", 0, 0, 0);
|
|
** <li> sqlite3_db_config(db, SQLITE_DBCONFIG_RESET_DATABASE, 0, 0);
|
|
** </ol>
|
|
** Because resetting a database is destructive and irreversible, the
|
|
** process requires the use of this obscure API and multiple steps to
|
|
** help ensure that it does not happen by accident. Because this
|
|
** feature must be capable of resetting corrupt databases, and
|
|
** shutting down virtual tables may require access to that corrupt
|
|
** storage, the library must abandon any installed virtual tables
|
|
** without calling their xDestroy() methods.
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DEFENSIVE]] <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DEFENSIVE</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DEFENSIVE option activates or deactivates the
|
|
** "defensive" flag for a database connection. When the defensive
|
|
** flag is enabled, language features that allow ordinary SQL to
|
|
** deliberately corrupt the database file are disabled. The disabled
|
|
** features include but are not limited to the following:
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> The [PRAGMA writable_schema=ON] statement.
|
|
** <li> The [PRAGMA journal_mode=OFF] statement.
|
|
** <li> The [PRAGMA schema_version=N] statement.
|
|
** <li> Writes to the [sqlite_dbpage] virtual table.
|
|
** <li> Direct writes to [shadow tables].
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_WRITABLE_SCHEMA]] <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_WRITABLE_SCHEMA</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_WRITABLE_SCHEMA option activates or deactivates the
|
|
** "writable_schema" flag. This has the same effect and is logically equivalent
|
|
** to setting [PRAGMA writable_schema=ON] or [PRAGMA writable_schema=OFF].
|
|
** The first argument to this setting is an integer which is 0 to disable
|
|
** the writable_schema, positive to enable writable_schema, or negative to
|
|
** leave the setting unchanged. The second parameter is a pointer to an
|
|
** integer into which is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether the writable_schema
|
|
** is enabled or disabled following this call.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_ALTER_TABLE]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_ALTER_TABLE</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_ALTER_TABLE option activates or deactivates
|
|
** the legacy behavior of the [ALTER TABLE RENAME] command such it
|
|
** behaves as it did prior to [version 3.24.0] (2018-06-04). See the
|
|
** "Compatibility Notice" on the [ALTER TABLE RENAME documentation] for
|
|
** additional information. This feature can also be turned on and off
|
|
** using the [PRAGMA legacy_alter_table] statement.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DQS_DML]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DQS_DML</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DQS_DML option activates or deactivates
|
|
** the legacy [double-quoted string literal] misfeature for DML statements
|
|
** only, that is DELETE, INSERT, SELECT, and UPDATE statements. The
|
|
** default value of this setting is determined by the [-DSQLITE_DQS]
|
|
** compile-time option.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DQS_DDL]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DQS_DDL</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DQS option activates or deactivates
|
|
** the legacy [double-quoted string literal] misfeature for DDL statements,
|
|
** such as CREATE TABLE and CREATE INDEX. The
|
|
** default value of this setting is determined by the [-DSQLITE_DQS]
|
|
** compile-time option.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRUSTED_SCHEMA]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRUSTED_SCHEMA</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRUSTED_SCHEMA option tells SQLite to
|
|
** assume that database schemas are untainted by malicious content.
|
|
** When the SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRUSTED_SCHEMA option is disabled, SQLite
|
|
** takes additional defensive steps to protect the application from harm
|
|
** including:
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> Prohibit the use of SQL functions inside triggers, views,
|
|
** CHECK constraints, DEFAULT clauses, expression indexes,
|
|
** partial indexes, or generated columns
|
|
** unless those functions are tagged with [SQLITE_INNOCUOUS].
|
|
** <li> Prohibit the use of virtual tables inside of triggers or views
|
|
** unless those virtual tables are tagged with [SQLITE_VTAB_INNOCUOUS].
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
** This setting defaults to "on" for legacy compatibility, however
|
|
** all applications are advised to turn it off if possible. This setting
|
|
** can also be controlled using the [PRAGMA trusted_schema] statement.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_FILE_FORMAT]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_FILE_FORMAT</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_FILE_FORMAT option activates or deactivates
|
|
** the legacy file format flag. When activated, this flag causes all newly
|
|
** created database file to have a schema format version number (the 4-byte
|
|
** integer found at offset 44 into the database header) of 1. This in turn
|
|
** means that the resulting database file will be readable and writable by
|
|
** any SQLite version back to 3.0.0 ([dateof:3.0.0]). Without this setting,
|
|
** newly created databases are generally not understandable by SQLite versions
|
|
** prior to 3.3.0 ([dateof:3.3.0]). As these words are written, there
|
|
** is now scarcely any need to generate database files that are compatible
|
|
** all the way back to version 3.0.0, and so this setting is of little
|
|
** practical use, but is provided so that SQLite can continue to claim the
|
|
** ability to generate new database files that are compatible with version
|
|
** 3.0.0.
|
|
** <p>Note that when the SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_FILE_FORMAT setting is on,
|
|
** the [VACUUM] command will fail with an obscure error when attempting to
|
|
** process a table with generated columns and a descending index. This is
|
|
** not considered a bug since SQLite versions 3.3.0 and earlier do not support
|
|
** either generated columns or descending indexes.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_STMT_SCANSTATUS]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_STMT_SCANSTATUS</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_STMT_SCANSTATUS option is only useful in
|
|
** SQLITE_ENABLE_STMT_SCANSTATUS builds. In this case, it sets or clears
|
|
** a flag that enables collection of the sqlite3_stmt_scanstatus_v2()
|
|
** statistics. For statistics to be collected, the flag must be set on
|
|
** the database handle both when the SQL statement is prepared and when it
|
|
** is stepped. The flag is set (collection of statistics is enabled)
|
|
** by default. This option takes two arguments: an integer and a pointer to
|
|
** an integer.. The first argument is 1, 0, or -1 to enable, disable, or
|
|
** leave unchanged the statement scanstatus option. If the second argument
|
|
** is not NULL, then the value of the statement scanstatus setting after
|
|
** processing the first argument is written into the integer that the second
|
|
** argument points to.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** [[SQLITE_DBCONFIG_REVERSE_SCANORDER]]
|
|
** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_REVERSE_SCANORDER</dt>
|
|
** <dd>The SQLITE_DBCONFIG_REVERSE_SCANORDER option changes the default order
|
|
** in which tables and indexes are scanned so that the scans start at the end
|
|
** and work toward the beginning rather than starting at the beginning and
|
|
** working toward the end. Setting SQLITE_DBCONFIG_REVERSE_SCANORDER is the
|
|
** same as setting [PRAGMA reverse_unordered_selects]. This option takes
|
|
** two arguments which are an integer and a pointer to an integer. The first
|
|
** argument is 1, 0, or -1 to enable, disable, or leave unchanged the
|
|
** reverse scan order flag, respectively. If the second argument is not NULL,
|
|
** then 0 or 1 is written into the integer that the second argument points to
|
|
** depending on if the reverse scan order flag is set after processing the
|
|
** first argument.
|
|
** </dd>
|
|
**
|
|
** </dl>
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_MAINDBNAME 1000 /* const char* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE 1001 /* void* int int */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_FKEY 1002 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_TRIGGER 1003 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_FTS3_TOKENIZER 1004 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_LOAD_EXTENSION 1005 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_NO_CKPT_ON_CLOSE 1006 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_QPSG 1007 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRIGGER_EQP 1008 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_RESET_DATABASE 1009 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DEFENSIVE 1010 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_WRITABLE_SCHEMA 1011 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_ALTER_TABLE 1012 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DQS_DML 1013 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_DQS_DDL 1014 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_VIEW 1015 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LEGACY_FILE_FORMAT 1016 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRUSTED_SCHEMA 1017 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_STMT_SCANSTATUS 1018 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_REVERSE_SCANORDER 1019 /* int int* */
|
|
#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_MAX 1019 /* Largest DBCONFIG */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Enable Or Disable Extended Result Codes
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_extended_result_codes() routine enables or disables the
|
|
** [extended result codes] feature of SQLite. ^The extended result
|
|
** codes are disabled by default for historical compatibility.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_extended_result_codes(sqlite3*, int onoff);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Last Insert Rowid
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** ^Each entry in most SQLite tables (except for [WITHOUT ROWID] tables)
|
|
** has a unique 64-bit signed
|
|
** integer key called the [ROWID | "rowid"]. ^The rowid is always available
|
|
** as an undeclared column named ROWID, OID, or _ROWID_ as long as those
|
|
** names are not also used by explicitly declared columns. ^If
|
|
** the table has a column of type [INTEGER PRIMARY KEY] then that column
|
|
** is another alias for the rowid.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_last_insert_rowid(D) interface usually returns the [rowid] of
|
|
** the most recent successful [INSERT] into a rowid table or [virtual table]
|
|
** on database connection D. ^Inserts into [WITHOUT ROWID] tables are not
|
|
** recorded. ^If no successful [INSERT]s into rowid tables have ever occurred
|
|
** on the database connection D, then sqlite3_last_insert_rowid(D) returns
|
|
** zero.
|
|
**
|
|
** As well as being set automatically as rows are inserted into database
|
|
** tables, the value returned by this function may be set explicitly by
|
|
** [sqlite3_set_last_insert_rowid()]
|
|
**
|
|
** Some virtual table implementations may INSERT rows into rowid tables as
|
|
** part of committing a transaction (e.g. to flush data accumulated in memory
|
|
** to disk). In this case subsequent calls to this function return the rowid
|
|
** associated with these internal INSERT operations, which leads to
|
|
** unintuitive results. Virtual table implementations that do write to rowid
|
|
** tables in this way can avoid this problem by restoring the original
|
|
** rowid value using [sqlite3_set_last_insert_rowid()] before returning
|
|
** control to the user.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^(If an [INSERT] occurs within a trigger then this routine will
|
|
** return the [rowid] of the inserted row as long as the trigger is
|
|
** running. Once the trigger program ends, the value returned
|
|
** by this routine reverts to what it was before the trigger was fired.)^
|
|
**
|
|
** ^An [INSERT] that fails due to a constraint violation is not a
|
|
** successful [INSERT] and does not change the value returned by this
|
|
** routine. ^Thus INSERT OR FAIL, INSERT OR IGNORE, INSERT OR ROLLBACK,
|
|
** and INSERT OR ABORT make no changes to the return value of this
|
|
** routine when their insertion fails. ^(When INSERT OR REPLACE
|
|
** encounters a constraint violation, it does not fail. The
|
|
** INSERT continues to completion after deleting rows that caused
|
|
** the constraint problem so INSERT OR REPLACE will always change
|
|
** the return value of this interface.)^
|
|
**
|
|
** ^For the purposes of this routine, an [INSERT] is considered to
|
|
** be successful even if it is subsequently rolled back.
|
|
**
|
|
** This function is accessible to SQL statements via the
|
|
** [last_insert_rowid() SQL function].
|
|
**
|
|
** If a separate thread performs a new [INSERT] on the same
|
|
** database connection while the [sqlite3_last_insert_rowid()]
|
|
** function is running and thus changes the last insert [rowid],
|
|
** then the value returned by [sqlite3_last_insert_rowid()] is
|
|
** unpredictable and might not equal either the old or the new
|
|
** last insert [rowid].
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_last_insert_rowid(sqlite3*);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Set the Last Insert Rowid value.
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** The sqlite3_set_last_insert_rowid(D, R) method allows the application to
|
|
** set the value returned by calling sqlite3_last_insert_rowid(D) to R
|
|
** without inserting a row into the database.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API void sqlite3_set_last_insert_rowid(sqlite3*,sqlite3_int64);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Count The Number Of Rows Modified
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** ^These functions return the number of rows modified, inserted or
|
|
** deleted by the most recently completed INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE
|
|
** statement on the database connection specified by the only parameter.
|
|
** The two functions are identical except for the type of the return value
|
|
** and that if the number of rows modified by the most recent INSERT, UPDATE
|
|
** or DELETE is greater than the maximum value supported by type "int", then
|
|
** the return value of sqlite3_changes() is undefined. ^Executing any other
|
|
** type of SQL statement does not modify the value returned by these functions.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^Only changes made directly by the INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE statement are
|
|
** considered - auxiliary changes caused by [CREATE TRIGGER | triggers],
|
|
** [foreign key actions] or [REPLACE] constraint resolution are not counted.
|
|
**
|
|
** Changes to a view that are intercepted by
|
|
** [INSTEAD OF trigger | INSTEAD OF triggers] are not counted. ^The value
|
|
** returned by sqlite3_changes() immediately after an INSERT, UPDATE or
|
|
** DELETE statement run on a view is always zero. Only changes made to real
|
|
** tables are counted.
|
|
**
|
|
** Things are more complicated if the sqlite3_changes() function is
|
|
** executed while a trigger program is running. This may happen if the
|
|
** program uses the [changes() SQL function], or if some other callback
|
|
** function invokes sqlite3_changes() directly. Essentially:
|
|
**
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> ^(Before entering a trigger program the value returned by
|
|
** sqlite3_changes() function is saved. After the trigger program
|
|
** has finished, the original value is restored.)^
|
|
**
|
|
** <li> ^(Within a trigger program each INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE
|
|
** statement sets the value returned by sqlite3_changes()
|
|
** upon completion as normal. Of course, this value will not include
|
|
** any changes performed by sub-triggers, as the sqlite3_changes()
|
|
** value will be saved and restored after each sub-trigger has run.)^
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
**
|
|
** ^This means that if the changes() SQL function (or similar) is used
|
|
** by the first INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE statement within a trigger, it
|
|
** returns the value as set when the calling statement began executing.
|
|
** ^If it is used by the second or subsequent such statement within a trigger
|
|
** program, the value returned reflects the number of rows modified by the
|
|
** previous INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE statement within the same trigger.
|
|
**
|
|
** If a separate thread makes changes on the same database connection
|
|
** while [sqlite3_changes()] is running then the value returned
|
|
** is unpredictable and not meaningful.
|
|
**
|
|
** See also:
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> the [sqlite3_total_changes()] interface
|
|
** <li> the [count_changes pragma]
|
|
** <li> the [changes() SQL function]
|
|
** <li> the [data_version pragma]
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_changes(sqlite3*);
|
|
SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_changes64(sqlite3*);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Total Number Of Rows Modified
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** ^These functions return the total number of rows inserted, modified or
|
|
** deleted by all [INSERT], [UPDATE] or [DELETE] statements completed
|
|
** since the database connection was opened, including those executed as
|
|
** part of trigger programs. The two functions are identical except for the
|
|
** type of the return value and that if the number of rows modified by the
|
|
** connection exceeds the maximum value supported by type "int", then
|
|
** the return value of sqlite3_total_changes() is undefined. ^Executing
|
|
** any other type of SQL statement does not affect the value returned by
|
|
** sqlite3_total_changes().
|
|
**
|
|
** ^Changes made as part of [foreign key actions] are included in the
|
|
** count, but those made as part of REPLACE constraint resolution are
|
|
** not. ^Changes to a view that are intercepted by INSTEAD OF triggers
|
|
** are not counted.
|
|
**
|
|
** The [sqlite3_total_changes(D)] interface only reports the number
|
|
** of rows that changed due to SQL statement run against database
|
|
** connection D. Any changes by other database connections are ignored.
|
|
** To detect changes against a database file from other database
|
|
** connections use the [PRAGMA data_version] command or the
|
|
** [SQLITE_FCNTL_DATA_VERSION] [file control].
|
|
**
|
|
** If a separate thread makes changes on the same database connection
|
|
** while [sqlite3_total_changes()] is running then the value
|
|
** returned is unpredictable and not meaningful.
|
|
**
|
|
** See also:
|
|
** <ul>
|
|
** <li> the [sqlite3_changes()] interface
|
|
** <li> the [count_changes pragma]
|
|
** <li> the [changes() SQL function]
|
|
** <li> the [data_version pragma]
|
|
** <li> the [SQLITE_FCNTL_DATA_VERSION] [file control]
|
|
** </ul>
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_total_changes(sqlite3*);
|
|
SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_total_changes64(sqlite3*);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Interrupt A Long-Running Query
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** ^This function causes any pending database operation to abort and
|
|
** return at its earliest opportunity. This routine is typically
|
|
** called in response to a user action such as pressing "Cancel"
|
|
** or Ctrl-C where the user wants a long query operation to halt
|
|
** immediately.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^It is safe to call this routine from a thread different from the
|
|
** thread that is currently running the database operation. But it
|
|
** is not safe to call this routine with a [database connection] that
|
|
** is closed or might close before sqlite3_interrupt() returns.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^If an SQL operation is very nearly finished at the time when
|
|
** sqlite3_interrupt() is called, then it might not have an opportunity
|
|
** to be interrupted and might continue to completion.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^An SQL operation that is interrupted will return [SQLITE_INTERRUPT].
|
|
** ^If the interrupted SQL operation is an INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE
|
|
** that is inside an explicit transaction, then the entire transaction
|
|
** will be rolled back automatically.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_interrupt(D) call is in effect until all currently running
|
|
** SQL statements on [database connection] D complete. ^Any new SQL statements
|
|
** that are started after the sqlite3_interrupt() call and before the
|
|
** running statement count reaches zero are interrupted as if they had been
|
|
** running prior to the sqlite3_interrupt() call. ^New SQL statements
|
|
** that are started after the running statement count reaches zero are
|
|
** not effected by the sqlite3_interrupt().
|
|
** ^A call to sqlite3_interrupt(D) that occurs when there are no running
|
|
** SQL statements is a no-op and has no effect on SQL statements
|
|
** that are started after the sqlite3_interrupt() call returns.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The [sqlite3_is_interrupted(D)] interface can be used to determine whether
|
|
** or not an interrupt is currently in effect for [database connection] D.
|
|
** It returns 1 if an interrupt is currently in effect, or 0 otherwise.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API void sqlite3_interrupt(sqlite3*);
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_is_interrupted(sqlite3*);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Determine If An SQL Statement Is Complete
|
|
**
|
|
** These routines are useful during command-line input to determine if the
|
|
** currently entered text seems to form a complete SQL statement or
|
|
** if additional input is needed before sending the text into
|
|
** SQLite for parsing. ^These routines return 1 if the input string
|
|
** appears to be a complete SQL statement. ^A statement is judged to be
|
|
** complete if it ends with a semicolon token and is not a prefix of a
|
|
** well-formed CREATE TRIGGER statement. ^Semicolons that are embedded within
|
|
** string literals or quoted identifier names or comments are not
|
|
** independent tokens (they are part of the token in which they are
|
|
** embedded) and thus do not count as a statement terminator. ^Whitespace
|
|
** and comments that follow the final semicolon are ignored.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^These routines return 0 if the statement is incomplete. ^If a
|
|
** memory allocation fails, then SQLITE_NOMEM is returned.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^These routines do not parse the SQL statements thus
|
|
** will not detect syntactically incorrect SQL.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^(If SQLite has not been initialized using [sqlite3_initialize()] prior
|
|
** to invoking sqlite3_complete16() then sqlite3_initialize() is invoked
|
|
** automatically by sqlite3_complete16(). If that initialization fails,
|
|
** then the return value from sqlite3_complete16() will be non-zero
|
|
** regardless of whether or not the input SQL is complete.)^
|
|
**
|
|
** The input to [sqlite3_complete()] must be a zero-terminated
|
|
** UTF-8 string.
|
|
**
|
|
** The input to [sqlite3_complete16()] must be a zero-terminated
|
|
** UTF-16 string in native byte order.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_complete(const char *sql);
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_complete16(const void *sql);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Register A Callback To Handle SQLITE_BUSY Errors
|
|
** KEYWORDS: {busy-handler callback} {busy handler}
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_busy_handler(D,X,P) routine sets a callback function X
|
|
** that might be invoked with argument P whenever
|
|
** an attempt is made to access a database table associated with
|
|
** [database connection] D when another thread
|
|
** or process has the table locked.
|
|
** The sqlite3_busy_handler() interface is used to implement
|
|
** [sqlite3_busy_timeout()] and [PRAGMA busy_timeout].
|
|
**
|
|
** ^If the busy callback is NULL, then [SQLITE_BUSY]
|
|
** is returned immediately upon encountering the lock. ^If the busy callback
|
|
** is not NULL, then the callback might be invoked with two arguments.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The first argument to the busy handler is a copy of the void* pointer which
|
|
** is the third argument to sqlite3_busy_handler(). ^The second argument to
|
|
** the busy handler callback is the number of times that the busy handler has
|
|
** been invoked previously for the same locking event. ^If the
|
|
** busy callback returns 0, then no additional attempts are made to
|
|
** access the database and [SQLITE_BUSY] is returned
|
|
** to the application.
|
|
** ^If the callback returns non-zero, then another attempt
|
|
** is made to access the database and the cycle repeats.
|
|
**
|
|
** The presence of a busy handler does not guarantee that it will be invoked
|
|
** when there is lock contention. ^If SQLite determines that invoking the busy
|
|
** handler could result in a deadlock, it will go ahead and return [SQLITE_BUSY]
|
|
** to the application instead of invoking the
|
|
** busy handler.
|
|
** Consider a scenario where one process is holding a read lock that
|
|
** it is trying to promote to a reserved lock and
|
|
** a second process is holding a reserved lock that it is trying
|
|
** to promote to an exclusive lock. The first process cannot proceed
|
|
** because it is blocked by the second and the second process cannot
|
|
** proceed because it is blocked by the first. If both processes
|
|
** invoke the busy handlers, neither will make any progress. Therefore,
|
|
** SQLite returns [SQLITE_BUSY] for the first process, hoping that this
|
|
** will induce the first process to release its read lock and allow
|
|
** the second process to proceed.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The default busy callback is NULL.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^(There can only be a single busy handler defined for each
|
|
** [database connection]. Setting a new busy handler clears any
|
|
** previously set handler.)^ ^Note that calling [sqlite3_busy_timeout()]
|
|
** or evaluating [PRAGMA busy_timeout=N] will change the
|
|
** busy handler and thus clear any previously set busy handler.
|
|
**
|
|
** The busy callback should not take any actions which modify the
|
|
** database connection that invoked the busy handler. In other words,
|
|
** the busy handler is not reentrant. Any such actions
|
|
** result in undefined behavior.
|
|
**
|
|
** A busy handler must not close the database connection
|
|
** or [prepared statement] that invoked the busy handler.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_busy_handler(sqlite3*,int(*)(void*,int),void*);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Set A Busy Timeout
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** ^This routine sets a [sqlite3_busy_handler | busy handler] that sleeps
|
|
** for a specified amount of time when a table is locked. ^The handler
|
|
** will sleep multiple times until at least "ms" milliseconds of sleeping
|
|
** have accumulated. ^After at least "ms" milliseconds of sleeping,
|
|
** the handler returns 0 which causes [sqlite3_step()] to return
|
|
** [SQLITE_BUSY].
|
|
**
|
|
** ^Calling this routine with an argument less than or equal to zero
|
|
** turns off all busy handlers.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^(There can only be a single busy handler for a particular
|
|
** [database connection] at any given moment. If another busy handler
|
|
** was defined (using [sqlite3_busy_handler()]) prior to calling
|
|
** this routine, that other busy handler is cleared.)^
|
|
**
|
|
** See also: [PRAGMA busy_timeout]
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_busy_timeout(sqlite3*, int ms);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Convenience Routines For Running Queries
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
**
|
|
** This is a legacy interface that is preserved for backwards compatibility.
|
|
** Use of this interface is not recommended.
|
|
**
|
|
** Definition: A <b>result table</b> is memory data structure created by the
|
|
** [sqlite3_get_table()] interface. A result table records the
|
|
** complete query results from one or more queries.
|
|
**
|
|
** The table conceptually has a number of rows and columns. But
|
|
** these numbers are not part of the result table itself. These
|
|
** numbers are obtained separately. Let N be the number of rows
|
|
** and M be the number of columns.
|
|
**
|
|
** A result table is an array of pointers to zero-terminated UTF-8 strings.
|
|
** There are (N+1)*M elements in the array. The first M pointers point
|
|
** to zero-terminated strings that contain the names of the columns.
|
|
** The remaining entries all point to query results. NULL values result
|
|
** in NULL pointers. All other values are in their UTF-8 zero-terminated
|
|
** string representation as returned by [sqlite3_column_text()].
|
|
**
|
|
** A result table might consist of one or more memory allocations.
|
|
** It is not safe to pass a result table directly to [sqlite3_free()].
|
|
** A result table should be deallocated using [sqlite3_free_table()].
|
|
**
|
|
** ^(As an example of the result table format, suppose a query result
|
|
** is as follows:
|
|
**
|
|
** <blockquote><pre>
|
|
** Name | Age
|
|
** -----------------------
|
|
** Alice | 43
|
|
** Bob | 28
|
|
** Cindy | 21
|
|
** </pre></blockquote>
|
|
**
|
|
** There are two columns (M==2) and three rows (N==3). Thus the
|
|
** result table has 8 entries. Suppose the result table is stored
|
|
** in an array named azResult. Then azResult holds this content:
|
|
**
|
|
** <blockquote><pre>
|
|
** azResult[0] = "Name";
|
|
** azResult[1] = "Age";
|
|
** azResult[2] = "Alice";
|
|
** azResult[3] = "43";
|
|
** azResult[4] = "Bob";
|
|
** azResult[5] = "28";
|
|
** azResult[6] = "Cindy";
|
|
** azResult[7] = "21";
|
|
** </pre></blockquote>)^
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_get_table() function evaluates one or more
|
|
** semicolon-separated SQL statements in the zero-terminated UTF-8
|
|
** string of its 2nd parameter and returns a result table to the
|
|
** pointer given in its 3rd parameter.
|
|
**
|
|
** After the application has finished with the result from sqlite3_get_table(),
|
|
** it must pass the result table pointer to sqlite3_free_table() in order to
|
|
** release the memory that was malloced. Because of the way the
|
|
** [sqlite3_malloc()] happens within sqlite3_get_table(), the calling
|
|
** function must not try to call [sqlite3_free()] directly. Only
|
|
** [sqlite3_free_table()] is able to release the memory properly and safely.
|
|
**
|
|
** The sqlite3_get_table() interface is implemented as a wrapper around
|
|
** [sqlite3_exec()]. The sqlite3_get_table() routine does not have access
|
|
** to any internal data structures of SQLite. It uses only the public
|
|
** interface defined here. As a consequence, errors that occur in the
|
|
** wrapper layer outside of the internal [sqlite3_exec()] call are not
|
|
** reflected in subsequent calls to [sqlite3_errcode()] or
|
|
** [sqlite3_errmsg()].
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_get_table(
|
|
sqlite3 *db, /* An open database */
|
|
const char *zSql, /* SQL to be evaluated */
|
|
char ***pazResult, /* Results of the query */
|
|
int *pnRow, /* Number of result rows written here */
|
|
int *pnColumn, /* Number of result columns written here */
|
|
char **pzErrmsg /* Error msg written here */
|
|
);
|
|
SQLITE_API void sqlite3_free_table(char **result);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Formatted String Printing Functions
|
|
**
|
|
** These routines are work-alikes of the "printf()" family of functions
|
|
** from the standard C library.
|
|
** These routines understand most of the common formatting options from
|
|
** the standard library printf()
|
|
** plus some additional non-standard formats ([%q], [%Q], [%w], and [%z]).
|
|
** See the [built-in printf()] documentation for details.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_mprintf() and sqlite3_vmprintf() routines write their
|
|
** results into memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc64()].
|
|
** The strings returned by these two routines should be
|
|
** released by [sqlite3_free()]. ^Both routines return a
|
|
** NULL pointer if [sqlite3_malloc64()] is unable to allocate enough
|
|
** memory to hold the resulting string.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^(The sqlite3_snprintf() routine is similar to "snprintf()" from
|
|
** the standard C library. The result is written into the
|
|
** buffer supplied as the second parameter whose size is given by
|
|
** the first parameter. Note that the order of the
|
|
** first two parameters is reversed from snprintf().)^ This is an
|
|
** historical accident that cannot be fixed without breaking
|
|
** backwards compatibility. ^(Note also that sqlite3_snprintf()
|
|
** returns a pointer to its buffer instead of the number of
|
|
** characters actually written into the buffer.)^ We admit that
|
|
** the number of characters written would be a more useful return
|
|
** value but we cannot change the implementation of sqlite3_snprintf()
|
|
** now without breaking compatibility.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^As long as the buffer size is greater than zero, sqlite3_snprintf()
|
|
** guarantees that the buffer is always zero-terminated. ^The first
|
|
** parameter "n" is the total size of the buffer, including space for
|
|
** the zero terminator. So the longest string that can be completely
|
|
** written will be n-1 characters.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_vsnprintf() routine is a varargs version of sqlite3_snprintf().
|
|
**
|
|
** See also: [built-in printf()], [printf() SQL function]
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_mprintf(const char*,...);
|
|
SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_vmprintf(const char*, va_list);
|
|
SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_snprintf(int,char*,const char*, ...);
|
|
SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_vsnprintf(int,char*,const char*, va_list);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Memory Allocation Subsystem
|
|
**
|
|
** The SQLite core uses these three routines for all of its own
|
|
** internal memory allocation needs. "Core" in the previous sentence
|
|
** does not include operating-system specific [VFS] implementation. The
|
|
** Windows VFS uses native malloc() and free() for some operations.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_malloc() routine returns a pointer to a block
|
|
** of memory at least N bytes in length, where N is the parameter.
|
|
** ^If sqlite3_malloc() is unable to obtain sufficient free
|
|
** memory, it returns a NULL pointer. ^If the parameter N to
|
|
** sqlite3_malloc() is zero or negative then sqlite3_malloc() returns
|
|
** a NULL pointer.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_malloc64(N) routine works just like
|
|
** sqlite3_malloc(N) except that N is an unsigned 64-bit integer instead
|
|
** of a signed 32-bit integer.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^Calling sqlite3_free() with a pointer previously returned
|
|
** by sqlite3_malloc() or sqlite3_realloc() releases that memory so
|
|
** that it might be reused. ^The sqlite3_free() routine is
|
|
** a no-op if is called with a NULL pointer. Passing a NULL pointer
|
|
** to sqlite3_free() is harmless. After being freed, memory
|
|
** should neither be read nor written. Even reading previously freed
|
|
** memory might result in a segmentation fault or other severe error.
|
|
** Memory corruption, a segmentation fault, or other severe error
|
|
** might result if sqlite3_free() is called with a non-NULL pointer that
|
|
** was not obtained from sqlite3_malloc() or sqlite3_realloc().
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_realloc(X,N) interface attempts to resize a
|
|
** prior memory allocation X to be at least N bytes.
|
|
** ^If the X parameter to sqlite3_realloc(X,N)
|
|
** is a NULL pointer then its behavior is identical to calling
|
|
** sqlite3_malloc(N).
|
|
** ^If the N parameter to sqlite3_realloc(X,N) is zero or
|
|
** negative then the behavior is exactly the same as calling
|
|
** sqlite3_free(X).
|
|
** ^sqlite3_realloc(X,N) returns a pointer to a memory allocation
|
|
** of at least N bytes in size or NULL if insufficient memory is available.
|
|
** ^If M is the size of the prior allocation, then min(N,M) bytes
|
|
** of the prior allocation are copied into the beginning of buffer returned
|
|
** by sqlite3_realloc(X,N) and the prior allocation is freed.
|
|
** ^If sqlite3_realloc(X,N) returns NULL and N is positive, then the
|
|
** prior allocation is not freed.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The sqlite3_realloc64(X,N) interfaces works the same as
|
|
** sqlite3_realloc(X,N) except that N is a 64-bit unsigned integer instead
|
|
** of a 32-bit signed integer.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^If X is a memory allocation previously obtained from sqlite3_malloc(),
|
|
** sqlite3_malloc64(), sqlite3_realloc(), or sqlite3_realloc64(), then
|
|
** sqlite3_msize(X) returns the size of that memory allocation in bytes.
|
|
** ^The value returned by sqlite3_msize(X) might be larger than the number
|
|
** of bytes requested when X was allocated. ^If X is a NULL pointer then
|
|
** sqlite3_msize(X) returns zero. If X points to something that is not
|
|
** the beginning of memory allocation, or if it points to a formerly
|
|
** valid memory allocation that has now been freed, then the behavior
|
|
** of sqlite3_msize(X) is undefined and possibly harmful.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The memory returned by sqlite3_malloc(), sqlite3_realloc(),
|
|
** sqlite3_malloc64(), and sqlite3_realloc64()
|
|
** is always aligned to at least an 8 byte boundary, or to a
|
|
** 4 byte boundary if the [SQLITE_4_BYTE_ALIGNED_MALLOC] compile-time
|
|
** option is used.
|
|
**
|
|
** The pointer arguments to [sqlite3_free()] and [sqlite3_realloc()]
|
|
** must be either NULL or else pointers obtained from a prior
|
|
** invocation of [sqlite3_malloc()] or [sqlite3_realloc()] that have
|
|
** not yet been released.
|
|
**
|
|
** The application must not read or write any part of
|
|
** a block of memory after it has been released using
|
|
** [sqlite3_free()] or [sqlite3_realloc()].
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_malloc(int);
|
|
SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_malloc64(sqlite3_uint64);
|
|
SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_realloc(void*, int);
|
|
SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_realloc64(void*, sqlite3_uint64);
|
|
SQLITE_API void sqlite3_free(void*);
|
|
SQLITE_API sqlite3_uint64 sqlite3_msize(void*);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Memory Allocator Statistics
|
|
**
|
|
** SQLite provides these two interfaces for reporting on the status
|
|
** of the [sqlite3_malloc()], [sqlite3_free()], and [sqlite3_realloc()]
|
|
** routines, which form the built-in memory allocation subsystem.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The [sqlite3_memory_used()] routine returns the number of bytes
|
|
** of memory currently outstanding (malloced but not freed).
|
|
** ^The [sqlite3_memory_highwater()] routine returns the maximum
|
|
** value of [sqlite3_memory_used()] since the high-water mark
|
|
** was last reset. ^The values returned by [sqlite3_memory_used()] and
|
|
** [sqlite3_memory_highwater()] include any overhead
|
|
** added by SQLite in its implementation of [sqlite3_malloc()],
|
|
** but not overhead added by the any underlying system library
|
|
** routines that [sqlite3_malloc()] may call.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The memory high-water mark is reset to the current value of
|
|
** [sqlite3_memory_used()] if and only if the parameter to
|
|
** [sqlite3_memory_highwater()] is true. ^The value returned
|
|
** by [sqlite3_memory_highwater(1)] is the high-water mark
|
|
** prior to the reset.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_memory_used(void);
|
|
SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_memory_highwater(int resetFlag);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Pseudo-Random Number Generator
|
|
**
|
|
** SQLite contains a high-quality pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) used to
|
|
** select random [ROWID | ROWIDs] when inserting new records into a table that
|
|
** already uses the largest possible [ROWID]. The PRNG is also used for
|
|
** the built-in random() and randomblob() SQL functions. This interface allows
|
|
** applications to access the same PRNG for other purposes.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^A call to this routine stores N bytes of randomness into buffer P.
|
|
** ^The P parameter can be a NULL pointer.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^If this routine has not been previously called or if the previous
|
|
** call had N less than one or a NULL pointer for P, then the PRNG is
|
|
** seeded using randomness obtained from the xRandomness method of
|
|
** the default [sqlite3_vfs] object.
|
|
** ^If the previous call to this routine had an N of 1 or more and a
|
|
** non-NULL P then the pseudo-randomness is generated
|
|
** internally and without recourse to the [sqlite3_vfs] xRandomness
|
|
** method.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API void sqlite3_randomness(int N, void *P);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Compile-Time Authorization Callbacks
|
|
** METHOD: sqlite3
|
|
** KEYWORDS: {authorizer callback}
|
|
**
|
|
** ^This routine registers an authorizer callback with a particular
|
|
** [database connection], supplied in the first argument.
|
|
** ^The authorizer callback is invoked as SQL statements are being compiled
|
|
** by [sqlite3_prepare()] or its variants [sqlite3_prepare_v2()],
|
|
** [sqlite3_prepare_v3()], [sqlite3_prepare16()], [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()],
|
|
** and [sqlite3_prepare16_v3()]. ^At various
|
|
** points during the compilation process, as logic is being created
|
|
** to perform various actions, the authorizer callback is invoked to
|
|
** see if those actions are allowed. ^The authorizer callback should
|
|
** return [SQLITE_OK] to allow the action, [SQLITE_IGNORE] to disallow the
|
|
** specific action but allow the SQL statement to continue to be
|
|
** compiled, or [SQLITE_DENY] to cause the entire SQL statement to be
|
|
** rejected with an error. ^If the authorizer callback returns
|
|
** any value other than [SQLITE_IGNORE], [SQLITE_OK], or [SQLITE_DENY]
|
|
** then the [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or equivalent call that triggered
|
|
** the authorizer will fail with an error message.
|
|
**
|
|
** When the callback returns [SQLITE_OK], that means the operation
|
|
** requested is ok. ^When the callback returns [SQLITE_DENY], the
|
|
** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or equivalent call that triggered the
|
|
** authorizer will fail with an error message explaining that
|
|
** access is denied.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^The first parameter to the authorizer callback is a copy of the third
|
|
** parameter to the sqlite3_set_authorizer() interface. ^The second parameter
|
|
** to the callback is an integer [SQLITE_COPY | action code] that specifies
|
|
** the particular action to be authorized. ^The third through sixth parameters
|
|
** to the callback are either NULL pointers or zero-terminated strings
|
|
** that contain additional details about the action to be authorized.
|
|
** Applications must always be prepared to encounter a NULL pointer in any
|
|
** of the third through the sixth parameters of the authorization callback.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^If the action code is [SQLITE_READ]
|
|
** and the callback returns [SQLITE_IGNORE] then the
|
|
** [prepared statement] statement is constructed to substitute
|
|
** a NULL value in place of the table column that would have
|
|
** been read if [SQLITE_OK] had been returned. The [SQLITE_IGNORE]
|
|
** return can be used to deny an untrusted user access to individual
|
|
** columns of a table.
|
|
** ^When a table is referenced by a [SELECT] but no column values are
|
|
** extracted from that table (for example in a query like
|
|
** "SELECT count(*) FROM tab") then the [SQLITE_READ] authorizer callback
|
|
** is invoked once for that table with a column name that is an empty string.
|
|
** ^If the action code is [SQLITE_DELETE] and the callback returns
|
|
** [SQLITE_IGNORE] then the [DELETE] operation proceeds but the
|
|
** [truncate optimization] is disabled and all rows are deleted individually.
|
|
**
|
|
** An authorizer is used when [sqlite3_prepare | preparing]
|
|
** SQL statements from an untrusted source, to ensure that the SQL statements
|
|
** do not try to access data they are not allowed to see, or that they do not
|
|
** try to execute malicious statements that damage the database. For
|
|
** example, an application may allow a user to enter arbitrary
|
|
** SQL queries for evaluation by a database. But the application does
|
|
** not want the user to be able to make arbitrary changes to the
|
|
** database. An authorizer could then be put in place while the
|
|
** user-entered SQL is being [sqlite3_prepare | prepared] that
|
|
** disallows everything except [SELECT] statements.
|
|
**
|
|
** Applications that need to process SQL from untrusted sources
|
|
** might also consider lowering resource limits using [sqlite3_limit()]
|
|
** and limiting database size using the [max_page_count] [PRAGMA]
|
|
** in addition to using an authorizer.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^(Only a single authorizer can be in place on a database connection
|
|
** at a time. Each call to sqlite3_set_authorizer overrides the
|
|
** previous call.)^ ^Disable the authorizer by installing a NULL callback.
|
|
** The authorizer is disabled by default.
|
|
**
|
|
** The authorizer callback must not do anything that will modify
|
|
** the database connection that invoked the authorizer callback.
|
|
** Note that [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] both modify their
|
|
** database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph.
|
|
**
|
|
** ^When [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] is used to prepare a statement, the
|
|
** statement might be re-prepared during [sqlite3_step()] due to a
|
|
** schema change. Hence, the application should ensure that the
|
|
** correct authorizer callback remains in place during the [sqlite3_step()].
|
|
**
|
|
** ^Note that the authorizer callback is invoked only during
|
|
** [sqlite3_prepare()] or its variants. Authorization is not
|
|
** performed during statement evaluation in [sqlite3_step()], unless
|
|
** as stated in the previous paragraph, sqlite3_step() invokes
|
|
** sqlite3_prepare_v2() to reprepare a statement after a schema change.
|
|
*/
|
|
SQLITE_API int sqlite3_set_authorizer(
|
|
sqlite3*,
|
|
int (*xAuth)(void*,int,const char*,const char*,const char*,const char*),
|
|
void *pUserData
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Authorizer Return Codes
|
|
**
|
|
** The [sqlite3_set_authorizer | authorizer callback function] must
|
|
** return either [SQLITE_OK] or one of these two constants in order
|
|
** to signal SQLite whether or not the action is permitted. See the
|
|
** [sqlite3_set_authorizer | authorizer documentation] for additional
|
|
** information.
|
|
**
|
|
** Note that SQLITE_IGNORE is also used as a [conflict resolution mode]
|
|
** returned from the [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] interface.
|
|
*/
|
|
#define SQLITE_DENY 1 /* Abort the SQL statement with an error */
|
|
#define SQLITE_IGNORE 2 /* Don't allow access, but don't generate an error */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
** CAPI3REF: Authorizer Action Codes
|
|
**
|
|
** The [sqlite3_set_authorizer()] interface registers a callback function
|
|
** that is invoked to authorize certain SQL statement actions. The
|
|
** second parameter to the callback is an integer code that specifies
|
|
** what action is being authorized. These are the integer action codes that
|
|
** the authorizer callback may be passed.
|
|
**
|
|
** These action code values signify what kind of opera |