Many hyperlinks are disabled.
Use anonymous login
to enable hyperlinks.
Overview
Comment: | Update the built-in SQLite to the first 3.19.0 beta. |
---|---|
Downloads: | Tarball | ZIP archive |
Timelines: | family | ancestors | descendants | both | trunk |
Files: | files | file ages | folders |
SHA1: |
84cb9787706a484a099467bc35e19256 |
User & Date: | drh 2017-05-12 15:32:38.461 |
Context
2017-12-02
| ||
19:15 | Add symlink support to sqlar. check-in: 4a0ed63dae user: dan tags: trunk | |
2017-05-12
| ||
15:32 | Update the built-in SQLite to the first 3.19.0 beta. check-in: 84cb978770 user: drh tags: trunk | |
2016-10-19
| ||
17:07 | Fix a typo on the extract SQL statement. check-in: eb7a492f16 user: drh tags: trunk | |
Changes
Changes to sqlite3.c.
more than 10,000 changes
Changes to sqlite3.h.
︙ | ︙ | |||
110 111 112 113 114 115 116 | ** ** Since [version 3.6.18] ([dateof:3.6.18]), ** SQLite source code has been stored in the ** <a href="http://www.fossil-scm.org/">Fossil configuration management ** system</a>. ^The SQLITE_SOURCE_ID macro evaluates to ** a string which identifies a particular check-in of SQLite ** within its configuration management system. ^The SQLITE_SOURCE_ID | | | | | | | | 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 | ** ** Since [version 3.6.18] ([dateof:3.6.18]), ** SQLite source code has been stored in the ** <a href="http://www.fossil-scm.org/">Fossil configuration management ** system</a>. ^The SQLITE_SOURCE_ID macro evaluates to ** a string which identifies a particular check-in of SQLite ** within its configuration management system. ^The SQLITE_SOURCE_ID ** string contains the date and time of the check-in (UTC) and a SHA1 ** or SHA3-256 hash of the entire source tree. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_libversion()], ** [sqlite3_libversion_number()], [sqlite3_sourceid()], ** [sqlite_version()] and [sqlite_source_id()]. */ #define SQLITE_VERSION "3.19.0" #define SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER 3019000 #define SQLITE_SOURCE_ID "2017-05-12 14:05:11 a123cb93307a6c48bd711d6af9828c87a1365e023f6fe4ca6eae264c8ec5e0c0" /* ** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Library Version Numbers ** KEYWORDS: sqlite3_version sqlite3_sourceid ** ** These interfaces provide the same information as the [SQLITE_VERSION], ** [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER], and [SQLITE_SOURCE_ID] C preprocessor macros ** but are associated with the library instead of the header file. ^(Cautious ** programmers might include assert() statements in their application to ** verify that values returned by these interfaces match the macros in ** the header, and thus ensure that the application is |
︙ | ︙ | |||
152 153 154 155 156 157 158 | ** [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER]. ^The sqlite3_sourceid() function returns ** a pointer to a string constant whose value is the same as the ** [SQLITE_SOURCE_ID] C preprocessor macro. ** ** See also: [sqlite_version()] and [sqlite_source_id()]. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXTERN const char sqlite3_version[]; | | | | | 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 | ** [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER]. ^The sqlite3_sourceid() function returns ** a pointer to a string constant whose value is the same as the ** [SQLITE_SOURCE_ID] C preprocessor macro. ** ** See also: [sqlite_version()] and [sqlite_source_id()]. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXTERN const char sqlite3_version[]; SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_libversion(void); SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_sourceid(void); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_libversion_number(void); /* ** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Library Compilation Options Diagnostics ** ** ^The sqlite3_compileoption_used() function returns 0 or 1 ** indicating whether the specified option was defined at ** compile time. ^The SQLITE_ prefix may be omitted from the |
︙ | ︙ | |||
179 180 181 182 183 184 185 | ** and sqlite3_compileoption_get() may be omitted by specifying the ** [SQLITE_OMIT_COMPILEOPTION_DIAGS] option at compile time. ** ** See also: SQL functions [sqlite_compileoption_used()] and ** [sqlite_compileoption_get()] and the [compile_options pragma]. */ #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_COMPILEOPTION_DIAGS | | | | 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 | ** and sqlite3_compileoption_get() may be omitted by specifying the ** [SQLITE_OMIT_COMPILEOPTION_DIAGS] option at compile time. ** ** See also: SQL functions [sqlite_compileoption_used()] and ** [sqlite_compileoption_get()] and the [compile_options pragma]. */ #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_COMPILEOPTION_DIAGS SQLITE_API int sqlite3_compileoption_used(const char *zOptName); SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_compileoption_get(int N); #endif /* ** CAPI3REF: Test To See If The Library Is Threadsafe ** ** ^The sqlite3_threadsafe() function returns zero if and only if ** SQLite was compiled with mutexing code omitted due to the |
︙ | ︙ | |||
219 220 221 222 223 224 225 | ** sqlite3_threadsafe() function shows only the compile-time setting of ** thread safety, not any run-time changes to that setting made by ** sqlite3_config(). In other words, the return value from sqlite3_threadsafe() ** is unchanged by calls to sqlite3_config().)^ ** ** See the [threading mode] documentation for additional information. */ | | | 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 | ** sqlite3_threadsafe() function shows only the compile-time setting of ** thread safety, not any run-time changes to that setting made by ** sqlite3_config(). In other words, the return value from sqlite3_threadsafe() ** is unchanged by calls to sqlite3_config().)^ ** ** See the [threading mode] documentation for additional information. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_threadsafe(void); /* ** CAPI3REF: Database Connection Handle ** KEYWORDS: {database connection} {database connections} ** ** Each open SQLite database is represented by a pointer to an instance of ** the opaque structure named "sqlite3". It is useful to think of an sqlite3 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
255 256 257 258 259 260 261 | ** ^The sqlite3_int64 and sqlite_int64 types can store integer values ** between -9223372036854775808 and +9223372036854775807 inclusive. ^The ** sqlite3_uint64 and sqlite_uint64 types can store integer values ** between 0 and +18446744073709551615 inclusive. */ #ifdef SQLITE_INT64_TYPE typedef SQLITE_INT64_TYPE sqlite_int64; | > > > | > | 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 | ** ^The sqlite3_int64 and sqlite_int64 types can store integer values ** between -9223372036854775808 and +9223372036854775807 inclusive. ^The ** sqlite3_uint64 and sqlite_uint64 types can store integer values ** between 0 and +18446744073709551615 inclusive. */ #ifdef SQLITE_INT64_TYPE typedef SQLITE_INT64_TYPE sqlite_int64; # ifdef SQLITE_UINT64_TYPE typedef SQLITE_UINT64_TYPE sqlite_uint64; # else typedef unsigned SQLITE_INT64_TYPE sqlite_uint64; # endif #elif defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__BORLANDC__) typedef __int64 sqlite_int64; typedef unsigned __int64 sqlite_uint64; #else typedef long long int sqlite_int64; typedef unsigned long long int sqlite_uint64; #endif |
︙ | ︙ | |||
316 317 318 319 320 321 322 | ** must be either a NULL ** pointer or an [sqlite3] object pointer obtained ** from [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()], or ** [sqlite3_open_v2()], and not previously closed. ** ^Calling sqlite3_close() or sqlite3_close_v2() with a NULL pointer ** argument is a harmless no-op. */ | | | | 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 | ** must be either a NULL ** pointer or an [sqlite3] object pointer obtained ** from [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()], or ** [sqlite3_open_v2()], and not previously closed. ** ^Calling sqlite3_close() or sqlite3_close_v2() with a NULL pointer ** argument is a harmless no-op. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_close(sqlite3*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_close_v2(sqlite3*); /* ** The type for a callback function. ** This is legacy and deprecated. It is included for historical ** compatibility and is not documented. */ typedef int (*sqlite3_callback)(void*,int,char**, char**); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
388 389 390 391 392 393 394 | ** is a valid and open [database connection]. ** <li> The application must not close the [database connection] specified by ** the 1st parameter to sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running. ** <li> The application must not modify the SQL statement text passed into ** the 2nd parameter of sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running. ** </ul> */ | | | 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 | ** is a valid and open [database connection]. ** <li> The application must not close the [database connection] specified by ** the 1st parameter to sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running. ** <li> The application must not modify the SQL statement text passed into ** the 2nd parameter of sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running. ** </ul> */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec( sqlite3*, /* An open database */ const char *sql, /* SQL to be evaluated */ int (*callback)(void*,int,char**,char**), /* Callback function */ void *, /* 1st argument to callback */ char **errmsg /* Error msg written here */ ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
568 569 570 571 572 573 574 | ** 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 | | | 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 | ** 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. */ #define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC 0x00000001 #define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC512 0x00000002 #define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC1K 0x00000004 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 | ** <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] ** </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 | > > > | 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 | ** <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] ** </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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
846 847 848 849 850 851 852 | ** 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 | | | 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867 | ** 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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 | ** 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_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. ** | > > > > > > | 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996 997 998 999 | ** 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. ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 | #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 /* 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 | > > | 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 | #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 /* 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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
1388 1389 1390 1391 1392 1393 1394 | ** (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. */ | | | | | | 1403 1404 1405 1406 1407 1408 1409 1410 1411 1412 1413 1414 1415 1416 1417 1418 1419 1420 | ** (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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
1424 1425 1426 1427 1428 1429 1430 | ** vary depending on the [configuration option] ** in the first argument. ** ** ^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]. */ | | | | 1439 1440 1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466 1467 1468 1469 1470 1471 1472 | ** vary depending on the [configuration option] ** in the first argument. ** ** ^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. ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 | ** 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> ** ** </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* */ /* ** 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. */ | > > > > > > > > > > > > > | | | | < | | > > > > | > > > > > > > > > | | < | | < | 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053 2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 2071 2072 2073 | ** 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> ** ** <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 behaviour. The first parameter passed to this operation ** is an integer - non-zero to disable checkpoints-on-close, or zero (the ** default) to enable them. 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> ** ** </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* */ /* ** 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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 | ** 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]. */ | | > > > > > > > > > > | 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 2100 2101 2102 2103 2104 2105 2106 2107 2108 | ** 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 ** ** ^This function returns the number of rows modified, inserted or ** deleted by the most recently completed INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2099 2100 2101 2102 2103 2104 2105 | ** See also the [sqlite3_total_changes()] interface, the ** [count_changes pragma], and the [changes() SQL function]. ** ** 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. */ | | | 2147 2148 2149 2150 2151 2152 2153 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158 2159 2160 2161 | ** See also the [sqlite3_total_changes()] interface, the ** [count_changes pragma], and the [changes() SQL function]. ** ** 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. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_changes(sqlite3*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Total Number Of Rows Modified ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^This function returns the total number of rows inserted, modified or ** deleted by all [INSERT], [UPDATE] or [DELETE] statements completed |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2123 2124 2125 2126 2127 2128 2129 | ** See also the [sqlite3_changes()] interface, the ** [count_changes pragma], and the [total_changes() SQL function]. ** ** 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. */ | | | 2171 2172 2173 2174 2175 2176 2177 2178 2179 2180 2181 2182 2183 2184 2185 | ** See also the [sqlite3_changes()] interface, the ** [count_changes pragma], and the [total_changes() SQL function]. ** ** 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. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_total_changes(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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2159 2160 2161 2162 2163 2164 2165 | ** running statements 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. | < < < | | 2207 2208 2209 2210 2211 2212 2213 2214 2215 2216 2217 2218 2219 2220 2221 2222 | ** running statements 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. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_interrupt(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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2198 2199 2200 2201 2202 2203 2204 | ** ** 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. */ | | | | 2243 2244 2245 2246 2247 2248 2249 2250 2251 2252 2253 2254 2255 2256 2257 2258 | ** ** 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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2260 2261 2262 2263 2264 2265 2266 | ** 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. */ | | | 2305 2306 2307 2308 2309 2310 2311 2312 2313 2314 2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 | ** 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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2283 2284 2285 2286 2287 2288 2289 | ** ^(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] */ | | | 2328 2329 2330 2331 2332 2333 2334 2335 2336 2337 2338 2339 2340 2341 2342 | ** ^(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. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2358 2359 2360 2361 2362 2363 2364 | ** [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()]. */ | | | | 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414 2415 2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422 2423 2424 2425 | ** [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 K&R formatting options, |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2472 2473 2474 2475 2476 2477 2478 | ** character.)^ The "%w" formatting option is intended for safely inserting ** table and column names into a constructed SQL statement. ** ** ^(The "%z" formatting option works like "%s" but with the ** addition that after the string has been read and copied into ** the result, [sqlite3_free()] is called on the input string.)^ */ | | | | | | 2517 2518 2519 2520 2521 2522 2523 2524 2525 2526 2527 2528 2529 2530 2531 2532 2533 2534 | ** character.)^ The "%w" formatting option is intended for safely inserting ** table and column names into a constructed SQL statement. ** ** ^(The "%z" formatting option works like "%s" but with the ** addition that after the string has been read and copied into ** the result, [sqlite3_free()] is called on the input string.)^ */ 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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2565 2566 2567 2568 2569 2570 2571 | ** 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()]. */ | | | | | | | | 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616 2617 2618 2619 2620 2621 2622 2623 2624 2625 2626 2627 2628 2629 | ** 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. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2595 2596 2597 2598 2599 2600 2601 | ** ** ^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. */ | | | | 2640 2641 2642 2643 2644 2645 2646 2647 2648 2649 2650 2651 2652 2653 2654 2655 | ** ** ^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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2619 2620 2621 2622 2623 2624 2625 | ** 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. */ | | > | 2664 2665 2666 2667 2668 2669 2670 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 2679 2680 2681 2682 2683 | ** 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_prepare16()] and [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()]. ^At various ** points during the compilation process, as logic is being created |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2651 2652 2653 2654 2655 2656 2657 | ** 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 | | | > > > > > > | 2697 2698 2699 2700 2701 2702 2703 2704 2705 2706 2707 2708 2709 2710 2711 2712 2713 2714 2715 2716 2717 2718 2719 2720 2721 2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 | ** 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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2702 2703 2704 2705 2706 2707 2708 | ** ** ^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. */ | | | 2754 2755 2756 2757 2758 2759 2760 2761 2762 2763 2764 2765 2766 2767 2768 | ** ** ^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 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2810 2811 2812 2813 2814 2815 2816 | ** time is in units of nanoseconds, however the current implementation ** is only capable of millisecond resolution so the six least significant ** digits in the time are meaningless. Future versions of SQLite ** might provide greater resolution on the profiler callback. The ** sqlite3_profile() function is considered experimental and is ** subject to change in future versions of SQLite. */ | | | | 2862 2863 2864 2865 2866 2867 2868 2869 2870 2871 2872 2873 2874 2875 2876 2877 2878 | ** time is in units of nanoseconds, however the current implementation ** is only capable of millisecond resolution so the six least significant ** digits in the time are meaningless. Future versions of SQLite ** might provide greater resolution on the profiler callback. The ** sqlite3_profile() function is considered experimental and is ** subject to change in future versions of SQLite. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED void *sqlite3_trace(sqlite3*, void(*xTrace)(void*,const char*), void*); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED void *sqlite3_profile(sqlite3*, void(*xProfile)(void*,const char*,sqlite3_uint64), void*); /* ** CAPI3REF: SQL Trace Event Codes ** KEYWORDS: SQLITE_TRACE ** ** These constants identify classes of events that can be monitored |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2901 2902 2903 2904 2905 2906 2907 | ** ^The C argument is a copy of the context pointer. ** The P and X arguments are pointers whose meanings depend on T. ** ** The sqlite3_trace_v2() interface is intended to replace the legacy ** interfaces [sqlite3_trace()] and [sqlite3_profile()], both of which ** are deprecated. */ | | | 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963 2964 2965 2966 2967 | ** ^The C argument is a copy of the context pointer. ** The P and X arguments are pointers whose meanings depend on T. ** ** The sqlite3_trace_v2() interface is intended to replace the legacy ** interfaces [sqlite3_trace()] and [sqlite3_profile()], both of which ** are deprecated. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_trace_v2( sqlite3*, unsigned uMask, int(*xCallback)(unsigned,void*,void*,void*), void *pCtx ); /* |
︙ | ︙ | |||
2940 2941 2942 2943 2944 2945 2946 | ** ** The progress handler callback must not do anything that will modify ** the database connection that invoked the progress handler. ** Note that [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] both modify their ** database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph. ** */ | | | 2992 2993 2994 2995 2996 2997 2998 2999 3000 3001 3002 3003 3004 3005 3006 | ** ** The progress handler callback must not do anything that will modify ** the database connection that invoked the progress handler. ** Note that [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] both modify their ** database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph. ** */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_progress_handler(sqlite3*, int, int(*)(void*), void*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Opening A New Database Connection ** CONSTRUCTOR: sqlite3 ** ** ^These routines open an SQLite database file as specified by the ** filename argument. ^The filename argument is interpreted as UTF-8 for |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3169 3170 3171 3172 3173 3174 3175 | ** ** <b>Note to Windows Runtime users:</b> The temporary directory must be set ** prior to calling sqlite3_open() or sqlite3_open_v2(). Otherwise, various ** features that require the use of temporary files may fail. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_temp_directory] */ | | | | | 3221 3222 3223 3224 3225 3226 3227 3228 3229 3230 3231 3232 3233 3234 3235 3236 3237 3238 3239 3240 3241 3242 3243 | ** ** <b>Note to Windows Runtime users:</b> The temporary directory must be set ** prior to calling sqlite3_open() or sqlite3_open_v2(). Otherwise, various ** features that require the use of temporary files may fail. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_temp_directory] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_open( const char *filename, /* Database filename (UTF-8) */ sqlite3 **ppDb /* OUT: SQLite db handle */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_open16( const void *filename, /* Database filename (UTF-16) */ sqlite3 **ppDb /* OUT: SQLite db handle */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_open_v2( const char *filename, /* Database filename (UTF-8) */ sqlite3 **ppDb, /* OUT: SQLite db handle */ int flags, /* Flags */ const char *zVfs /* Name of VFS module to use */ ); /* |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3223 3224 3225 3226 3227 3228 3229 | ** ** If F is a NULL pointer, then sqlite3_uri_parameter(F,P) returns NULL and ** sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) returns B. If F is not a NULL pointer and ** is not a database file pathname pointer that SQLite passed into the xOpen ** VFS method, then the behavior of this routine is undefined and probably ** undesirable. */ | | | | | 3275 3276 3277 3278 3279 3280 3281 3282 3283 3284 3285 3286 3287 3288 3289 3290 3291 | ** ** If F is a NULL pointer, then sqlite3_uri_parameter(F,P) returns NULL and ** sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) returns B. If F is not a NULL pointer and ** is not a database file pathname pointer that SQLite passed into the xOpen ** VFS method, then the behavior of this routine is undefined and probably ** undesirable. */ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_uri_parameter(const char *zFilename, const char *zParam); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_uri_boolean(const char *zFile, const char *zParam, int bDefault); SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_uri_int64(const char*, const char*, sqlite3_int64); /* ** CAPI3REF: Error Codes And Messages ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^If the most recent sqlite3_* API call associated with |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3269 3270 3271 3272 3273 3274 3275 | ** to use D and invoking [sqlite3_mutex_leave]([sqlite3_db_mutex](D)) after ** all calls to the interfaces listed here are completed. ** ** If an interface fails with SQLITE_MISUSE, that means the interface ** was invoked incorrectly by the application. In that case, the ** error code and message may or may not be set. */ | | | | | | | 3321 3322 3323 3324 3325 3326 3327 3328 3329 3330 3331 3332 3333 3334 3335 3336 3337 3338 3339 | ** to use D and invoking [sqlite3_mutex_leave]([sqlite3_db_mutex](D)) after ** all calls to the interfaces listed here are completed. ** ** If an interface fails with SQLITE_MISUSE, that means the interface ** was invoked incorrectly by the application. In that case, the ** error code and message may or may not be set. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_errcode(sqlite3 *db); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_extended_errcode(sqlite3 *db); SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_errmsg(sqlite3*); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_errmsg16(sqlite3*); SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_errstr(int); /* ** CAPI3REF: Prepared Statement Object ** KEYWORDS: {prepared statement} {prepared statements} ** ** An instance of this object represents a single SQL statement that ** has been compiled into binary form and is ready to be evaluated. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3341 3342 3343 3344 3345 3346 3347 | ** attack. Developers might also want to use the [sqlite3_set_authorizer()] ** interface to further control untrusted SQL. The size of the database ** created by an untrusted script can be contained using the ** [max_page_count] [PRAGMA]. ** ** New run-time limit categories may be added in future releases. */ | | | 3393 3394 3395 3396 3397 3398 3399 3400 3401 3402 3403 3404 3405 3406 3407 | ** attack. Developers might also want to use the [sqlite3_set_authorizer()] ** interface to further control untrusted SQL. The size of the database ** created by an untrusted script can be contained using the ** [max_page_count] [PRAGMA]. ** ** New run-time limit categories may be added in future releases. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_limit(sqlite3*, int id, int newVal); /* ** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Limit Categories ** KEYWORDS: {limit category} {*limit categories} ** ** These constants define various performance limits ** that can be lowered at run-time using [sqlite3_limit()]. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3372 3373 3374 3375 3376 3377 3378 | ** <dd>The maximum depth of the parse tree on any expression.</dd>)^ ** ** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_COMPOUND_SELECT]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_COMPOUND_SELECT</dt> ** <dd>The maximum number of terms in a compound SELECT statement.</dd>)^ ** ** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP</dt> ** <dd>The maximum number of instructions in a virtual machine program | | | | | 3424 3425 3426 3427 3428 3429 3430 3431 3432 3433 3434 3435 3436 3437 3438 3439 3440 | ** <dd>The maximum depth of the parse tree on any expression.</dd>)^ ** ** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_COMPOUND_SELECT]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_COMPOUND_SELECT</dt> ** <dd>The maximum number of terms in a compound SELECT statement.</dd>)^ ** ** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP</dt> ** <dd>The maximum number of instructions in a virtual machine program ** used to implement an SQL statement. If [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or ** the equivalent tries to allocate space for more than this many opcodes ** in a single prepared statement, an SQLITE_NOMEM error is returned.</dd>)^ ** ** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_FUNCTION_ARG]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_FUNCTION_ARG</dt> ** <dd>The maximum number of arguments on a function.</dd>)^ ** ** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_ATTACHED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_ATTACHED</dt> ** <dd>The maximum number of [ATTACH | attached databases].)^</dd> ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3411 3412 3413 3414 3415 3416 3417 3418 3419 3420 3421 3422 3423 3424 | #define SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP 5 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_FUNCTION_ARG 6 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_ATTACHED 7 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_LIKE_PATTERN_LENGTH 8 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER 9 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_TRIGGER_DEPTH 10 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_WORKER_THREADS 11 /* ** CAPI3REF: Compiling An SQL Statement ** KEYWORDS: {SQL statement compiler} ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** CONSTRUCTOR: sqlite3_stmt ** | > | 3463 3464 3465 3466 3467 3468 3469 3470 3471 3472 3473 3474 3475 3476 3477 | #define SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP 5 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_FUNCTION_ARG 6 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_ATTACHED 7 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_LIKE_PATTERN_LENGTH 8 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER 9 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_TRIGGER_DEPTH 10 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_WORKER_THREADS 11 /* ** CAPI3REF: Compiling An SQL Statement ** KEYWORDS: {SQL statement compiler} ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** CONSTRUCTOR: sqlite3_stmt ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3493 3494 3495 3496 3497 3498 3499 | ** ^The specific value of WHERE-clause [parameter] might influence the ** choice of query plan if the parameter is the left-hand side of a [LIKE] ** or [GLOB] operator or if the parameter is compared to an indexed column ** and the [SQLITE_ENABLE_STAT3] compile-time option is enabled. ** </li> ** </ol> */ | | | | | | 3546 3547 3548 3549 3550 3551 3552 3553 3554 3555 3556 3557 3558 3559 3560 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 3568 3569 3570 3571 3572 3573 3574 3575 3576 3577 3578 3579 3580 3581 | ** ^The specific value of WHERE-clause [parameter] might influence the ** choice of query plan if the parameter is the left-hand side of a [LIKE] ** or [GLOB] operator or if the parameter is compared to an indexed column ** and the [SQLITE_ENABLE_STAT3] compile-time option is enabled. ** </li> ** </ol> */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_prepare( sqlite3 *db, /* Database handle */ const char *zSql, /* SQL statement, UTF-8 encoded */ int nByte, /* Maximum length of zSql in bytes. */ sqlite3_stmt **ppStmt, /* OUT: Statement handle */ const char **pzTail /* OUT: Pointer to unused portion of zSql */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_prepare_v2( sqlite3 *db, /* Database handle */ const char *zSql, /* SQL statement, UTF-8 encoded */ int nByte, /* Maximum length of zSql in bytes. */ sqlite3_stmt **ppStmt, /* OUT: Statement handle */ const char **pzTail /* OUT: Pointer to unused portion of zSql */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_prepare16( sqlite3 *db, /* Database handle */ const void *zSql, /* SQL statement, UTF-16 encoded */ int nByte, /* Maximum length of zSql in bytes. */ sqlite3_stmt **ppStmt, /* OUT: Statement handle */ const void **pzTail /* OUT: Pointer to unused portion of zSql */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_prepare16_v2( sqlite3 *db, /* Database handle */ const void *zSql, /* SQL statement, UTF-16 encoded */ int nByte, /* Maximum length of zSql in bytes. */ sqlite3_stmt **ppStmt, /* OUT: Statement handle */ const void **pzTail /* OUT: Pointer to unused portion of zSql */ ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3553 3554 3555 3556 3557 3558 3559 | ** ** ^The string returned by sqlite3_sql(P) is managed by SQLite and is ** automatically freed when the prepared statement is finalized. ** ^The string returned by sqlite3_expanded_sql(P), on the other hand, ** is obtained from [sqlite3_malloc()] and must be free by the application ** by passing it to [sqlite3_free()]. */ | | | | 3606 3607 3608 3609 3610 3611 3612 3613 3614 3615 3616 3617 3618 3619 3620 3621 | ** ** ^The string returned by sqlite3_sql(P) is managed by SQLite and is ** automatically freed when the prepared statement is finalized. ** ^The string returned by sqlite3_expanded_sql(P), on the other hand, ** is obtained from [sqlite3_malloc()] and must be free by the application ** by passing it to [sqlite3_free()]. */ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_sql(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_expanded_sql(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); /* ** CAPI3REF: Determine If An SQL Statement Writes The Database ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^The sqlite3_stmt_readonly(X) interface returns true (non-zero) if ** and only if the [prepared statement] X makes no direct changes to |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3585 3586 3587 3588 3589 3590 3591 3592 | ** [SAVEPOINT], and [RELEASE] cause sqlite3_stmt_readonly() to return true, ** since the statements themselves do not actually modify the database but ** rather they control the timing of when other statements modify the ** database. ^The [ATTACH] and [DETACH] statements also cause ** sqlite3_stmt_readonly() to return true since, while those statements ** change the configuration of a database connection, they do not make ** changes to the content of the database files on disk. */ | > > > > | | | 3638 3639 3640 3641 3642 3643 3644 3645 3646 3647 3648 3649 3650 3651 3652 3653 3654 3655 3656 3657 3658 3659 3660 3661 3662 3663 3664 3665 3666 3667 3668 3669 3670 3671 3672 3673 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 | ** [SAVEPOINT], and [RELEASE] cause sqlite3_stmt_readonly() to return true, ** since the statements themselves do not actually modify the database but ** rather they control the timing of when other statements modify the ** database. ^The [ATTACH] and [DETACH] statements also cause ** sqlite3_stmt_readonly() to return true since, while those statements ** change the configuration of a database connection, they do not make ** changes to the content of the database files on disk. ** ^The sqlite3_stmt_readonly() interface returns true for [BEGIN] since ** [BEGIN] merely sets internal flags, but the [BEGIN|BEGIN IMMEDIATE] and ** [BEGIN|BEGIN EXCLUSIVE] commands do touch the database and so ** sqlite3_stmt_readonly() returns false for those commands. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_readonly(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); /* ** CAPI3REF: Determine If A Prepared Statement Has Been Reset ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^The sqlite3_stmt_busy(S) interface returns true (non-zero) if the ** [prepared statement] S has been stepped at least once using ** [sqlite3_step(S)] but has neither run to completion (returned ** [SQLITE_DONE] from [sqlite3_step(S)]) nor ** been reset using [sqlite3_reset(S)]. ^The sqlite3_stmt_busy(S) ** interface returns false if S is a NULL pointer. If S is not a ** NULL pointer and is not a pointer to a valid [prepared statement] ** object, then the behavior is undefined and probably undesirable. ** ** This interface can be used in combination [sqlite3_next_stmt()] ** to locate all prepared statements associated with a database ** connection that are in need of being reset. This can be used, ** for example, in diagnostic routines to search for prepared ** statements that are holding a transaction open. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_busy(sqlite3_stmt*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Dynamically Typed Value Object ** KEYWORDS: {protected sqlite3_value} {unprotected sqlite3_value} ** ** SQLite uses the sqlite3_value object to represent all values ** that can be stored in a database table. SQLite uses dynamic typing |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3648 3649 3650 3651 3652 3653 3654 | ** ^The sqlite3_value object returned by ** [sqlite3_column_value()] is unprotected. ** Unprotected sqlite3_value objects may only be used with ** [sqlite3_result_value()] and [sqlite3_bind_value()]. ** The [sqlite3_value_blob | sqlite3_value_type()] family of ** interfaces require protected sqlite3_value objects. */ | | | 3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712 3713 3714 3715 3716 3717 3718 3719 | ** ^The sqlite3_value object returned by ** [sqlite3_column_value()] is unprotected. ** Unprotected sqlite3_value objects may only be used with ** [sqlite3_result_value()] and [sqlite3_bind_value()]. ** The [sqlite3_value_blob | sqlite3_value_type()] family of ** interfaces require protected sqlite3_value objects. */ typedef struct sqlite3_value sqlite3_value; /* ** CAPI3REF: SQL Function Context Object ** ** The context in which an SQL function executes is stored in an ** sqlite3_context object. ^A pointer to an sqlite3_context object ** is always first parameter to [application-defined SQL functions]. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3771 3772 3773 3774 3775 3776 3777 | ** [SQLITE_MAX_LENGTH]. ** ^[SQLITE_RANGE] is returned if the parameter ** index is out of range. ^[SQLITE_NOMEM] is returned if malloc() fails. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_bind_parameter_count()], ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_name()], and [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()]. */ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 3828 3829 3830 3831 3832 3833 3834 3835 3836 3837 3838 3839 3840 3841 3842 3843 3844 3845 3846 3847 3848 3849 3850 3851 3852 3853 3854 3855 3856 3857 3858 3859 3860 3861 3862 3863 3864 3865 3866 3867 3868 3869 3870 3871 3872 3873 3874 3875 3876 | ** [SQLITE_MAX_LENGTH]. ** ^[SQLITE_RANGE] is returned if the parameter ** index is out of range. ^[SQLITE_NOMEM] is returned if malloc() fails. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_bind_parameter_count()], ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_name()], and [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_blob(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const void*, int n, void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_blob64(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const void*, sqlite3_uint64, void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_double(sqlite3_stmt*, int, double); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_int(sqlite3_stmt*, int, int); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_int64(sqlite3_stmt*, int, sqlite3_int64); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_null(sqlite3_stmt*, int); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text(sqlite3_stmt*,int,const char*,int,void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text16(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const void*, int, void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text64(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const char*, sqlite3_uint64, void(*)(void*), unsigned char encoding); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_value(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_zeroblob(sqlite3_stmt*, int, int n); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_zeroblob64(sqlite3_stmt*, int, sqlite3_uint64); /* ** CAPI3REF: Number Of SQL Parameters ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^This routine can be used to find the number of [SQL parameters] ** in a [prepared statement]. SQL parameters are tokens of the ** form "?", "?NNN", ":AAA", "$AAA", or "@AAA" that serve as ** placeholders for values that are [sqlite3_bind_blob | bound] ** to the parameters at a later time. ** ** ^(This routine actually returns the index of the largest (rightmost) ** parameter. For all forms except ?NNN, this will correspond to the ** number of unique parameters. If parameters of the ?NNN form are used, ** there may be gaps in the list.)^ ** ** See also: [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()], ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_name()], and ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_parameter_count(sqlite3_stmt*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Name Of A Host Parameter ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^The sqlite3_bind_parameter_name(P,N) interface returns ** the name of the N-th [SQL parameter] in the [prepared statement] P. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3833 3834 3835 3836 3837 3838 3839 | ** originally specified as UTF-16 in [sqlite3_prepare16()] or ** [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()]. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()], ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_count()], and ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()]. */ | | | | | | > > > > | | 3890 3891 3892 3893 3894 3895 3896 3897 3898 3899 3900 3901 3902 3903 3904 3905 3906 3907 3908 3909 3910 3911 3912 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917 3918 3919 3920 3921 3922 3923 3924 3925 3926 3927 3928 3929 3930 3931 3932 3933 3934 3935 3936 3937 3938 3939 3940 3941 3942 3943 3944 3945 3946 3947 | ** originally specified as UTF-16 in [sqlite3_prepare16()] or ** [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()]. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()], ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_count()], and ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()]. */ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_bind_parameter_name(sqlite3_stmt*, int); /* ** CAPI3REF: Index Of A Parameter With A Given Name ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^Return the index of an SQL parameter given its name. ^The ** index value returned is suitable for use as the second ** parameter to [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()]. ^A zero ** is returned if no matching parameter is found. ^The parameter ** name must be given in UTF-8 even if the original statement ** was prepared from UTF-16 text using [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()]. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()], ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_count()], and ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_name()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_parameter_index(sqlite3_stmt*, const char *zName); /* ** CAPI3REF: Reset All Bindings On A Prepared Statement ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^Contrary to the intuition of many, [sqlite3_reset()] does not reset ** the [sqlite3_bind_blob | bindings] on a [prepared statement]. ** ^Use this routine to reset all host parameters to NULL. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_clear_bindings(sqlite3_stmt*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Number Of Columns In A Result Set ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^Return the number of columns in the result set returned by the ** [prepared statement]. ^If this routine returns 0, that means the ** [prepared statement] returns no data (for example an [UPDATE]). ** ^However, just because this routine returns a positive number does not ** mean that one or more rows of data will be returned. ^A SELECT statement ** will always have a positive sqlite3_column_count() but depending on the ** WHERE clause constraints and the table content, it might return no rows. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_data_count()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_count(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); /* ** CAPI3REF: Column Names In A Result Set ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^These routines return the name assigned to a particular column ** in the result set of a [SELECT] statement. ^The sqlite3_column_name() |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3901 3902 3903 3904 3905 3906 3907 | ** NULL pointer is returned. ** ** ^The name of a result column is the value of the "AS" clause for ** that column, if there is an AS clause. If there is no AS clause ** then the name of the column is unspecified and may change from ** one release of SQLite to the next. */ | | | | 3962 3963 3964 3965 3966 3967 3968 3969 3970 3971 3972 3973 3974 3975 3976 3977 | ** NULL pointer is returned. ** ** ^The name of a result column is the value of the "AS" clause for ** that column, if there is an AS clause. If there is no AS clause ** then the name of the column is unspecified and may change from ** one release of SQLite to the next. */ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_name(sqlite3_stmt*, int N); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_name16(sqlite3_stmt*, int N); /* ** CAPI3REF: Source Of Data In A Query Result ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^These routines provide a means to determine the database, table, and ** table column that is the origin of a particular result column in |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3950 3951 3952 3953 3954 3955 3956 | ** undefined. ** ** If two or more threads call one or more ** [sqlite3_column_database_name | column metadata interfaces] ** for the same [prepared statement] and result column ** at the same time then the results are undefined. */ | | | | | | | | 4011 4012 4013 4014 4015 4016 4017 4018 4019 4020 4021 4022 4023 4024 4025 4026 4027 4028 4029 4030 | ** undefined. ** ** If two or more threads call one or more ** [sqlite3_column_database_name | column metadata interfaces] ** for the same [prepared statement] and result column ** at the same time then the results are undefined. */ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_database_name(sqlite3_stmt*,int); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_database_name16(sqlite3_stmt*,int); SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_table_name(sqlite3_stmt*,int); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_table_name16(sqlite3_stmt*,int); SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_origin_name(sqlite3_stmt*,int); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_origin_name16(sqlite3_stmt*,int); /* ** CAPI3REF: Declared Datatype Of A Query Result ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^(The first parameter is a [prepared statement]. ** If this statement is a [SELECT] statement and the Nth column of the |
︙ | ︙ | |||
3987 3988 3989 3990 3991 3992 3993 | ** ^SQLite uses dynamic run-time typing. ^So just because a column ** is declared to contain a particular type does not mean that the ** data stored in that column is of the declared type. SQLite is ** strongly typed, but the typing is dynamic not static. ^Type ** is associated with individual values, not with the containers ** used to hold those values. */ | | | | 4048 4049 4050 4051 4052 4053 4054 4055 4056 4057 4058 4059 4060 4061 4062 4063 | ** ^SQLite uses dynamic run-time typing. ^So just because a column ** is declared to contain a particular type does not mean that the ** data stored in that column is of the declared type. SQLite is ** strongly typed, but the typing is dynamic not static. ^Type ** is associated with individual values, not with the containers ** used to hold those values. */ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_decltype(sqlite3_stmt*,int); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_decltype16(sqlite3_stmt*,int); /* ** CAPI3REF: Evaluate An SQL Statement ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** After a [prepared statement] has been prepared using either ** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()] or one of the legacy |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4069 4070 4071 4072 4073 4074 4075 | ** We admit that this is a goofy design. The problem has been fixed ** with the "v2" interface. If you prepare all of your SQL statements ** using either [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()] instead ** of the legacy [sqlite3_prepare()] and [sqlite3_prepare16()] interfaces, ** then the more specific [error codes] are returned directly ** by sqlite3_step(). The use of the "v2" interface is recommended. */ | | | | 4130 4131 4132 4133 4134 4135 4136 4137 4138 4139 4140 4141 4142 4143 4144 4145 4146 4147 4148 4149 4150 4151 4152 4153 4154 4155 4156 4157 4158 4159 4160 4161 4162 4163 4164 4165 | ** We admit that this is a goofy design. The problem has been fixed ** with the "v2" interface. If you prepare all of your SQL statements ** using either [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()] instead ** of the legacy [sqlite3_prepare()] and [sqlite3_prepare16()] interfaces, ** then the more specific [error codes] are returned directly ** by sqlite3_step(). The use of the "v2" interface is recommended. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_step(sqlite3_stmt*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Number of columns in a result set ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) interface returns the number of columns in the ** current row of the result set of [prepared statement] P. ** ^If prepared statement P does not have results ready to return ** (via calls to the [sqlite3_column_int | sqlite3_column_*()] of ** interfaces) then sqlite3_data_count(P) returns 0. ** ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) routine also returns 0 if P is a NULL pointer. ** ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) routine returns 0 if the previous call to ** [sqlite3_step](P) returned [SQLITE_DONE]. ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) ** will return non-zero if previous call to [sqlite3_step](P) returned ** [SQLITE_ROW], except in the case of the [PRAGMA incremental_vacuum] ** where it always returns zero since each step of that multi-step ** pragma returns 0 columns of data. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_column_count()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_data_count(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); /* ** CAPI3REF: Fundamental Datatypes ** KEYWORDS: SQLITE_TEXT ** ** ^(Every value in SQLite has one of five fundamental datatypes: ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4280 4281 4282 4283 4284 4285 4286 | ** ** ^(If a memory allocation error occurs during the evaluation of any ** of these routines, a default value is returned. The default value ** is either the integer 0, the floating point number 0.0, or a NULL ** pointer. Subsequent calls to [sqlite3_errcode()] will return ** [SQLITE_NOMEM].)^ */ | | | | | | | | | | | | 4341 4342 4343 4344 4345 4346 4347 4348 4349 4350 4351 4352 4353 4354 4355 4356 4357 4358 4359 4360 4361 4362 4363 4364 | ** ** ^(If a memory allocation error occurs during the evaluation of any ** of these routines, a default value is returned. The default value ** is either the integer 0, the floating point number 0.0, or a NULL ** pointer. Subsequent calls to [sqlite3_errcode()] will return ** [SQLITE_NOMEM].)^ */ SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_blob(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_bytes(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_bytes16(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API double sqlite3_column_double(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_int(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_column_int64(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API const unsigned char *sqlite3_column_text(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_text16(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_type(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); SQLITE_API sqlite3_value *sqlite3_column_value(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol); /* ** CAPI3REF: Destroy A Prepared Statement Object ** DESTRUCTOR: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^The sqlite3_finalize() function is called to delete a [prepared statement]. ** ^If the most recent evaluation of the statement encountered no errors |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4317 4318 4319 4320 4321 4322 4323 | ** ** The application must finalize every [prepared statement] in order to avoid ** resource leaks. It is a grievous error for the application to try to use ** a prepared statement after it has been finalized. Any use of a prepared ** statement after it has been finalized can result in undefined and ** undesirable behavior such as segfaults and heap corruption. */ | | | 4378 4379 4380 4381 4382 4383 4384 4385 4386 4387 4388 4389 4390 4391 4392 | ** ** The application must finalize every [prepared statement] in order to avoid ** resource leaks. It is a grievous error for the application to try to use ** a prepared statement after it has been finalized. Any use of a prepared ** statement after it has been finalized can result in undefined and ** undesirable behavior such as segfaults and heap corruption. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_finalize(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); /* ** CAPI3REF: Reset A Prepared Statement Object ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** The sqlite3_reset() function is called to reset a [prepared statement] ** object back to its initial state, ready to be re-executed. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4344 4345 4346 4347 4348 4349 4350 | ** ^If the most recent call to [sqlite3_step(S)] for the ** [prepared statement] S indicated an error, then ** [sqlite3_reset(S)] returns an appropriate [error code]. ** ** ^The [sqlite3_reset(S)] interface does not change the values ** of any [sqlite3_bind_blob|bindings] on the [prepared statement] S. */ | | | 4405 4406 4407 4408 4409 4410 4411 4412 4413 4414 4415 4416 4417 4418 4419 | ** ^If the most recent call to [sqlite3_step(S)] for the ** [prepared statement] S indicated an error, then ** [sqlite3_reset(S)] returns an appropriate [error code]. ** ** ^The [sqlite3_reset(S)] interface does not change the values ** of any [sqlite3_bind_blob|bindings] on the [prepared statement] S. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_reset(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); /* ** CAPI3REF: Create Or Redefine SQL Functions ** KEYWORDS: {function creation routines} ** KEYWORDS: {application-defined SQL function} ** KEYWORDS: {application-defined SQL functions} ** METHOD: sqlite3 |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4444 4445 4446 4447 4448 4449 4450 | ** ^Built-in functions may be overloaded by new application-defined functions. ** ** ^An application-defined function is permitted to call other ** SQLite interfaces. However, such calls must not ** close the database connection nor finalize or reset the prepared ** statement in which the function is running. */ | | | | | 4505 4506 4507 4508 4509 4510 4511 4512 4513 4514 4515 4516 4517 4518 4519 4520 4521 4522 4523 4524 4525 4526 4527 4528 4529 4530 4531 4532 4533 4534 4535 4536 4537 4538 4539 | ** ^Built-in functions may be overloaded by new application-defined functions. ** ** ^An application-defined function is permitted to call other ** SQLite interfaces. However, such calls must not ** close the database connection nor finalize or reset the prepared ** statement in which the function is running. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_function( sqlite3 *db, const char *zFunctionName, int nArg, int eTextRep, void *pApp, void (*xFunc)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**), void (*xStep)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**), void (*xFinal)(sqlite3_context*) ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_function16( sqlite3 *db, const void *zFunctionName, int nArg, int eTextRep, void *pApp, void (*xFunc)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**), void (*xStep)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**), void (*xFinal)(sqlite3_context*) ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_function_v2( sqlite3 *db, const char *zFunctionName, int nArg, int eTextRep, void *pApp, void (*xFunc)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**), void (*xStep)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**), |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4510 4511 4512 4513 4514 4515 4516 | ** These functions are [deprecated]. In order to maintain ** backwards compatibility with older code, these functions continue ** to be supported. However, new applications should avoid ** the use of these functions. To encourage programmers to avoid ** these functions, we will not explain what they do. */ #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_DEPRECATED | | | | | | | | 4571 4572 4573 4574 4575 4576 4577 4578 4579 4580 4581 4582 4583 4584 4585 4586 4587 4588 4589 4590 | ** These functions are [deprecated]. In order to maintain ** backwards compatibility with older code, these functions continue ** to be supported. However, new applications should avoid ** the use of these functions. To encourage programmers to avoid ** these functions, we will not explain what they do. */ #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_DEPRECATED SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_aggregate_count(sqlite3_context*); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_expired(sqlite3_stmt*); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_transfer_bindings(sqlite3_stmt*, sqlite3_stmt*); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_global_recover(void); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED void sqlite3_thread_cleanup(void); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_memory_alarm(void(*)(void*,sqlite3_int64,int), void*,sqlite3_int64); #endif /* ** CAPI3REF: Obtaining SQL Values ** METHOD: sqlite3_value ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4565 4566 4567 4568 4569 4570 4571 | ** [sqlite3_value_text16()] can be invalidated by a subsequent call to ** [sqlite3_value_bytes()], [sqlite3_value_bytes16()], [sqlite3_value_text()], ** or [sqlite3_value_text16()]. ** ** These routines must be called from the same thread as ** the SQL function that supplied the [sqlite3_value*] parameters. */ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 4626 4627 4628 4629 4630 4631 4632 4633 4634 4635 4636 4637 4638 4639 4640 4641 4642 4643 4644 4645 4646 4647 4648 4649 4650 4651 4652 4653 4654 4655 4656 4657 4658 4659 4660 4661 4662 4663 4664 4665 4666 4667 4668 4669 4670 4671 4672 4673 4674 4675 4676 4677 4678 4679 4680 4681 4682 4683 4684 | ** [sqlite3_value_text16()] can be invalidated by a subsequent call to ** [sqlite3_value_bytes()], [sqlite3_value_bytes16()], [sqlite3_value_text()], ** or [sqlite3_value_text16()]. ** ** These routines must be called from the same thread as ** the SQL function that supplied the [sqlite3_value*] parameters. */ SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_value_blob(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_bytes(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_bytes16(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API double sqlite3_value_double(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_int(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_value_int64(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API const unsigned char *sqlite3_value_text(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_value_text16(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_value_text16le(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_value_text16be(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_type(sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_numeric_type(sqlite3_value*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Finding The Subtype Of SQL Values ** METHOD: sqlite3_value ** ** The sqlite3_value_subtype(V) function returns the subtype for ** an [application-defined SQL function] argument V. The subtype ** information can be used to pass a limited amount of context from ** one SQL function to another. Use the [sqlite3_result_subtype()] ** routine to set the subtype for the return value of an SQL function. ** ** SQLite makes no use of subtype itself. It merely passes the subtype ** from the result of one [application-defined SQL function] into the ** input of another. */ SQLITE_API unsigned int sqlite3_value_subtype(sqlite3_value*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Copy And Free SQL Values ** METHOD: sqlite3_value ** ** ^The sqlite3_value_dup(V) interface makes a copy of the [sqlite3_value] ** object D and returns a pointer to that copy. ^The [sqlite3_value] returned ** is a [protected sqlite3_value] object even if the input is not. ** ^The sqlite3_value_dup(V) interface returns NULL if V is NULL or if a ** memory allocation fails. ** ** ^The sqlite3_value_free(V) interface frees an [sqlite3_value] object ** previously obtained from [sqlite3_value_dup()]. ^If V is a NULL pointer ** then sqlite3_value_free(V) is a harmless no-op. */ SQLITE_API sqlite3_value *sqlite3_value_dup(const sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_value_free(sqlite3_value*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Obtain Aggregate Function Context ** METHOD: sqlite3_context ** ** Implementations of aggregate SQL functions use this ** routine to allocate memory for storing their state. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4654 4655 4656 4657 4658 4659 4660 | ** [sqlite3_context | SQL function context] that is the first parameter ** to the xStep or xFinal callback routine that implements the aggregate ** function. ** ** This routine must be called from the same thread in which ** the aggregate SQL function is running. */ | | | | | | | > | | 4715 4716 4717 4718 4719 4720 4721 4722 4723 4724 4725 4726 4727 4728 4729 4730 4731 4732 4733 4734 4735 4736 4737 4738 4739 4740 4741 4742 4743 4744 4745 4746 4747 4748 4749 4750 4751 4752 4753 4754 4755 4756 4757 4758 4759 4760 4761 4762 4763 4764 4765 4766 4767 4768 4769 4770 4771 4772 4773 4774 4775 4776 4777 | ** [sqlite3_context | SQL function context] that is the first parameter ** to the xStep or xFinal callback routine that implements the aggregate ** function. ** ** This routine must be called from the same thread in which ** the aggregate SQL function is running. */ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_aggregate_context(sqlite3_context*, int nBytes); /* ** CAPI3REF: User Data For Functions ** METHOD: sqlite3_context ** ** ^The sqlite3_user_data() interface returns a copy of ** the pointer that was the pUserData parameter (the 5th parameter) ** of the [sqlite3_create_function()] ** and [sqlite3_create_function16()] routines that originally ** registered the application defined function. ** ** This routine must be called from the same thread in which ** the application-defined function is running. */ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_user_data(sqlite3_context*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Database Connection For Functions ** METHOD: sqlite3_context ** ** ^The sqlite3_context_db_handle() interface returns a copy of ** the pointer to the [database connection] (the 1st parameter) ** of the [sqlite3_create_function()] ** and [sqlite3_create_function16()] routines that originally ** registered the application defined function. */ SQLITE_API sqlite3 *sqlite3_context_db_handle(sqlite3_context*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Function Auxiliary Data ** METHOD: sqlite3_context ** ** These functions may be used by (non-aggregate) SQL functions to ** associate metadata with argument values. If the same value is passed to ** multiple invocations of the same SQL function during query execution, under ** some circumstances the associated metadata may be preserved. An example ** of where this might be useful is in a regular-expression matching ** function. The compiled version of the regular expression can be stored as ** metadata associated with the pattern string. ** Then as long as the pattern string remains the same, ** the compiled regular expression can be reused on multiple ** invocations of the same function. ** ** ^The sqlite3_get_auxdata(C,N) interface returns a pointer to the metadata ** associated by the sqlite3_set_auxdata(C,N,P,X) function with the Nth argument ** value to the application-defined function. ^N is zero for the left-most ** function argument. ^If there is no metadata ** associated with the function argument, the sqlite3_get_auxdata(C,N) interface ** returns a NULL pointer. ** ** ^The sqlite3_set_auxdata(C,N,P,X) interface saves P as metadata for the N-th ** argument of the application-defined function. ^Subsequent ** calls to sqlite3_get_auxdata(C,N) return P from the most recent ** sqlite3_set_auxdata(C,N,P,X) call if the metadata is still valid or ** NULL if the metadata has been discarded. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4731 4732 4733 4734 4735 4736 4737 4738 4739 4740 4741 | ** should be called near the end of the function implementation and the ** function implementation should not make any use of P after ** sqlite3_set_auxdata() has been called. ** ** ^(In practice, metadata is preserved between function calls for ** function parameters that are compile-time constants, including literal ** values and [parameters] and expressions composed from the same.)^ ** ** These routines must be called from the same thread in which ** the SQL function is running. */ | > > > > | | | 4793 4794 4795 4796 4797 4798 4799 4800 4801 4802 4803 4804 4805 4806 4807 4808 4809 4810 4811 4812 4813 4814 4815 4816 | ** should be called near the end of the function implementation and the ** function implementation should not make any use of P after ** sqlite3_set_auxdata() has been called. ** ** ^(In practice, metadata is preserved between function calls for ** function parameters that are compile-time constants, including literal ** values and [parameters] and expressions composed from the same.)^ ** ** The value of the N parameter to these interfaces should be non-negative. ** Future enhancements may make use of negative N values to define new ** kinds of function caching behavior. ** ** These routines must be called from the same thread in which ** the SQL function is running. */ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_get_auxdata(sqlite3_context*, int N); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_set_auxdata(sqlite3_context*, int N, void*, void (*)(void*)); /* ** CAPI3REF: Constants Defining Special Destructor Behavior ** ** These are special values for the destructor that is passed in as the ** final argument to routines like [sqlite3_result_blob()]. ^If the destructor |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4872 4873 4874 4875 4876 4877 4878 | ** [unprotected sqlite3_value] object is required, so either ** kind of [sqlite3_value] object can be used with this interface. ** ** If these routines are called from within the different thread ** than the one containing the application-defined function that received ** the [sqlite3_context] pointer, the results are undefined. */ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 4938 4939 4940 4941 4942 4943 4944 4945 4946 4947 4948 4949 4950 4951 4952 4953 4954 4955 4956 4957 4958 4959 4960 4961 4962 4963 4964 4965 4966 4967 4968 4969 4970 4971 4972 4973 4974 4975 4976 4977 4978 4979 4980 4981 4982 4983 4984 4985 4986 4987 | ** [unprotected sqlite3_value] object is required, so either ** kind of [sqlite3_value] object can be used with this interface. ** ** If these routines are called from within the different thread ** than the one containing the application-defined function that received ** the [sqlite3_context] pointer, the results are undefined. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_blob(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int, void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_blob64(sqlite3_context*,const void*, sqlite3_uint64,void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_double(sqlite3_context*, double); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error(sqlite3_context*, const char*, int); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error16(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error_toobig(sqlite3_context*); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error_nomem(sqlite3_context*); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error_code(sqlite3_context*, int); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_int(sqlite3_context*, int); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_int64(sqlite3_context*, sqlite3_int64); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_null(sqlite3_context*); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text(sqlite3_context*, const char*, int, void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text64(sqlite3_context*, const char*,sqlite3_uint64, void(*)(void*), unsigned char encoding); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int, void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16le(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int,void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16be(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int,void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_value(sqlite3_context*, sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_zeroblob(sqlite3_context*, int n); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_result_zeroblob64(sqlite3_context*, sqlite3_uint64 n); /* ** CAPI3REF: Setting The Subtype Of An SQL Function ** METHOD: sqlite3_context ** ** The sqlite3_result_subtype(C,T) function causes the subtype of ** the result from the [application-defined SQL function] with ** [sqlite3_context] C to be the value T. Only the lower 8 bits ** of the subtype T are preserved in current versions of SQLite; ** higher order bits are discarded. ** The number of subtype bytes preserved by SQLite might increase ** in future releases of SQLite. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_subtype(sqlite3_context*,unsigned int); /* ** CAPI3REF: Define New Collating Sequences ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^These functions add, remove, or modify a [collation] associated ** with the [database connection] specified as the first argument. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
4989 4990 4991 4992 4993 4994 4995 | ** themselves rather than expecting SQLite to deal with it for them. ** This is different from every other SQLite interface. The inconsistency ** is unfortunate but cannot be changed without breaking backwards ** compatibility. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_collation_needed()] and [sqlite3_collation_needed16()]. */ | | | | | 5055 5056 5057 5058 5059 5060 5061 5062 5063 5064 5065 5066 5067 5068 5069 5070 5071 5072 5073 5074 5075 5076 5077 5078 5079 5080 5081 5082 5083 5084 | ** themselves rather than expecting SQLite to deal with it for them. ** This is different from every other SQLite interface. The inconsistency ** is unfortunate but cannot be changed without breaking backwards ** compatibility. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_collation_needed()] and [sqlite3_collation_needed16()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_collation( sqlite3*, const char *zName, int eTextRep, void *pArg, int(*xCompare)(void*,int,const void*,int,const void*) ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_collation_v2( sqlite3*, const char *zName, int eTextRep, void *pArg, int(*xCompare)(void*,int,const void*,int,const void*), void(*xDestroy)(void*) ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_collation16( sqlite3*, const void *zName, int eTextRep, void *pArg, int(*xCompare)(void*,int,const void*,int,const void*) ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5039 5040 5041 5042 5043 5044 5045 | ** sequence function required. The fourth parameter is the name of the ** required collation sequence.)^ ** ** The callback function should register the desired collation using ** [sqlite3_create_collation()], [sqlite3_create_collation16()], or ** [sqlite3_create_collation_v2()]. */ | | | | | | | | | | 5105 5106 5107 5108 5109 5110 5111 5112 5113 5114 5115 5116 5117 5118 5119 5120 5121 5122 5123 5124 5125 5126 5127 5128 5129 5130 5131 5132 5133 5134 5135 5136 5137 5138 5139 5140 5141 5142 5143 5144 5145 5146 5147 5148 5149 5150 5151 5152 5153 5154 5155 5156 5157 5158 5159 5160 5161 5162 5163 5164 5165 5166 5167 5168 5169 5170 5171 5172 5173 5174 5175 5176 5177 5178 5179 5180 | ** sequence function required. The fourth parameter is the name of the ** required collation sequence.)^ ** ** The callback function should register the desired collation using ** [sqlite3_create_collation()], [sqlite3_create_collation16()], or ** [sqlite3_create_collation_v2()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_collation_needed( sqlite3*, void*, void(*)(void*,sqlite3*,int eTextRep,const char*) ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_collation_needed16( sqlite3*, void*, void(*)(void*,sqlite3*,int eTextRep,const void*) ); #ifdef SQLITE_HAS_CODEC /* ** Specify the key for an encrypted database. This routine should be ** called right after sqlite3_open(). ** ** The code to implement this API is not available in the public release ** of SQLite. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_key( sqlite3 *db, /* Database to be rekeyed */ const void *pKey, int nKey /* The key */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_key_v2( sqlite3 *db, /* Database to be rekeyed */ const char *zDbName, /* Name of the database */ const void *pKey, int nKey /* The key */ ); /* ** Change the key on an open database. If the current database is not ** encrypted, this routine will encrypt it. If pNew==0 or nNew==0, the ** database is decrypted. ** ** The code to implement this API is not available in the public release ** of SQLite. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rekey( sqlite3 *db, /* Database to be rekeyed */ const void *pKey, int nKey /* The new key */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rekey_v2( sqlite3 *db, /* Database to be rekeyed */ const char *zDbName, /* Name of the database */ const void *pKey, int nKey /* The new key */ ); /* ** Specify the activation key for a SEE database. Unless ** activated, none of the SEE routines will work. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_activate_see( const char *zPassPhrase /* Activation phrase */ ); #endif #ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_CEROD /* ** Specify the activation key for a CEROD database. Unless ** activated, none of the CEROD routines will work. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_activate_cerod( const char *zPassPhrase /* Activation phrase */ ); #endif /* ** CAPI3REF: Suspend Execution For A Short Time ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5122 5123 5124 5125 5126 5127 5128 | ** ** ^SQLite implements this interface by calling the xSleep() ** method of the default [sqlite3_vfs] object. If the xSleep() method ** of the default VFS is not implemented correctly, or not implemented at ** all, then the behavior of sqlite3_sleep() may deviate from the description ** in the previous paragraphs. */ | | | 5188 5189 5190 5191 5192 5193 5194 5195 5196 5197 5198 5199 5200 5201 5202 | ** ** ^SQLite implements this interface by calling the xSleep() ** method of the default [sqlite3_vfs] object. If the xSleep() method ** of the default VFS is not implemented correctly, or not implemented at ** all, then the behavior of sqlite3_sleep() may deviate from the description ** in the previous paragraphs. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_sleep(int); /* ** CAPI3REF: Name Of The Folder Holding Temporary Files ** ** ^(If this global variable is made to point to a string which is ** the name of a folder (a.k.a. directory), then all temporary files ** created by SQLite when using a built-in [sqlite3_vfs | VFS] |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5241 5242 5243 5244 5245 5246 5247 | ** find out whether SQLite automatically rolled back the transaction after ** an error is to use this function. ** ** If another thread changes the autocommit status of the database ** connection while this routine is running, then the return value ** is undefined. */ | | | | | | | 5307 5308 5309 5310 5311 5312 5313 5314 5315 5316 5317 5318 5319 5320 5321 5322 5323 5324 5325 5326 5327 5328 5329 5330 5331 5332 5333 5334 5335 5336 5337 5338 5339 5340 5341 5342 5343 5344 5345 5346 5347 5348 5349 5350 5351 5352 5353 5354 5355 5356 5357 5358 5359 5360 5361 5362 5363 5364 5365 5366 5367 5368 5369 5370 5371 5372 5373 5374 5375 5376 5377 | ** find out whether SQLite automatically rolled back the transaction after ** an error is to use this function. ** ** If another thread changes the autocommit status of the database ** connection while this routine is running, then the return value ** is undefined. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_get_autocommit(sqlite3*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Find The Database Handle Of A Prepared Statement ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^The sqlite3_db_handle interface returns the [database connection] handle ** to which a [prepared statement] belongs. ^The [database connection] ** returned by sqlite3_db_handle is the same [database connection] ** that was the first argument ** to the [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] call (or its variants) that was used to ** create the statement in the first place. */ SQLITE_API sqlite3 *sqlite3_db_handle(sqlite3_stmt*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Return The Filename For A Database Connection ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^The sqlite3_db_filename(D,N) interface returns a pointer to a filename ** associated with database N of connection D. ^The main database file ** has the name "main". If there is no attached database N on the database ** connection D, or if database N is a temporary or in-memory database, then ** a NULL pointer is returned. ** ** ^The filename returned by this function is the output of the ** xFullPathname method of the [VFS]. ^In other words, the filename ** will be an absolute pathname, even if the filename used ** to open the database originally was a URI or relative pathname. */ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_db_filename(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDbName); /* ** CAPI3REF: Determine if a database is read-only ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^The sqlite3_db_readonly(D,N) interface returns 1 if the database N ** of connection D is read-only, 0 if it is read/write, or -1 if N is not ** the name of a database on connection D. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_readonly(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDbName); /* ** CAPI3REF: Find the next prepared statement ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^This interface returns a pointer to the next [prepared statement] after ** pStmt associated with the [database connection] pDb. ^If pStmt is NULL ** then this interface returns a pointer to the first prepared statement ** associated with the database connection pDb. ^If no prepared statement ** satisfies the conditions of this routine, it returns NULL. ** ** The [database connection] pointer D in a call to ** [sqlite3_next_stmt(D,S)] must refer to an open database ** connection and in particular must not be a NULL pointer. */ SQLITE_API sqlite3_stmt *sqlite3_next_stmt(sqlite3 *pDb, sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); /* ** CAPI3REF: Commit And Rollback Notification Callbacks ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^The sqlite3_commit_hook() interface registers a callback ** function to be invoked whenever a transaction is [COMMIT | committed]. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5346 5347 5348 5349 5350 5351 5352 | ** rolled back if an explicit "ROLLBACK" statement is executed, or ** an error or constraint causes an implicit rollback to occur. ** ^The rollback callback is not invoked if a transaction is ** automatically rolled back because the database connection is closed. ** ** See also the [sqlite3_update_hook()] interface. */ | | | | 5412 5413 5414 5415 5416 5417 5418 5419 5420 5421 5422 5423 5424 5425 5426 5427 | ** rolled back if an explicit "ROLLBACK" statement is executed, or ** an error or constraint causes an implicit rollback to occur. ** ^The rollback callback is not invoked if a transaction is ** automatically rolled back because the database connection is closed. ** ** See also the [sqlite3_update_hook()] interface. */ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_commit_hook(sqlite3*, int(*)(void*), void*); SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_rollback_hook(sqlite3*, void(*)(void *), void*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Data Change Notification Callbacks ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^The sqlite3_update_hook() interface registers a callback function ** with the [database connection] identified by the first argument |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5377 5378 5379 5380 5381 5382 5383 | ** ^In the case of an update, this is the [rowid] after the update takes place. ** ** ^(The update hook is not invoked when internal system tables are ** modified (i.e. sqlite_master and sqlite_sequence).)^ ** ^The update hook is not invoked when [WITHOUT ROWID] tables are modified. ** ** ^In the current implementation, the update hook | | | | 5443 5444 5445 5446 5447 5448 5449 5450 5451 5452 5453 5454 5455 5456 5457 5458 5459 5460 5461 5462 5463 5464 5465 5466 5467 5468 5469 5470 5471 5472 5473 5474 5475 5476 5477 5478 | ** ^In the case of an update, this is the [rowid] after the update takes place. ** ** ^(The update hook is not invoked when internal system tables are ** modified (i.e. sqlite_master and sqlite_sequence).)^ ** ^The update hook is not invoked when [WITHOUT ROWID] tables are modified. ** ** ^In the current implementation, the update hook ** is not invoked when conflicting rows are deleted because of an ** [ON CONFLICT | ON CONFLICT REPLACE] clause. ^Nor is the update hook ** invoked when rows are deleted using the [truncate optimization]. ** The exceptions defined in this paragraph might change in a future ** release of SQLite. ** ** The update hook implementation must not do anything that will modify ** the database connection that invoked the update hook. Any actions ** to modify the database connection must be deferred until after the ** completion of the [sqlite3_step()] call that triggered the update hook. ** Note that [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] both modify their ** database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph. ** ** ^The sqlite3_update_hook(D,C,P) function ** returns the P argument from the previous call ** on the same [database connection] D, or NULL for ** the first call on D. ** ** See also the [sqlite3_commit_hook()], [sqlite3_rollback_hook()], ** and [sqlite3_preupdate_hook()] interfaces. */ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_update_hook( sqlite3*, void(*)(void *,int ,char const *,char const *,sqlite3_int64), void* ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Enable Or Disable Shared Pager Cache |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5439 5440 5441 5442 5443 5444 5445 | ** [sqlite3_open_v2()] with [SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE]. ** ** This interface is threadsafe on processors where writing a ** 32-bit integer is atomic. ** ** See Also: [SQLite Shared-Cache Mode] */ | | | | | 5505 5506 5507 5508 5509 5510 5511 5512 5513 5514 5515 5516 5517 5518 5519 5520 5521 5522 5523 5524 5525 5526 5527 5528 5529 5530 5531 5532 5533 5534 5535 5536 5537 5538 5539 5540 5541 5542 5543 5544 5545 5546 5547 5548 5549 | ** [sqlite3_open_v2()] with [SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE]. ** ** This interface is threadsafe on processors where writing a ** 32-bit integer is atomic. ** ** See Also: [SQLite Shared-Cache Mode] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_enable_shared_cache(int); /* ** CAPI3REF: Attempt To Free Heap Memory ** ** ^The sqlite3_release_memory() interface attempts to free N bytes ** of heap memory by deallocating non-essential memory allocations ** held by the database library. Memory used to cache database ** pages to improve performance is an example of non-essential memory. ** ^sqlite3_release_memory() returns the number of bytes actually freed, ** which might be more or less than the amount requested. ** ^The sqlite3_release_memory() routine is a no-op returning zero ** if SQLite is not compiled with [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT]. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_db_release_memory()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_release_memory(int); /* ** CAPI3REF: Free Memory Used By A Database Connection ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^The sqlite3_db_release_memory(D) interface attempts to free as much heap ** memory as possible from database connection D. Unlike the ** [sqlite3_release_memory()] interface, this interface is in effect even ** when the [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT] compile-time option is ** omitted. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_release_memory()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_release_memory(sqlite3*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Impose A Limit On Heap Size ** ** ^The sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64() interface sets and/or queries the ** soft limit on the amount of heap memory that may be allocated by SQLite. ** ^SQLite strives to keep heap memory utilization below the soft heap |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5522 5523 5524 5525 5526 5527 5528 | ** the page cache is the predominate memory user in SQLite, most ** applications will achieve adequate soft heap limit enforcement without ** the use of [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT]. ** ** The circumstances under which SQLite will enforce the soft heap limit may ** changes in future releases of SQLite. */ | | | | 5588 5589 5590 5591 5592 5593 5594 5595 5596 5597 5598 5599 5600 5601 5602 5603 5604 5605 5606 5607 5608 5609 5610 5611 5612 5613 | ** the page cache is the predominate memory user in SQLite, most ** applications will achieve adequate soft heap limit enforcement without ** the use of [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT]. ** ** The circumstances under which SQLite will enforce the soft heap limit may ** changes in future releases of SQLite. */ SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64(sqlite3_int64 N); /* ** CAPI3REF: Deprecated Soft Heap Limit Interface ** DEPRECATED ** ** This is a deprecated version of the [sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64()] ** interface. This routine is provided for historical compatibility ** only. All new applications should use the ** [sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64()] interface rather than this one. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED void sqlite3_soft_heap_limit(int N); /* ** CAPI3REF: Extract Metadata About A Column Of A Table ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^(The sqlite3_table_column_metadata(X,D,T,C,....) routine returns |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5603 5604 5605 5606 5607 5608 5609 | ** auto increment: 0 ** </pre>)^ ** ** ^This function causes all database schemas to be read from disk and ** parsed, if that has not already been done, and returns an error if ** any errors are encountered while loading the schema. */ | | | 5669 5670 5671 5672 5673 5674 5675 5676 5677 5678 5679 5680 5681 5682 5683 | ** auto increment: 0 ** </pre>)^ ** ** ^This function causes all database schemas to be read from disk and ** parsed, if that has not already been done, and returns an error if ** any errors are encountered while loading the schema. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_table_column_metadata( sqlite3 *db, /* Connection handle */ const char *zDbName, /* Database name or NULL */ const char *zTableName, /* Table name */ const char *zColumnName, /* Column name */ char const **pzDataType, /* OUTPUT: Declared data type */ char const **pzCollSeq, /* OUTPUT: Collation sequence name */ int *pNotNull, /* OUTPUT: True if NOT NULL constraint exists */ |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5659 5660 5661 5662 5663 5664 5665 | ** interface. The use of the [sqlite3_enable_load_extension()] interface ** should be avoided. This will keep the SQL function [load_extension()] ** disabled and prevent SQL injections from giving attackers ** access to extension loading capabilities. ** ** See also the [load_extension() SQL function]. */ | | | 5725 5726 5727 5728 5729 5730 5731 5732 5733 5734 5735 5736 5737 5738 5739 | ** interface. The use of the [sqlite3_enable_load_extension()] interface ** should be avoided. This will keep the SQL function [load_extension()] ** disabled and prevent SQL injections from giving attackers ** access to extension loading capabilities. ** ** See also the [load_extension() SQL function]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_load_extension( sqlite3 *db, /* Load the extension into this database connection */ const char *zFile, /* Name of the shared library containing extension */ const char *zProc, /* Entry point. Derived from zFile if 0 */ char **pzErrMsg /* Put error message here if not 0 */ ); /* |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5691 5692 5693 5694 5695 5696 5697 | ** ** <b>Security warning:</b> It is recommended that extension loading ** be disabled using the [SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_LOAD_EXTENSION] method ** rather than this interface, so the [load_extension()] SQL function ** remains disabled. This will prevent SQL injections from giving attackers ** access to extension loading capabilities. */ | | | 5757 5758 5759 5760 5761 5762 5763 5764 5765 5766 5767 5768 5769 5770 5771 | ** ** <b>Security warning:</b> It is recommended that extension loading ** be disabled using the [SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_LOAD_EXTENSION] method ** rather than this interface, so the [load_extension()] SQL function ** remains disabled. This will prevent SQL injections from giving attackers ** access to extension loading capabilities. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_enable_load_extension(sqlite3 *db, int onoff); /* ** CAPI3REF: Automatically Load Statically Linked Extensions ** ** ^This interface causes the xEntryPoint() function to be invoked for ** each new [database connection] that is created. The idea here is that ** xEntryPoint() is the entry point for a statically linked [SQLite extension] |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5729 5730 5731 5732 5733 5734 5735 | ** ^Calling sqlite3_auto_extension(X) with an entry point X that is already ** on the list of automatic extensions is a harmless no-op. ^No entry point ** will be called more than once for each database connection that is opened. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_reset_auto_extension()] ** and [sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension()] */ | | | | | 5795 5796 5797 5798 5799 5800 5801 5802 5803 5804 5805 5806 5807 5808 5809 5810 5811 5812 5813 5814 5815 5816 5817 5818 5819 5820 5821 5822 5823 5824 5825 5826 5827 5828 5829 | ** ^Calling sqlite3_auto_extension(X) with an entry point X that is already ** on the list of automatic extensions is a harmless no-op. ^No entry point ** will be called more than once for each database connection that is opened. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_reset_auto_extension()] ** and [sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_auto_extension(void(*xEntryPoint)(void)); /* ** CAPI3REF: Cancel Automatic Extension Loading ** ** ^The [sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension(X)] interface unregisters the ** initialization routine X that was registered using a prior call to ** [sqlite3_auto_extension(X)]. ^The [sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension(X)] ** routine returns 1 if initialization routine X was successfully ** unregistered and it returns 0 if X was not on the list of initialization ** routines. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension(void(*xEntryPoint)(void)); /* ** CAPI3REF: Reset Automatic Extension Loading ** ** ^This interface disables all automatic extensions previously ** registered using [sqlite3_auto_extension()]. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_reset_auto_extension(void); /* ** The interface to the virtual-table mechanism is currently considered ** to be experimental. The interface might change in incompatible ways. ** If this is a problem for you, do not use the interface at this time. ** ** When the virtual-table mechanism stabilizes, we will declare the |
︙ | ︙ | |||
5996 5997 5998 5999 6000 6001 6002 | ** invoke the destructor function (if it is not NULL) when SQLite ** no longer needs the pClientData pointer. ^The destructor will also ** be invoked if the call to sqlite3_create_module_v2() fails. ** ^The sqlite3_create_module() ** interface is equivalent to sqlite3_create_module_v2() with a NULL ** destructor. */ | | | | 6062 6063 6064 6065 6066 6067 6068 6069 6070 6071 6072 6073 6074 6075 6076 6077 6078 6079 6080 6081 6082 | ** invoke the destructor function (if it is not NULL) when SQLite ** no longer needs the pClientData pointer. ^The destructor will also ** be invoked if the call to sqlite3_create_module_v2() fails. ** ^The sqlite3_create_module() ** interface is equivalent to sqlite3_create_module_v2() with a NULL ** destructor. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_module( sqlite3 *db, /* SQLite connection to register module with */ const char *zName, /* Name of the module */ const sqlite3_module *p, /* Methods for the module */ void *pClientData /* Client data for xCreate/xConnect */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_module_v2( sqlite3 *db, /* SQLite connection to register module with */ const char *zName, /* Name of the module */ const sqlite3_module *p, /* Methods for the module */ void *pClientData, /* Client data for xCreate/xConnect */ void(*xDestroy)(void*) /* Module destructor function */ ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6065 6066 6067 6068 6069 6070 6071 | ** CAPI3REF: Declare The Schema Of A Virtual Table ** ** ^The [xCreate] and [xConnect] methods of a ** [virtual table module] call this interface ** to declare the format (the names and datatypes of the columns) of ** the virtual tables they implement. */ | | | | 6131 6132 6133 6134 6135 6136 6137 6138 6139 6140 6141 6142 6143 6144 6145 6146 6147 6148 6149 6150 6151 6152 6153 6154 6155 6156 6157 6158 6159 6160 6161 6162 6163 6164 | ** CAPI3REF: Declare The Schema Of A Virtual Table ** ** ^The [xCreate] and [xConnect] methods of a ** [virtual table module] call this interface ** to declare the format (the names and datatypes of the columns) of ** the virtual tables they implement. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_declare_vtab(sqlite3*, const char *zSQL); /* ** CAPI3REF: Overload A Function For A Virtual Table ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^(Virtual tables can provide alternative implementations of functions ** using the [xFindFunction] method of the [virtual table module]. ** But global versions of those functions ** must exist in order to be overloaded.)^ ** ** ^(This API makes sure a global version of a function with a particular ** name and number of parameters exists. If no such function exists ** before this API is called, a new function is created.)^ ^The implementation ** of the new function always causes an exception to be thrown. So ** the new function is not good for anything by itself. Its only ** purpose is to be a placeholder function that can be overloaded ** by a [virtual table]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_overload_function(sqlite3*, const char *zFuncName, int nArg); /* ** The interface to the virtual-table mechanism defined above (back up ** to a comment remarkably similar to this one) is currently considered ** to be experimental. The interface might change in incompatible ways. ** If this is a problem for you, do not use the interface at this time. ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6159 6160 6161 6162 6163 6164 6165 6166 6167 6168 6169 6170 6171 6172 | ** being opened for read/write access)^. ** </ul> ** ** ^Unless it returns SQLITE_MISUSE, this function sets the ** [database connection] error code and message accessible via ** [sqlite3_errcode()] and [sqlite3_errmsg()] and related functions. ** ** ** ^(If the row that a BLOB handle points to is modified by an ** [UPDATE], [DELETE], or by [ON CONFLICT] side-effects ** then the BLOB handle is marked as "expired". ** This is true if any column of the row is changed, even a column ** other than the one the BLOB handle is open on.)^ ** ^Calls to [sqlite3_blob_read()] and [sqlite3_blob_write()] for | > > > > > > | 6225 6226 6227 6228 6229 6230 6231 6232 6233 6234 6235 6236 6237 6238 6239 6240 6241 6242 6243 6244 | ** being opened for read/write access)^. ** </ul> ** ** ^Unless it returns SQLITE_MISUSE, this function sets the ** [database connection] error code and message accessible via ** [sqlite3_errcode()] and [sqlite3_errmsg()] and related functions. ** ** A BLOB referenced by sqlite3_blob_open() may be read using the ** [sqlite3_blob_read()] interface and modified by using ** [sqlite3_blob_write()]. The [BLOB handle] can be moved to a ** different row of the same table using the [sqlite3_blob_reopen()] ** interface. However, the column, table, or database of a [BLOB handle] ** cannot be changed after the [BLOB handle] is opened. ** ** ^(If the row that a BLOB handle points to is modified by an ** [UPDATE], [DELETE], or by [ON CONFLICT] side-effects ** then the BLOB handle is marked as "expired". ** This is true if any column of the row is changed, even a column ** other than the one the BLOB handle is open on.)^ ** ^Calls to [sqlite3_blob_read()] and [sqlite3_blob_write()] for |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6182 6183 6184 6185 6186 6187 6188 6189 | ** ** ^The [sqlite3_bind_zeroblob()] and [sqlite3_result_zeroblob()] interfaces ** and the built-in [zeroblob] SQL function may be used to create a ** zero-filled blob to read or write using the incremental-blob interface. ** ** To avoid a resource leak, every open [BLOB handle] should eventually ** be released by a call to [sqlite3_blob_close()]. */ | > > > > | | | | | 6254 6255 6256 6257 6258 6259 6260 6261 6262 6263 6264 6265 6266 6267 6268 6269 6270 6271 6272 6273 6274 6275 6276 6277 6278 6279 6280 6281 6282 6283 6284 6285 6286 6287 6288 6289 6290 6291 6292 6293 6294 6295 6296 6297 6298 6299 6300 6301 6302 6303 6304 6305 6306 | ** ** ^The [sqlite3_bind_zeroblob()] and [sqlite3_result_zeroblob()] interfaces ** and the built-in [zeroblob] SQL function may be used to create a ** zero-filled blob to read or write using the incremental-blob interface. ** ** To avoid a resource leak, every open [BLOB handle] should eventually ** be released by a call to [sqlite3_blob_close()]. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_blob_close()], ** [sqlite3_blob_reopen()], [sqlite3_blob_read()], ** [sqlite3_blob_bytes()], [sqlite3_blob_write()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_open( sqlite3*, const char *zDb, const char *zTable, const char *zColumn, sqlite3_int64 iRow, int flags, sqlite3_blob **ppBlob ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Move a BLOB Handle to a New Row ** METHOD: sqlite3_blob ** ** ^This function is used to move an existing [BLOB handle] so that it points ** to a different row of the same database table. ^The new row is identified ** by the rowid value passed as the second argument. Only the row can be ** changed. ^The database, table and column on which the blob handle is open ** remain the same. Moving an existing [BLOB handle] to a new row is ** faster than closing the existing handle and opening a new one. ** ** ^(The new row must meet the same criteria as for [sqlite3_blob_open()] - ** it must exist and there must be either a blob or text value stored in ** the nominated column.)^ ^If the new row is not present in the table, or if ** it does not contain a blob or text value, or if another error occurs, an ** SQLite error code is returned and the blob handle is considered aborted. ** ^All subsequent calls to [sqlite3_blob_read()], [sqlite3_blob_write()] or ** [sqlite3_blob_reopen()] on an aborted blob handle immediately return ** SQLITE_ABORT. ^Calling [sqlite3_blob_bytes()] on an aborted blob handle ** always returns zero. ** ** ^This function sets the database handle error code and message. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_reopen(sqlite3_blob *, sqlite3_int64); /* ** CAPI3REF: Close A BLOB Handle ** DESTRUCTOR: sqlite3_blob ** ** ^This function closes an open [BLOB handle]. ^(The BLOB handle is closed ** unconditionally. Even if this routine returns an error code, the |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6239 6240 6241 6242 6243 6244 6245 | ** Calling this function with an argument that is not a NULL pointer or an ** open blob handle results in undefined behaviour. ^Calling this routine ** with a null pointer (such as would be returned by a failed call to ** [sqlite3_blob_open()]) is a harmless no-op. ^Otherwise, if this function ** is passed a valid open blob handle, the values returned by the ** sqlite3_errcode() and sqlite3_errmsg() functions are set before returning. */ | | | | 6315 6316 6317 6318 6319 6320 6321 6322 6323 6324 6325 6326 6327 6328 6329 6330 6331 6332 6333 6334 6335 6336 6337 6338 6339 6340 6341 6342 6343 6344 6345 | ** Calling this function with an argument that is not a NULL pointer or an ** open blob handle results in undefined behaviour. ^Calling this routine ** with a null pointer (such as would be returned by a failed call to ** [sqlite3_blob_open()]) is a harmless no-op. ^Otherwise, if this function ** is passed a valid open blob handle, the values returned by the ** sqlite3_errcode() and sqlite3_errmsg() functions are set before returning. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_close(sqlite3_blob *); /* ** CAPI3REF: Return The Size Of An Open BLOB ** METHOD: sqlite3_blob ** ** ^Returns the size in bytes of the BLOB accessible via the ** successfully opened [BLOB handle] in its only argument. ^The ** incremental blob I/O routines can only read or overwriting existing ** blob content; they cannot change the size of a blob. ** ** This routine only works on a [BLOB handle] which has been created ** by a prior successful call to [sqlite3_blob_open()] and which has not ** been closed by [sqlite3_blob_close()]. Passing any other pointer in ** to this routine results in undefined and probably undesirable behavior. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_bytes(sqlite3_blob *); /* ** CAPI3REF: Read Data From A BLOB Incrementally ** METHOD: sqlite3_blob ** ** ^(This function is used to read data from an open [BLOB handle] into a ** caller-supplied buffer. N bytes of data are copied into buffer Z |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6284 6285 6286 6287 6288 6289 6290 | ** This routine only works on a [BLOB handle] which has been created ** by a prior successful call to [sqlite3_blob_open()] and which has not ** been closed by [sqlite3_blob_close()]. Passing any other pointer in ** to this routine results in undefined and probably undesirable behavior. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_blob_write()]. */ | | | 6360 6361 6362 6363 6364 6365 6366 6367 6368 6369 6370 6371 6372 6373 6374 | ** This routine only works on a [BLOB handle] which has been created ** by a prior successful call to [sqlite3_blob_open()] and which has not ** been closed by [sqlite3_blob_close()]. Passing any other pointer in ** to this routine results in undefined and probably undesirable behavior. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_blob_write()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_read(sqlite3_blob *, void *Z, int N, int iOffset); /* ** CAPI3REF: Write Data Into A BLOB Incrementally ** METHOD: sqlite3_blob ** ** ^(This function is used to write data into an open [BLOB handle] from a ** caller-supplied buffer. N bytes of data are copied from the buffer Z |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6326 6327 6328 6329 6330 6331 6332 | ** This routine only works on a [BLOB handle] which has been created ** by a prior successful call to [sqlite3_blob_open()] and which has not ** been closed by [sqlite3_blob_close()]. Passing any other pointer in ** to this routine results in undefined and probably undesirable behavior. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_blob_read()]. */ | | | 6402 6403 6404 6405 6406 6407 6408 6409 6410 6411 6412 6413 6414 6415 6416 | ** This routine only works on a [BLOB handle] which has been created ** by a prior successful call to [sqlite3_blob_open()] and which has not ** been closed by [sqlite3_blob_close()]. Passing any other pointer in ** to this routine results in undefined and probably undesirable behavior. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_blob_read()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_write(sqlite3_blob *, const void *z, int n, int iOffset); /* ** CAPI3REF: Virtual File System Objects ** ** A virtual filesystem (VFS) is an [sqlite3_vfs] object ** that SQLite uses to interact ** with the underlying operating system. Most SQLite builds come with a |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6357 6358 6359 6360 6361 6362 6363 | ** VFS is registered with a name that is NULL or an empty string, ** then the behavior is undefined. ** ** ^Unregister a VFS with the sqlite3_vfs_unregister() interface. ** ^(If the default VFS is unregistered, another VFS is chosen as ** the default. The choice for the new VFS is arbitrary.)^ */ | | | | | 6433 6434 6435 6436 6437 6438 6439 6440 6441 6442 6443 6444 6445 6446 6447 6448 6449 | ** VFS is registered with a name that is NULL or an empty string, ** then the behavior is undefined. ** ** ^Unregister a VFS with the sqlite3_vfs_unregister() interface. ** ^(If the default VFS is unregistered, another VFS is chosen as ** the default. The choice for the new VFS is arbitrary.)^ */ SQLITE_API sqlite3_vfs *sqlite3_vfs_find(const char *zVfsName); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_vfs_register(sqlite3_vfs*, int makeDflt); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_vfs_unregister(sqlite3_vfs*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Mutexes ** ** The SQLite core uses these routines for thread ** synchronization. Though they are intended for internal ** use by SQLite, code that links against SQLite is |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6475 6476 6477 6478 6479 6480 6481 | ** ** ^If the argument to sqlite3_mutex_enter(), sqlite3_mutex_try(), or ** sqlite3_mutex_leave() is a NULL pointer, then all three routines ** behave as no-ops. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_mutex_held()] and [sqlite3_mutex_notheld()]. */ | | | | | | | 6551 6552 6553 6554 6555 6556 6557 6558 6559 6560 6561 6562 6563 6564 6565 6566 6567 6568 6569 | ** ** ^If the argument to sqlite3_mutex_enter(), sqlite3_mutex_try(), or ** sqlite3_mutex_leave() is a NULL pointer, then all three routines ** behave as no-ops. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_mutex_held()] and [sqlite3_mutex_notheld()]. */ SQLITE_API sqlite3_mutex *sqlite3_mutex_alloc(int); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_mutex_free(sqlite3_mutex*); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_mutex_enter(sqlite3_mutex*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_mutex_try(sqlite3_mutex*); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_mutex_leave(sqlite3_mutex*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Mutex Methods Object ** ** An instance of this structure defines the low-level routines ** used to allocate and use mutexes. ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6589 6590 6591 6592 6593 6594 6595 | ** the reason the mutex does not exist is because the build is not ** using mutexes. And we do not want the assert() containing the ** call to sqlite3_mutex_held() to fail, so a non-zero return is ** the appropriate thing to do. The sqlite3_mutex_notheld() ** interface should also return 1 when given a NULL pointer. */ #ifndef NDEBUG | | | | 6665 6666 6667 6668 6669 6670 6671 6672 6673 6674 6675 6676 6677 6678 6679 6680 | ** the reason the mutex does not exist is because the build is not ** using mutexes. And we do not want the assert() containing the ** call to sqlite3_mutex_held() to fail, so a non-zero return is ** the appropriate thing to do. The sqlite3_mutex_notheld() ** interface should also return 1 when given a NULL pointer. */ #ifndef NDEBUG SQLITE_API int sqlite3_mutex_held(sqlite3_mutex*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_mutex_notheld(sqlite3_mutex*); #endif /* ** CAPI3REF: Mutex Types ** ** The [sqlite3_mutex_alloc()] interface takes a single argument ** which is one of these integer constants. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6630 6631 6632 6633 6634 6635 6636 | ** ** ^This interface returns a pointer the [sqlite3_mutex] object that ** serializes access to the [database connection] given in the argument ** when the [threading mode] is Serialized. ** ^If the [threading mode] is Single-thread or Multi-thread then this ** routine returns a NULL pointer. */ | | | 6706 6707 6708 6709 6710 6711 6712 6713 6714 6715 6716 6717 6718 6719 6720 | ** ** ^This interface returns a pointer the [sqlite3_mutex] object that ** serializes access to the [database connection] given in the argument ** when the [threading mode] is Serialized. ** ^If the [threading mode] is Single-thread or Multi-thread then this ** routine returns a NULL pointer. */ SQLITE_API sqlite3_mutex *sqlite3_db_mutex(sqlite3*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Low-Level Control Of Database Files ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^The [sqlite3_file_control()] interface makes a direct call to the ** xFileControl method for the [sqlite3_io_methods] object associated |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6665 6666 6667 6668 6669 6670 6671 | ** or [sqlite3_errmsg()]. The underlying xFileControl method might ** also return SQLITE_ERROR. There is no way to distinguish between ** an incorrect zDbName and an SQLITE_ERROR return from the underlying ** xFileControl method. ** ** See also: [SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE] */ | | | | 6741 6742 6743 6744 6745 6746 6747 6748 6749 6750 6751 6752 6753 6754 6755 6756 6757 6758 6759 6760 6761 6762 6763 6764 6765 6766 6767 6768 6769 6770 6771 6772 6773 6774 | ** or [sqlite3_errmsg()]. The underlying xFileControl method might ** also return SQLITE_ERROR. There is no way to distinguish between ** an incorrect zDbName and an SQLITE_ERROR return from the underlying ** xFileControl method. ** ** See also: [SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_file_control(sqlite3*, const char *zDbName, int op, void*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Testing Interface ** ** ^The sqlite3_test_control() interface is used to read out internal ** state of SQLite and to inject faults into SQLite for testing ** purposes. ^The first parameter is an operation code that determines ** the number, meaning, and operation of all subsequent parameters. ** ** This interface is not for use by applications. It exists solely ** for verifying the correct operation of the SQLite library. Depending ** on how the SQLite library is compiled, this interface might not exist. ** ** The details of the operation codes, their meanings, the parameters ** they take, and what they do are all subject to change without notice. ** Unlike most of the SQLite API, this function is not guaranteed to ** operate consistently from one release to the next. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_test_control(int op, ...); /* ** CAPI3REF: Testing Interface Operation Codes ** ** These constants are the valid operation code parameters used ** as the first argument to [sqlite3_test_control()]. ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6748 6749 6750 6751 6752 6753 6754 | ** ** If either the current value or the highwater mark is too large to ** be represented by a 32-bit integer, then the values returned by ** sqlite3_status() are undefined. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_db_status()] */ | | | | 6824 6825 6826 6827 6828 6829 6830 6831 6832 6833 6834 6835 6836 6837 6838 6839 | ** ** If either the current value or the highwater mark is too large to ** be represented by a 32-bit integer, then the values returned by ** sqlite3_status() are undefined. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_db_status()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_status(int op, int *pCurrent, int *pHighwater, int resetFlag); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_status64( int op, sqlite3_int64 *pCurrent, sqlite3_int64 *pHighwater, int resetFlag ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
6874 6875 6876 6877 6878 6879 6880 | ** reset back down to the current value. ** ** ^The sqlite3_db_status() routine returns SQLITE_OK on success and a ** non-zero [error code] on failure. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_status()] and [sqlite3_stmt_status()]. */ | | | 6950 6951 6952 6953 6954 6955 6956 6957 6958 6959 6960 6961 6962 6963 6964 | ** reset back down to the current value. ** ** ^The sqlite3_db_status() routine returns SQLITE_OK on success and a ** non-zero [error code] on failure. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_status()] and [sqlite3_stmt_status()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_status(sqlite3*, int op, int *pCur, int *pHiwtr, int resetFlg); /* ** CAPI3REF: Status Parameters for database connections ** KEYWORDS: {SQLITE_DBSTATUS options} ** ** These constants are the available integer "verbs" that can be passed as ** the second argument to the [sqlite3_db_status()] interface. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7017 7018 7019 7020 7021 7022 7023 | ** to be interrogated.)^ ** ^The current value of the requested counter is returned. ** ^If the resetFlg is true, then the counter is reset to zero after this ** interface call returns. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_status()] and [sqlite3_db_status()]. */ | | | 7093 7094 7095 7096 7097 7098 7099 7100 7101 7102 7103 7104 7105 7106 7107 | ** to be interrogated.)^ ** ^The current value of the requested counter is returned. ** ^If the resetFlg is true, then the counter is reset to zero after this ** interface call returns. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_status()] and [sqlite3_db_status()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_status(sqlite3_stmt*, int op,int resetFlg); /* ** CAPI3REF: Status Parameters for prepared statements ** KEYWORDS: {SQLITE_STMTSTATUS counter} {SQLITE_STMTSTATUS counters} ** ** These preprocessor macros define integer codes that name counter ** values associated with the [sqlite3_stmt_status()] interface. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7486 7487 7488 7489 7490 7491 7492 | ** The [sqlite3_backup] object itself is partially threadsafe. Multiple ** threads may safely make multiple concurrent calls to sqlite3_backup_step(). ** However, the sqlite3_backup_remaining() and sqlite3_backup_pagecount() ** APIs are not strictly speaking threadsafe. If they are invoked at the ** same time as another thread is invoking sqlite3_backup_step() it is ** possible that they return invalid values. */ | | | | | | | 7562 7563 7564 7565 7566 7567 7568 7569 7570 7571 7572 7573 7574 7575 7576 7577 7578 7579 7580 7581 7582 7583 7584 7585 | ** The [sqlite3_backup] object itself is partially threadsafe. Multiple ** threads may safely make multiple concurrent calls to sqlite3_backup_step(). ** However, the sqlite3_backup_remaining() and sqlite3_backup_pagecount() ** APIs are not strictly speaking threadsafe. If they are invoked at the ** same time as another thread is invoking sqlite3_backup_step() it is ** possible that they return invalid values. */ SQLITE_API sqlite3_backup *sqlite3_backup_init( sqlite3 *pDest, /* Destination database handle */ const char *zDestName, /* Destination database name */ sqlite3 *pSource, /* Source database handle */ const char *zSourceName /* Source database name */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_backup_step(sqlite3_backup *p, int nPage); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_backup_finish(sqlite3_backup *p); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_backup_remaining(sqlite3_backup *p); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_backup_pagecount(sqlite3_backup *p); /* ** CAPI3REF: Unlock Notification ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^When running in shared-cache mode, a database operation may fail with ** an [SQLITE_LOCKED] error if the required locks on the shared-cache or |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7612 7613 7614 7615 7616 7617 7618 | ** ** One way around this problem is to check the extended error code returned ** by an sqlite3_step() call. ^(If there is a blocking connection, then the ** extended error code is set to SQLITE_LOCKED_SHAREDCACHE. Otherwise, in ** the special "DROP TABLE/INDEX" case, the extended error code is just ** SQLITE_LOCKED.)^ */ | | | | | | 7688 7689 7690 7691 7692 7693 7694 7695 7696 7697 7698 7699 7700 7701 7702 7703 7704 7705 7706 7707 7708 7709 7710 7711 7712 7713 7714 7715 7716 7717 7718 7719 7720 7721 7722 7723 7724 7725 7726 7727 7728 7729 7730 7731 7732 7733 7734 7735 | ** ** One way around this problem is to check the extended error code returned ** by an sqlite3_step() call. ^(If there is a blocking connection, then the ** extended error code is set to SQLITE_LOCKED_SHAREDCACHE. Otherwise, in ** the special "DROP TABLE/INDEX" case, the extended error code is just ** SQLITE_LOCKED.)^ */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_unlock_notify( sqlite3 *pBlocked, /* Waiting connection */ void (*xNotify)(void **apArg, int nArg), /* Callback function to invoke */ void *pNotifyArg /* Argument to pass to xNotify */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: String Comparison ** ** ^The [sqlite3_stricmp()] and [sqlite3_strnicmp()] APIs allow applications ** and extensions to compare the contents of two buffers containing UTF-8 ** strings in a case-independent fashion, using the same definition of "case ** independence" that SQLite uses internally when comparing identifiers. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stricmp(const char *, const char *); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_strnicmp(const char *, const char *, int); /* ** CAPI3REF: String Globbing * ** ^The [sqlite3_strglob(P,X)] interface returns zero if and only if ** string X matches the [GLOB] pattern P. ** ^The definition of [GLOB] pattern matching used in ** [sqlite3_strglob(P,X)] is the same as for the "X GLOB P" operator in the ** SQL dialect understood by SQLite. ^The [sqlite3_strglob(P,X)] function ** is case sensitive. ** ** Note that this routine returns zero on a match and non-zero if the strings ** do not match, the same as [sqlite3_stricmp()] and [sqlite3_strnicmp()]. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_strlike()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_strglob(const char *zGlob, const char *zStr); /* ** CAPI3REF: String LIKE Matching * ** ^The [sqlite3_strlike(P,X,E)] interface returns zero if and only if ** string X matches the [LIKE] pattern P with escape character E. ** ^The definition of [LIKE] pattern matching used in |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7668 7669 7670 7671 7672 7673 7674 | ** only ASCII characters are case folded. ** ** Note that this routine returns zero on a match and non-zero if the strings ** do not match, the same as [sqlite3_stricmp()] and [sqlite3_strnicmp()]. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_strglob()]. */ | | | 7744 7745 7746 7747 7748 7749 7750 7751 7752 7753 7754 7755 7756 7757 7758 | ** only ASCII characters are case folded. ** ** Note that this routine returns zero on a match and non-zero if the strings ** do not match, the same as [sqlite3_stricmp()] and [sqlite3_strnicmp()]. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_strglob()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_strlike(const char *zGlob, const char *zStr, unsigned int cEsc); /* ** CAPI3REF: Error Logging Interface ** ** ^The [sqlite3_log()] interface writes a message into the [error log] ** established by the [SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG] option to [sqlite3_config()]. ** ^If logging is enabled, the zFormat string and subsequent arguments are |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7691 7692 7693 7694 7695 7696 7697 | ** ** To avoid deadlocks and other threading problems, the sqlite3_log() routine ** will not use dynamically allocated memory. The log message is stored in ** a fixed-length buffer on the stack. If the log message is longer than ** a few hundred characters, it will be truncated to the length of the ** buffer. */ | | | 7767 7768 7769 7770 7771 7772 7773 7774 7775 7776 7777 7778 7779 7780 7781 | ** ** To avoid deadlocks and other threading problems, the sqlite3_log() routine ** will not use dynamically allocated memory. The log message is stored in ** a fixed-length buffer on the stack. If the log message is longer than ** a few hundred characters, it will be truncated to the length of the ** buffer. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_log(int iErrCode, const char *zFormat, ...); /* ** CAPI3REF: Write-Ahead Log Commit Hook ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^The [sqlite3_wal_hook()] function is used to register a callback that ** is invoked each time data is committed to a database in wal mode. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7727 7728 7729 7730 7731 7732 7733 | ** A single database handle may have at most a single write-ahead log callback ** registered at one time. ^Calling [sqlite3_wal_hook()] replaces any ** previously registered write-ahead log callback. ^Note that the ** [sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint()] interface and the ** [wal_autocheckpoint pragma] both invoke [sqlite3_wal_hook()] and will ** overwrite any prior [sqlite3_wal_hook()] settings. */ | | | 7803 7804 7805 7806 7807 7808 7809 7810 7811 7812 7813 7814 7815 7816 7817 | ** A single database handle may have at most a single write-ahead log callback ** registered at one time. ^Calling [sqlite3_wal_hook()] replaces any ** previously registered write-ahead log callback. ^Note that the ** [sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint()] interface and the ** [wal_autocheckpoint pragma] both invoke [sqlite3_wal_hook()] and will ** overwrite any prior [sqlite3_wal_hook()] settings. */ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_wal_hook( sqlite3*, int(*)(void *,sqlite3*,const char*,int), void* ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Configure an auto-checkpoint |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7762 7763 7764 7765 7766 7767 7768 | ** ** ^Every new [database connection] defaults to having the auto-checkpoint ** enabled with a threshold of 1000 or [SQLITE_DEFAULT_WAL_AUTOCHECKPOINT] ** pages. The use of this interface ** is only necessary if the default setting is found to be suboptimal ** for a particular application. */ | | | 7838 7839 7840 7841 7842 7843 7844 7845 7846 7847 7848 7849 7850 7851 7852 | ** ** ^Every new [database connection] defaults to having the auto-checkpoint ** enabled with a threshold of 1000 or [SQLITE_DEFAULT_WAL_AUTOCHECKPOINT] ** pages. The use of this interface ** is only necessary if the default setting is found to be suboptimal ** for a particular application. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint(sqlite3 *db, int N); /* ** CAPI3REF: Checkpoint a database ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^(The sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(D,X) is equivalent to ** [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2](D,X,[SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE],0,0).)^ |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7784 7785 7786 7787 7788 7789 7790 | ** This interface used to be the only way to cause a checkpoint to ** occur. But then the newer and more powerful [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2()] ** interface was added. This interface is retained for backwards ** compatibility and as a convenience for applications that need to manually ** start a callback but which do not need the full power (and corresponding ** complication) of [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2()]. */ | | | 7860 7861 7862 7863 7864 7865 7866 7867 7868 7869 7870 7871 7872 7873 7874 | ** This interface used to be the only way to cause a checkpoint to ** occur. But then the newer and more powerful [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2()] ** interface was added. This interface is retained for backwards ** compatibility and as a convenience for applications that need to manually ** start a callback but which do not need the full power (and corresponding ** complication) of [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDb); /* ** CAPI3REF: Checkpoint a database ** METHOD: sqlite3 ** ** ^(The sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2(D,X,M,L,C) interface runs a checkpoint ** operation on database X of [database connection] D in mode M. Status |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7878 7879 7880 7881 7882 7883 7884 | ** the sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2() interface ** sets the error information that is queried by ** [sqlite3_errcode()] and [sqlite3_errmsg()]. ** ** ^The [PRAGMA wal_checkpoint] command can be used to invoke this interface ** from SQL. */ | | | 7954 7955 7956 7957 7958 7959 7960 7961 7962 7963 7964 7965 7966 7967 7968 | ** the sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2() interface ** sets the error information that is queried by ** [sqlite3_errcode()] and [sqlite3_errmsg()]. ** ** ^The [PRAGMA wal_checkpoint] command can be used to invoke this interface ** from SQL. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2( sqlite3 *db, /* Database handle */ const char *zDb, /* Name of attached database (or NULL) */ int eMode, /* SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_* value */ int *pnLog, /* OUT: Size of WAL log in frames */ int *pnCkpt /* OUT: Total number of frames checkpointed */ ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7914 7915 7916 7917 7918 7919 7920 | ** If this interface is invoked outside the context of an xConnect or ** xCreate virtual table method then the behavior is undefined. ** ** At present, there is only one option that may be configured using ** this function. (See [SQLITE_VTAB_CONSTRAINT_SUPPORT].) Further options ** may be added in the future. */ | | | 7990 7991 7992 7993 7994 7995 7996 7997 7998 7999 8000 8001 8002 8003 8004 | ** If this interface is invoked outside the context of an xConnect or ** xCreate virtual table method then the behavior is undefined. ** ** At present, there is only one option that may be configured using ** this function. (See [SQLITE_VTAB_CONSTRAINT_SUPPORT].) Further options ** may be added in the future. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_vtab_config(sqlite3*, int op, ...); /* ** CAPI3REF: Virtual Table Configuration Options ** ** These macros define the various options to the ** [sqlite3_vtab_config()] interface that [virtual table] implementations ** can use to customize and optimize their behavior. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
7967 7968 7969 7970 7971 7972 7973 | ** This function may only be called from within a call to the [xUpdate] method ** of a [virtual table] implementation for an INSERT or UPDATE operation. ^The ** value returned is one of [SQLITE_ROLLBACK], [SQLITE_IGNORE], [SQLITE_FAIL], ** [SQLITE_ABORT], or [SQLITE_REPLACE], according to the [ON CONFLICT] mode ** of the SQL statement that triggered the call to the [xUpdate] method of the ** [virtual table]. */ | | | 8043 8044 8045 8046 8047 8048 8049 8050 8051 8052 8053 8054 8055 8056 8057 | ** This function may only be called from within a call to the [xUpdate] method ** of a [virtual table] implementation for an INSERT or UPDATE operation. ^The ** value returned is one of [SQLITE_ROLLBACK], [SQLITE_IGNORE], [SQLITE_FAIL], ** [SQLITE_ABORT], or [SQLITE_REPLACE], according to the [ON CONFLICT] mode ** of the SQL statement that triggered the call to the [xUpdate] method of the ** [virtual table]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict(sqlite3 *); /* ** CAPI3REF: Conflict resolution modes ** KEYWORDS: {conflict resolution mode} ** ** These constants are returned by [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] to ** inform a [virtual table] implementation what the [ON CONFLICT] mode |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8072 8073 8074 8075 8076 8077 8078 | ** ^Statistics might not be available for all loops in all statements. ^In cases ** where there exist loops with no available statistics, this function behaves ** as if the loop did not exist - it returns non-zero and leave the variable ** that pOut points to unchanged. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_stmt_scanstatus_reset()] */ | | | | 8148 8149 8150 8151 8152 8153 8154 8155 8156 8157 8158 8159 8160 8161 8162 8163 8164 8165 8166 8167 8168 8169 8170 8171 8172 8173 8174 8175 8176 8177 8178 | ** ^Statistics might not be available for all loops in all statements. ^In cases ** where there exist loops with no available statistics, this function behaves ** as if the loop did not exist - it returns non-zero and leave the variable ** that pOut points to unchanged. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_stmt_scanstatus_reset()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_scanstatus( sqlite3_stmt *pStmt, /* Prepared statement for which info desired */ int idx, /* Index of loop to report on */ int iScanStatusOp, /* Information desired. SQLITE_SCANSTAT_* */ void *pOut /* Result written here */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Zero Scan-Status Counters ** METHOD: sqlite3_stmt ** ** ^Zero all [sqlite3_stmt_scanstatus()] related event counters. ** ** This API is only available if the library is built with pre-processor ** symbol [SQLITE_ENABLE_STMT_SCANSTATUS] defined. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_stmt_scanstatus_reset(sqlite3_stmt*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Flush caches to disk mid-transaction ** ** ^If a write-transaction is open on [database connection] D when the ** [sqlite3_db_cacheflush(D)] interface invoked, any dirty ** pages in the pager-cache that are not currently in use are written out |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8120 8121 8122 8123 8124 8125 8126 | ** abandoned and an SQLite [error code] is returned to the caller immediately. ** ** ^Otherwise, if no error occurs, [sqlite3_db_cacheflush()] returns SQLITE_OK. ** ** ^This function does not set the database handle error code or message ** returned by the [sqlite3_errcode()] and [sqlite3_errmsg()] functions. */ | | | | | | > > | | > | | < > | > | 8196 8197 8198 8199 8200 8201 8202 8203 8204 8205 8206 8207 8208 8209 8210 8211 8212 8213 8214 8215 8216 8217 8218 8219 8220 8221 8222 8223 8224 8225 8226 8227 8228 8229 8230 8231 8232 8233 8234 8235 8236 8237 8238 8239 8240 8241 8242 8243 8244 8245 8246 8247 8248 8249 8250 8251 8252 8253 8254 | ** abandoned and an SQLite [error code] is returned to the caller immediately. ** ** ^Otherwise, if no error occurs, [sqlite3_db_cacheflush()] returns SQLITE_OK. ** ** ^This function does not set the database handle error code or message ** returned by the [sqlite3_errcode()] and [sqlite3_errmsg()] functions. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_cacheflush(sqlite3*); /* ** CAPI3REF: The pre-update hook. ** ** ^These interfaces are only available if SQLite is compiled using the ** [SQLITE_ENABLE_PREUPDATE_HOOK] compile-time option. ** ** ^The [sqlite3_preupdate_hook()] interface registers a callback function ** that is invoked prior to each [INSERT], [UPDATE], and [DELETE] operation ** on a database table. ** ^At most one preupdate hook may be registered at a time on a single ** [database connection]; each call to [sqlite3_preupdate_hook()] overrides ** the previous setting. ** ^The preupdate hook is disabled by invoking [sqlite3_preupdate_hook()] ** with a NULL pointer as the second parameter. ** ^The third parameter to [sqlite3_preupdate_hook()] is passed through as ** the first parameter to callbacks. ** ** ^The preupdate hook only fires for changes to real database tables; the ** preupdate hook is not invoked for changes to [virtual tables] or to ** system tables like sqlite_master or sqlite_stat1. ** ** ^The second parameter to the preupdate callback is a pointer to ** the [database connection] that registered the preupdate hook. ** ^The third parameter to the preupdate callback is one of the constants ** [SQLITE_INSERT], [SQLITE_DELETE], or [SQLITE_UPDATE] to identify the ** kind of update operation that is about to occur. ** ^(The fourth parameter to the preupdate callback is the name of the ** database within the database connection that is being modified. This ** will be "main" for the main database or "temp" for TEMP tables or ** the name given after the AS keyword in the [ATTACH] statement for attached ** databases.)^ ** ^The fifth parameter to the preupdate callback is the name of the ** table that is being modified. ** ** For an UPDATE or DELETE operation on a [rowid table], the sixth ** parameter passed to the preupdate callback is the initial [rowid] of the ** row being modified or deleted. For an INSERT operation on a rowid table, ** or any operation on a WITHOUT ROWID table, the value of the sixth ** parameter is undefined. For an INSERT or UPDATE on a rowid table the ** seventh parameter is the final rowid value of the row being inserted ** or updated. The value of the seventh parameter passed to the callback ** function is not defined for operations on WITHOUT ROWID tables, or for ** INSERT operations on rowid tables. ** ** The [sqlite3_preupdate_old()], [sqlite3_preupdate_new()], ** [sqlite3_preupdate_count()], and [sqlite3_preupdate_depth()] interfaces ** provide additional information about a preupdate event. These routines ** may only be called from within a preupdate callback. Invoking any of ** these routines from outside of a preupdate callback or with a ** [database connection] pointer that is different from the one supplied |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8200 8201 8202 8203 8204 8205 8206 | ** callback was invoked as a result of a direct insert, update, or delete ** operation; or 1 for inserts, updates, or deletes invoked by top-level ** triggers; or 2 for changes resulting from triggers called by top-level ** triggers; and so forth. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_update_hook()] */ | > | | | | | > | | | 8280 8281 8282 8283 8284 8285 8286 8287 8288 8289 8290 8291 8292 8293 8294 8295 8296 8297 8298 8299 8300 8301 8302 8303 8304 8305 8306 8307 8308 8309 8310 8311 8312 8313 8314 8315 8316 8317 8318 8319 8320 8321 8322 8323 8324 8325 8326 8327 8328 | ** callback was invoked as a result of a direct insert, update, or delete ** operation; or 1 for inserts, updates, or deletes invoked by top-level ** triggers; or 2 for changes resulting from triggers called by top-level ** triggers; and so forth. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_update_hook()] */ #if defined(SQLITE_ENABLE_PREUPDATE_HOOK) SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_preupdate_hook( sqlite3 *db, void(*xPreUpdate)( void *pCtx, /* Copy of third arg to preupdate_hook() */ sqlite3 *db, /* Database handle */ int op, /* SQLITE_UPDATE, DELETE or INSERT */ char const *zDb, /* Database name */ char const *zName, /* Table name */ sqlite3_int64 iKey1, /* Rowid of row about to be deleted/updated */ sqlite3_int64 iKey2 /* New rowid value (for a rowid UPDATE) */ ), void* ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_preupdate_old(sqlite3 *, int, sqlite3_value **); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_preupdate_count(sqlite3 *); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_preupdate_depth(sqlite3 *); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_preupdate_new(sqlite3 *, int, sqlite3_value **); #endif /* ** CAPI3REF: Low-level system error code ** ** ^Attempt to return the underlying operating system error code or error ** number that caused the most recent I/O error or failure to open a file. ** The return value is OS-dependent. For example, on unix systems, after ** [sqlite3_open_v2()] returns [SQLITE_CANTOPEN], this interface could be ** called to get back the underlying "errno" that caused the problem, such ** as ENOSPC, EAUTH, EISDIR, and so forth. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_system_errno(sqlite3*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Database Snapshot ** KEYWORDS: {snapshot} {sqlite3_snapshot} ** EXPERIMENTAL ** ** An instance of the snapshot object records the state of a [WAL mode] ** database for some specific point in history. ** ** In [WAL mode], multiple [database connections] that are open on the ** same database file can each be reading a different historical version |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8256 8257 8258 8259 8260 8261 8262 | ** the most recent version. ** ** The constructor for this object is [sqlite3_snapshot_get()]. The ** [sqlite3_snapshot_open()] method causes a fresh read transaction to refer ** to an historical snapshot (if possible). The destructor for ** sqlite3_snapshot objects is [sqlite3_snapshot_free()]. */ | | > > > > > > > > > > > > > | > > > > > > > > > > > > > | < | | 8338 8339 8340 8341 8342 8343 8344 8345 8346 8347 8348 8349 8350 8351 8352 8353 8354 8355 8356 8357 8358 8359 8360 8361 8362 8363 8364 8365 8366 8367 8368 8369 8370 8371 8372 8373 8374 8375 8376 8377 8378 8379 8380 8381 8382 8383 8384 8385 8386 8387 8388 8389 8390 8391 8392 8393 8394 8395 8396 8397 8398 8399 | ** the most recent version. ** ** The constructor for this object is [sqlite3_snapshot_get()]. The ** [sqlite3_snapshot_open()] method causes a fresh read transaction to refer ** to an historical snapshot (if possible). The destructor for ** sqlite3_snapshot objects is [sqlite3_snapshot_free()]. */ typedef struct sqlite3_snapshot { unsigned char hidden[48]; } sqlite3_snapshot; /* ** CAPI3REF: Record A Database Snapshot ** EXPERIMENTAL ** ** ^The [sqlite3_snapshot_get(D,S,P)] interface attempts to make a ** new [sqlite3_snapshot] object that records the current state of ** schema S in database connection D. ^On success, the ** [sqlite3_snapshot_get(D,S,P)] interface writes a pointer to the newly ** created [sqlite3_snapshot] object into *P and returns SQLITE_OK. ** If there is not already a read-transaction open on schema S when ** this function is called, one is opened automatically. ** ** The following must be true for this function to succeed. If any of ** the following statements are false when sqlite3_snapshot_get() is ** called, SQLITE_ERROR is returned. The final value of *P is undefined ** in this case. ** ** <ul> ** <li> The database handle must be in [autocommit mode]. ** ** <li> Schema S of [database connection] D must be a [WAL mode] database. ** ** <li> There must not be a write transaction open on schema S of database ** connection D. ** ** <li> One or more transactions must have been written to the current wal ** file since it was created on disk (by any connection). This means ** that a snapshot cannot be taken on a wal mode database with no wal ** file immediately after it is first opened. At least one transaction ** must be written to it first. ** </ul> ** ** This function may also return SQLITE_NOMEM. If it is called with the ** database handle in autocommit mode but fails for some other reason, ** whether or not a read transaction is opened on schema S is undefined. ** ** The [sqlite3_snapshot] object returned from a successful call to ** [sqlite3_snapshot_get()] must be freed using [sqlite3_snapshot_free()] ** to avoid a memory leak. ** ** The [sqlite3_snapshot_get()] interface is only available when the ** SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT compile-time option is used. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL int sqlite3_snapshot_get( sqlite3 *db, const char *zSchema, sqlite3_snapshot **ppSnapshot ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Start a read transaction on an historical snapshot |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8316 8317 8318 8319 8320 8321 8322 | ** after the most recent I/O on the database connection.)^ ** (Hint: Run "[PRAGMA application_id]" against a newly opened ** database connection in order to make it ready to use snapshots.) ** ** The [sqlite3_snapshot_open()] interface is only available when the ** SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT compile-time option is used. */ | | | | 8423 8424 8425 8426 8427 8428 8429 8430 8431 8432 8433 8434 8435 8436 8437 8438 8439 8440 8441 8442 8443 8444 8445 8446 8447 8448 8449 8450 8451 8452 8453 8454 | ** after the most recent I/O on the database connection.)^ ** (Hint: Run "[PRAGMA application_id]" against a newly opened ** database connection in order to make it ready to use snapshots.) ** ** The [sqlite3_snapshot_open()] interface is only available when the ** SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT compile-time option is used. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL int sqlite3_snapshot_open( sqlite3 *db, const char *zSchema, sqlite3_snapshot *pSnapshot ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Destroy a snapshot ** EXPERIMENTAL ** ** ^The [sqlite3_snapshot_free(P)] interface destroys [sqlite3_snapshot] P. ** The application must eventually free every [sqlite3_snapshot] object ** using this routine to avoid a memory leak. ** ** The [sqlite3_snapshot_free()] interface is only available when the ** SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT compile-time option is used. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL void sqlite3_snapshot_free(sqlite3_snapshot*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Compare the ages of two snapshot handles. ** EXPERIMENTAL ** ** The sqlite3_snapshot_cmp(P1, P2) interface is used to compare the ages ** of two valid snapshot handles. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8357 8358 8359 8360 8361 8362 8363 | ** wal file was last deleted, the value returned by this function ** is undefined. ** ** Otherwise, this API returns a negative value if P1 refers to an older ** snapshot than P2, zero if the two handles refer to the same database ** snapshot, and a positive value if P1 is a newer snapshot than P2. */ | | > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > | 8464 8465 8466 8467 8468 8469 8470 8471 8472 8473 8474 8475 8476 8477 8478 8479 8480 8481 8482 8483 8484 8485 8486 8487 8488 8489 8490 8491 8492 8493 8494 8495 8496 8497 8498 8499 8500 8501 8502 8503 8504 | ** wal file was last deleted, the value returned by this function ** is undefined. ** ** Otherwise, this API returns a negative value if P1 refers to an older ** snapshot than P2, zero if the two handles refer to the same database ** snapshot, and a positive value if P1 is a newer snapshot than P2. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL int sqlite3_snapshot_cmp( sqlite3_snapshot *p1, sqlite3_snapshot *p2 ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Recover snapshots from a wal file ** EXPERIMENTAL ** ** If all connections disconnect from a database file but do not perform ** a checkpoint, the existing wal file is opened along with the database ** file the next time the database is opened. At this point it is only ** possible to successfully call sqlite3_snapshot_open() to open the most ** recent snapshot of the database (the one at the head of the wal file), ** even though the wal file may contain other valid snapshots for which ** clients have sqlite3_snapshot handles. ** ** This function attempts to scan the wal file associated with database zDb ** of database handle db and make all valid snapshots available to ** sqlite3_snapshot_open(). It is an error if there is already a read ** transaction open on the database, or if the database is not a wal mode ** database. ** ** SQLITE_OK is returned if successful, or an SQLite error code otherwise. */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL int sqlite3_snapshot_recover(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDb); /* ** Undo the hack that converts floating point types to integer for ** builds on processors without floating point support. */ #ifdef SQLITE_OMIT_FLOATING_POINT # undef double #endif |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8415 8416 8417 8418 8419 8420 8421 | /* ** Register a geometry callback named zGeom that can be used as part of an ** R-Tree geometry query as follows: ** ** SELECT ... FROM <rtree> WHERE <rtree col> MATCH $zGeom(... params ...) */ | | | 8544 8545 8546 8547 8548 8549 8550 8551 8552 8553 8554 8555 8556 8557 8558 | /* ** Register a geometry callback named zGeom that can be used as part of an ** R-Tree geometry query as follows: ** ** SELECT ... FROM <rtree> WHERE <rtree col> MATCH $zGeom(... params ...) */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rtree_geometry_callback( sqlite3 *db, const char *zGeom, int (*xGeom)(sqlite3_rtree_geometry*, int, sqlite3_rtree_dbl*,int*), void *pContext ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8441 8442 8443 8444 8445 8446 8447 | /* ** Register a 2nd-generation geometry callback named zScore that can be ** used as part of an R-Tree geometry query as follows: ** ** SELECT ... FROM <rtree> WHERE <rtree col> MATCH $zQueryFunc(... params ...) */ | | | 8570 8571 8572 8573 8574 8575 8576 8577 8578 8579 8580 8581 8582 8583 8584 | /* ** Register a 2nd-generation geometry callback named zScore that can be ** used as part of an R-Tree geometry query as follows: ** ** SELECT ... FROM <rtree> WHERE <rtree col> MATCH $zQueryFunc(... params ...) */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rtree_query_callback( sqlite3 *db, const char *zQueryFunc, int (*xQueryFunc)(sqlite3_rtree_query_info*), void *pContext, void (*xDestructor)(void*) ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8547 8548 8549 8550 8551 8552 8553 | ** either of these things are undefined. ** ** The session object will be used to create changesets for tables in ** database zDb, where zDb is either "main", or "temp", or the name of an ** attached database. It is not an error if database zDb is not attached ** to the database when the session object is created. */ | | | | | 8676 8677 8678 8679 8680 8681 8682 8683 8684 8685 8686 8687 8688 8689 8690 8691 8692 8693 8694 8695 8696 8697 8698 8699 8700 8701 8702 8703 8704 8705 8706 8707 8708 8709 8710 8711 8712 8713 8714 8715 8716 8717 8718 8719 8720 8721 8722 8723 8724 8725 8726 8727 8728 | ** either of these things are undefined. ** ** The session object will be used to create changesets for tables in ** database zDb, where zDb is either "main", or "temp", or the name of an ** attached database. It is not an error if database zDb is not attached ** to the database when the session object is created. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_create( sqlite3 *db, /* Database handle */ const char *zDb, /* Name of db (e.g. "main") */ sqlite3_session **ppSession /* OUT: New session object */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Delete A Session Object ** ** Delete a session object previously allocated using ** [sqlite3session_create()]. Once a session object has been deleted, the ** results of attempting to use pSession with any other session module ** function are undefined. ** ** Session objects must be deleted before the database handle to which they ** are attached is closed. Refer to the documentation for ** [sqlite3session_create()] for details. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3session_delete(sqlite3_session *pSession); /* ** CAPI3REF: Enable Or Disable A Session Object ** ** Enable or disable the recording of changes by a session object. When ** enabled, a session object records changes made to the database. When ** disabled - it does not. A newly created session object is enabled. ** Refer to the documentation for [sqlite3session_changeset()] for further ** details regarding how enabling and disabling a session object affects ** the eventual changesets. ** ** Passing zero to this function disables the session. Passing a value ** greater than zero enables it. Passing a value less than zero is a ** no-op, and may be used to query the current state of the session. ** ** The return value indicates the final state of the session object: 0 if ** the session is disabled, or 1 if it is enabled. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_enable(sqlite3_session *pSession, int bEnable); /* ** CAPI3REF: Set Or Clear the Indirect Change Flag ** ** Each change recorded by a session object is marked as either direct or ** indirect. A change is marked as indirect if either: ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8614 8615 8616 8617 8618 8619 8620 | ** is set. Passing a value less than zero does not modify the current value ** of the indirect flag, and may be used to query the current state of the ** indirect flag for the specified session object. ** ** The return value indicates the final state of the indirect flag: 0 if ** it is clear, or 1 if it is set. */ | | | 8743 8744 8745 8746 8747 8748 8749 8750 8751 8752 8753 8754 8755 8756 8757 | ** is set. Passing a value less than zero does not modify the current value ** of the indirect flag, and may be used to query the current state of the ** indirect flag for the specified session object. ** ** The return value indicates the final state of the indirect flag: 0 if ** it is clear, or 1 if it is set. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_indirect(sqlite3_session *pSession, int bIndirect); /* ** CAPI3REF: Attach A Table To A Session Object ** ** If argument zTab is not NULL, then it is the name of a table to attach ** to the session object passed as the first argument. All subsequent changes ** made to the table while the session object is enabled will be recorded. See |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8644 8645 8646 8647 8648 8649 8650 | ** ** Changes are not recorded for individual rows that have NULL values stored ** in one or more of their PRIMARY KEY columns. ** ** SQLITE_OK is returned if the call completes without error. Or, if an error ** occurs, an SQLite error code (e.g. SQLITE_NOMEM) is returned. */ | | | | | 8773 8774 8775 8776 8777 8778 8779 8780 8781 8782 8783 8784 8785 8786 8787 8788 8789 8790 8791 8792 8793 8794 8795 8796 8797 8798 8799 8800 8801 | ** ** Changes are not recorded for individual rows that have NULL values stored ** in one or more of their PRIMARY KEY columns. ** ** SQLITE_OK is returned if the call completes without error. Or, if an error ** occurs, an SQLite error code (e.g. SQLITE_NOMEM) is returned. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_attach( sqlite3_session *pSession, /* Session object */ const char *zTab /* Table name */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Set a table filter on a Session Object. ** ** The second argument (xFilter) is the "filter callback". For changes to rows ** in tables that are not attached to the Session object, the filter is called ** to determine whether changes to the table's rows should be tracked or not. ** If xFilter returns 0, changes is not tracked. Note that once a table is ** attached, xFilter will not be called again. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3session_table_filter( sqlite3_session *pSession, /* Session object */ int(*xFilter)( void *pCtx, /* Copy of third arg to _filter_table() */ const char *zTab /* Table name */ ), void *pCtx /* First argument passed to xFilter */ ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8771 8772 8773 8774 8775 8776 8777 | ** is inserted while a session object is enabled, then later deleted while ** the same session object is disabled, no INSERT record will appear in the ** changeset, even though the delete took place while the session was disabled. ** Or, if one field of a row is updated while a session is disabled, and ** another field of the same row is updated while the session is enabled, the ** resulting changeset will contain an UPDATE change that updates both fields. */ | | | 8900 8901 8902 8903 8904 8905 8906 8907 8908 8909 8910 8911 8912 8913 8914 | ** is inserted while a session object is enabled, then later deleted while ** the same session object is disabled, no INSERT record will appear in the ** changeset, even though the delete took place while the session was disabled. ** Or, if one field of a row is updated while a session is disabled, and ** another field of the same row is updated while the session is enabled, the ** resulting changeset will contain an UPDATE change that updates both fields. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_changeset( sqlite3_session *pSession, /* Session object */ int *pnChangeset, /* OUT: Size of buffer at *ppChangeset */ void **ppChangeset /* OUT: Buffer containing changeset */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Load The Difference Between Tables Into A Session |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8815 8816 8817 8818 8819 8820 8821 | ** <li> For each row (primary key) that exists in the to-table but not in ** the from-table, an INSERT record is added to the session object. ** ** <li> For each row (primary key) that exists in the to-table but not in ** the from-table, a DELETE record is added to the session object. ** ** <li> For each row (primary key) that exists in both tables, but features | | > | | 8944 8945 8946 8947 8948 8949 8950 8951 8952 8953 8954 8955 8956 8957 8958 8959 8960 8961 8962 8963 8964 8965 8966 8967 8968 8969 8970 8971 8972 8973 8974 8975 8976 | ** <li> For each row (primary key) that exists in the to-table but not in ** the from-table, an INSERT record is added to the session object. ** ** <li> For each row (primary key) that exists in the to-table but not in ** the from-table, a DELETE record is added to the session object. ** ** <li> For each row (primary key) that exists in both tables, but features ** different non-PK values in each, an UPDATE record is added to the ** session. ** </ul> ** ** To clarify, if this function is called and then a changeset constructed ** using [sqlite3session_changeset()], then after applying that changeset to ** database zFrom the contents of the two compatible tables would be ** identical. ** ** It an error if database zFrom does not exist or does not contain the ** required compatible table. ** ** If the operation successful, SQLITE_OK is returned. Otherwise, an SQLite ** error code. In this case, if argument pzErrMsg is not NULL, *pzErrMsg ** may be set to point to a buffer containing an English language error ** message. It is the responsibility of the caller to free this buffer using ** sqlite3_free(). */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_diff( sqlite3_session *pSession, const char *zFromDb, const char *zTbl, char **pzErrMsg ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8868 8869 8870 8871 8872 8873 8874 | ** in the same way as for changesets. ** ** Changes within a patchset are ordered in the same way as for changesets ** generated by the sqlite3session_changeset() function (i.e. all changes for ** a single table are grouped together, tables appear in the order in which ** they were attached to the session object). */ | | | | 8998 8999 9000 9001 9002 9003 9004 9005 9006 9007 9008 9009 9010 9011 9012 9013 9014 9015 9016 9017 9018 9019 9020 9021 9022 9023 9024 9025 9026 9027 9028 9029 9030 9031 9032 9033 | ** in the same way as for changesets. ** ** Changes within a patchset are ordered in the same way as for changesets ** generated by the sqlite3session_changeset() function (i.e. all changes for ** a single table are grouped together, tables appear in the order in which ** they were attached to the session object). */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_patchset( sqlite3_session *pSession, /* Session object */ int *pnPatchset, /* OUT: Size of buffer at *ppChangeset */ void **ppPatchset /* OUT: Buffer containing changeset */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Test if a changeset has recorded any changes. ** ** Return non-zero if no changes to attached tables have been recorded by ** the session object passed as the first argument. Otherwise, if one or ** more changes have been recorded, return zero. ** ** Even if this function returns zero, it is possible that calling ** [sqlite3session_changeset()] on the session handle may still return a ** changeset that contains no changes. This can happen when a row in ** an attached table is modified and then later on the original values ** are restored. However, if this function returns non-zero, then it is ** guaranteed that a call to sqlite3session_changeset() will return a ** changeset containing zero changes. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_isempty(sqlite3_session *pSession); /* ** CAPI3REF: Create An Iterator To Traverse A Changeset ** ** Create an iterator used to iterate through the contents of a changeset. ** If successful, *pp is set to point to the iterator handle and SQLITE_OK ** is returned. Otherwise, if an error occurs, *pp is set to zero and an |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8919 8920 8921 8922 8923 8924 8925 | ** destroyed. ** ** Assuming the changeset blob was created by one of the ** [sqlite3session_changeset()], [sqlite3changeset_concat()] or ** [sqlite3changeset_invert()] functions, all changes within the changeset ** that apply to a single table are grouped together. This means that when ** an application iterates through a changeset using an iterator created by | | | | 9049 9050 9051 9052 9053 9054 9055 9056 9057 9058 9059 9060 9061 9062 9063 9064 9065 9066 9067 9068 | ** destroyed. ** ** Assuming the changeset blob was created by one of the ** [sqlite3session_changeset()], [sqlite3changeset_concat()] or ** [sqlite3changeset_invert()] functions, all changes within the changeset ** that apply to a single table are grouped together. This means that when ** an application iterates through a changeset using an iterator created by ** this function, all changes that relate to a single table are visited ** consecutively. There is no chance that the iterator will visit a change ** the applies to table X, then one for table Y, and then later on visit ** another change for table X. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_start( sqlite3_changeset_iter **pp, /* OUT: New changeset iterator handle */ int nChangeset, /* Size of changeset blob in bytes */ void *pChangeset /* Pointer to blob containing changeset */ ); /* |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8953 8954 8955 8956 8957 8958 8959 | ** Otherwise, if all changes in the changeset have already been visited, ** SQLITE_DONE is returned. ** ** If an error occurs, an SQLite error code is returned. Possible error ** codes include SQLITE_CORRUPT (if the changeset buffer is corrupt) or ** SQLITE_NOMEM. */ | | | 9083 9084 9085 9086 9087 9088 9089 9090 9091 9092 9093 9094 9095 9096 9097 | ** Otherwise, if all changes in the changeset have already been visited, ** SQLITE_DONE is returned. ** ** If an error occurs, an SQLite error code is returned. Possible error ** codes include SQLITE_CORRUPT (if the changeset buffer is corrupt) or ** SQLITE_NOMEM. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_next(sqlite3_changeset_iter *pIter); /* ** CAPI3REF: Obtain The Current Operation From A Changeset Iterator ** ** The pIter argument passed to this function may either be an iterator ** passed to a conflict-handler by [sqlite3changeset_apply()], or an iterator ** created by [sqlite3changeset_start()]. In the latter case, the most recent |
︙ | ︙ | |||
8981 8982 8983 8984 8985 8986 8987 | ** [SQLITE_INSERT], [SQLITE_DELETE] or [SQLITE_UPDATE], depending on the ** type of change that the iterator currently points to. ** ** If no error occurs, SQLITE_OK is returned. If an error does occur, an ** SQLite error code is returned. The values of the output variables may not ** be trusted in this case. */ | | | 9111 9112 9113 9114 9115 9116 9117 9118 9119 9120 9121 9122 9123 9124 9125 | ** [SQLITE_INSERT], [SQLITE_DELETE] or [SQLITE_UPDATE], depending on the ** type of change that the iterator currently points to. ** ** If no error occurs, SQLITE_OK is returned. If an error does occur, an ** SQLite error code is returned. The values of the output variables may not ** be trusted in this case. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_op( sqlite3_changeset_iter *pIter, /* Iterator object */ const char **pzTab, /* OUT: Pointer to table name */ int *pnCol, /* OUT: Number of columns in table */ int *pOp, /* OUT: SQLITE_INSERT, DELETE or UPDATE */ int *pbIndirect /* OUT: True for an 'indirect' change */ ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9006 9007 9008 9009 9010 9011 9012 | ** This function is used to find which columns comprise the PRIMARY KEY of ** the table modified by the change that iterator pIter currently points to. ** If successful, *pabPK is set to point to an array of nCol entries, where ** nCol is the number of columns in the table. Elements of *pabPK are set to ** 0x01 if the corresponding column is part of the tables primary key, or ** 0x00 if it is not. ** | | | | 9136 9137 9138 9139 9140 9141 9142 9143 9144 9145 9146 9147 9148 9149 9150 9151 9152 9153 9154 9155 9156 9157 9158 | ** This function is used to find which columns comprise the PRIMARY KEY of ** the table modified by the change that iterator pIter currently points to. ** If successful, *pabPK is set to point to an array of nCol entries, where ** nCol is the number of columns in the table. Elements of *pabPK are set to ** 0x01 if the corresponding column is part of the tables primary key, or ** 0x00 if it is not. ** ** If argument pnCol is not NULL, then *pnCol is set to the number of columns ** in the table. ** ** If this function is called when the iterator does not point to a valid ** entry, SQLITE_MISUSE is returned and the output variables zeroed. Otherwise, ** SQLITE_OK is returned and the output variables populated as described ** above. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_pk( sqlite3_changeset_iter *pIter, /* Iterator object */ unsigned char **pabPK, /* OUT: Array of boolean - true for PK cols */ int *pnCol /* OUT: Number of entries in output array */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Obtain old.* Values From A Changeset Iterator |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9044 9045 9046 9047 9048 9049 9050 | ** original row values stored as part of the UPDATE or DELETE change and ** returns SQLITE_OK. The name of the function comes from the fact that this ** is similar to the "old.*" columns available to update or delete triggers. ** ** If some other error occurs (e.g. an OOM condition), an SQLite error code ** is returned and *ppValue is set to NULL. */ | | | 9174 9175 9176 9177 9178 9179 9180 9181 9182 9183 9184 9185 9186 9187 9188 | ** original row values stored as part of the UPDATE or DELETE change and ** returns SQLITE_OK. The name of the function comes from the fact that this ** is similar to the "old.*" columns available to update or delete triggers. ** ** If some other error occurs (e.g. an OOM condition), an SQLite error code ** is returned and *ppValue is set to NULL. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_old( sqlite3_changeset_iter *pIter, /* Changeset iterator */ int iVal, /* Column number */ sqlite3_value **ppValue /* OUT: Old value (or NULL pointer) */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Obtain new.* Values From A Changeset Iterator |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9077 9078 9079 9080 9081 9082 9083 | ** SQLITE_OK returned. The name of the function comes from the fact that ** this is similar to the "new.*" columns available to update or delete ** triggers. ** ** If some other error occurs (e.g. an OOM condition), an SQLite error code ** is returned and *ppValue is set to NULL. */ | | | 9207 9208 9209 9210 9211 9212 9213 9214 9215 9216 9217 9218 9219 9220 9221 | ** SQLITE_OK returned. The name of the function comes from the fact that ** this is similar to the "new.*" columns available to update or delete ** triggers. ** ** If some other error occurs (e.g. an OOM condition), an SQLite error code ** is returned and *ppValue is set to NULL. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_new( sqlite3_changeset_iter *pIter, /* Changeset iterator */ int iVal, /* Column number */ sqlite3_value **ppValue /* OUT: New value (or NULL pointer) */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Obtain Conflicting Row Values From A Changeset Iterator |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9104 9105 9106 9107 9108 9109 9110 | ** sqlite3_value object containing the iVal'th value from the ** "conflicting row" associated with the current conflict-handler callback ** and returns SQLITE_OK. ** ** If some other error occurs (e.g. an OOM condition), an SQLite error code ** is returned and *ppValue is set to NULL. */ | | | | 9234 9235 9236 9237 9238 9239 9240 9241 9242 9243 9244 9245 9246 9247 9248 9249 9250 9251 9252 9253 9254 9255 9256 9257 9258 9259 9260 9261 9262 9263 9264 | ** sqlite3_value object containing the iVal'th value from the ** "conflicting row" associated with the current conflict-handler callback ** and returns SQLITE_OK. ** ** If some other error occurs (e.g. an OOM condition), an SQLite error code ** is returned and *ppValue is set to NULL. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_conflict( sqlite3_changeset_iter *pIter, /* Changeset iterator */ int iVal, /* Column number */ sqlite3_value **ppValue /* OUT: Value from conflicting row */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Determine The Number Of Foreign Key Constraint Violations ** ** This function may only be called with an iterator passed to an ** SQLITE_CHANGESET_FOREIGN_KEY conflict handler callback. In this case ** it sets the output variable to the total number of known foreign key ** violations in the destination database and returns SQLITE_OK. ** ** In all other cases this function returns SQLITE_MISUSE. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_fk_conflicts( sqlite3_changeset_iter *pIter, /* Changeset iterator */ int *pnOut /* OUT: Number of FK violations */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Finalize A Changeset Iterator |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9153 9154 9155 9156 9157 9158 9159 | ** // Do something with change. ** } ** rc = sqlite3changeset_finalize(); ** if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ ** // An error has occurred ** } */ | | | 9283 9284 9285 9286 9287 9288 9289 9290 9291 9292 9293 9294 9295 9296 9297 | ** // Do something with change. ** } ** rc = sqlite3changeset_finalize(); ** if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ ** // An error has occurred ** } */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_finalize(sqlite3_changeset_iter *pIter); /* ** CAPI3REF: Invert A Changeset ** ** This function is used to "invert" a changeset object. Applying an inverted ** changeset to a database reverses the effects of applying the uninverted ** changeset. Specifically: |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9183 9184 9185 9186 9187 9188 9189 | ** It is the responsibility of the caller to eventually call sqlite3_free() ** on the *ppOut pointer to free the buffer allocation following a successful ** call to this function. ** ** WARNING/TODO: This function currently assumes that the input is a valid ** changeset. If it is not, the results are undefined. */ | | | 9313 9314 9315 9316 9317 9318 9319 9320 9321 9322 9323 9324 9325 9326 9327 | ** It is the responsibility of the caller to eventually call sqlite3_free() ** on the *ppOut pointer to free the buffer allocation following a successful ** call to this function. ** ** WARNING/TODO: This function currently assumes that the input is a valid ** changeset. If it is not, the results are undefined. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_invert( int nIn, const void *pIn, /* Input changeset */ int *pnOut, void **ppOut /* OUT: Inverse of input */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Concatenate Two Changeset Objects ** |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9212 9213 9214 9215 9216 9217 9218 | ** }else{ ** *ppOut = 0; ** *pnOut = 0; ** } ** ** Refer to the sqlite3_changegroup documentation below for details. */ | | | 9342 9343 9344 9345 9346 9347 9348 9349 9350 9351 9352 9353 9354 9355 9356 | ** }else{ ** *ppOut = 0; ** *pnOut = 0; ** } ** ** Refer to the sqlite3_changegroup documentation below for details. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_concat( int nA, /* Number of bytes in buffer pA */ void *pA, /* Pointer to buffer containing changeset A */ int nB, /* Number of bytes in buffer pB */ void *pB, /* Pointer to buffer containing changeset B */ int *pnOut, /* OUT: Number of bytes in output changeset */ void **ppOut /* OUT: Buffer containing output changeset */ ); |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9262 9263 9264 9265 9266 9267 9268 | ** Any number of calls to add() and output() may be made between the calls to ** new() and delete(), and in any order. ** ** As well as the regular sqlite3changegroup_add() and ** sqlite3changegroup_output() functions, also available are the streaming ** versions sqlite3changegroup_add_strm() and sqlite3changegroup_output_strm(). */ | | | | 9392 9393 9394 9395 9396 9397 9398 9399 9400 9401 9402 9403 9404 9405 9406 9407 9408 9409 9410 9411 9412 9413 9414 9415 9416 9417 9418 9419 9420 9421 9422 9423 9424 9425 | ** Any number of calls to add() and output() may be made between the calls to ** new() and delete(), and in any order. ** ** As well as the regular sqlite3changegroup_add() and ** sqlite3changegroup_output() functions, also available are the streaming ** versions sqlite3changegroup_add_strm() and sqlite3changegroup_output_strm(). */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changegroup_new(sqlite3_changegroup **pp); /* ** CAPI3REF: Add A Changeset To A Changegroup ** ** Add all changes within the changeset (or patchset) in buffer pData (size ** nData bytes) to the changegroup. ** ** If the buffer contains a patchset, then all prior calls to this function ** on the same changegroup object must also have specified patchsets. Or, if ** the buffer contains a changeset, so must have the earlier calls to this ** function. Otherwise, SQLITE_ERROR is returned and no changes are added ** to the changegroup. ** ** Rows within the changeset and changegroup are identified by the values in ** their PRIMARY KEY columns. A change in the changeset is considered to ** apply to the same row as a change already present in the changegroup if ** the two rows have the same primary key. ** ** Changes to rows that do not already appear in the changegroup are ** simply copied into it. Or, if both the new changeset and the changegroup ** contain changes that apply to a single row, the final contents of the ** changegroup depends on the type of each change, as follows: ** ** <table border=1 style="margin-left:8ex;margin-right:8ex"> ** <tr><th style="white-space:pre">Existing Change </th> ** <th style="white-space:pre">New Change </th> |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9339 9340 9341 9342 9343 9344 9345 | ** appears to be corrupt and the corruption is detected, SQLITE_CORRUPT is ** returned. Or, if an out-of-memory condition occurs during processing, this ** function returns SQLITE_NOMEM. In all cases, if an error occurs the ** final contents of the changegroup is undefined. ** ** If no error occurs, SQLITE_OK is returned. */ | | | 9469 9470 9471 9472 9473 9474 9475 9476 9477 9478 9479 9480 9481 9482 9483 | ** appears to be corrupt and the corruption is detected, SQLITE_CORRUPT is ** returned. Or, if an out-of-memory condition occurs during processing, this ** function returns SQLITE_NOMEM. In all cases, if an error occurs the ** final contents of the changegroup is undefined. ** ** If no error occurs, SQLITE_OK is returned. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changegroup_add(sqlite3_changegroup*, int nData, void *pData); /* ** CAPI3REF: Obtain A Composite Changeset From A Changegroup ** ** Obtain a buffer containing a changeset (or patchset) representing the ** current contents of the changegroup. If the inputs to the changegroup ** were themselves changesets, the output is a changeset. Or, if the |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9365 9366 9367 9368 9369 9370 9371 | ** If an error occurs, an SQLite error code is returned and the output ** variables (*pnData) and (*ppData) are set to 0. Otherwise, SQLITE_OK ** is returned and the output variables are set to the size of and a ** pointer to the output buffer, respectively. In this case it is the ** responsibility of the caller to eventually free the buffer using a ** call to sqlite3_free(). */ | | | | 9495 9496 9497 9498 9499 9500 9501 9502 9503 9504 9505 9506 9507 9508 9509 9510 9511 9512 9513 9514 9515 9516 9517 9518 | ** If an error occurs, an SQLite error code is returned and the output ** variables (*pnData) and (*ppData) are set to 0. Otherwise, SQLITE_OK ** is returned and the output variables are set to the size of and a ** pointer to the output buffer, respectively. In this case it is the ** responsibility of the caller to eventually free the buffer using a ** call to sqlite3_free(). */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changegroup_output( sqlite3_changegroup*, int *pnData, /* OUT: Size of output buffer in bytes */ void **ppData /* OUT: Pointer to output buffer */ ); /* ** CAPI3REF: Delete A Changegroup Object */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3changegroup_delete(sqlite3_changegroup*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Apply A Changeset To A Database ** ** Apply a changeset to a database. This function attempts to update the ** "main" database attached to handle db with the changes found in the ** changeset passed via the second and third arguments. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9400 9401 9402 9403 9404 9405 9406 | ** For each table that is not excluded by the filter callback, this function ** tests that the target database contains a compatible table. A table is ** considered compatible if all of the following are true: ** ** <ul> ** <li> The table has the same name as the name recorded in the ** changeset, and | | | 9530 9531 9532 9533 9534 9535 9536 9537 9538 9539 9540 9541 9542 9543 9544 | ** For each table that is not excluded by the filter callback, this function ** tests that the target database contains a compatible table. A table is ** considered compatible if all of the following are true: ** ** <ul> ** <li> The table has the same name as the name recorded in the ** changeset, and ** <li> The table has at least as many columns as recorded in the ** changeset, and ** <li> The table has primary key columns in the same position as ** recorded in the changeset. ** </ul> ** ** If there is no compatible table, it is not an error, but none of the ** changes associated with the table are applied. A warning message is issued |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9445 9446 9447 9448 9449 9450 9451 | ** original row values stored in the changeset. If it does, and the values ** stored in all non-primary key columns also match the values stored in ** the changeset the row is deleted from the target database. ** ** If a row with matching primary key values is found, but one or more of ** the non-primary key fields contains a value different from the original ** row value stored in the changeset, the conflict-handler function is | | > > > > | > > | | | | | | 9575 9576 9577 9578 9579 9580 9581 9582 9583 9584 9585 9586 9587 9588 9589 9590 9591 9592 9593 9594 9595 9596 9597 9598 9599 9600 9601 9602 9603 9604 9605 9606 9607 9608 9609 9610 9611 9612 9613 9614 9615 9616 9617 9618 9619 9620 9621 9622 9623 9624 9625 9626 9627 9628 9629 9630 9631 9632 9633 9634 | ** original row values stored in the changeset. If it does, and the values ** stored in all non-primary key columns also match the values stored in ** the changeset the row is deleted from the target database. ** ** If a row with matching primary key values is found, but one or more of ** the non-primary key fields contains a value different from the original ** row value stored in the changeset, the conflict-handler function is ** invoked with [SQLITE_CHANGESET_DATA] as the second argument. If the ** database table has more columns than are recorded in the changeset, ** only the values of those non-primary key fields are compared against ** the current database contents - any trailing database table columns ** are ignored. ** ** If no row with matching primary key values is found in the database, ** the conflict-handler function is invoked with [SQLITE_CHANGESET_NOTFOUND] ** passed as the second argument. ** ** If the DELETE operation is attempted, but SQLite returns SQLITE_CONSTRAINT ** (which can only happen if a foreign key constraint is violated), the ** conflict-handler function is invoked with [SQLITE_CHANGESET_CONSTRAINT] ** passed as the second argument. This includes the case where the DELETE ** operation is attempted because an earlier call to the conflict handler ** function returned [SQLITE_CHANGESET_REPLACE]. ** ** <dt>INSERT Changes<dd> ** For each INSERT change, an attempt is made to insert the new row into ** the database. If the changeset row contains fewer fields than the ** database table, the trailing fields are populated with their default ** values. ** ** If the attempt to insert the row fails because the database already ** contains a row with the same primary key values, the conflict handler ** function is invoked with the second argument set to ** [SQLITE_CHANGESET_CONFLICT]. ** ** If the attempt to insert the row fails because of some other constraint ** violation (e.g. NOT NULL or UNIQUE), the conflict handler function is ** invoked with the second argument set to [SQLITE_CHANGESET_CONSTRAINT]. ** This includes the case where the INSERT operation is re-attempted because ** an earlier call to the conflict handler function returned ** [SQLITE_CHANGESET_REPLACE]. ** ** <dt>UPDATE Changes<dd> ** For each UPDATE change, this function checks if the target database ** contains a row with the same primary key value (or values) as the ** original row values stored in the changeset. If it does, and the values ** stored in all modified non-primary key columns also match the values ** stored in the changeset the row is updated within the target database. ** ** If a row with matching primary key values is found, but one or more of ** the modified non-primary key fields contains a value different from an ** original row value stored in the changeset, the conflict-handler function ** is invoked with [SQLITE_CHANGESET_DATA] as the second argument. Since ** UPDATE changes only contain values for non-primary key fields that are ** to be modified, only those fields need to match the original values to ** avoid the SQLITE_CHANGESET_DATA conflict-handler callback. ** ** If no row with matching primary key values is found in the database, ** the conflict-handler function is invoked with [SQLITE_CHANGESET_NOTFOUND] ** passed as the second argument. |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9512 9513 9514 9515 9516 9517 9518 | ** ** All changes made by this function are enclosed in a savepoint transaction. ** If any other error (aside from a constraint failure when attempting to ** write to the target database) occurs, then the savepoint transaction is ** rolled back, restoring the target database to its original state, and an ** SQLite error code returned. */ | | | 9648 9649 9650 9651 9652 9653 9654 9655 9656 9657 9658 9659 9660 9661 9662 | ** ** All changes made by this function are enclosed in a savepoint transaction. ** If any other error (aside from a constraint failure when attempting to ** write to the target database) occurs, then the savepoint transaction is ** rolled back, restoring the target database to its original state, and an ** SQLite error code returned. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_apply( sqlite3 *db, /* Apply change to "main" db of this handle */ int nChangeset, /* Size of changeset in bytes */ void *pChangeset, /* Changeset blob */ int(*xFilter)( void *pCtx, /* Copy of sixth arg to _apply() */ const char *zTab /* Table name */ ), |
︙ | ︙ | |||
9713 9714 9715 9716 9717 9718 9719 | ** is immediately abandoned and the streaming API function returns a copy ** of the xOutput error code to the application. ** ** The sessions module never invokes an xOutput callback with the third ** parameter set to a value less than or equal to zero. Other than this, ** no guarantees are made as to the size of the chunks of data returned. */ | | | | | | | | | | 9849 9850 9851 9852 9853 9854 9855 9856 9857 9858 9859 9860 9861 9862 9863 9864 9865 9866 9867 9868 9869 9870 9871 9872 9873 9874 9875 9876 9877 9878 9879 9880 9881 9882 9883 9884 9885 9886 9887 9888 9889 9890 9891 9892 9893 9894 9895 9896 9897 9898 9899 9900 9901 9902 9903 9904 9905 9906 9907 9908 9909 9910 9911 | ** is immediately abandoned and the streaming API function returns a copy ** of the xOutput error code to the application. ** ** The sessions module never invokes an xOutput callback with the third ** parameter set to a value less than or equal to zero. Other than this, ** no guarantees are made as to the size of the chunks of data returned. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_apply_strm( sqlite3 *db, /* Apply change to "main" db of this handle */ int (*xInput)(void *pIn, void *pData, int *pnData), /* Input function */ void *pIn, /* First arg for xInput */ int(*xFilter)( void *pCtx, /* Copy of sixth arg to _apply() */ const char *zTab /* Table name */ ), int(*xConflict)( void *pCtx, /* Copy of sixth arg to _apply() */ int eConflict, /* DATA, MISSING, CONFLICT, CONSTRAINT */ sqlite3_changeset_iter *p /* Handle describing change and conflict */ ), void *pCtx /* First argument passed to xConflict */ ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_concat_strm( int (*xInputA)(void *pIn, void *pData, int *pnData), void *pInA, int (*xInputB)(void *pIn, void *pData, int *pnData), void *pInB, int (*xOutput)(void *pOut, const void *pData, int nData), void *pOut ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_invert_strm( int (*xInput)(void *pIn, void *pData, int *pnData), void *pIn, int (*xOutput)(void *pOut, const void *pData, int nData), void *pOut ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3changeset_start_strm( sqlite3_changeset_iter **pp, int (*xInput)(void *pIn, void *pData, int *pnData), void *pIn ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_changeset_strm( sqlite3_session *pSession, int (*xOutput)(void *pOut, const void *pData, int nData), void *pOut ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3session_patchset_strm( sqlite3_session *pSession, int (*xOutput)(void *pOut, const void *pData, int nData), void *pOut ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3changegroup_add_strm(sqlite3_changegroup*, int (*xInput)(void *pIn, void *pData, int *pnData), void *pIn ); SQLITE_API int sqlite3changegroup_output_strm(sqlite3_changegroup*, int (*xOutput)(void *pOut, const void *pData, int nData), void *pOut ); /* ** Make sure we can call this stuff from C++. |
︙ | ︙ |