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/*
** 2010 February 1
**
** The author disclaims copyright to this source code.  In place of
** a legal notice, here is a blessing:
**
**    May you do good and not evil.
**    May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
**    May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
**
*************************************************************************
**
** This file contains the implementation of a write-ahead log (WAL) used in 
** "journal_mode=WAL" mode.
**
** WRITE-AHEAD LOG (WAL) FILE FORMAT
**
** A WAL file consists of a header followed by zero or more "frames".
** Each frame records the revised content of a single page from the
** database file.  All changes to the database are recorded by writing
** frames into the WAL.  Transactions commit when a frame is written that
** contains a commit marker.  A single WAL can and usually does record 
** multiple transactions.  Periodically, the content of the WAL is
** transferred back into the database file in an operation called a
** "checkpoint".
**
** A single WAL file can be used multiple times.  In other words, the
** WAL can fill up with frames and then be checkpointed and then new
** frames can overwrite the old ones.  A WAL always grows from beginning
** toward the end.  Checksums and counters attached to each frame are
** used to determine which frames within the WAL are valid and which
** are leftovers from prior checkpoints.
**
** The WAL header is 32 bytes in size and consists of the following eight
** big-endian 32-bit unsigned integer values:
**
**     0: Magic number.  0x377f0682 or 0x377f0683
**     4: File format version.  Currently 3007000
**     8: Database page size.  Example: 1024
**    12: Checkpoint sequence number
**    16: Salt-1, random integer incremented with each checkpoint
**    20: Salt-2, a different random integer changing with each ckpt
**    24: Checksum-1 (first part of checksum for first 24 bytes of header).
**    28: Checksum-2 (second part of checksum for first 24 bytes of header).
**
** Immediately following the wal-header are zero or more frames. Each
** frame consists of a 24-byte frame-header followed by a <page-size> bytes
** of page data. The frame-header is six big-endian 32-bit unsigned 
** integer values, as follows:
**
**     0: Page number.
**     4: For commit records, the size of the database image in pages 
**        after the commit. For all other records, zero.
**     8: Salt-1 (copied from the header)
**    12: Salt-2 (copied from the header)
**    16: Checksum-1.
**    20: Checksum-2.
**
** A frame is considered valid if and only if the following conditions are
** true:
**
**    (1) The salt-1 and salt-2 values in the frame-header match
**        salt values in the wal-header
**
**    (2) The checksum values in the final 8 bytes of the frame-header
**        exactly match the checksum computed consecutively on the
**        WAL header and the first 8 bytes and the content of all frames
**        up to and including the current frame.
**
** The checksum is computed using 32-bit big-endian integers if the
** magic number in the first 4 bytes of the WAL is 0x377f0683 and it
** is computed using little-endian if the magic number is 0x377f0682.
** The checksum values are always stored in the frame header in a
** big-endian format regardless of which byte order is used to compute
** the checksum.  The checksum is computed by interpreting the input as
** an even number of unsigned 32-bit integers: x[0] through x[N].  The
** algorithm used for the checksum is as follows:
** 
**   for i from 0 to n-1 step 2:
**     s0 += x[i] + s1;
**     s1 += x[i+1] + s0;
**   endfor
**
** Note that s0 and s1 are both weighted checksums using fibonacci weights
** in reverse order (the largest fibonacci weight occurs on the first element
** of the sequence being summed.)  The s1 value spans all 32-bit 
** terms of the sequence whereas s0 omits the final term.
**
** On a checkpoint, the WAL is first VFS.xSync-ed, then valid content of the
** WAL is transferred into the database, then the database is VFS.xSync-ed.
** The VFS.xSync operations serve as write barriers - all writes launched
** before the xSync must complete before any write that launches after the
** xSync begins.
**
** After each checkpoint, the salt-1 value is incremented and the salt-2
** value is randomized.  This prevents old and new frames in the WAL from
** being considered valid at the same time and being checkpointing together
** following a crash.
**
** READER ALGORITHM
**
** To read a page from the database (call it page number P), a reader
** first checks the WAL to see if it contains page P.  If so, then the
** last valid instance of page P that is a followed by a commit frame
** or is a commit frame itself becomes the value read.  If the WAL
** contains no copies of page P that are valid and which are a commit
** frame or are followed by a commit frame, then page P is read from
** the database file.
**
** To start a read transaction, the reader records the index of the last
** valid frame in the WAL.  The reader uses this recorded "mxFrame" value
** for all subsequent read operations.  New transactions can be appended
** to the WAL, but as long as the reader uses its original mxFrame value
** and ignores the newly appended content, it will see a consistent snapshot
** of the database from a single point in time.  This technique allows
** multiple concurrent readers to view different versions of the database
** content simultaneously.
**
** The reader algorithm in the previous paragraphs works correctly, but 
** because frames for page P can appear anywhere within the WAL, the
** reader has to scan the entire WAL looking for page P frames.  If the
** WAL is large (multiple megabytes is typical) that scan can be slow,
** and read performance suffers.  To overcome this problem, a separate
** data structure called the wal-index is maintained to expedite the
** search for frames of a particular page.
** 
** WAL-INDEX FORMAT
**
** Conceptually, the wal-index is shared memory, though VFS implementations
** might choose to implement the wal-index using a mmapped file.  Because
** the wal-index is shared memory, SQLite does not support journal_mode=WAL 
** on a network filesystem.  All users of the database must be able to
** share memory.
**
** In the default unix and windows implementation, the wal-index is a mmapped
** file whose name is the database name with a "-shm" suffix added.  For that
** reason, the wal-index is sometimes called the "shm" file.
**
** The wal-index is transient.  After a crash, the wal-index can (and should
** be) reconstructed from the original WAL file.  In fact, the VFS is required
** to either truncate or zero the header of the wal-index when the last
** connection to it closes.  Because the wal-index is transient, it can
** use an architecture-specific format; it does not have to be cross-platform.
** Hence, unlike the database and WAL file formats which store all values
** as big endian, the wal-index can store multi-byte values in the native
** byte order of the host computer.
**
** The purpose of the wal-index is to answer this question quickly:  Given
** a page number P and a maximum frame index M, return the index of the 
** last frame in the wal before frame M for page P in the WAL, or return
** NULL if there are no frames for page P in the WAL prior to M.
**
** The wal-index consists of a header region, followed by an one or
** more index blocks.  
**
** The wal-index header contains the total number of frames within the WAL
** in the mxFrame field.
**
** Each index block except for the first contains information on 
** HASHTABLE_NPAGE frames. The first index block contains information on
** HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE frames. The values of HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE and 
** HASHTABLE_NPAGE are selected so that together the wal-index header and
** first index block are the same size as all other index blocks in the
** wal-index.
**
** Each index block contains two sections, a page-mapping that contains the
** database page number associated with each wal frame, and a hash-table 
** that allows readers to query an index block for a specific page number.
** The page-mapping is an array of HASHTABLE_NPAGE (or HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE
** for the first index block) 32-bit page numbers. The first entry in the 
** first index-block contains the database page number corresponding to the
** first frame in the WAL file. The first entry in the second index block
** in the WAL file corresponds to the (HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE+1)th frame in
** the log, and so on.
**
** The last index block in a wal-index usually contains less than the full
** complement of HASHTABLE_NPAGE (or HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE) page-numbers,
** depending on the contents of the WAL file. This does not change the
** allocated size of the page-mapping array - the page-mapping array merely
** contains unused entries.
**
** Even without using the hash table, the last frame for page P
** can be found by scanning the page-mapping sections of each index block
** starting with the last index block and moving toward the first, and
** within each index block, starting at the end and moving toward the
** beginning.  The first entry that equals P corresponds to the frame
** holding the content for that page.
**
** The hash table consists of HASHTABLE_NSLOT 16-bit unsigned integers.
** HASHTABLE_NSLOT = 2*HASHTABLE_NPAGE, and there is one entry in the
** hash table for each page number in the mapping section, so the hash 
** table is never more than half full.  The expected number of collisions 
** prior to finding a match is 1.  Each entry of the hash table is an
** 1-based index of an entry in the mapping section of the same
** index block.   Let K be the 1-based index of the largest entry in
** the mapping section.  (For index blocks other than the last, K will
** always be exactly HASHTABLE_NPAGE (4096) and for the last index block
** K will be (mxFrame%HASHTABLE_NPAGE).)  Unused slots of the hash table
** contain a value of 0.
**
** To look for page P in the hash table, first compute a hash iKey on
** P as follows:
**
**      iKey = (P * 383) % HASHTABLE_NSLOT
**
** Then start scanning entries of the hash table, starting with iKey
** (wrapping around to the beginning when the end of the hash table is
** reached) until an unused hash slot is found. Let the first unused slot
** be at index iUnused.  (iUnused might be less than iKey if there was
** wrap-around.) Because the hash table is never more than half full,
** the search is guaranteed to eventually hit an unused entry.  Let 
** iMax be the value between iKey and iUnused, closest to iUnused,
** where aHash[iMax]==P.  If there is no iMax entry (if there exists
** no hash slot such that aHash[i]==p) then page P is not in the
** current index block.  Otherwise the iMax-th mapping entry of the
** current index block corresponds to the last entry that references 
** page P.
**
** A hash search begins with the last index block and moves toward the
** first index block, looking for entries corresponding to page P.  On
** average, only two or three slots in each index block need to be
** examined in order to either find the last entry for page P, or to
** establish that no such entry exists in the block.  Each index block
** holds over 4000 entries.  So two or three index blocks are sufficient
** to cover a typical 10 megabyte WAL file, assuming 1K pages.  8 or 10
** comparisons (on average) suffice to either locate a frame in the
** WAL or to establish that the frame does not exist in the WAL.  This
** is much faster than scanning the entire 10MB WAL.
**
** Note that entries are added in order of increasing K.  Hence, one
** reader might be using some value K0 and a second reader that started
** at a later time (after additional transactions were added to the WAL
** and to the wal-index) might be using a different value K1, where K1>K0.
** Both readers can use the same hash table and mapping section to get
** the correct result.  There may be entries in the hash table with
** K>K0 but to the first reader, those entries will appear to be unused
** slots in the hash table and so the first reader will get an answer as
** if no values greater than K0 had ever been inserted into the hash table
** in the first place - which is what reader one wants.  Meanwhile, the
** second reader using K1 will see additional values that were inserted
** later, which is exactly what reader two wants.  
**
** When a rollback occurs, the value of K is decreased. Hash table entries
** that correspond to frames greater than the new K value are removed
** from the hash table at this point.
*/
#ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_WAL

#include "wal.h"

/*
** Trace output macros
*/
#if defined(SQLITE_TEST) && defined(SQLITE_DEBUG)
int sqlite3WalTrace = 0;
# define WALTRACE(X)  if(sqlite3WalTrace) sqlite3DebugPrintf X
#else
# define WALTRACE(X)
#endif

/*
** The maximum (and only) versions of the wal and wal-index formats
** that may be interpreted by this version of SQLite.
**
** If a client begins recovering a WAL file and finds that (a) the checksum
** values in the wal-header are correct and (b) the version field is not
** WAL_MAX_VERSION, recovery fails and SQLite returns SQLITE_CANTOPEN.
**
** Similarly, if a client successfully reads a wal-index header (i.e. the 
** checksum test is successful) and finds that the version field is not
** WALINDEX_MAX_VERSION, then no read-transaction is opened and SQLite
** returns SQLITE_CANTOPEN.
*/
#define WAL_MAX_VERSION      3007000
#define WALINDEX_MAX_VERSION 3007000

/*
** Index numbers for various locking bytes.   WAL_NREADER is the number
** of available reader locks and should be at least 3.  The default
** is SQLITE_SHM_NLOCK==8 and  WAL_NREADER==5.
**
** Technically, the various VFSes are free to implement these locks however
** they see fit.  However, compatibility is encouraged so that VFSes can
** interoperate.  The standard implemention used on both unix and windows
** is for the index number to indicate a byte offset into the
** WalCkptInfo.aLock[] array in the wal-index header.  In other words, all
** locks are on the shm file.  The WALINDEX_LOCK_OFFSET constant (which
** should be 120) is the location in the shm file for the first locking
** byte.
*/
#define WAL_WRITE_LOCK         0
#define WAL_ALL_BUT_WRITE      1
#define WAL_CKPT_LOCK          1
#define WAL_RECOVER_LOCK       2
#define WAL_READ_LOCK(I)       (3+(I))
#define WAL_NREADER            (SQLITE_SHM_NLOCK-3)


/* Object declarations */
typedef struct WalIndexHdr WalIndexHdr;
typedef struct WalIterator WalIterator;
typedef struct WalCkptInfo WalCkptInfo;


/*
** The following object holds a copy of the wal-index header content.
**
** The actual header in the wal-index consists of two copies of this
** object followed by one instance of the WalCkptInfo object.
** For all versions of SQLite through 3.10.0 and probably beyond,
** the locking bytes (WalCkptInfo.aLock) start at offset 120 and
** the total header size is 136 bytes.
**
** The szPage value can be any power of 2 between 512 and 32768, inclusive.
** Or it can be 1 to represent a 65536-byte page.  The latter case was
** added in 3.7.1 when support for 64K pages was added.  
*/
struct WalIndexHdr {
  u32 iVersion;                   /* Wal-index version */
  u32 unused;                     /* Unused (padding) field */
  u32 iChange;                    /* Counter incremented each transaction */
  u8 isInit;                      /* 1 when initialized */
  u8 bigEndCksum;                 /* True if checksums in WAL are big-endian */
  u16 szPage;                     /* Database page size in bytes. 1==64K */
  u32 mxFrame;                    /* Index of last valid frame in the WAL */
  u32 nPage;                      /* Size of database in pages */
  u32 aFrameCksum[2];             /* Checksum of last frame in log */
  u32 aSalt[2];                   /* Two salt values copied from WAL header */
  u32 aCksum[2];                  /* Checksum over all prior fields */
};

/*
** A copy of the following object occurs in the wal-index immediately
** following the second copy of the WalIndexHdr.  This object stores
** information used by checkpoint.
**
** nBackfill is the number of frames in the WAL that have been written
** back into the database. (We call the act of moving content from WAL to
** database "backfilling".)  The nBackfill number is never greater than
** WalIndexHdr.mxFrame.  nBackfill can only be increased by threads
** holding the WAL_CKPT_LOCK lock (which includes a recovery thread).
** However, a WAL_WRITE_LOCK thread can move the value of nBackfill from
** mxFrame back to zero when the WAL is reset.
**
** nBackfillAttempted is the largest value of nBackfill that a checkpoint
** has attempted to achieve.  Normally nBackfill==nBackfillAtempted, however
** the nBackfillAttempted is set before any backfilling is done and the
** nBackfill is only set after all backfilling completes.  So if a checkpoint
** crashes, nBackfillAttempted might be larger than nBackfill.  The
** WalIndexHdr.mxFrame must never be less than nBackfillAttempted.
**
** The aLock[] field is a set of bytes used for locking.  These bytes should
** never be read or written.
**
** There is one entry in aReadMark[] for each reader lock.  If a reader
** holds read-lock K, then the value in aReadMark[K] is no greater than
** the mxFrame for that reader.  The value READMARK_NOT_USED (0xffffffff)
** for any aReadMark[] means that entry is unused.  aReadMark[0] is 
** a special case; its value is never used and it exists as a place-holder
** to avoid having to offset aReadMark[] indexs by one.  Readers holding
** WAL_READ_LOCK(0) always ignore the entire WAL and read all content
** directly from the database.
**
** The value of aReadMark[K] may only be changed by a thread that
** is holding an exclusive lock on WAL_READ_LOCK(K).  Thus, the value of
** aReadMark[K] cannot changed while there is a reader is using that mark
** since the reader will be holding a shared lock on WAL_READ_LOCK(K).
**
** The checkpointer may only transfer frames from WAL to database where
** the frame numbers are less than or equal to every aReadMark[] that is
** in use (that is, every aReadMark[j] for which there is a corresponding
** WAL_READ_LOCK(j)).  New readers (usually) pick the aReadMark[] with the
** largest value and will increase an unused aReadMark[] to mxFrame if there
** is not already an aReadMark[] equal to mxFrame.  The exception to the
** previous sentence is when nBackfill equals mxFrame (meaning that everything
** in the WAL has been backfilled into the database) then new readers
** will choose aReadMark[0] which has value 0 and hence such reader will
** get all their all content directly from the database file and ignore 
** the WAL.
**
** Writers normally append new frames to the end of the WAL.  However,
** if nBackfill equals mxFrame (meaning that all WAL content has been
** written back into the database) and if no readers are using the WAL
** (in other words, if there are no WAL_READ_LOCK(i) where i>0) then
** the writer will first "reset" the WAL back to the beginning and start
** writing new content beginning at frame 1.
**
** We assume that 32-bit loads are atomic and so no locks are needed in
** order to read from any aReadMark[] entries.
*/
struct WalCkptInfo {
  u32 nBackfill;                  /* Number of WAL frames backfilled into DB */
  u32 aReadMark[WAL_NREADER];     /* Reader marks */
  u8 aLock[SQLITE_SHM_NLOCK];     /* Reserved space for locks */
  u32 nBackfillAttempted;         /* WAL frames perhaps written, or maybe not */
  u32 notUsed0;                   /* Available for future enhancements */
};
#define READMARK_NOT_USED  0xffffffff


/* A block of WALINDEX_LOCK_RESERVED bytes beginning at
** WALINDEX_LOCK_OFFSET is reserved for locks. Since some systems
** only support mandatory file-locks, we do not read or write data
** from the region of the file on which locks are applied.
*/
#define WALINDEX_LOCK_OFFSET (sizeof(WalIndexHdr)*2+offsetof(WalCkptInfo,aLock))
#define WALINDEX_HDR_SIZE    (sizeof(WalIndexHdr)*2+sizeof(WalCkptInfo))

/* Size of header before each frame in wal */
#define WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE 24

/* Size of write ahead log header, including checksum. */
#define WAL_HDRSIZE 32

/* WAL magic value. Either this value, or the same value with the least
** significant bit also set (WAL_MAGIC | 0x00000001) is stored in 32-bit
** big-endian format in the first 4 bytes of a WAL file.
**
** If the LSB is set, then the checksums for each frame within the WAL
** file are calculated by treating all data as an array of 32-bit 
** big-endian words. Otherwise, they are calculated by interpreting 
** all data as 32-bit little-endian words.
*/
#define WAL_MAGIC 0x377f0682

/*
** Return the offset of frame iFrame in the write-ahead log file, 
** assuming a database page size of szPage bytes. The offset returned
** is to the start of the write-ahead log frame-header.
*/
#define walFrameOffset(iFrame, szPage) (                               \
  WAL_HDRSIZE + ((iFrame)-1)*(i64)((szPage)+WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE)         \
)

/*
** An open write-ahead log file is represented by an instance of the
** following object.
*/
struct Wal {
  sqlite3_vfs *pVfs;         /* The VFS used to create pDbFd */
  sqlite3_file *pDbFd;       /* File handle for the database file */
  sqlite3_file *pWalFd;      /* File handle for WAL file */
  u32 iCallback;             /* Value to pass to log callback (or 0) */
  i64 mxWalSize;             /* Truncate WAL to this size upon reset */
  int nWiData;               /* Size of array apWiData */
  int szFirstBlock;          /* Size of first block written to WAL file */
  volatile u32 **apWiData;   /* Pointer to wal-index content in memory */
  u32 szPage;                /* Database page size */
  i16 readLock;              /* Which read lock is being held.  -1 for none */
  u8 syncFlags;              /* Flags to use to sync header writes */
  u8 exclusiveMode;          /* Non-zero if connection is in exclusive mode */
  u8 writeLock;              /* True if in a write transaction */
  u8 ckptLock;               /* True if holding a checkpoint lock */
  u8 readOnly;               /* WAL_RDWR, WAL_RDONLY, or WAL_SHM_RDONLY */
  u8 truncateOnCommit;       /* True to truncate WAL file on commit */
  u8 syncHeader;             /* Fsync the WAL header if true */
  u8 padToSectorBoundary;    /* Pad transactions out to the next sector */
  u8 bShmUnreliable;         /* SHM content is read-only and unreliable */
  WalIndexHdr hdr;           /* Wal-index header for current transaction */
  u32 minFrame;              /* Ignore wal frames before this one */
  u32 iReCksum;              /* On commit, recalculate checksums from here */
  const char *zWalName;      /* Name of WAL file */
  u32 nCkpt;                 /* Checkpoint sequence counter in the wal-header */
#ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG
  u8 lockError;              /* True if a locking error has occurred */
#endif
#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT
  WalIndexHdr *pSnapshot;    /* Start transaction here if not NULL */
#endif
#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SETLK_TIMEOUT
  sqlite3 *db;
#endif
};

/*
** Candidate values for Wal.exclusiveMode.
*/
#define WAL_NORMAL_MODE     0
#define WAL_EXCLUSIVE_MODE  1     
#define WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE 2

/*
** Possible values for WAL.readOnly
*/
#define WAL_RDWR        0    /* Normal read/write connection */
#define WAL_RDONLY      1    /* The WAL file is readonly */
#define WAL_SHM_RDONLY  2    /* The SHM file is readonly */

/*
** Each page of the wal-index mapping contains a hash-table made up of
** an array of HASHTABLE_NSLOT elements of the following type.
*/
typedef u16 ht_slot;

/*
** This structure is used to implement an iterator that loops through
** all frames in the WAL in database page order. Where two or more frames
** correspond to the same database page, the iterator visits only the 
** frame most recently written to the WAL (in other words, the frame with
** the largest index).
**
** The internals of this structure are only accessed by:
**
**   walIteratorInit() - Create a new iterator,
**   walIteratorNext() - Step an iterator,
**   walIteratorFree() - Free an iterator.
**
** This functionality is used by the checkpoint code (see walCheckpoint()).
*/
struct WalIterator {
  u32 iPrior;                     /* Last result returned from the iterator */
  int nSegment;                   /* Number of entries in aSegment[] */
  struct WalSegment {
    int iNext;                    /* Next slot in aIndex[] not yet returned */
    ht_slot *aIndex;              /* i0, i1, i2... such that aPgno[iN] ascend */
    u32 *aPgno;                   /* Array of page numbers. */
    int nEntry;                   /* Nr. of entries in aPgno[] and aIndex[] */
    int iZero;                    /* Frame number associated with aPgno[0] */
  } aSegment[1];                  /* One for every 32KB page in the wal-index */
};

/*
** Define the parameters of the hash tables in the wal-index file. There
** is a hash-table following every HASHTABLE_NPAGE page numbers in the
** wal-index.
**
** Changing any of these constants will alter the wal-index format and
** create incompatibilities.
*/
#define HASHTABLE_NPAGE      4096                 /* Must be power of 2 */
#define HASHTABLE_HASH_1     383                  /* Should be prime */
#define HASHTABLE_NSLOT      (HASHTABLE_NPAGE*2)  /* Must be a power of 2 */

/* 
** The block of page numbers associated with the first hash-table in a
** wal-index is smaller than usual. This is so that there is a complete
** hash-table on each aligned 32KB page of the wal-index.
*/
#define HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE  (HASHTABLE_NPAGE - (WALINDEX_HDR_SIZE/sizeof(u32)))

/* The wal-index is divided into pages of WALINDEX_PGSZ bytes each. */
#define WALINDEX_PGSZ   (                                         \
    sizeof(ht_slot)*HASHTABLE_NSLOT + HASHTABLE_NPAGE*sizeof(u32) \
)

/*
** Obtain a pointer to the iPage'th page of the wal-index. The wal-index
** is broken into pages of WALINDEX_PGSZ bytes. Wal-index pages are
** numbered from zero.
**
** If the wal-index is currently smaller the iPage pages then the size
** of the wal-index might be increased, but only if it is safe to do
** so.  It is safe to enlarge the wal-index if pWal->writeLock is true
** or pWal->exclusiveMode==WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE.
**
** If this call is successful, *ppPage is set to point to the wal-index
** page and SQLITE_OK is returned. If an error (an OOM or VFS error) occurs,
** then an SQLite error code is returned and *ppPage is set to 0.
*/
static SQLITE_NOINLINE int walIndexPageRealloc(
  Wal *pWal,               /* The WAL context */
  int iPage,               /* The page we seek */
  volatile u32 **ppPage    /* Write the page pointer here */
){
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;

  /* Enlarge the pWal->apWiData[] array if required */
  if( pWal->nWiData<=iPage ){
    sqlite3_int64 nByte = sizeof(u32*)*(iPage+1);
    volatile u32 **apNew;
    apNew = (volatile u32 **)sqlite3Realloc((void *)pWal->apWiData, nByte);
    if( !apNew ){
      *ppPage = 0;
      return SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;
    }
    memset((void*)&apNew[pWal->nWiData], 0,
           sizeof(u32*)*(iPage+1-pWal->nWiData));
    pWal->apWiData = apNew;
    pWal->nWiData = iPage+1;
  }

  /* Request a pointer to the required page from the VFS */
  assert( pWal->apWiData[iPage]==0 );
  if( pWal->exclusiveMode==WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE ){
    pWal->apWiData[iPage] = (u32 volatile *)sqlite3MallocZero(WALINDEX_PGSZ);
    if( !pWal->apWiData[iPage] ) rc = SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;
  }else{
    rc = sqlite3OsShmMap(pWal->pDbFd, iPage, WALINDEX_PGSZ, 
        pWal->writeLock, (void volatile **)&pWal->apWiData[iPage]
    );
    assert( pWal->apWiData[iPage]!=0 || rc!=SQLITE_OK || pWal->writeLock==0 );
    testcase( pWal->apWiData[iPage]==0 && rc==SQLITE_OK );
    if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
      if( iPage>0 && sqlite3FaultSim(600) ) rc = SQLITE_NOMEM;
    }else if( (rc&0xff)==SQLITE_READONLY ){
      pWal->readOnly |= WAL_SHM_RDONLY;
      if( rc==SQLITE_READONLY ){
        rc = SQLITE_OK;
      }
    }
  }

  *ppPage = pWal->apWiData[iPage];
  assert( iPage==0 || *ppPage || rc!=SQLITE_OK );
  return rc;
}
static int walIndexPage(
  Wal *pWal,               /* The WAL context */
  int iPage,               /* The page we seek */
  volatile u32 **ppPage    /* Write the page pointer here */
){
  if( pWal->nWiData<=iPage || (*ppPage = pWal->apWiData[iPage])==0 ){
    return walIndexPageRealloc(pWal, iPage, ppPage);
  }
  return SQLITE_OK;
}

/*
** Return a pointer to the WalCkptInfo structure in the wal-index.
*/
static volatile WalCkptInfo *walCkptInfo(Wal *pWal){
  assert( pWal->nWiData>0 && pWal->apWiData[0] );
  return (volatile WalCkptInfo*)&(pWal->apWiData[0][sizeof(WalIndexHdr)/2]);
}

/*
** Return a pointer to the WalIndexHdr structure in the wal-index.
*/
static volatile WalIndexHdr *walIndexHdr(Wal *pWal){
  assert( pWal->nWiData>0 && pWal->apWiData[0] );
  return (volatile WalIndexHdr*)pWal->apWiData[0];
}

/*
** The argument to this macro must be of type u32. On a little-endian
** architecture, it returns the u32 value that results from interpreting
** the 4 bytes as a big-endian value. On a big-endian architecture, it
** returns the value that would be produced by interpreting the 4 bytes
** of the input value as a little-endian integer.
*/
#define BYTESWAP32(x) ( \
    (((x)&0x000000FF)<<24) + (((x)&0x0000FF00)<<8)  \
  + (((x)&0x00FF0000)>>8)  + (((x)&0xFF000000)>>24) \
)

/*
** Generate or extend an 8 byte checksum based on the data in 
** array aByte[] and the initial values of aIn[0] and aIn[1] (or
** initial values of 0 and 0 if aIn==NULL).
**
** The checksum is written back into aOut[] before returning.
**
** nByte must be a positive multiple of 8.
*/
static void walChecksumBytes(
  int nativeCksum, /* True for native byte-order, false for non-native */
  u8 *a,           /* Content to be checksummed */
  int nByte,       /* Bytes of content in a[].  Must be a multiple of 8. */
  const u32 *aIn,  /* Initial checksum value input */
  u32 *aOut        /* OUT: Final checksum value output */
){
  u32 s1, s2;
  u32 *aData = (u32 *)a;
  u32 *aEnd = (u32 *)&a[nByte];

  if( aIn ){
    s1 = aIn[0];
    s2 = aIn[1];
  }else{
    s1 = s2 = 0;
  }

  assert( nByte>=8 );
  assert( (nByte&0x00000007)==0 );
  assert( nByte<=65536 );

  if( nativeCksum ){
    do {
      s1 += *aData++ + s2;
      s2 += *aData++ + s1;
    }while( aData<aEnd );
  }else{
    do {
      s1 += BYTESWAP32(aData[0]) + s2;
      s2 += BYTESWAP32(aData[1]) + s1;
      aData += 2;
    }while( aData<aEnd );
  }

  aOut[0] = s1;
  aOut[1] = s2;
}

/*
** If there is the possibility of concurrent access to the SHM file
** from multiple threads and/or processes, then do a memory barrier.
*/
static void walShmBarrier(Wal *pWal){
  if( pWal->exclusiveMode!=WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE ){
    sqlite3OsShmBarrier(pWal->pDbFd);
  }
}

/*
** Add the SQLITE_NO_TSAN as part of the return-type of a function
** definition as a hint that the function contains constructs that
** might give false-positive TSAN warnings.
**
** See tag-20200519-1.
*/
#if defined(__clang__) && !defined(SQLITE_NO_TSAN)
# define SQLITE_NO_TSAN __attribute__((no_sanitize_thread))
#else
# define SQLITE_NO_TSAN
#endif

/*
** Write the header information in pWal->hdr into the wal-index.
**
** The checksum on pWal->hdr is updated before it is written.
*/
static SQLITE_NO_TSAN void walIndexWriteHdr(Wal *pWal){
  volatile WalIndexHdr *aHdr = walIndexHdr(pWal);
  const int nCksum = offsetof(WalIndexHdr, aCksum);

  assert( pWal->writeLock );
  pWal->hdr.isInit = 1;
  pWal->hdr.iVersion = WALINDEX_MAX_VERSION;
  walChecksumBytes(1, (u8*)&pWal->hdr, nCksum, 0, pWal->hdr.aCksum);
  /* Possible TSAN false-positive.  See tag-20200519-1 */
  memcpy((void*)&aHdr[1], (const void*)&pWal->hdr, sizeof(WalIndexHdr));
  walShmBarrier(pWal);
  memcpy((void*)&aHdr[0], (const void*)&pWal->hdr, sizeof(WalIndexHdr));
}

/*
** This function encodes a single frame header and writes it to a buffer
** supplied by the caller. A frame-header is made up of a series of 
** 4-byte big-endian integers, as follows:
**
**     0: Page number.
**     4: For commit records, the size of the database image in pages 
**        after the commit. For all other records, zero.
**     8: Salt-1 (copied from the wal-header)
**    12: Salt-2 (copied from the wal-header)
**    16: Checksum-1.
**    20: Checksum-2.
*/
static void walEncodeFrame(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* The write-ahead log */
  u32 iPage,                      /* Database page number for frame */
  u32 nTruncate,                  /* New db size (or 0 for non-commit frames) */
  u8 *aData,                      /* Pointer to page data */
  u8 *aFrame                      /* OUT: Write encoded frame here */
){
  int nativeCksum;                /* True for native byte-order checksums */
  u32 *aCksum = pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum;
  assert( WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE==24 );
  sqlite3Put4byte(&aFrame[0], iPage);
  sqlite3Put4byte(&aFrame[4], nTruncate);
  if( pWal->iReCksum==0 ){
    memcpy(&aFrame[8], pWal->hdr.aSalt, 8);

    nativeCksum = (pWal->hdr.bigEndCksum==SQLITE_BIGENDIAN);
    walChecksumBytes(nativeCksum, aFrame, 8, aCksum, aCksum);
    walChecksumBytes(nativeCksum, aData, pWal->szPage, aCksum, aCksum);

    sqlite3Put4byte(&aFrame[16], aCksum[0]);
    sqlite3Put4byte(&aFrame[20], aCksum[1]);
  }else{
    memset(&aFrame[8], 0, 16);
  }
}

/*
** Check to see if the frame with header in aFrame[] and content
** in aData[] is valid.  If it is a valid frame, fill *piPage and
** *pnTruncate and return true.  Return if the frame is not valid.
*/
static int walDecodeFrame(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* The write-ahead log */
  u32 *piPage,                    /* OUT: Database page number for frame */
  u32 *pnTruncate,                /* OUT: New db size (or 0 if not commit) */
  u8 *aData,                      /* Pointer to page data (for checksum) */
  u8 *aFrame                      /* Frame data */
){
  int nativeCksum;                /* True for native byte-order checksums */
  u32 *aCksum = pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum;
  u32 pgno;                       /* Page number of the frame */
  assert( WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE==24 );

  /* A frame is only valid if the salt values in the frame-header
  ** match the salt values in the wal-header. 
  */
  if( memcmp(&pWal->hdr.aSalt, &aFrame[8], 8)!=0 ){
    return 0;
  }

  /* A frame is only valid if the page number is creater than zero.
  */
  pgno = sqlite3Get4byte(&aFrame[0]);
  if( pgno==0 ){
    return 0;
  }

  /* A frame is only valid if a checksum of the WAL header,
  ** all prior frams, the first 16 bytes of this frame-header, 
  ** and the frame-data matches the checksum in the last 8 
  ** bytes of this frame-header.
  */
  nativeCksum = (pWal->hdr.bigEndCksum==SQLITE_BIGENDIAN);
  walChecksumBytes(nativeCksum, aFrame, 8, aCksum, aCksum);
  walChecksumBytes(nativeCksum, aData, pWal->szPage, aCksum, aCksum);
  if( aCksum[0]!=sqlite3Get4byte(&aFrame[16]) 
   || aCksum[1]!=sqlite3Get4byte(&aFrame[20]) 
  ){
    /* Checksum failed. */
    return 0;
  }

  /* If we reach this point, the frame is valid.  Return the page number
  ** and the new database size.
  */
  *piPage = pgno;
  *pnTruncate = sqlite3Get4byte(&aFrame[4]);
  return 1;
}


#if defined(SQLITE_TEST) && defined(SQLITE_DEBUG)
/*
** Names of locks.  This routine is used to provide debugging output and is not
** a part of an ordinary build.
*/
static const char *walLockName(int lockIdx){
  if( lockIdx==WAL_WRITE_LOCK ){
    return "WRITE-LOCK";
  }else if( lockIdx==WAL_CKPT_LOCK ){
    return "CKPT-LOCK";
  }else if( lockIdx==WAL_RECOVER_LOCK ){
    return "RECOVER-LOCK";
  }else{
    static char zName[15];
    sqlite3_snprintf(sizeof(zName), zName, "READ-LOCK[%d]",
                     lockIdx-WAL_READ_LOCK(0));
    return zName;
  }
}
#endif /*defined(SQLITE_TEST) || defined(SQLITE_DEBUG) */
    

/*
** Set or release locks on the WAL.  Locks are either shared or exclusive.
** A lock cannot be moved directly between shared and exclusive - it must go
** through the unlocked state first.
**
** In locking_mode=EXCLUSIVE, all of these routines become no-ops.
*/
static int walLockShared(Wal *pWal, int lockIdx){
  int rc;
  if( pWal->exclusiveMode ) return SQLITE_OK;
  rc = sqlite3OsShmLock(pWal->pDbFd, lockIdx, 1,
                        SQLITE_SHM_LOCK | SQLITE_SHM_SHARED);
  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: acquire SHARED-%s %s\n", pWal,
            walLockName(lockIdx), rc ? "failed" : "ok"));
  VVA_ONLY( pWal->lockError = (u8)(rc!=SQLITE_OK && (rc&0xFF)!=SQLITE_BUSY); )
  return rc;
}
static void walUnlockShared(Wal *pWal, int lockIdx){
  if( pWal->exclusiveMode ) return;
  (void)sqlite3OsShmLock(pWal->pDbFd, lockIdx, 1,
                         SQLITE_SHM_UNLOCK | SQLITE_SHM_SHARED);
  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: release SHARED-%s\n", pWal, walLockName(lockIdx)));
}
static int walLockExclusive(Wal *pWal, int lockIdx, int n){
  int rc;
  if( pWal->exclusiveMode ) return SQLITE_OK;
  rc = sqlite3OsShmLock(pWal->pDbFd, lockIdx, n,
                        SQLITE_SHM_LOCK | SQLITE_SHM_EXCLUSIVE);
  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: acquire EXCLUSIVE-%s cnt=%d %s\n", pWal,
            walLockName(lockIdx), n, rc ? "failed" : "ok"));
  VVA_ONLY( pWal->lockError = (u8)(rc!=SQLITE_OK && (rc&0xFF)!=SQLITE_BUSY); )
  return rc;
}
static void walUnlockExclusive(Wal *pWal, int lockIdx, int n){
  if( pWal->exclusiveMode ) return;
  (void)sqlite3OsShmLock(pWal->pDbFd, lockIdx, n,
                         SQLITE_SHM_UNLOCK | SQLITE_SHM_EXCLUSIVE);
  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: release EXCLUSIVE-%s cnt=%d\n", pWal,
             walLockName(lockIdx), n));
}

/*
** Compute a hash on a page number.  The resulting hash value must land
** between 0 and (HASHTABLE_NSLOT-1).  The walHashNext() function advances
** the hash to the next value in the event of a collision.
*/
static int walHash(u32 iPage){
  assert( iPage>0 );
  assert( (HASHTABLE_NSLOT & (HASHTABLE_NSLOT-1))==0 );
  return (iPage*HASHTABLE_HASH_1) & (HASHTABLE_NSLOT-1);
}
static int walNextHash(int iPriorHash){
  return (iPriorHash+1)&(HASHTABLE_NSLOT-1);
}

/*
** An instance of the WalHashLoc object is used to describe the location
** of a page hash table in the wal-index.  This becomes the return value
** from walHashGet().
*/
typedef struct WalHashLoc WalHashLoc;
struct WalHashLoc {
  volatile ht_slot *aHash;  /* Start of the wal-index hash table */
  volatile u32 *aPgno;      /* aPgno[1] is the page of first frame indexed */
  u32 iZero;                /* One less than the frame number of first indexed*/
};

/* 
** Return pointers to the hash table and page number array stored on
** page iHash of the wal-index. The wal-index is broken into 32KB pages
** numbered starting from 0.
**
** Set output variable pLoc->aHash to point to the start of the hash table
** in the wal-index file. Set pLoc->iZero to one less than the frame 
** number of the first frame indexed by this hash table. If a
** slot in the hash table is set to N, it refers to frame number 
** (pLoc->iZero+N) in the log.
**
** Finally, set pLoc->aPgno so that pLoc->aPgno[1] is the page number of the
** first frame indexed by the hash table, frame (pLoc->iZero+1).
*/
static int walHashGet(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* WAL handle */
  int iHash,                      /* Find the iHash'th table */
  WalHashLoc *pLoc                /* OUT: Hash table location */
){
  int rc;                         /* Return code */

  rc = walIndexPage(pWal, iHash, &pLoc->aPgno);
  assert( rc==SQLITE_OK || iHash>0 );

  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    pLoc->aHash = (volatile ht_slot *)&pLoc->aPgno[HASHTABLE_NPAGE];
    if( iHash==0 ){
      pLoc->aPgno = &pLoc->aPgno[WALINDEX_HDR_SIZE/sizeof(u32)];
      pLoc->iZero = 0;
    }else{
      pLoc->iZero = HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE + (iHash-1)*HASHTABLE_NPAGE;
    }
    pLoc->aPgno = &pLoc->aPgno[-1];
  }
  return rc;
}

/*
** Return the number of the wal-index page that contains the hash-table
** and page-number array that contain entries corresponding to WAL frame
** iFrame. The wal-index is broken up into 32KB pages. Wal-index pages 
** are numbered starting from 0.
*/
static int walFramePage(u32 iFrame){
  int iHash = (iFrame+HASHTABLE_NPAGE-HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE-1) / HASHTABLE_NPAGE;
  assert( (iHash==0 || iFrame>HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE)
       && (iHash>=1 || iFrame<=HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE)
       && (iHash<=1 || iFrame>(HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE+HASHTABLE_NPAGE))
       && (iHash>=2 || iFrame<=HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE+HASHTABLE_NPAGE)
       && (iHash<=2 || iFrame>(HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE+2*HASHTABLE_NPAGE))
  );
  assert( iHash>=0 );
  return iHash;
}

/*
** Return the page number associated with frame iFrame in this WAL.
*/
static u32 walFramePgno(Wal *pWal, u32 iFrame){
  int iHash = walFramePage(iFrame);
  if( iHash==0 ){
    return pWal->apWiData[0][WALINDEX_HDR_SIZE/sizeof(u32) + iFrame - 1];
  }
  return pWal->apWiData[iHash][(iFrame-1-HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE)%HASHTABLE_NPAGE];
}

/*
** Remove entries from the hash table that point to WAL slots greater
** than pWal->hdr.mxFrame.
**
** This function is called whenever pWal->hdr.mxFrame is decreased due
** to a rollback or savepoint.
**
** At most only the hash table containing pWal->hdr.mxFrame needs to be
** updated.  Any later hash tables will be automatically cleared when
** pWal->hdr.mxFrame advances to the point where those hash tables are
** actually needed.
*/
static void walCleanupHash(Wal *pWal){
  WalHashLoc sLoc;                /* Hash table location */
  int iLimit = 0;                 /* Zero values greater than this */
  int nByte;                      /* Number of bytes to zero in aPgno[] */
  int i;                          /* Used to iterate through aHash[] */
  int rc;                         /* Return code form walHashGet() */

  assert( pWal->writeLock );
  testcase( pWal->hdr.mxFrame==HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE-1 );
  testcase( pWal->hdr.mxFrame==HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE );
  testcase( pWal->hdr.mxFrame==HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE+1 );

  if( pWal->hdr.mxFrame==0 ) return;

  /* Obtain pointers to the hash-table and page-number array containing 
  ** the entry that corresponds to frame pWal->hdr.mxFrame. It is guaranteed
  ** that the page said hash-table and array reside on is already mapped.(1)
  */
  assert( pWal->nWiData>walFramePage(pWal->hdr.mxFrame) );
  assert( pWal->apWiData[walFramePage(pWal->hdr.mxFrame)] );
  rc = walHashGet(pWal, walFramePage(pWal->hdr.mxFrame), &sLoc);
  if( NEVER(rc) ) return; /* Defense-in-depth, in case (1) above is wrong */

  /* Zero all hash-table entries that correspond to frame numbers greater
  ** than pWal->hdr.mxFrame.
  */
  iLimit = pWal->hdr.mxFrame - sLoc.iZero;
  assert( iLimit>0 );
  for(i=0; i<HASHTABLE_NSLOT; i++){
    if( sLoc.aHash[i]>iLimit ){
      sLoc.aHash[i] = 0;
    }
  }
  
  /* Zero the entries in the aPgno array that correspond to frames with
  ** frame numbers greater than pWal->hdr.mxFrame. 
  */
  nByte = (int)((char *)sLoc.aHash - (char *)&sLoc.aPgno[iLimit+1]);
  memset((void *)&sLoc.aPgno[iLimit+1], 0, nByte);

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_ASSERT
  /* Verify that the every entry in the mapping region is still reachable
  ** via the hash table even after the cleanup.
  */
  if( iLimit ){
    int j;           /* Loop counter */
    int iKey;        /* Hash key */
    for(j=1; j<=iLimit; j++){
      for(iKey=walHash(sLoc.aPgno[j]);sLoc.aHash[iKey];iKey=walNextHash(iKey)){
        if( sLoc.aHash[iKey]==j ) break;
      }
      assert( sLoc.aHash[iKey]==j );
    }
  }
#endif /* SQLITE_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_ASSERT */
}


/*
** Set an entry in the wal-index that will map database page number
** pPage into WAL frame iFrame.
*/
static int walIndexAppend(Wal *pWal, u32 iFrame, u32 iPage){
  int rc;                         /* Return code */
  WalHashLoc sLoc;                /* Wal-index hash table location */

  rc = walHashGet(pWal, walFramePage(iFrame), &sLoc);

  /* Assuming the wal-index file was successfully mapped, populate the
  ** page number array and hash table entry.
  */
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    int iKey;                     /* Hash table key */
    int idx;                      /* Value to write to hash-table slot */
    int nCollide;                 /* Number of hash collisions */

    idx = iFrame - sLoc.iZero;
    assert( idx <= HASHTABLE_NSLOT/2 + 1 );
    
    /* If this is the first entry to be added to this hash-table, zero the
    ** entire hash table and aPgno[] array before proceeding. 
    */
    if( idx==1 ){
      int nByte = (int)((u8 *)&sLoc.aHash[HASHTABLE_NSLOT]
                               - (u8 *)&sLoc.aPgno[1]);
      memset((void*)&sLoc.aPgno[1], 0, nByte);
    }

    /* If the entry in aPgno[] is already set, then the previous writer
    ** must have exited unexpectedly in the middle of a transaction (after
    ** writing one or more dirty pages to the WAL to free up memory). 
    ** Remove the remnants of that writers uncommitted transaction from 
    ** the hash-table before writing any new entries.
    */
    if( sLoc.aPgno[idx] ){
      walCleanupHash(pWal);
      assert( !sLoc.aPgno[idx] );
    }

    /* Write the aPgno[] array entry and the hash-table slot. */
    nCollide = idx;
    for(iKey=walHash(iPage); sLoc.aHash[iKey]; iKey=walNextHash(iKey)){
      if( (nCollide--)==0 ) return SQLITE_CORRUPT_BKPT;
    }
    sLoc.aPgno[idx] = iPage;
    AtomicStore(&sLoc.aHash[iKey], (ht_slot)idx);

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_ASSERT
    /* Verify that the number of entries in the hash table exactly equals
    ** the number of entries in the mapping region.
    */
    {
      int i;           /* Loop counter */
      int nEntry = 0;  /* Number of entries in the hash table */
      for(i=0; i<HASHTABLE_NSLOT; i++){ if( sLoc.aHash[i] ) nEntry++; }
      assert( nEntry==idx );
    }

    /* Verify that the every entry in the mapping region is reachable
    ** via the hash table.  This turns out to be a really, really expensive
    ** thing to check, so only do this occasionally - not on every
    ** iteration.
    */
    if( (idx&0x3ff)==0 ){
      int i;           /* Loop counter */
      for(i=1; i<=idx; i++){
        for(iKey=walHash(sLoc.aPgno[i]);
            sLoc.aHash[iKey];
            iKey=walNextHash(iKey)){
          if( sLoc.aHash[iKey]==i ) break;
        }
        assert( sLoc.aHash[iKey]==i );
      }
    }
#endif /* SQLITE_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_ASSERT */
  }


  return rc;
}


/*
** Recover the wal-index by reading the write-ahead log file. 
**
** This routine first tries to establish an exclusive lock on the
** wal-index to prevent other threads/processes from doing anything
** with the WAL or wal-index while recovery is running.  The
** WAL_RECOVER_LOCK is also held so that other threads will know
** that this thread is running recovery.  If unable to establish
** the necessary locks, this routine returns SQLITE_BUSY.
*/
static int walIndexRecover(Wal *pWal){
  int rc;                         /* Return Code */
  i64 nSize;                      /* Size of log file */
  u32 aFrameCksum[2] = {0, 0};
  int iLock;                      /* Lock offset to lock for checkpoint */

  /* Obtain an exclusive lock on all byte in the locking range not already
  ** locked by the caller. The caller is guaranteed to have locked the
  ** WAL_WRITE_LOCK byte, and may have also locked the WAL_CKPT_LOCK byte.
  ** If successful, the same bytes that are locked here are unlocked before
  ** this function returns.
  */
  assert( pWal->ckptLock==1 || pWal->ckptLock==0 );
  assert( WAL_ALL_BUT_WRITE==WAL_WRITE_LOCK+1 );
  assert( WAL_CKPT_LOCK==WAL_ALL_BUT_WRITE );
  assert( pWal->writeLock );
  iLock = WAL_ALL_BUT_WRITE + pWal->ckptLock;
  rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, iLock, WAL_READ_LOCK(0)-iLock);
  if( rc ){
    return rc;
  }

  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: recovery begin...\n", pWal));

  memset(&pWal->hdr, 0, sizeof(WalIndexHdr));

  rc = sqlite3OsFileSize(pWal->pWalFd, &nSize);
  if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
    goto recovery_error;
  }

  if( nSize>WAL_HDRSIZE ){
    u8 aBuf[WAL_HDRSIZE];         /* Buffer to load WAL header into */
    u32 *aPrivate = 0;            /* Heap copy of *-shm hash being populated */
    u8 *aFrame = 0;               /* Malloc'd buffer to load entire frame */
    int szFrame;                  /* Number of bytes in buffer aFrame[] */
    u8 *aData;                    /* Pointer to data part of aFrame buffer */
    int szPage;                   /* Page size according to the log */
    u32 magic;                    /* Magic value read from WAL header */
    u32 version;                  /* Magic value read from WAL header */
    int isValid;                  /* True if this frame is valid */
    u32 iPg;                      /* Current 32KB wal-index page */
    u32 iLastFrame;               /* Last frame in wal, based on nSize alone */

    /* Read in the WAL header. */
    rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, aBuf, WAL_HDRSIZE, 0);
    if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
      goto recovery_error;
    }

    /* If the database page size is not a power of two, or is greater than
    ** SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE, conclude that the WAL file contains no valid 
    ** data. Similarly, if the 'magic' value is invalid, ignore the whole
    ** WAL file.
    */
    magic = sqlite3Get4byte(&aBuf[0]);
    szPage = sqlite3Get4byte(&aBuf[8]);
    if( (magic&0xFFFFFFFE)!=WAL_MAGIC 
     || szPage&(szPage-1) 
     || szPage>SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE 
     || szPage<512 
    ){
      goto finished;
    }
    pWal->hdr.bigEndCksum = (u8)(magic&0x00000001);
    pWal->szPage = szPage;
    pWal->nCkpt = sqlite3Get4byte(&aBuf[12]);
    memcpy(&pWal->hdr.aSalt, &aBuf[16], 8);

    /* Verify that the WAL header checksum is correct */
    walChecksumBytes(pWal->hdr.bigEndCksum==SQLITE_BIGENDIAN, 
        aBuf, WAL_HDRSIZE-2*4, 0, pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum
    );
    if( pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0]!=sqlite3Get4byte(&aBuf[24])
     || pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1]!=sqlite3Get4byte(&aBuf[28])
    ){
      goto finished;
    }

    /* Verify that the version number on the WAL format is one that
    ** are able to understand */
    version = sqlite3Get4byte(&aBuf[4]);
    if( version!=WAL_MAX_VERSION ){
      rc = SQLITE_CANTOPEN_BKPT;
      goto finished;
    }

    /* Malloc a buffer to read frames into. */
    szFrame = szPage + WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE;
    aFrame = (u8 *)sqlite3_malloc64(szFrame + WALINDEX_PGSZ);
    if( !aFrame ){
      rc = SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;
      goto recovery_error;
    }
    aData = &aFrame[WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE];
    aPrivate = (u32*)&aData[szPage];

    /* Read all frames from the log file. */
    iLastFrame = (nSize - WAL_HDRSIZE) / szFrame;
    for(iPg=0; iPg<=(u32)walFramePage(iLastFrame); iPg++){
      u32 *aShare;
      u32 iFrame;                 /* Index of last frame read */
      u32 iLast = MIN(iLastFrame, HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE+iPg*HASHTABLE_NPAGE);
      u32 iFirst = 1 + (iPg==0?0:HASHTABLE_NPAGE_ONE+(iPg-1)*HASHTABLE_NPAGE);
      u32 nHdr, nHdr32;
      rc = walIndexPage(pWal, iPg, (volatile u32**)&aShare);
      if( rc ) break;
      pWal->apWiData[iPg] = aPrivate;
      
      for(iFrame=iFirst; iFrame<=iLast; iFrame++){
        i64 iOffset = walFrameOffset(iFrame, szPage);
        u32 pgno;                 /* Database page number for frame */
        u32 nTruncate;            /* dbsize field from frame header */

        /* Read and decode the next log frame. */
        rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, aFrame, szFrame, iOffset);
        if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ) break;
        isValid = walDecodeFrame(pWal, &pgno, &nTruncate, aData, aFrame);
        if( !isValid ) break;
        rc = walIndexAppend(pWal, iFrame, pgno);
        if( NEVER(rc!=SQLITE_OK) ) break;

        /* If nTruncate is non-zero, this is a commit record. */
        if( nTruncate ){
          pWal->hdr.mxFrame = iFrame;
          pWal->hdr.nPage = nTruncate;
          pWal->hdr.szPage = (u16)((szPage&0xff00) | (szPage>>16));
          testcase( szPage<=32768 );
          testcase( szPage>=65536 );
          aFrameCksum[0] = pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0];
          aFrameCksum[1] = pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1];
        }
      }
      pWal->apWiData[iPg] = aShare;
      nHdr = (iPg==0 ? WALINDEX_HDR_SIZE : 0);
      nHdr32 = nHdr / sizeof(u32);
#ifndef SQLITE_SAFER_WALINDEX_RECOVERY
      /* Memcpy() should work fine here, on all reasonable implementations.
      ** Technically, memcpy() might change the destination to some
      ** intermediate value before setting to the final value, and that might
      ** cause a concurrent reader to malfunction.  Memcpy() is allowed to
      ** do that, according to the spec, but no memcpy() implementation that
      ** we know of actually does that, which is why we say that memcpy()
      ** is safe for this.  Memcpy() is certainly a lot faster.
      */
      memcpy(&aShare[nHdr32], &aPrivate[nHdr32], WALINDEX_PGSZ-nHdr);
#else
      /* In the event that some platform is found for which memcpy()
      ** changes the destination to some intermediate value before
      ** setting the final value, this alternative copy routine is
      ** provided.
      */
      {
        int i;
        for(i=nHdr32; i<WALINDEX_PGSZ/sizeof(u32); i++){
          if( aShare[i]!=aPrivate[i] ){
            /* Atomic memory operations are not required here because if
            ** the value needs to be changed, that means it is not being
            ** accessed concurrently. */
            aShare[i] = aPrivate[i];
          }
        }
      }
#endif
      if( iFrame<=iLast ) break;
    }

    sqlite3_free(aFrame);
  }

finished:
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    volatile WalCkptInfo *pInfo;
    int i;
    pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0] = aFrameCksum[0];
    pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1] = aFrameCksum[1];
    walIndexWriteHdr(pWal);

    /* Reset the checkpoint-header. This is safe because this thread is 
    ** currently holding locks that exclude all other writers and 
    ** checkpointers. Then set the values of read-mark slots 1 through N.
    */
    pInfo = walCkptInfo(pWal);
    pInfo->nBackfill = 0;
    pInfo->nBackfillAttempted = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
    pInfo->aReadMark[0] = 0;
    for(i=1; i<WAL_NREADER; i++){
      rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(i), 1);
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        if( i==1 && pWal->hdr.mxFrame ){
          pInfo->aReadMark[i] = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
        }else{
          pInfo->aReadMark[i] = READMARK_NOT_USED;
        }
        walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(i), 1);
      }else if( rc!=SQLITE_BUSY ){
        goto recovery_error;
      }
    }

    /* If more than one frame was recovered from the log file, report an
    ** event via sqlite3_log(). This is to help with identifying performance
    ** problems caused by applications routinely shutting down without
    ** checkpointing the log file.
    */
    if( pWal->hdr.nPage ){
      sqlite3_log(SQLITE_NOTICE_RECOVER_WAL,
          "recovered %d frames from WAL file %s",
          pWal->hdr.mxFrame, pWal->zWalName
      );
    }
  }

recovery_error:
  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: recovery %s\n", pWal, rc ? "failed" : "ok"));
  walUnlockExclusive(pWal, iLock, WAL_READ_LOCK(0)-iLock);
  return rc;
}

/*
** Close an open wal-index.
*/
static void walIndexClose(Wal *pWal, int isDelete){
  if( pWal->exclusiveMode==WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE || pWal->bShmUnreliable ){
    int i;
    for(i=0; i<pWal->nWiData; i++){
      sqlite3_free((void *)pWal->apWiData[i]);
      pWal->apWiData[i] = 0;
    }
  }
  if( pWal->exclusiveMode!=WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE ){
    sqlite3OsShmUnmap(pWal->pDbFd, isDelete);
  }
}

/* 
** Open a connection to the WAL file zWalName. The database file must 
** already be opened on connection pDbFd. The buffer that zWalName points
** to must remain valid for the lifetime of the returned Wal* handle.
**
** A SHARED lock should be held on the database file when this function
** is called. The purpose of this SHARED lock is to prevent any other
** client from unlinking the WAL or wal-index file. If another process
** were to do this just after this client opened one of these files, the
** system would be badly broken.
**
** If the log file is successfully opened, SQLITE_OK is returned and 
** *ppWal is set to point to a new WAL handle. If an error occurs,
** an SQLite error code is returned and *ppWal is left unmodified.
*/
int sqlite3WalOpen(
  sqlite3_vfs *pVfs,              /* vfs module to open wal and wal-index */
  sqlite3_file *pDbFd,            /* The open database file */
  const char *zWalName,           /* Name of the WAL file */
  int bNoShm,                     /* True to run in heap-memory mode */
  i64 mxWalSize,                  /* Truncate WAL to this size on reset */
  Wal **ppWal                     /* OUT: Allocated Wal handle */
){
  int rc;                         /* Return Code */
  Wal *pRet;                      /* Object to allocate and return */
  int flags;                      /* Flags passed to OsOpen() */

  assert( zWalName && zWalName[0] );
  assert( pDbFd );

  /* In the amalgamation, the os_unix.c and os_win.c source files come before
  ** this source file.  Verify that the #defines of the locking byte offsets
  ** in os_unix.c and os_win.c agree with the WALINDEX_LOCK_OFFSET value.
  ** For that matter, if the lock offset ever changes from its initial design
  ** value of 120, we need to know that so there is an assert() to check it.
  */
  assert( 120==WALINDEX_LOCK_OFFSET );
  assert( 136==WALINDEX_HDR_SIZE );
#ifdef WIN_SHM_BASE
  assert( WIN_SHM_BASE==WALINDEX_LOCK_OFFSET );
#endif
#ifdef UNIX_SHM_BASE
  assert( UNIX_SHM_BASE==WALINDEX_LOCK_OFFSET );
#endif


  /* Allocate an instance of struct Wal to return. */
  *ppWal = 0;
  pRet = (Wal*)sqlite3MallocZero(sizeof(Wal) + pVfs->szOsFile);
  if( !pRet ){
    return SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;
  }

  pRet->pVfs = pVfs;
  pRet->pWalFd = (sqlite3_file *)&pRet[1];
  pRet->pDbFd = pDbFd;
  pRet->readLock = -1;
  pRet->mxWalSize = mxWalSize;
  pRet->zWalName = zWalName;
  pRet->syncHeader = 1;
  pRet->padToSectorBoundary = 1;
  pRet->exclusiveMode = (bNoShm ? WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE: WAL_NORMAL_MODE);

  /* Open file handle on the write-ahead log file. */
  flags = (SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE|SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE|SQLITE_OPEN_WAL);
  rc = sqlite3OsOpen(pVfs, zWalName, pRet->pWalFd, flags, &flags);
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK && flags&SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY ){
    pRet->readOnly = WAL_RDONLY;
  }

  if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
    walIndexClose(pRet, 0);
    sqlite3OsClose(pRet->pWalFd);
    sqlite3_free(pRet);
  }else{
    int iDC = sqlite3OsDeviceCharacteristics(pDbFd);
    if( iDC & SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL ){ pRet->syncHeader = 0; }
    if( iDC & SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE ){
      pRet->padToSectorBoundary = 0;
    }
    *ppWal = pRet;
    WALTRACE(("WAL%d: opened\n", pRet));
  }
  return rc;
}

/*
** Change the size to which the WAL file is trucated on each reset.
*/
void sqlite3WalLimit(Wal *pWal, i64 iLimit){
  if( pWal ) pWal->mxWalSize = iLimit;
}

/*
** Find the smallest page number out of all pages held in the WAL that
** has not been returned by any prior invocation of this method on the
** same WalIterator object.   Write into *piFrame the frame index where
** that page was last written into the WAL.  Write into *piPage the page
** number.
**
** Return 0 on success.  If there are no pages in the WAL with a page
** number larger than *piPage, then return 1.
*/
static int walIteratorNext(
  WalIterator *p,               /* Iterator */
  u32 *piPage,                  /* OUT: The page number of the next page */
  u32 *piFrame                  /* OUT: Wal frame index of next page */
){
  u32 iMin;                     /* Result pgno must be greater than iMin */
  u32 iRet = 0xFFFFFFFF;        /* 0xffffffff is never a valid page number */
  int i;                        /* For looping through segments */

  iMin = p->iPrior;
  assert( iMin<0xffffffff );
  for(i=p->nSegment-1; i>=0; i--){
    struct WalSegment *pSegment = &p->aSegment[i];
    while( pSegment->iNext<pSegment->nEntry ){
      u32 iPg = pSegment->aPgno[pSegment->aIndex[pSegment->iNext]];
      if( iPg>iMin ){
        if( iPg<iRet ){
          iRet = iPg;
          *piFrame = pSegment->iZero + pSegment->aIndex[pSegment->iNext];
        }
        break;
      }
      pSegment->iNext++;
    }
  }

  *piPage = p->iPrior = iRet;
  return (iRet==0xFFFFFFFF);
}

/*
** This function merges two sorted lists into a single sorted list.
**
** aLeft[] and aRight[] are arrays of indices.  The sort key is
** aContent[aLeft[]] and aContent[aRight[]].  Upon entry, the following
** is guaranteed for all J<K:
**
**        aContent[aLeft[J]] < aContent[aLeft[K]]
**        aContent[aRight[J]] < aContent[aRight[K]]
**
** This routine overwrites aRight[] with a new (probably longer) sequence
** of indices such that the aRight[] contains every index that appears in
** either aLeft[] or the old aRight[] and such that the second condition
** above is still met.
**
** The aContent[aLeft[X]] values will be unique for all X.  And the
** aContent[aRight[X]] values will be unique too.  But there might be
** one or more combinations of X and Y such that
**
**      aLeft[X]!=aRight[Y]  &&  aContent[aLeft[X]] == aContent[aRight[Y]]
**
** When that happens, omit the aLeft[X] and use the aRight[Y] index.
*/
static void walMerge(
  const u32 *aContent,            /* Pages in wal - keys for the sort */
  ht_slot *aLeft,                 /* IN: Left hand input list */
  int nLeft,                      /* IN: Elements in array *paLeft */
  ht_slot **paRight,              /* IN/OUT: Right hand input list */
  int *pnRight,                   /* IN/OUT: Elements in *paRight */
  ht_slot *aTmp                   /* Temporary buffer */
){
  int iLeft = 0;                  /* Current index in aLeft */
  int iRight = 0;                 /* Current index in aRight */
  int iOut = 0;                   /* Current index in output buffer */
  int nRight = *pnRight;
  ht_slot *aRight = *paRight;

  assert( nLeft>0 && nRight>0 );
  while( iRight<nRight || iLeft<nLeft ){
    ht_slot logpage;
    Pgno dbpage;

    if( (iLeft<nLeft) 
     && (iRight>=nRight || aContent[aLeft[iLeft]]<aContent[aRight[iRight]])
    ){
      logpage = aLeft[iLeft++];
    }else{
      logpage = aRight[iRight++];
    }
    dbpage = aContent[logpage];

    aTmp[iOut++] = logpage;
    if( iLeft<nLeft && aContent[aLeft[iLeft]]==dbpage ) iLeft++;

    assert( iLeft>=nLeft || aContent[aLeft[iLeft]]>dbpage );
    assert( iRight>=nRight || aContent[aRight[iRight]]>dbpage );
  }

  *paRight = aLeft;
  *pnRight = iOut;
  memcpy(aLeft, aTmp, sizeof(aTmp[0])*iOut);
}

/*
** Sort the elements in list aList using aContent[] as the sort key.
** Remove elements with duplicate keys, preferring to keep the
** larger aList[] values.
**
** The aList[] entries are indices into aContent[].  The values in
** aList[] are to be sorted so that for all J<K:
**
**      aContent[aList[J]] < aContent[aList[K]]
**
** For any X and Y such that
**
**      aContent[aList[X]] == aContent[aList[Y]]
**
** Keep the larger of the two values aList[X] and aList[Y] and discard
** the smaller.
*/
static void walMergesort(
  const u32 *aContent,            /* Pages in wal */
  ht_slot *aBuffer,               /* Buffer of at least *pnList items to use */
  ht_slot *aList,                 /* IN/OUT: List to sort */
  int *pnList                     /* IN/OUT: Number of elements in aList[] */
){
  struct Sublist {
    int nList;                    /* Number of elements in aList */
    ht_slot *aList;               /* Pointer to sub-list content */
  };

  const int nList = *pnList;      /* Size of input list */
  int nMerge = 0;                 /* Number of elements in list aMerge */
  ht_slot *aMerge = 0;            /* List to be merged */
  int iList;                      /* Index into input list */
  u32 iSub = 0;                   /* Index into aSub array */
  struct Sublist aSub[13];        /* Array of sub-lists */

  memset(aSub, 0, sizeof(aSub));
  assert( nList<=HASHTABLE_NPAGE && nList>0 );
  assert( HASHTABLE_NPAGE==(1<<(ArraySize(aSub)-1)) );

  for(iList=0; iList<nList; iList++){
    nMerge = 1;
    aMerge = &aList[iList];
    for(iSub=0; iList & (1<<iSub); iSub++){
      struct Sublist *p;
      assert( iSub<ArraySize(aSub) );
      p = &aSub[iSub];
      assert( p->aList && p->nList<=(1<<iSub) );
      assert( p->aList==&aList[iList&~((2<<iSub)-1)] );
      walMerge(aContent, p->aList, p->nList, &aMerge, &nMerge, aBuffer);
    }
    aSub[iSub].aList = aMerge;
    aSub[iSub].nList = nMerge;
  }

  for(iSub++; iSub<ArraySize(aSub); iSub++){
    if( nList & (1<<iSub) ){
      struct Sublist *p;
      assert( iSub<ArraySize(aSub) );
      p = &aSub[iSub];
      assert( p->nList<=(1<<iSub) );
      assert( p->aList==&aList[nList&~((2<<iSub)-1)] );
      walMerge(aContent, p->aList, p->nList, &aMerge, &nMerge, aBuffer);
    }
  }
  assert( aMerge==aList );
  *pnList = nMerge;

#ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG
  {
    int i;
    for(i=1; i<*pnList; i++){
      assert( aContent[aList[i]] > aContent[aList[i-1]] );
    }
  }
#endif
}

/* 
** Free an iterator allocated by walIteratorInit().
*/
static void walIteratorFree(WalIterator *p){
  sqlite3_free(p);
}

/*
** Construct a WalInterator object that can be used to loop over all 
** pages in the WAL following frame nBackfill in ascending order. Frames
** nBackfill or earlier may be included - excluding them is an optimization
** only. The caller must hold the checkpoint lock.
**
** On success, make *pp point to the newly allocated WalInterator object
** return SQLITE_OK. Otherwise, return an error code. If this routine
** returns an error, the value of *pp is undefined.
**
** The calling routine should invoke walIteratorFree() to destroy the
** WalIterator object when it has finished with it.
*/
static int walIteratorInit(Wal *pWal, u32 nBackfill, WalIterator **pp){
  WalIterator *p;                 /* Return value */
  int nSegment;                   /* Number of segments to merge */
  u32 iLast;                      /* Last frame in log */
  sqlite3_int64 nByte;            /* Number of bytes to allocate */
  int i;                          /* Iterator variable */
  ht_slot *aTmp;                  /* Temp space used by merge-sort */
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;             /* Return Code */

  /* This routine only runs while holding the checkpoint lock. And
  ** it only runs if there is actually content in the log (mxFrame>0).
  */
  assert( pWal->ckptLock && pWal->hdr.mxFrame>0 );
  iLast = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;

  /* Allocate space for the WalIterator object. */
  nSegment = walFramePage(iLast) + 1;
  nByte = sizeof(WalIterator) 
        + (nSegment-1)*sizeof(struct WalSegment)
        + iLast*sizeof(ht_slot);
  p = (WalIterator *)sqlite3_malloc64(nByte);
  if( !p ){
    return SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;
  }
  memset(p, 0, nByte);
  p->nSegment = nSegment;

  /* Allocate temporary space used by the merge-sort routine. This block
  ** of memory will be freed before this function returns.
  */
  aTmp = (ht_slot *)sqlite3_malloc64(
      sizeof(ht_slot) * (iLast>HASHTABLE_NPAGE?HASHTABLE_NPAGE:iLast)
  );
  if( !aTmp ){
    rc = SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;
  }

  for(i=walFramePage(nBackfill+1); rc==SQLITE_OK && i<nSegment; i++){
    WalHashLoc sLoc;

    rc = walHashGet(pWal, i, &sLoc);
    if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
      int j;                      /* Counter variable */
      int nEntry;                 /* Number of entries in this segment */
      ht_slot *aIndex;            /* Sorted index for this segment */

      sLoc.aPgno++;
      if( (i+1)==nSegment ){
        nEntry = (int)(iLast - sLoc.iZero);
      }else{
        nEntry = (int)((u32*)sLoc.aHash - (u32*)sLoc.aPgno);
      }
      aIndex = &((ht_slot *)&p->aSegment[p->nSegment])[sLoc.iZero];
      sLoc.iZero++;
  
      for(j=0; j<nEntry; j++){
        aIndex[j] = (ht_slot)j;
      }
      walMergesort((u32 *)sLoc.aPgno, aTmp, aIndex, &nEntry);
      p->aSegment[i].iZero = sLoc.iZero;
      p->aSegment[i].nEntry = nEntry;
      p->aSegment[i].aIndex = aIndex;
      p->aSegment[i].aPgno = (u32 *)sLoc.aPgno;
    }
  }
  sqlite3_free(aTmp);

  if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
    walIteratorFree(p);
    p = 0;
  }
  *pp = p;
  return rc;
}

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SETLK_TIMEOUT
/*
** Attempt to enable blocking locks. Blocking locks are enabled only if (a)
** they are supported by the VFS, and (b) the database handle is configured 
** with a busy-timeout. Return 1 if blocking locks are successfully enabled, 
** or 0 otherwise.
*/
static int walEnableBlocking(Wal *pWal){
  int res = 0;
  if( pWal->db ){
    int tmout = pWal->db->busyTimeout;
    if( tmout ){
      int rc;
      rc = sqlite3OsFileControl(
          pWal->pDbFd, SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCK_TIMEOUT, (void*)&tmout
      );
      res = (rc==SQLITE_OK);
    }
  }
  return res;
}

/*
** Disable blocking locks.
*/
static void walDisableBlocking(Wal *pWal){
  int tmout = 0;
  sqlite3OsFileControl(pWal->pDbFd, SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCK_TIMEOUT, (void*)&tmout);
}

/*
** If parameter bLock is true, attempt to enable blocking locks, take
** the WRITER lock, and then disable blocking locks. If blocking locks
** cannot be enabled, no attempt to obtain the WRITER lock is made. Return 
** an SQLite error code if an error occurs, or SQLITE_OK otherwise. It is not
** an error if blocking locks can not be enabled.
**
** If the bLock parameter is false and the WRITER lock is held, release it.
*/
int sqlite3WalWriteLock(Wal *pWal, int bLock){
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;
  assert( pWal->readLock<0 || bLock==0 );
  if( bLock ){
    assert( pWal->db );
    if( walEnableBlocking(pWal) ){
      rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1);
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        pWal->writeLock = 1;
      }
      walDisableBlocking(pWal);
    }
  }else if( pWal->writeLock ){
    walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1);
    pWal->writeLock = 0;
  }
  return rc;
}

/*
** Set the database handle used to determine if blocking locks are required.
*/
void sqlite3WalDb(Wal *pWal, sqlite3 *db){
  pWal->db = db;
}

/*
** Take an exclusive WRITE lock. Blocking if so configured.
*/
static int walLockWriter(Wal *pWal){
  int rc;
  walEnableBlocking(pWal);
  rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1);
  walDisableBlocking(pWal);
  return rc;
}
#else
# define walEnableBlocking(x) 0
# define walDisableBlocking(x)
# define walLockWriter(pWal) walLockExclusive((pWal), WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1)
# define sqlite3WalDb(pWal, db)
#endif   /* ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SETLK_TIMEOUT */


/*
** Attempt to obtain the exclusive WAL lock defined by parameters lockIdx and
** n. If the attempt fails and parameter xBusy is not NULL, then it is a
** busy-handler function. Invoke it and retry the lock until either the
** lock is successfully obtained or the busy-handler returns 0.
*/
static int walBusyLock(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* WAL connection */
  int (*xBusy)(void*),            /* Function to call when busy */
  void *pBusyArg,                 /* Context argument for xBusyHandler */
  int lockIdx,                    /* Offset of first byte to lock */
  int n                           /* Number of bytes to lock */
){
  int rc;
  do {
    rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, lockIdx, n);
  }while( xBusy && rc==SQLITE_BUSY && xBusy(pBusyArg) );
#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SETLK_TIMEOUT
  if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY_TIMEOUT ){
    walDisableBlocking(pWal);
    rc = SQLITE_BUSY;
  }
#endif
  return rc;
}

/*
** The cache of the wal-index header must be valid to call this function.
** Return the page-size in bytes used by the database.
*/
static int walPagesize(Wal *pWal){
  return (pWal->hdr.szPage&0xfe00) + ((pWal->hdr.szPage&0x0001)<<16);
}

/*
** The following is guaranteed when this function is called:
**
**   a) the WRITER lock is held,
**   b) the entire log file has been checkpointed, and
**   c) any existing readers are reading exclusively from the database
**      file - there are no readers that may attempt to read a frame from
**      the log file.
**
** This function updates the shared-memory structures so that the next
** client to write to the database (which may be this one) does so by
** writing frames into the start of the log file.
**
** The value of parameter salt1 is used as the aSalt[1] value in the 
** new wal-index header. It should be passed a pseudo-random value (i.e. 
** one obtained from sqlite3_randomness()).
*/
static void walRestartHdr(Wal *pWal, u32 salt1){
  volatile WalCkptInfo *pInfo = walCkptInfo(pWal);
  int i;                          /* Loop counter */
  u32 *aSalt = pWal->hdr.aSalt;   /* Big-endian salt values */
  pWal->nCkpt++;
  pWal->hdr.mxFrame = 0;
  sqlite3Put4byte((u8*)&aSalt[0], 1 + sqlite3Get4byte((u8*)&aSalt[0]));
  memcpy(&pWal->hdr.aSalt[1], &salt1, 4);
  walIndexWriteHdr(pWal);
  AtomicStore(&pInfo->nBackfill, 0);
  pInfo->nBackfillAttempted = 0;
  pInfo->aReadMark[1] = 0;
  for(i=2; i<WAL_NREADER; i++) pInfo->aReadMark[i] = READMARK_NOT_USED;
  assert( pInfo->aReadMark[0]==0 );
}

/*
** Copy as much content as we can from the WAL back into the database file
** in response to an sqlite3_wal_checkpoint() request or the equivalent.
**
** The amount of information copies from WAL to database might be limited
** by active readers.  This routine will never overwrite a database page
** that a concurrent reader might be using.
**
** All I/O barrier operations (a.k.a fsyncs) occur in this routine when
** SQLite is in WAL-mode in synchronous=NORMAL.  That means that if 
** checkpoints are always run by a background thread or background 
** process, foreground threads will never block on a lengthy fsync call.
**
** Fsync is called on the WAL before writing content out of the WAL and
** into the database.  This ensures that if the new content is persistent
** in the WAL and can be recovered following a power-loss or hard reset.
**
** Fsync is also called on the database file if (and only if) the entire
** WAL content is copied into the database file.  This second fsync makes
** it safe to delete the WAL since the new content will persist in the
** database file.
**
** This routine uses and updates the nBackfill field of the wal-index header.
** This is the only routine that will increase the value of nBackfill.  
** (A WAL reset or recovery will revert nBackfill to zero, but not increase
** its value.)
**
** The caller must be holding sufficient locks to ensure that no other
** checkpoint is running (in any other thread or process) at the same
** time.
*/
static int walCheckpoint(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* Wal connection */
  sqlite3 *db,                    /* Check for interrupts on this handle */
  int eMode,                      /* One of PASSIVE, FULL or RESTART */
  int (*xBusy)(void*),            /* Function to call when busy */
  void *pBusyArg,                 /* Context argument for xBusyHandler */
  int sync_flags,                 /* Flags for OsSync() (or 0) */
  u8 *zBuf                        /* Temporary buffer to use */
){
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;             /* Return code */
  int szPage;                     /* Database page-size */
  WalIterator *pIter = 0;         /* Wal iterator context */
  u32 iDbpage = 0;                /* Next database page to write */
  u32 iFrame = 0;                 /* Wal frame containing data for iDbpage */
  u32 mxSafeFrame;                /* Max frame that can be backfilled */
  u32 mxPage;                     /* Max database page to write */
  int i;                          /* Loop counter */
  volatile WalCkptInfo *pInfo;    /* The checkpoint status information */

  szPage = walPagesize(pWal);
  testcase( szPage<=32768 );
  testcase( szPage>=65536 );
  pInfo = walCkptInfo(pWal);
  if( pInfo->nBackfill<pWal->hdr.mxFrame ){

    /* EVIDENCE-OF: R-62920-47450 The busy-handler callback is never invoked
    ** in the SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE mode. */
    assert( eMode!=SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE || xBusy==0 );

    /* Compute in mxSafeFrame the index of the last frame of the WAL that is
    ** safe to write into the database.  Frames beyond mxSafeFrame might
    ** overwrite database pages that are in use by active readers and thus
    ** cannot be backfilled from the WAL.
    */
    mxSafeFrame = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
    mxPage = pWal->hdr.nPage;
    for(i=1; i<WAL_NREADER; i++){
      u32 y = AtomicLoad(pInfo->aReadMark+i);
      if( mxSafeFrame>y ){
        assert( y<=pWal->hdr.mxFrame );
        rc = walBusyLock(pWal, xBusy, pBusyArg, WAL_READ_LOCK(i), 1);
        if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
          u32 iMark = (i==1 ? mxSafeFrame : READMARK_NOT_USED);
          AtomicStore(pInfo->aReadMark+i, iMark);
          walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(i), 1);
        }else if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY ){
          mxSafeFrame = y;
          xBusy = 0;
        }else{
          goto walcheckpoint_out;
        }
      }
    }

    /* Allocate the iterator */
    if( pInfo->nBackfill<mxSafeFrame ){
      rc = walIteratorInit(pWal, pInfo->nBackfill, &pIter);
      assert( rc==SQLITE_OK || pIter==0 );
    }

    if( pIter
     && (rc = walBusyLock(pWal,xBusy,pBusyArg,WAL_READ_LOCK(0),1))==SQLITE_OK
    ){
      u32 nBackfill = pInfo->nBackfill;

      pInfo->nBackfillAttempted = mxSafeFrame;

      /* Sync the WAL to disk */
      rc = sqlite3OsSync(pWal->pWalFd, CKPT_SYNC_FLAGS(sync_flags));

      /* If the database may grow as a result of this checkpoint, hint
      ** about the eventual size of the db file to the VFS layer.
      */
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        i64 nReq = ((i64)mxPage * szPage);
        i64 nSize;                    /* Current size of database file */
        sqlite3OsFileControl(pWal->pDbFd, SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_START, 0);
        rc = sqlite3OsFileSize(pWal->pDbFd, &nSize);
        if( rc==SQLITE_OK && nSize<nReq ){
          if( (nSize+65536+(i64)pWal->hdr.mxFrame*szPage)<nReq ){
            /* If the size of the final database is larger than the current
            ** database plus the amount of data in the wal file, plus the
            ** maximum size of the pending-byte page (65536 bytes), then 
            ** must be corruption somewhere.  */
            rc = SQLITE_CORRUPT_BKPT;
          }else{
            sqlite3OsFileControlHint(pWal->pDbFd, SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT,&nReq);
          }
        }

      }

      /* Iterate through the contents of the WAL, copying data to the db file */
      while( rc==SQLITE_OK && 0==walIteratorNext(pIter, &iDbpage, &iFrame) ){
        i64 iOffset;
        assert( walFramePgno(pWal, iFrame)==iDbpage );
        if( AtomicLoad(&db->u1.isInterrupted) ){
          rc = db->mallocFailed ? SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT : SQLITE_INTERRUPT;
          break;
        }
        if( iFrame<=nBackfill || iFrame>mxSafeFrame || iDbpage>mxPage ){
          continue;
        }
        iOffset = walFrameOffset(iFrame, szPage) + WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE;
        /* testcase( IS_BIG_INT(iOffset) ); // requires a 4GiB WAL file */
        rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, zBuf, szPage, iOffset);
        if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ) break;
        iOffset = (iDbpage-1)*(i64)szPage;
        testcase( IS_BIG_INT(iOffset) );
        rc = sqlite3OsWrite(pWal->pDbFd, zBuf, szPage, iOffset);
        if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ) break;
      }
      sqlite3OsFileControl(pWal->pDbFd, SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_DONE, 0);

      /* If work was actually accomplished... */
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        if( mxSafeFrame==walIndexHdr(pWal)->mxFrame ){
          i64 szDb = pWal->hdr.nPage*(i64)szPage;
          testcase( IS_BIG_INT(szDb) );
          rc = sqlite3OsTruncate(pWal->pDbFd, szDb);
          if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
            rc = sqlite3OsSync(pWal->pDbFd, CKPT_SYNC_FLAGS(sync_flags));
          }
        }
        if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
          AtomicStore(&pInfo->nBackfill, mxSafeFrame);
        }
      }

      /* Release the reader lock held while backfilling */
      walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(0), 1);
    }

    if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY ){
      /* Reset the return code so as not to report a checkpoint failure
      ** just because there are active readers.  */
      rc = SQLITE_OK;
    }
  }

  /* If this is an SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_RESTART or TRUNCATE operation, and the
  ** entire wal file has been copied into the database file, then block 
  ** until all readers have finished using the wal file. This ensures that 
  ** the next process to write to the database restarts the wal file.
  */
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK && eMode!=SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE ){
    assert( pWal->writeLock );
    if( pInfo->nBackfill<pWal->hdr.mxFrame ){
      rc = SQLITE_BUSY;
    }else if( eMode>=SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_RESTART ){
      u32 salt1;
      sqlite3_randomness(4, &salt1);
      assert( pInfo->nBackfill==pWal->hdr.mxFrame );
      rc = walBusyLock(pWal, xBusy, pBusyArg, WAL_READ_LOCK(1), WAL_NREADER-1);
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        if( eMode==SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_TRUNCATE ){
          /* IMPLEMENTATION-OF: R-44699-57140 This mode works the same way as
          ** SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_RESTART with the addition that it also
          ** truncates the log file to zero bytes just prior to a
          ** successful return.
          **
          ** In theory, it might be safe to do this without updating the
          ** wal-index header in shared memory, as all subsequent reader or
          ** writer clients should see that the entire log file has been
          ** checkpointed and behave accordingly. This seems unsafe though,
          ** as it would leave the system in a state where the contents of
          ** the wal-index header do not match the contents of the 
          ** file-system. To avoid this, update the wal-index header to
          ** indicate that the log file contains zero valid frames.  */
          walRestartHdr(pWal, salt1);
          rc = sqlite3OsTruncate(pWal->pWalFd, 0);
        }
        walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(1), WAL_NREADER-1);
      }
    }
  }

 walcheckpoint_out:
  walIteratorFree(pIter);
  return rc;
}

/*
** If the WAL file is currently larger than nMax bytes in size, truncate
** it to exactly nMax bytes. If an error occurs while doing so, ignore it.
*/
static void walLimitSize(Wal *pWal, i64 nMax){
  i64 sz;
  int rx;
  sqlite3BeginBenignMalloc();
  rx = sqlite3OsFileSize(pWal->pWalFd, &sz);
  if( rx==SQLITE_OK && (sz > nMax ) ){
    rx = sqlite3OsTruncate(pWal->pWalFd, nMax);
  }
  sqlite3EndBenignMalloc();
  if( rx ){
    sqlite3_log(rx, "cannot limit WAL size: %s", pWal->zWalName);
  }
}

/*
** Close a connection to a log file.
*/
int sqlite3WalClose(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* Wal to close */
  sqlite3 *db,                    /* For interrupt flag */
  int sync_flags,                 /* Flags to pass to OsSync() (or 0) */
  int nBuf,
  u8 *zBuf                        /* Buffer of at least nBuf bytes */
){
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;
  if( pWal ){
    int isDelete = 0;             /* True to unlink wal and wal-index files */

    /* If an EXCLUSIVE lock can be obtained on the database file (using the
    ** ordinary, rollback-mode locking methods, this guarantees that the
    ** connection associated with this log file is the only connection to
    ** the database. In this case checkpoint the database and unlink both
    ** the wal and wal-index files.
    **
    ** The EXCLUSIVE lock is not released before returning.
    */
    if( zBuf!=0
     && SQLITE_OK==(rc = sqlite3OsLock(pWal->pDbFd, SQLITE_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE))
    ){
      if( pWal->exclusiveMode==WAL_NORMAL_MODE ){
        pWal->exclusiveMode = WAL_EXCLUSIVE_MODE;
      }
      rc = sqlite3WalCheckpoint(pWal, db, 
          SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE, 0, 0, sync_flags, nBuf, zBuf, 0, 0
      );
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        int bPersist = -1;
        sqlite3OsFileControlHint(
            pWal->pDbFd, SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL, &bPersist
        );
        if( bPersist!=1 ){
          /* Try to delete the WAL file if the checkpoint completed and
          ** fsyned (rc==SQLITE_OK) and if we are not in persistent-wal
          ** mode (!bPersist) */
          isDelete = 1;
        }else if( pWal->mxWalSize>=0 ){
          /* Try to truncate the WAL file to zero bytes if the checkpoint
          ** completed and fsynced (rc==SQLITE_OK) and we are in persistent
          ** WAL mode (bPersist) and if the PRAGMA journal_size_limit is a
          ** non-negative value (pWal->mxWalSize>=0).  Note that we truncate
          ** to zero bytes as truncating to the journal_size_limit might
          ** leave a corrupt WAL file on disk. */
          walLimitSize(pWal, 0);
        }
      }
    }

    walIndexClose(pWal, isDelete);
    sqlite3OsClose(pWal->pWalFd);
    if( isDelete ){
      sqlite3BeginBenignMalloc();
      sqlite3OsDelete(pWal->pVfs, pWal->zWalName, 0);
      sqlite3EndBenignMalloc();
    }
    WALTRACE(("WAL%p: closed\n", pWal));
    sqlite3_free((void *)pWal->apWiData);
    sqlite3_free(pWal);
  }
  return rc;
}

/*
** Try to read the wal-index header.  Return 0 on success and 1 if
** there is a problem.
**
** The wal-index is in shared memory.  Another thread or process might
** be writing the header at the same time this procedure is trying to
** read it, which might result in inconsistency.  A dirty read is detected
** by verifying that both copies of the header are the same and also by
** a checksum on the header.
**
** If and only if the read is consistent and the header is different from
** pWal->hdr, then pWal->hdr is updated to the content of the new header
** and *pChanged is set to 1.
**
** If the checksum cannot be verified return non-zero. If the header
** is read successfully and the checksum verified, return zero.
*/
static SQLITE_NO_TSAN int walIndexTryHdr(Wal *pWal, int *pChanged){
  u32 aCksum[2];                  /* Checksum on the header content */
  WalIndexHdr h1, h2;             /* Two copies of the header content */
  WalIndexHdr volatile *aHdr;     /* Header in shared memory */

  /* The first page of the wal-index must be mapped at this point. */
  assert( pWal->nWiData>0 && pWal->apWiData[0] );

  /* Read the header. This might happen concurrently with a write to the
  ** same area of shared memory on a different CPU in a SMP,
  ** meaning it is possible that an inconsistent snapshot is read
  ** from the file. If this happens, return non-zero.
  **
  ** tag-20200519-1:
  ** There are two copies of the header at the beginning of the wal-index.
  ** When reading, read [0] first then [1].  Writes are in the reverse order.
  ** Memory barriers are used to prevent the compiler or the hardware from
  ** reordering the reads and writes.  TSAN and similar tools can sometimes
  ** give false-positive warnings about these accesses because the tools do not
  ** account for the double-read and the memory barrier. The use of mutexes
  ** here would be problematic as the memory being accessed is potentially
  ** shared among multiple processes and not all mutex implementions work
  ** reliably in that environment.
  */
  aHdr = walIndexHdr(pWal);
  memcpy(&h1, (void *)&aHdr[0], sizeof(h1)); /* Possible TSAN false-positive */
  walShmBarrier(pWal);
  memcpy(&h2, (void *)&aHdr[1], sizeof(h2));

  if( memcmp(&h1, &h2, sizeof(h1))!=0 ){
    return 1;   /* Dirty read */
  }  
  if( h1.isInit==0 ){
    return 1;   /* Malformed header - probably all zeros */
  }
  walChecksumBytes(1, (u8*)&h1, sizeof(h1)-sizeof(h1.aCksum), 0, aCksum);
  if( aCksum[0]!=h1.aCksum[0] || aCksum[1]!=h1.aCksum[1] ){
    return 1;   /* Checksum does not match */
  }

  if( memcmp(&pWal->hdr, &h1, sizeof(WalIndexHdr)) ){
    *pChanged = 1;
    memcpy(&pWal->hdr, &h1, sizeof(WalIndexHdr));
    pWal->szPage = (pWal->hdr.szPage&0xfe00) + ((pWal->hdr.szPage&0x0001)<<16);
    testcase( pWal->szPage<=32768 );
    testcase( pWal->szPage>=65536 );
  }

  /* The header was successfully read. Return zero. */
  return 0;
}

/*
** This is the value that walTryBeginRead returns when it needs to
** be retried.
*/
#define WAL_RETRY  (-1)

/*
** Read the wal-index header from the wal-index and into pWal->hdr.
** If the wal-header appears to be corrupt, try to reconstruct the
** wal-index from the WAL before returning.
**
** Set *pChanged to 1 if the wal-index header value in pWal->hdr is
** changed by this operation.  If pWal->hdr is unchanged, set *pChanged
** to 0.
**
** If the wal-index header is successfully read, return SQLITE_OK. 
** Otherwise an SQLite error code.
*/
static int walIndexReadHdr(Wal *pWal, int *pChanged){
  int rc;                         /* Return code */
  int badHdr;                     /* True if a header read failed */
  volatile u32 *page0;            /* Chunk of wal-index containing header */

  /* Ensure that page 0 of the wal-index (the page that contains the 
  ** wal-index header) is mapped. Return early if an error occurs here.
  */
  assert( pChanged );
  rc = walIndexPage(pWal, 0, &page0);
  if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
    assert( rc!=SQLITE_READONLY ); /* READONLY changed to OK in walIndexPage */
    if( rc==SQLITE_READONLY_CANTINIT ){
      /* The SQLITE_READONLY_CANTINIT return means that the shared-memory
      ** was openable but is not writable, and this thread is unable to
      ** confirm that another write-capable connection has the shared-memory
      ** open, and hence the content of the shared-memory is unreliable,
      ** since the shared-memory might be inconsistent with the WAL file
      ** and there is no writer on hand to fix it. */
      assert( page0==0 );
      assert( pWal->writeLock==0 );
      assert( pWal->readOnly & WAL_SHM_RDONLY );
      pWal->bShmUnreliable = 1;
      pWal->exclusiveMode = WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE;
      *pChanged = 1;
    }else{
      return rc; /* Any other non-OK return is just an error */
    }
  }else{
    /* page0 can be NULL if the SHM is zero bytes in size and pWal->writeLock
    ** is zero, which prevents the SHM from growing */
    testcase( page0!=0 );
  }
  assert( page0!=0 || pWal->writeLock==0 );

  /* If the first page of the wal-index has been mapped, try to read the
  ** wal-index header immediately, without holding any lock. This usually
  ** works, but may fail if the wal-index header is corrupt or currently 
  ** being modified by another thread or process.
  */
  badHdr = (page0 ? walIndexTryHdr(pWal, pChanged) : 1);

  /* If the first attempt failed, it might have been due to a race
  ** with a writer.  So get a WRITE lock and try again.
  */
  if( badHdr ){
    if( pWal->bShmUnreliable==0 && (pWal->readOnly & WAL_SHM_RDONLY) ){
      if( SQLITE_OK==(rc = walLockShared(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK)) ){
        walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK);
        rc = SQLITE_READONLY_RECOVERY;
      }
    }else{
      int bWriteLock = pWal->writeLock;
      if( bWriteLock || SQLITE_OK==(rc = walLockWriter(pWal)) ){
        pWal->writeLock = 1;
        if( SQLITE_OK==(rc = walIndexPage(pWal, 0, &page0)) ){
          badHdr = walIndexTryHdr(pWal, pChanged);
          if( badHdr ){
            /* If the wal-index header is still malformed even while holding
            ** a WRITE lock, it can only mean that the header is corrupted and
            ** needs to be reconstructed.  So run recovery to do exactly that.
            */
            rc = walIndexRecover(pWal);
            *pChanged = 1;
          }
        }
        if( bWriteLock==0 ){
          pWal->writeLock = 0;
          walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1);
        }
      }
    }
  }

  /* If the header is read successfully, check the version number to make
  ** sure the wal-index was not constructed with some future format that
  ** this version of SQLite cannot understand.
  */
  if( badHdr==0 && pWal->hdr.iVersion!=WALINDEX_MAX_VERSION ){
    rc = SQLITE_CANTOPEN_BKPT;
  }
  if( pWal->bShmUnreliable ){
    if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
      walIndexClose(pWal, 0);
      pWal->bShmUnreliable = 0;
      assert( pWal->nWiData>0 && pWal->apWiData[0]==0 );
      /* walIndexRecover() might have returned SHORT_READ if a concurrent
      ** writer truncated the WAL out from under it.  If that happens, it
      ** indicates that a writer has fixed the SHM file for us, so retry */
      if( rc==SQLITE_IOERR_SHORT_READ ) rc = WAL_RETRY;
    }
    pWal->exclusiveMode = WAL_NORMAL_MODE;
  }

  return rc;
}

/*
** Open a transaction in a connection where the shared-memory is read-only
** and where we cannot verify that there is a separate write-capable connection
** on hand to keep the shared-memory up-to-date with the WAL file.
**
** This can happen, for example, when the shared-memory is implemented by
** memory-mapping a *-shm file, where a prior writer has shut down and
** left the *-shm file on disk, and now the present connection is trying
** to use that database but lacks write permission on the *-shm file.
** Other scenarios are also possible, depending on the VFS implementation.
**
** Precondition:
**
**    The *-wal file has been read and an appropriate wal-index has been
**    constructed in pWal->apWiData[] using heap memory instead of shared
**    memory. 
**
** If this function returns SQLITE_OK, then the read transaction has
** been successfully opened. In this case output variable (*pChanged) 
** is set to true before returning if the caller should discard the
** contents of the page cache before proceeding. Or, if it returns 
** WAL_RETRY, then the heap memory wal-index has been discarded and 
** the caller should retry opening the read transaction from the 
** beginning (including attempting to map the *-shm file). 
**
** If an error occurs, an SQLite error code is returned.
*/
static int walBeginShmUnreliable(Wal *pWal, int *pChanged){
  i64 szWal;                      /* Size of wal file on disk in bytes */
  i64 iOffset;                    /* Current offset when reading wal file */
  u8 aBuf[WAL_HDRSIZE];           /* Buffer to load WAL header into */
  u8 *aFrame = 0;                 /* Malloc'd buffer to load entire frame */
  int szFrame;                    /* Number of bytes in buffer aFrame[] */
  u8 *aData;                      /* Pointer to data part of aFrame buffer */
  volatile void *pDummy;          /* Dummy argument for xShmMap */
  int rc;                         /* Return code */
  u32 aSaveCksum[2];              /* Saved copy of pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum */

  assert( pWal->bShmUnreliable );
  assert( pWal->readOnly & WAL_SHM_RDONLY );
  assert( pWal->nWiData>0 && pWal->apWiData[0] );

  /* Take WAL_READ_LOCK(0). This has the effect of preventing any
  ** writers from running a checkpoint, but does not stop them
  ** from running recovery.  */
  rc = walLockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(0));
  if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
    if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY ) rc = WAL_RETRY;
    goto begin_unreliable_shm_out;
  }
  pWal->readLock = 0;

  /* Check to see if a separate writer has attached to the shared-memory area,
  ** thus making the shared-memory "reliable" again.  Do this by invoking
  ** the xShmMap() routine of the VFS and looking to see if the return
  ** is SQLITE_READONLY instead of SQLITE_READONLY_CANTINIT.
  **
  ** If the shared-memory is now "reliable" return WAL_RETRY, which will
  ** cause the heap-memory WAL-index to be discarded and the actual
  ** shared memory to be used in its place.
  **
  ** This step is important because, even though this connection is holding
  ** the WAL_READ_LOCK(0) which prevents a checkpoint, a writer might
  ** have already checkpointed the WAL file and, while the current
  ** is active, wrap the WAL and start overwriting frames that this
  ** process wants to use.
  **
  ** Once sqlite3OsShmMap() has been called for an sqlite3_file and has
  ** returned any SQLITE_READONLY value, it must return only SQLITE_READONLY
  ** or SQLITE_READONLY_CANTINIT or some error for all subsequent invocations,
  ** even if some external agent does a "chmod" to make the shared-memory
  ** writable by us, until sqlite3OsShmUnmap() has been called.
  ** This is a requirement on the VFS implementation.
   */
  rc = sqlite3OsShmMap(pWal->pDbFd, 0, WALINDEX_PGSZ, 0, &pDummy);
  assert( rc!=SQLITE_OK ); /* SQLITE_OK not possible for read-only connection */
  if( rc!=SQLITE_READONLY_CANTINIT ){
    rc = (rc==SQLITE_READONLY ? WAL_RETRY : rc);
    goto begin_unreliable_shm_out;
  }

  /* We reach this point only if the real shared-memory is still unreliable.
  ** Assume the in-memory WAL-index substitute is correct and load it
  ** into pWal->hdr.
  */
  memcpy(&pWal->hdr, (void*)walIndexHdr(pWal), sizeof(WalIndexHdr));

  /* Make sure some writer hasn't come in and changed the WAL file out
  ** from under us, then disconnected, while we were not looking.
  */
  rc = sqlite3OsFileSize(pWal->pWalFd, &szWal);
  if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
    goto begin_unreliable_shm_out;
  }
  if( szWal<WAL_HDRSIZE ){
    /* If the wal file is too small to contain a wal-header and the
    ** wal-index header has mxFrame==0, then it must be safe to proceed
    ** reading the database file only. However, the page cache cannot
    ** be trusted, as a read/write connection may have connected, written
    ** the db, run a checkpoint, truncated the wal file and disconnected
    ** since this client's last read transaction.  */
    *pChanged = 1;
    rc = (pWal->hdr.mxFrame==0 ? SQLITE_OK : WAL_RETRY);
    goto begin_unreliable_shm_out;
  }

  /* Check the salt keys at the start of the wal file still match. */
  rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, aBuf, WAL_HDRSIZE, 0);
  if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
    goto begin_unreliable_shm_out;
  }
  if( memcmp(&pWal->hdr.aSalt, &aBuf[16], 8) ){
    /* Some writer has wrapped the WAL file while we were not looking.
    ** Return WAL_RETRY which will cause the in-memory WAL-index to be
    ** rebuilt. */
    rc = WAL_RETRY;
    goto begin_unreliable_shm_out;
  }

  /* Allocate a buffer to read frames into */
  szFrame = pWal->hdr.szPage + WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE;
  aFrame = (u8 *)sqlite3_malloc64(szFrame);
  if( aFrame==0 ){
    rc = SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;
    goto begin_unreliable_shm_out;
  }
  aData = &aFrame[WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE];

  /* Check to see if a complete transaction has been appended to the
  ** wal file since the heap-memory wal-index was created. If so, the
  ** heap-memory wal-index is discarded and WAL_RETRY returned to
  ** the caller.  */
  aSaveCksum[0] = pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0];
  aSaveCksum[1] = pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1];
  for(iOffset=walFrameOffset(pWal->hdr.mxFrame+1, pWal->hdr.szPage); 
      iOffset+szFrame<=szWal; 
      iOffset+=szFrame
  ){
    u32 pgno;                   /* Database page number for frame */
    u32 nTruncate;              /* dbsize field from frame header */

    /* Read and decode the next log frame. */
    rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, aFrame, szFrame, iOffset);
    if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ) break;
    if( !walDecodeFrame(pWal, &pgno, &nTruncate, aData, aFrame) ) break;

    /* If nTruncate is non-zero, then a complete transaction has been
    ** appended to this wal file. Set rc to WAL_RETRY and break out of
    ** the loop.  */
    if( nTruncate ){
      rc = WAL_RETRY;
      break;
    }
  }
  pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0] = aSaveCksum[0];
  pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1] = aSaveCksum[1];

 begin_unreliable_shm_out:
  sqlite3_free(aFrame);
  if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
    int i;
    for(i=0; i<pWal->nWiData; i++){
      sqlite3_free((void*)pWal->apWiData[i]);
      pWal->apWiData[i] = 0;
    }
    pWal->bShmUnreliable = 0;
    sqlite3WalEndReadTransaction(pWal);
    *pChanged = 1;
  }
  return rc;
}

/*
** Attempt to start a read transaction.  This might fail due to a race or
** other transient condition.  When that happens, it returns WAL_RETRY to
** indicate to the caller that it is safe to retry immediately.
**
** On success return SQLITE_OK.  On a permanent failure (such an
** I/O error or an SQLITE_BUSY because another process is running
** recovery) return a positive error code.
**
** The useWal parameter is true to force the use of the WAL and disable
** the case where the WAL is bypassed because it has been completely
** checkpointed.  If useWal==0 then this routine calls walIndexReadHdr() 
** to make a copy of the wal-index header into pWal->hdr.  If the 
** wal-index header has changed, *pChanged is set to 1 (as an indication 
** to the caller that the local page cache is obsolete and needs to be 
** flushed.)  When useWal==1, the wal-index header is assumed to already
** be loaded and the pChanged parameter is unused.
**
** The caller must set the cnt parameter to the number of prior calls to
** this routine during the current read attempt that returned WAL_RETRY.
** This routine will start taking more aggressive measures to clear the
** race conditions after multiple WAL_RETRY returns, and after an excessive
** number of errors will ultimately return SQLITE_PROTOCOL.  The
** SQLITE_PROTOCOL return indicates that some other process has gone rogue
** and is not honoring the locking protocol.  There is a vanishingly small
** chance that SQLITE_PROTOCOL could be returned because of a run of really
** bad luck when there is lots of contention for the wal-index, but that
** possibility is so small that it can be safely neglected, we believe.
**
** On success, this routine obtains a read lock on 
** WAL_READ_LOCK(pWal->readLock).  The pWal->readLock integer is
** in the range 0 <= pWal->readLock < WAL_NREADER.  If pWal->readLock==(-1)
** that means the Wal does not hold any read lock.  The reader must not
** access any database page that is modified by a WAL frame up to and
** including frame number aReadMark[pWal->readLock].  The reader will
** use WAL frames up to and including pWal->hdr.mxFrame if pWal->readLock>0
** Or if pWal->readLock==0, then the reader will ignore the WAL
** completely and get all content directly from the database file.
** If the useWal parameter is 1 then the WAL will never be ignored and
** this routine will always set pWal->readLock>0 on success.
** When the read transaction is completed, the caller must release the
** lock on WAL_READ_LOCK(pWal->readLock) and set pWal->readLock to -1.
**
** This routine uses the nBackfill and aReadMark[] fields of the header
** to select a particular WAL_READ_LOCK() that strives to let the
** checkpoint process do as much work as possible.  This routine might
** update values of the aReadMark[] array in the header, but if it does
** so it takes care to hold an exclusive lock on the corresponding
** WAL_READ_LOCK() while changing values.
*/
static int walTryBeginRead(Wal *pWal, int *pChanged, int useWal, int cnt){
  volatile WalCkptInfo *pInfo;    /* Checkpoint information in wal-index */
  u32 mxReadMark;                 /* Largest aReadMark[] value */
  int mxI;                        /* Index of largest aReadMark[] value */
  int i;                          /* Loop counter */
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;             /* Return code  */
  u32 mxFrame;                    /* Wal frame to lock to */

  assert( pWal->readLock<0 );     /* Not currently locked */

  /* useWal may only be set for read/write connections */
  assert( (pWal->readOnly & WAL_SHM_RDONLY)==0 || useWal==0 );

  /* Take steps to avoid spinning forever if there is a protocol error.
  **
  ** Circumstances that cause a RETRY should only last for the briefest
  ** instances of time.  No I/O or other system calls are done while the
  ** locks are held, so the locks should not be held for very long. But 
  ** if we are unlucky, another process that is holding a lock might get
  ** paged out or take a page-fault that is time-consuming to resolve, 
  ** during the few nanoseconds that it is holding the lock.  In that case,
  ** it might take longer than normal for the lock to free.
  **
  ** After 5 RETRYs, we begin calling sqlite3OsSleep().  The first few
  ** calls to sqlite3OsSleep() have a delay of 1 microsecond.  Really this
  ** is more of a scheduler yield than an actual delay.  But on the 10th
  ** an subsequent retries, the delays start becoming longer and longer, 
  ** so that on the 100th (and last) RETRY we delay for 323 milliseconds.
  ** The total delay time before giving up is less than 10 seconds.
  */
  if( cnt>5 ){
    int nDelay = 1;                      /* Pause time in microseconds */
    if( cnt>100 ){
      VVA_ONLY( pWal->lockError = 1; )
      return SQLITE_PROTOCOL;
    }
    if( cnt>=10 ) nDelay = (cnt-9)*(cnt-9)*39;
    sqlite3OsSleep(pWal->pVfs, nDelay);
  }

  if( !useWal ){
    assert( rc==SQLITE_OK );
    if( pWal->bShmUnreliable==0 ){
      rc = walIndexReadHdr(pWal, pChanged);
    }
    if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY ){
      /* If there is not a recovery running in another thread or process
      ** then convert BUSY errors to WAL_RETRY.  If recovery is known to
      ** be running, convert BUSY to BUSY_RECOVERY.  There is a race here
      ** which might cause WAL_RETRY to be returned even if BUSY_RECOVERY
      ** would be technically correct.  But the race is benign since with
      ** WAL_RETRY this routine will be called again and will probably be
      ** right on the second iteration.
      */
      if( pWal->apWiData[0]==0 ){
        /* This branch is taken when the xShmMap() method returns SQLITE_BUSY.
        ** We assume this is a transient condition, so return WAL_RETRY. The
        ** xShmMap() implementation used by the default unix and win32 VFS 
        ** modules may return SQLITE_BUSY due to a race condition in the 
        ** code that determines whether or not the shared-memory region 
        ** must be zeroed before the requested page is returned.
        */
        rc = WAL_RETRY;
      }else if( SQLITE_OK==(rc = walLockShared(pWal, WAL_RECOVER_LOCK)) ){
        walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_RECOVER_LOCK);
        rc = WAL_RETRY;
      }else if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY ){
        rc = SQLITE_BUSY_RECOVERY;
      }
    }
    if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
      return rc;
    }
    else if( pWal->bShmUnreliable ){
      return walBeginShmUnreliable(pWal, pChanged);
    }
  }

  assert( pWal->nWiData>0 );
  assert( pWal->apWiData[0]!=0 );
  pInfo = walCkptInfo(pWal);
  if( !useWal && AtomicLoad(&pInfo->nBackfill)==pWal->hdr.mxFrame
#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT
   && (pWal->pSnapshot==0 || pWal->hdr.mxFrame==0)
#endif
  ){
    /* The WAL has been completely backfilled (or it is empty).
    ** and can be safely ignored.
    */
    rc = walLockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(0));
    walShmBarrier(pWal);
    if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
      if( memcmp((void *)walIndexHdr(pWal), &pWal->hdr, sizeof(WalIndexHdr)) ){
        /* It is not safe to allow the reader to continue here if frames
        ** may have been appended to the log before READ_LOCK(0) was obtained.
        ** When holding READ_LOCK(0), the reader ignores the entire log file,
        ** which implies that the database file contains a trustworthy
        ** snapshot. Since holding READ_LOCK(0) prevents a checkpoint from
        ** happening, this is usually correct.
        **
        ** However, if frames have been appended to the log (or if the log 
        ** is wrapped and written for that matter) before the READ_LOCK(0)
        ** is obtained, that is not necessarily true. A checkpointer may
        ** have started to backfill the appended frames but crashed before
        ** it finished. Leaving a corrupt image in the database file.
        */
        walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(0));
        return WAL_RETRY;
      }
      pWal->readLock = 0;
      return SQLITE_OK;
    }else if( rc!=SQLITE_BUSY ){
      return rc;
    }
  }

  /* If we get this far, it means that the reader will want to use
  ** the WAL to get at content from recent commits.  The job now is
  ** to select one of the aReadMark[] entries that is closest to
  ** but not exceeding pWal->hdr.mxFrame and lock that entry.
  */
  mxReadMark = 0;
  mxI = 0;
  mxFrame = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT
  if( pWal->pSnapshot && pWal->pSnapshot->mxFrame<mxFrame ){
    mxFrame = pWal->pSnapshot->mxFrame;
  }
#endif
  for(i=1; i<WAL_NREADER; i++){
    u32 thisMark = AtomicLoad(pInfo->aReadMark+i);
    if( mxReadMark<=thisMark && thisMark<=mxFrame ){
      assert( thisMark!=READMARK_NOT_USED );
      mxReadMark = thisMark;
      mxI = i;
    }
  }
  if( (pWal->readOnly & WAL_SHM_RDONLY)==0
   && (mxReadMark<mxFrame || mxI==0)
  ){
    for(i=1; i<WAL_NREADER; i++){
      rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(i), 1);
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        AtomicStore(pInfo->aReadMark+i,mxFrame);
        mxReadMark = mxFrame;
        mxI = i;
        walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(i), 1);
        break;
      }else if( rc!=SQLITE_BUSY ){
        return rc;
      }
    }
  }
  if( mxI==0 ){
    assert( rc==SQLITE_BUSY || (pWal->readOnly & WAL_SHM_RDONLY)!=0 );
    return rc==SQLITE_BUSY ? WAL_RETRY : SQLITE_READONLY_CANTINIT;
  }

  rc = walLockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(mxI));
  if( rc ){
    return rc==SQLITE_BUSY ? WAL_RETRY : rc;
  }
  /* Now that the read-lock has been obtained, check that neither the
  ** value in the aReadMark[] array or the contents of the wal-index
  ** header have changed.
  **
  ** It is necessary to check that the wal-index header did not change
  ** between the time it was read and when the shared-lock was obtained
  ** on WAL_READ_LOCK(mxI) was obtained to account for the possibility
  ** that the log file may have been wrapped by a writer, or that frames
  ** that occur later in the log than pWal->hdr.mxFrame may have been
  ** copied into the database by a checkpointer. If either of these things
  ** happened, then reading the database with the current value of
  ** pWal->hdr.mxFrame risks reading a corrupted snapshot. So, retry
  ** instead.
  **
  ** Before checking that the live wal-index header has not changed
  ** since it was read, set Wal.minFrame to the first frame in the wal
  ** file that has not yet been checkpointed. This client will not need
  ** to read any frames earlier than minFrame from the wal file - they
  ** can be safely read directly from the database file.
  **
  ** Because a ShmBarrier() call is made between taking the copy of 
  ** nBackfill and checking that the wal-header in shared-memory still
  ** matches the one cached in pWal->hdr, it is guaranteed that the 
  ** checkpointer that set nBackfill was not working with a wal-index
  ** header newer than that cached in pWal->hdr. If it were, that could
  ** cause a problem. The checkpointer could omit to checkpoint
  ** a version of page X that lies before pWal->minFrame (call that version
  ** A) on the basis that there is a newer version (version B) of the same
  ** page later in the wal file. But if version B happens to like past
  ** frame pWal->hdr.mxFrame - then the client would incorrectly assume
  ** that it can read version A from the database file. However, since
  ** we can guarantee that the checkpointer that set nBackfill could not
  ** see any pages past pWal->hdr.mxFrame, this problem does not come up.
  */
  pWal->minFrame = AtomicLoad(&pInfo->nBackfill)+1;
  walShmBarrier(pWal);
  if( AtomicLoad(pInfo->aReadMark+mxI)!=mxReadMark
   || memcmp((void *)walIndexHdr(pWal), &pWal->hdr, sizeof(WalIndexHdr))
  ){
    walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(mxI));
    return WAL_RETRY;
  }else{
    assert( mxReadMark<=pWal->hdr.mxFrame );
    pWal->readLock = (i16)mxI;
  }
  return rc;
}

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT
/*
** Attempt to reduce the value of the WalCkptInfo.nBackfillAttempted 
** variable so that older snapshots can be accessed. To do this, loop
** through all wal frames from nBackfillAttempted to (nBackfill+1), 
** comparing their content to the corresponding page with the database
** file, if any. Set nBackfillAttempted to the frame number of the
** first frame for which the wal file content matches the db file.
**
** This is only really safe if the file-system is such that any page 
** writes made by earlier checkpointers were atomic operations, which 
** is not always true. It is also possible that nBackfillAttempted
** may be left set to a value larger than expected, if a wal frame
** contains content that duplicate of an earlier version of the same
** page.
**
** SQLITE_OK is returned if successful, or an SQLite error code if an
** error occurs. It is not an error if nBackfillAttempted cannot be
** decreased at all.
*/
int sqlite3WalSnapshotRecover(Wal *pWal){
  int rc;

  assert( pWal->readLock>=0 );
  rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK, 1);
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    volatile WalCkptInfo *pInfo = walCkptInfo(pWal);
    int szPage = (int)pWal->szPage;
    i64 szDb;                   /* Size of db file in bytes */

    rc = sqlite3OsFileSize(pWal->pDbFd, &szDb);
    if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
      void *pBuf1 = sqlite3_malloc(szPage);
      void *pBuf2 = sqlite3_malloc(szPage);
      if( pBuf1==0 || pBuf2==0 ){
        rc = SQLITE_NOMEM;
      }else{
        u32 i = pInfo->nBackfillAttempted;
        for(i=pInfo->nBackfillAttempted; i>AtomicLoad(&pInfo->nBackfill); i--){
          WalHashLoc sLoc;          /* Hash table location */
          u32 pgno;                 /* Page number in db file */
          i64 iDbOff;               /* Offset of db file entry */
          i64 iWalOff;              /* Offset of wal file entry */

          rc = walHashGet(pWal, walFramePage(i), &sLoc);
          if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ) break;
          pgno = sLoc.aPgno[i-sLoc.iZero];
          iDbOff = (i64)(pgno-1) * szPage;

          if( iDbOff+szPage<=szDb ){
            iWalOff = walFrameOffset(i, szPage) + WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE;
            rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, pBuf1, szPage, iWalOff);

            if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
              rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pDbFd, pBuf2, szPage, iDbOff);
            }

            if( rc!=SQLITE_OK || 0==memcmp(pBuf1, pBuf2, szPage) ){
              break;
            }
          }

          pInfo->nBackfillAttempted = i-1;
        }
      }

      sqlite3_free(pBuf1);
      sqlite3_free(pBuf2);
    }
    walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK, 1);
  }

  return rc;
}
#endif /* SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT */

/*
** Begin a read transaction on the database.
**
** This routine used to be called sqlite3OpenSnapshot() and with good reason:
** it takes a snapshot of the state of the WAL and wal-index for the current
** instant in time.  The current thread will continue to use this snapshot.
** Other threads might append new content to the WAL and wal-index but
** that extra content is ignored by the current thread.
**
** If the database contents have changes since the previous read
** transaction, then *pChanged is set to 1 before returning.  The
** Pager layer will use this to know that its cache is stale and
** needs to be flushed.
*/
int sqlite3WalBeginReadTransaction(Wal *pWal, int *pChanged){
  int rc;                         /* Return code */
  int cnt = 0;                    /* Number of TryBeginRead attempts */
#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT
  int bChanged = 0;
  WalIndexHdr *pSnapshot = pWal->pSnapshot;
#endif

  assert( pWal->ckptLock==0 );

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT
  if( pSnapshot ){
    if( memcmp(pSnapshot, &pWal->hdr, sizeof(WalIndexHdr))!=0 ){
      bChanged = 1;
    }

    /* It is possible that there is a checkpointer thread running 
    ** concurrent with this code. If this is the case, it may be that the
    ** checkpointer has already determined that it will checkpoint 
    ** snapshot X, where X is later in the wal file than pSnapshot, but 
    ** has not yet set the pInfo->nBackfillAttempted variable to indicate 
    ** its intent. To avoid the race condition this leads to, ensure that
    ** there is no checkpointer process by taking a shared CKPT lock 
    ** before checking pInfo->nBackfillAttempted.  */
    (void)walEnableBlocking(pWal);
    rc = walLockShared(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK);
    walDisableBlocking(pWal);

    if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
      return rc;
    }
    pWal->ckptLock = 1;
  }
#endif

  do{
    rc = walTryBeginRead(pWal, pChanged, 0, ++cnt);
  }while( rc==WAL_RETRY );
  testcase( (rc&0xff)==SQLITE_BUSY );
  testcase( (rc&0xff)==SQLITE_IOERR );
  testcase( rc==SQLITE_PROTOCOL );
  testcase( rc==SQLITE_OK );

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    if( pSnapshot && memcmp(pSnapshot, &pWal->hdr, sizeof(WalIndexHdr))!=0 ){
      /* At this point the client has a lock on an aReadMark[] slot holding
      ** a value equal to or smaller than pSnapshot->mxFrame, but pWal->hdr
      ** is populated with the wal-index header corresponding to the head
      ** of the wal file. Verify that pSnapshot is still valid before
      ** continuing.  Reasons why pSnapshot might no longer be valid:
      **
      **    (1)  The WAL file has been reset since the snapshot was taken.
      **         In this case, the salt will have changed.
      **
      **    (2)  A checkpoint as been attempted that wrote frames past
      **         pSnapshot->mxFrame into the database file.  Note that the
      **         checkpoint need not have completed for this to cause problems.
      */
      volatile WalCkptInfo *pInfo = walCkptInfo(pWal);

      assert( pWal->readLock>0 || pWal->hdr.mxFrame==0 );
      assert( pInfo->aReadMark[pWal->readLock]<=pSnapshot->mxFrame );

      /* Check that the wal file has not been wrapped. Assuming that it has
      ** not, also check that no checkpointer has attempted to checkpoint any
      ** frames beyond pSnapshot->mxFrame. If either of these conditions are
      ** true, return SQLITE_ERROR_SNAPSHOT. Otherwise, overwrite pWal->hdr
      ** with *pSnapshot and set *pChanged as appropriate for opening the
      ** snapshot.  */
      if( !memcmp(pSnapshot->aSalt, pWal->hdr.aSalt, sizeof(pWal->hdr.aSalt))
       && pSnapshot->mxFrame>=pInfo->nBackfillAttempted
      ){
        assert( pWal->readLock>0 );
        memcpy(&pWal->hdr, pSnapshot, sizeof(WalIndexHdr));
        *pChanged = bChanged;
      }else{
        rc = SQLITE_ERROR_SNAPSHOT;
      }

      /* A client using a non-current snapshot may not ignore any frames
      ** from the start of the wal file. This is because, for a system
      ** where (minFrame < iSnapshot < maxFrame), a checkpointer may
      ** have omitted to checkpoint a frame earlier than minFrame in 
      ** the file because there exists a frame after iSnapshot that
      ** is the same database page.  */
      pWal->minFrame = 1;

      if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
        sqlite3WalEndReadTransaction(pWal);
      }
    }
  }

  /* Release the shared CKPT lock obtained above. */
  if( pWal->ckptLock ){
    assert( pSnapshot );
    walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK);
    pWal->ckptLock = 0;
  }
#endif
  return rc;
}

/*
** Finish with a read transaction.  All this does is release the
** read-lock.
*/
void sqlite3WalEndReadTransaction(Wal *pWal){
  sqlite3WalEndWriteTransaction(pWal);
  if( pWal->readLock>=0 ){
    walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(pWal->readLock));
    pWal->readLock = -1;
  }
}

/*
** Search the wal file for page pgno. If found, set *piRead to the frame that
** contains the page. Otherwise, if pgno is not in the wal file, set *piRead
** to zero.
**
** Return SQLITE_OK if successful, or an error code if an error occurs. If an
** error does occur, the final value of *piRead is undefined.
*/
int sqlite3WalFindFrame(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* WAL handle */
  Pgno pgno,                      /* Database page number to read data for */
  u32 *piRead                     /* OUT: Frame number (or zero) */
){
  u32 iRead = 0;                  /* If !=0, WAL frame to return data from */
  u32 iLast = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;  /* Last page in WAL for this reader */
  int iHash;                      /* Used to loop through N hash tables */
  int iMinHash;

  /* This routine is only be called from within a read transaction. */
  assert( pWal->readLock>=0 || pWal->lockError );

  /* If the "last page" field of the wal-index header snapshot is 0, then
  ** no data will be read from the wal under any circumstances. Return early
  ** in this case as an optimization.  Likewise, if pWal->readLock==0, 
  ** then the WAL is ignored by the reader so return early, as if the 
  ** WAL were empty.
  */
  if( iLast==0 || (pWal->readLock==0 && pWal->bShmUnreliable==0) ){
    *piRead = 0;
    return SQLITE_OK;
  }

  /* Search the hash table or tables for an entry matching page number
  ** pgno. Each iteration of the following for() loop searches one
  ** hash table (each hash table indexes up to HASHTABLE_NPAGE frames).
  **
  ** This code might run concurrently to the code in walIndexAppend()
  ** that adds entries to the wal-index (and possibly to this hash 
  ** table). This means the value just read from the hash 
  ** slot (aHash[iKey]) may have been added before or after the 
  ** current read transaction was opened. Values added after the
  ** read transaction was opened may have been written incorrectly -
  ** i.e. these slots may contain garbage data. However, we assume
  ** that any slots written before the current read transaction was
  ** opened remain unmodified.
  **
  ** For the reasons above, the if(...) condition featured in the inner
  ** loop of the following block is more stringent that would be required 
  ** if we had exclusive access to the hash-table:
  **
  **   (aPgno[iFrame]==pgno): 
  **     This condition filters out normal hash-table collisions.
  **
  **   (iFrame<=iLast): 
  **     This condition filters out entries that were added to the hash
  **     table after the current read-transaction had started.
  */
  iMinHash = walFramePage(pWal->minFrame);
  for(iHash=walFramePage(iLast); iHash>=iMinHash; iHash--){
    WalHashLoc sLoc;              /* Hash table location */
    int iKey;                     /* Hash slot index */
    int nCollide;                 /* Number of hash collisions remaining */
    int rc;                       /* Error code */
    u32 iH;

    rc = walHashGet(pWal, iHash, &sLoc);
    if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
      return rc;
    }
    nCollide = HASHTABLE_NSLOT;
    iKey = walHash(pgno);
    while( (iH = AtomicLoad(&sLoc.aHash[iKey]))!=0 ){
      u32 iFrame = iH + sLoc.iZero;
      if( iFrame<=iLast && iFrame>=pWal->minFrame && sLoc.aPgno[iH]==pgno ){
        assert( iFrame>iRead || CORRUPT_DB );
        iRead = iFrame;
      }
      if( (nCollide--)==0 ){
        return SQLITE_CORRUPT_BKPT;
      }
      iKey = walNextHash(iKey);
    }
    if( iRead ) break;
  }

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_ASSERT
  /* If expensive assert() statements are available, do a linear search
  ** of the wal-index file content. Make sure the results agree with the
  ** result obtained using the hash indexes above.  */
  {
    u32 iRead2 = 0;
    u32 iTest;
    assert( pWal->bShmUnreliable || pWal->minFrame>0 );
    for(iTest=iLast; iTest>=pWal->minFrame && iTest>0; iTest--){
      if( walFramePgno(pWal, iTest)==pgno ){
        iRead2 = iTest;
        break;
      }
    }
    assert( iRead==iRead2 );
  }
#endif

  *piRead = iRead;
  return SQLITE_OK;
}

/*
** Read the contents of frame iRead from the wal file into buffer pOut
** (which is nOut bytes in size). Return SQLITE_OK if successful, or an
** error code otherwise.
*/
int sqlite3WalReadFrame(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* WAL handle */
  u32 iRead,                      /* Frame to read */
  int nOut,                       /* Size of buffer pOut in bytes */
  u8 *pOut                        /* Buffer to write page data to */
){
  int sz;
  i64 iOffset;
  sz = pWal->hdr.szPage;
  sz = (sz&0xfe00) + ((sz&0x0001)<<16);
  testcase( sz<=32768 );
  testcase( sz>=65536 );
  iOffset = walFrameOffset(iRead, sz) + WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE;
  /* testcase( IS_BIG_INT(iOffset) ); // requires a 4GiB WAL */
  return sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, pOut, (nOut>sz ? sz : nOut), iOffset);
}

/* 
** Return the size of the database in pages (or zero, if unknown).
*/
Pgno sqlite3WalDbsize(Wal *pWal){
  if( pWal && ALWAYS(pWal->readLock>=0) ){
    return pWal->hdr.nPage;
  }
  return 0;
}


/* 
** This function starts a write transaction on the WAL.
**
** A read transaction must have already been started by a prior call
** to sqlite3WalBeginReadTransaction().
**
** If another thread or process has written into the database since
** the read transaction was started, then it is not possible for this
** thread to write as doing so would cause a fork.  So this routine
** returns SQLITE_BUSY in that case and no write transaction is started.
**
** There can only be a single writer active at a time.
*/
int sqlite3WalBeginWriteTransaction(Wal *pWal){
  int rc;

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SETLK_TIMEOUT
  /* If the write-lock is already held, then it was obtained before the
  ** read-transaction was even opened, making this call a no-op.
  ** Return early. */
  if( pWal->writeLock ){
    assert( !memcmp(&pWal->hdr,(void *)walIndexHdr(pWal),sizeof(WalIndexHdr)) );
    return SQLITE_OK;
  }
#endif

  /* Cannot start a write transaction without first holding a read
  ** transaction. */
  assert( pWal->readLock>=0 );
  assert( pWal->writeLock==0 && pWal->iReCksum==0 );

  if( pWal->readOnly ){
    return SQLITE_READONLY;
  }

  /* Only one writer allowed at a time.  Get the write lock.  Return
  ** SQLITE_BUSY if unable.
  */
  rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1);
  if( rc ){
    return rc;
  }
  pWal->writeLock = 1;

  /* If another connection has written to the database file since the
  ** time the read transaction on this connection was started, then
  ** the write is disallowed.
  */
  if( memcmp(&pWal->hdr, (void *)walIndexHdr(pWal), sizeof(WalIndexHdr))!=0 ){
    walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1);
    pWal->writeLock = 0;
    rc = SQLITE_BUSY_SNAPSHOT;
  }

  return rc;
}

/*
** End a write transaction.  The commit has already been done.  This
** routine merely releases the lock.
*/
int sqlite3WalEndWriteTransaction(Wal *pWal){
  if( pWal->writeLock ){
    walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1);
    pWal->writeLock = 0;
    pWal->iReCksum = 0;
    pWal->truncateOnCommit = 0;
  }
  return SQLITE_OK;
}

/*
** If any data has been written (but not committed) to the log file, this
** function moves the write-pointer back to the start of the transaction.
**
** Additionally, the callback function is invoked for each frame written
** to the WAL since the start of the transaction. If the callback returns
** other than SQLITE_OK, it is not invoked again and the error code is
** returned to the caller.
**
** Otherwise, if the callback function does not return an error, this
** function returns SQLITE_OK.
*/
int sqlite3WalUndo(Wal *pWal, int (*xUndo)(void *, Pgno), void *pUndoCtx){
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;
  if( ALWAYS(pWal->writeLock) ){
    Pgno iMax = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
    Pgno iFrame;
  
    /* Restore the clients cache of the wal-index header to the state it
    ** was in before the client began writing to the database. 
    */
    memcpy(&pWal->hdr, (void *)walIndexHdr(pWal), sizeof(WalIndexHdr));

    for(iFrame=pWal->hdr.mxFrame+1; 
        ALWAYS(rc==SQLITE_OK) && iFrame<=iMax; 
        iFrame++
    ){
      /* This call cannot fail. Unless the page for which the page number
      ** is passed as the second argument is (a) in the cache and 
      ** (b) has an outstanding reference, then xUndo is either a no-op
      ** (if (a) is false) or simply expels the page from the cache (if (b)
      ** is false).
      **
      ** If the upper layer is doing a rollback, it is guaranteed that there
      ** are no outstanding references to any page other than page 1. And
      ** page 1 is never written to the log until the transaction is
      ** committed. As a result, the call to xUndo may not fail.
      */
      assert( walFramePgno(pWal, iFrame)!=1 );
      rc = xUndo(pUndoCtx, walFramePgno(pWal, iFrame));
    }
    if( iMax!=pWal->hdr.mxFrame ) walCleanupHash(pWal);
  }
  return rc;
}

/* 
** Argument aWalData must point to an array of WAL_SAVEPOINT_NDATA u32 
** values. This function populates the array with values required to 
** "rollback" the write position of the WAL handle back to the current 
** point in the event of a savepoint rollback (via WalSavepointUndo()).
*/
void sqlite3WalSavepoint(Wal *pWal, u32 *aWalData){
  assert( pWal->writeLock );
  aWalData[0] = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
  aWalData[1] = pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0];
  aWalData[2] = pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1];
  aWalData[3] = pWal->nCkpt;
}

/* 
** Move the write position of the WAL back to the point identified by
** the values in the aWalData[] array. aWalData must point to an array
** of WAL_SAVEPOINT_NDATA u32 values that has been previously populated
** by a call to WalSavepoint().
*/
int sqlite3WalSavepointUndo(Wal *pWal, u32 *aWalData){
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;

  assert( pWal->writeLock );
  assert( aWalData[3]!=pWal->nCkpt || aWalData[0]<=pWal->hdr.mxFrame );

  if( aWalData[3]!=pWal->nCkpt ){
    /* This savepoint was opened immediately after the write-transaction
    ** was started. Right after that, the writer decided to wrap around
    ** to the start of the log. Update the savepoint values to match.
    */
    aWalData[0] = 0;
    aWalData[3] = pWal->nCkpt;
  }

  if( aWalData[0]<pWal->hdr.mxFrame ){
    pWal->hdr.mxFrame = aWalData[0];
    pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0] = aWalData[1];
    pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1] = aWalData[2];
    walCleanupHash(pWal);
  }

  return rc;
}

/*
** This function is called just before writing a set of frames to the log
** file (see sqlite3WalFrames()). It checks to see if, instead of appending
** to the current log file, it is possible to overwrite the start of the
** existing log file with the new frames (i.e. "reset" the log). If so,
** it sets pWal->hdr.mxFrame to 0. Otherwise, pWal->hdr.mxFrame is left
** unchanged.
**
** SQLITE_OK is returned if no error is encountered (regardless of whether
** or not pWal->hdr.mxFrame is modified). An SQLite error code is returned
** if an error occurs.
*/
static int walRestartLog(Wal *pWal){
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;
  int cnt;

  if( pWal->readLock==0 ){
    volatile WalCkptInfo *pInfo = walCkptInfo(pWal);
    assert( pInfo->nBackfill==pWal->hdr.mxFrame );
    if( pInfo->nBackfill>0 ){
      u32 salt1;
      sqlite3_randomness(4, &salt1);
      rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(1), WAL_NREADER-1);
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        /* If all readers are using WAL_READ_LOCK(0) (in other words if no
        ** readers are currently using the WAL), then the transactions
        ** frames will overwrite the start of the existing log. Update the
        ** wal-index header to reflect this.
        **
        ** In theory it would be Ok to update the cache of the header only
        ** at this point. But updating the actual wal-index header is also
        ** safe and means there is no special case for sqlite3WalUndo()
        ** to handle if this transaction is rolled back.  */
        walRestartHdr(pWal, salt1);
        walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(1), WAL_NREADER-1);
      }else if( rc!=SQLITE_BUSY ){
        return rc;
      }
    }
    walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(0));
    pWal->readLock = -1;
    cnt = 0;
    do{
      int notUsed;
      rc = walTryBeginRead(pWal, &notUsed, 1, ++cnt);
    }while( rc==WAL_RETRY );
    assert( (rc&0xff)!=SQLITE_BUSY ); /* BUSY not possible when useWal==1 */
    testcase( (rc&0xff)==SQLITE_IOERR );
    testcase( rc==SQLITE_PROTOCOL );
    testcase( rc==SQLITE_OK );
  }
  return rc;
}

/*
** Information about the current state of the WAL file and where
** the next fsync should occur - passed from sqlite3WalFrames() into
** walWriteToLog().
*/
typedef struct WalWriter {
  Wal *pWal;                   /* The complete WAL information */
  sqlite3_file *pFd;           /* The WAL file to which we write */
  sqlite3_int64 iSyncPoint;    /* Fsync at this offset */
  int syncFlags;               /* Flags for the fsync */
  int szPage;                  /* Size of one page */
} WalWriter;

/*
** Write iAmt bytes of content into the WAL file beginning at iOffset.
** Do a sync when crossing the p->iSyncPoint boundary.
**
** In other words, if iSyncPoint is in between iOffset and iOffset+iAmt,
** first write the part before iSyncPoint, then sync, then write the
** rest.
*/
static int walWriteToLog(
  WalWriter *p,              /* WAL to write to */
  void *pContent,            /* Content to be written */
  int iAmt,                  /* Number of bytes to write */
  sqlite3_int64 iOffset      /* Start writing at this offset */
){
  int rc;
  if( iOffset<p->iSyncPoint && iOffset+iAmt>=p->iSyncPoint ){
    int iFirstAmt = (int)(p->iSyncPoint - iOffset);
    rc = sqlite3OsWrite(p->pFd, pContent, iFirstAmt, iOffset);
    if( rc ) return rc;
    iOffset += iFirstAmt;
    iAmt -= iFirstAmt;
    pContent = (void*)(iFirstAmt + (char*)pContent);
    assert( WAL_SYNC_FLAGS(p->syncFlags)!=0 );
    rc = sqlite3OsSync(p->pFd, WAL_SYNC_FLAGS(p->syncFlags));
    if( iAmt==0 || rc ) return rc;
  }
  rc = sqlite3OsWrite(p->pFd, pContent, iAmt, iOffset);
  return rc;
}

/*
** Write out a single frame of the WAL
*/
static int walWriteOneFrame(
  WalWriter *p,               /* Where to write the frame */
  PgHdr *pPage,               /* The page of the frame to be written */
  int nTruncate,              /* The commit flag.  Usually 0.  >0 for commit */
  sqlite3_int64 iOffset       /* Byte offset at which to write */
){
  int rc;                         /* Result code from subfunctions */
  void *pData;                    /* Data actually written */
  u8 aFrame[WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE];   /* Buffer to assemble frame-header in */
  pData = pPage->pData;
  walEncodeFrame(p->pWal, pPage->pgno, nTruncate, pData, aFrame);
  rc = walWriteToLog(p, aFrame, sizeof(aFrame), iOffset);
  if( rc ) return rc;
  /* Write the page data */
  rc = walWriteToLog(p, pData, p->szPage, iOffset+sizeof(aFrame));
  return rc;
}

/*
** This function is called as part of committing a transaction within which
** one or more frames have been overwritten. It updates the checksums for
** all frames written to the wal file by the current transaction starting
** with the earliest to have been overwritten.
**
** SQLITE_OK is returned if successful, or an SQLite error code otherwise.
*/
static int walRewriteChecksums(Wal *pWal, u32 iLast){
  const int szPage = pWal->szPage;/* Database page size */
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;             /* Return code */
  u8 *aBuf;                       /* Buffer to load data from wal file into */
  u8 aFrame[WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE];   /* Buffer to assemble frame-headers in */
  u32 iRead;                      /* Next frame to read from wal file */
  i64 iCksumOff;

  aBuf = sqlite3_malloc(szPage + WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE);
  if( aBuf==0 ) return SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;

  /* Find the checksum values to use as input for the recalculating the
  ** first checksum. If the first frame is frame 1 (implying that the current
  ** transaction restarted the wal file), these values must be read from the
  ** wal-file header. Otherwise, read them from the frame header of the
  ** previous frame.  */
  assert( pWal->iReCksum>0 );
  if( pWal->iReCksum==1 ){
    iCksumOff = 24;
  }else{
    iCksumOff = walFrameOffset(pWal->iReCksum-1, szPage) + 16;
  }
  rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, aBuf, sizeof(u32)*2, iCksumOff);
  pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0] = sqlite3Get4byte(aBuf);
  pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1] = sqlite3Get4byte(&aBuf[sizeof(u32)]);

  iRead = pWal->iReCksum;
  pWal->iReCksum = 0;
  for(; rc==SQLITE_OK && iRead<=iLast; iRead++){
    i64 iOff = walFrameOffset(iRead, szPage);
    rc = sqlite3OsRead(pWal->pWalFd, aBuf, szPage+WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE, iOff);
    if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
      u32 iPgno, nDbSize;
      iPgno = sqlite3Get4byte(aBuf);
      nDbSize = sqlite3Get4byte(&aBuf[4]);

      walEncodeFrame(pWal, iPgno, nDbSize, &aBuf[WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE], aFrame);
      rc = sqlite3OsWrite(pWal->pWalFd, aFrame, sizeof(aFrame), iOff);
    }
  }

  sqlite3_free(aBuf);
  return rc;
}

/* 
** Write a set of frames to the log. The caller must hold the write-lock
** on the log file (obtained using sqlite3WalBeginWriteTransaction()).
*/
int sqlite3WalFrames(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* Wal handle to write to */
  int szPage,                     /* Database page-size in bytes */
  PgHdr *pList,                   /* List of dirty pages to write */
  Pgno nTruncate,                 /* Database size after this commit */
  int isCommit,                   /* True if this is a commit */
  int sync_flags                  /* Flags to pass to OsSync() (or 0) */
){
  int rc;                         /* Used to catch return codes */
  u32 iFrame;                     /* Next frame address */
  PgHdr *p;                       /* Iterator to run through pList with. */
  PgHdr *pLast = 0;               /* Last frame in list */
  int nExtra = 0;                 /* Number of extra copies of last page */
  int szFrame;                    /* The size of a single frame */
  i64 iOffset;                    /* Next byte to write in WAL file */
  WalWriter w;                    /* The writer */
  u32 iFirst = 0;                 /* First frame that may be overwritten */
  WalIndexHdr *pLive;             /* Pointer to shared header */

  assert( pList );
  assert( pWal->writeLock );

  /* If this frame set completes a transaction, then nTruncate>0.  If
  ** nTruncate==0 then this frame set does not complete the transaction. */
  assert( (isCommit!=0)==(nTruncate!=0) );

#if defined(SQLITE_TEST) && defined(SQLITE_DEBUG)
  { int cnt; for(cnt=0, p=pList; p; p=p->pDirty, cnt++){}
    WALTRACE(("WAL%p: frame write begin. %d frames. mxFrame=%d. %s\n",
              pWal, cnt, pWal->hdr.mxFrame, isCommit ? "Commit" : "Spill"));
  }
#endif

  pLive = (WalIndexHdr*)walIndexHdr(pWal);
  if( memcmp(&pWal->hdr, (void *)pLive, sizeof(WalIndexHdr))!=0 ){
    iFirst = pLive->mxFrame+1;
  }

  /* See if it is possible to write these frames into the start of the
  ** log file, instead of appending to it at pWal->hdr.mxFrame.
  */
  if( SQLITE_OK!=(rc = walRestartLog(pWal)) ){
    return rc;
  }

  /* If this is the first frame written into the log, write the WAL
  ** header to the start of the WAL file. See comments at the top of
  ** this source file for a description of the WAL header format.
  */
  iFrame = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
  if( iFrame==0 ){
    u8 aWalHdr[WAL_HDRSIZE];      /* Buffer to assemble wal-header in */
    u32 aCksum[2];                /* Checksum for wal-header */

    sqlite3Put4byte(&aWalHdr[0], (WAL_MAGIC | SQLITE_BIGENDIAN));
    sqlite3Put4byte(&aWalHdr[4], WAL_MAX_VERSION);
    sqlite3Put4byte(&aWalHdr[8], szPage);
    sqlite3Put4byte(&aWalHdr[12], pWal->nCkpt);
    if( pWal->nCkpt==0 ) sqlite3_randomness(8, pWal->hdr.aSalt);
    memcpy(&aWalHdr[16], pWal->hdr.aSalt, 8);
    walChecksumBytes(1, aWalHdr, WAL_HDRSIZE-2*4, 0, aCksum);
    sqlite3Put4byte(&aWalHdr[24], aCksum[0]);
    sqlite3Put4byte(&aWalHdr[28], aCksum[1]);
    
    pWal->szPage = szPage;
    pWal->hdr.bigEndCksum = SQLITE_BIGENDIAN;
    pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0] = aCksum[0];
    pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[1] = aCksum[1];
    pWal->truncateOnCommit = 1;

    rc = sqlite3OsWrite(pWal->pWalFd, aWalHdr, sizeof(aWalHdr), 0);
    WALTRACE(("WAL%p: wal-header write %s\n", pWal, rc ? "failed" : "ok"));
    if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
      return rc;
    }

    /* Sync the header (unless SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL is true or unless
    ** all syncing is turned off by PRAGMA synchronous=OFF).  Otherwise
    ** an out-of-order write following a WAL restart could result in
    ** database corruption.  See the ticket:
    **
    **     https://sqlite.org/src/info/ff5be73dee
    */
    if( pWal->syncHeader ){
      rc = sqlite3OsSync(pWal->pWalFd, CKPT_SYNC_FLAGS(sync_flags));
      if( rc ) return rc;
    }
  }
  assert( (int)pWal->szPage==szPage );

  /* Setup information needed to write frames into the WAL */
  w.pWal = pWal;
  w.pFd = pWal->pWalFd;
  w.iSyncPoint = 0;
  w.syncFlags = sync_flags;
  w.szPage = szPage;
  iOffset = walFrameOffset(iFrame+1, szPage);
  szFrame = szPage + WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE;

  /* Write all frames into the log file exactly once */
  for(p=pList; p; p=p->pDirty){
    int nDbSize;   /* 0 normally.  Positive == commit flag */

    /* Check if this page has already been written into the wal file by
    ** the current transaction. If so, overwrite the existing frame and
    ** set Wal.writeLock to WAL_WRITELOCK_RECKSUM - indicating that 
    ** checksums must be recomputed when the transaction is committed.  */
    if( iFirst && (p->pDirty || isCommit==0) ){
      u32 iWrite = 0;
      VVA_ONLY(rc =) sqlite3WalFindFrame(pWal, p->pgno, &iWrite);
      assert( rc==SQLITE_OK || iWrite==0 );
      if( iWrite>=iFirst ){
        i64 iOff = walFrameOffset(iWrite, szPage) + WAL_FRAME_HDRSIZE;
        void *pData;
        if( pWal->iReCksum==0 || iWrite<pWal->iReCksum ){
          pWal->iReCksum = iWrite;
        }
        pData = p->pData;
        rc = sqlite3OsWrite(pWal->pWalFd, pData, szPage, iOff);
        if( rc ) return rc;
        p->flags &= ~PGHDR_WAL_APPEND;
        continue;
      }
    }

    iFrame++;
    assert( iOffset==walFrameOffset(iFrame, szPage) );
    nDbSize = (isCommit && p->pDirty==0) ? nTruncate : 0;
    rc = walWriteOneFrame(&w, p, nDbSize, iOffset);
    if( rc ) return rc;
    pLast = p;
    iOffset += szFrame;
    p->flags |= PGHDR_WAL_APPEND;
  }

  /* Recalculate checksums within the wal file if required. */
  if( isCommit && pWal->iReCksum ){
    rc = walRewriteChecksums(pWal, iFrame);
    if( rc ) return rc;
  }

  /* If this is the end of a transaction, then we might need to pad
  ** the transaction and/or sync the WAL file.
  **
  ** Padding and syncing only occur if this set of frames complete a
  ** transaction and if PRAGMA synchronous=FULL.  If synchronous==NORMAL
  ** or synchronous==OFF, then no padding or syncing are needed.
  **
  ** If SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE is defined, then padding is not
  ** needed and only the sync is done.  If padding is needed, then the
  ** final frame is repeated (with its commit mark) until the next sector
  ** boundary is crossed.  Only the part of the WAL prior to the last
  ** sector boundary is synced; the part of the last frame that extends
  ** past the sector boundary is written after the sync.
  */
  if( isCommit && WAL_SYNC_FLAGS(sync_flags)!=0 ){
    int bSync = 1;
    if( pWal->padToSectorBoundary ){
      int sectorSize = sqlite3SectorSize(pWal->pWalFd);
      w.iSyncPoint = ((iOffset+sectorSize-1)/sectorSize)*sectorSize;
      bSync = (w.iSyncPoint==iOffset);
      testcase( bSync );
      while( iOffset<w.iSyncPoint ){
        rc = walWriteOneFrame(&w, pLast, nTruncate, iOffset);
        if( rc ) return rc;
        iOffset += szFrame;
        nExtra++;
        assert( pLast!=0 );
      }
    }
    if( bSync ){
      assert( rc==SQLITE_OK );
      rc = sqlite3OsSync(w.pFd, WAL_SYNC_FLAGS(sync_flags));
    }
  }

  /* If this frame set completes the first transaction in the WAL and
  ** if PRAGMA journal_size_limit is set, then truncate the WAL to the
  ** journal size limit, if possible.
  */
  if( isCommit && pWal->truncateOnCommit && pWal->mxWalSize>=0 ){
    i64 sz = pWal->mxWalSize;
    if( walFrameOffset(iFrame+nExtra+1, szPage)>pWal->mxWalSize ){
      sz = walFrameOffset(iFrame+nExtra+1, szPage);
    }
    walLimitSize(pWal, sz);
    pWal->truncateOnCommit = 0;
  }

  /* Append data to the wal-index. It is not necessary to lock the 
  ** wal-index to do this as the SQLITE_SHM_WRITE lock held on the wal-index
  ** guarantees that there are no other writers, and no data that may
  ** be in use by existing readers is being overwritten.
  */
  iFrame = pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
  for(p=pList; p && rc==SQLITE_OK; p=p->pDirty){
    if( (p->flags & PGHDR_WAL_APPEND)==0 ) continue;
    iFrame++;
    rc = walIndexAppend(pWal, iFrame, p->pgno);
  }
  assert( pLast!=0 || nExtra==0 );
  while( rc==SQLITE_OK && nExtra>0 ){
    iFrame++;
    nExtra--;
    rc = walIndexAppend(pWal, iFrame, pLast->pgno);
  }

  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    /* Update the private copy of the header. */
    pWal->hdr.szPage = (u16)((szPage&0xff00) | (szPage>>16));
    testcase( szPage<=32768 );
    testcase( szPage>=65536 );
    pWal->hdr.mxFrame = iFrame;
    if( isCommit ){
      pWal->hdr.iChange++;
      pWal->hdr.nPage = nTruncate;
    }
    /* If this is a commit, update the wal-index header too. */
    if( isCommit ){
      walIndexWriteHdr(pWal);
      pWal->iCallback = iFrame;
    }
  }

  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: frame write %s\n", pWal, rc ? "failed" : "ok"));
  return rc;
}

/* 
** This routine is called to implement sqlite3_wal_checkpoint() and
** related interfaces.
**
** Obtain a CHECKPOINT lock and then backfill as much information as
** we can from WAL into the database.
**
** If parameter xBusy is not NULL, it is a pointer to a busy-handler
** callback. In this case this function runs a blocking checkpoint.
*/
int sqlite3WalCheckpoint(
  Wal *pWal,                      /* Wal connection */
  sqlite3 *db,                    /* Check this handle's interrupt flag */
  int eMode,                      /* PASSIVE, FULL, RESTART, or TRUNCATE */
  int (*xBusy)(void*),            /* Function to call when busy */
  void *pBusyArg,                 /* Context argument for xBusyHandler */
  int sync_flags,                 /* Flags to sync db file with (or 0) */
  int nBuf,                       /* Size of temporary buffer */
  u8 *zBuf,                       /* Temporary buffer to use */
  int *pnLog,                     /* OUT: Number of frames in WAL */
  int *pnCkpt                     /* OUT: Number of backfilled frames in WAL */
){
  int rc;                         /* Return code */
  int isChanged = 0;              /* True if a new wal-index header is loaded */
  int eMode2 = eMode;             /* Mode to pass to walCheckpoint() */
  int (*xBusy2)(void*) = xBusy;   /* Busy handler for eMode2 */

  assert( pWal->ckptLock==0 );
  assert( pWal->writeLock==0 );

  /* EVIDENCE-OF: R-62920-47450 The busy-handler callback is never invoked
  ** in the SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE mode. */
  assert( eMode!=SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE || xBusy==0 );

  if( pWal->readOnly ) return SQLITE_READONLY;
  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: checkpoint begins\n", pWal));

  /* Enable blocking locks, if possible. If blocking locks are successfully
  ** enabled, set xBusy2=0 so that the busy-handler is never invoked. */
  sqlite3WalDb(pWal, db);
  (void)walEnableBlocking(pWal);

  /* IMPLEMENTATION-OF: R-62028-47212 All calls obtain an exclusive 
  ** "checkpoint" lock on the database file.
  ** EVIDENCE-OF: R-10421-19736 If any other process is running a
  ** checkpoint operation at the same time, the lock cannot be obtained and
  ** SQLITE_BUSY is returned.
  ** EVIDENCE-OF: R-53820-33897 Even if there is a busy-handler configured,
  ** it will not be invoked in this case.
  */
  rc = walLockExclusive(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK, 1);
  testcase( rc==SQLITE_BUSY );
  testcase( rc!=SQLITE_OK && xBusy2!=0 );
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    pWal->ckptLock = 1;

    /* IMPLEMENTATION-OF: R-59782-36818 The SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_FULL, RESTART and
    ** TRUNCATE modes also obtain the exclusive "writer" lock on the database
    ** file.
    **
    ** EVIDENCE-OF: R-60642-04082 If the writer lock cannot be obtained
    ** immediately, and a busy-handler is configured, it is invoked and the
    ** writer lock retried until either the busy-handler returns 0 or the
    ** lock is successfully obtained.
    */
    if( eMode!=SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE ){
      rc = walBusyLock(pWal, xBusy2, pBusyArg, WAL_WRITE_LOCK, 1);
      if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
        pWal->writeLock = 1;
      }else if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY ){
        eMode2 = SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE;
        xBusy2 = 0;
        rc = SQLITE_OK;
      }
    }
  }


  /* Read the wal-index header. */
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    walDisableBlocking(pWal);
    rc = walIndexReadHdr(pWal, &isChanged);
    (void)walEnableBlocking(pWal);
    if( isChanged && pWal->pDbFd->pMethods->iVersion>=3 ){
      sqlite3OsUnfetch(pWal->pDbFd, 0, 0);
    }
  }

  /* Copy data from the log to the database file. */
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){

    if( pWal->hdr.mxFrame && walPagesize(pWal)!=nBuf ){
      rc = SQLITE_CORRUPT_BKPT;
    }else{
      rc = walCheckpoint(pWal, db, eMode2, xBusy2, pBusyArg, sync_flags, zBuf);
    }

    /* If no error occurred, set the output variables. */
    if( rc==SQLITE_OK || rc==SQLITE_BUSY ){
      if( pnLog ) *pnLog = (int)pWal->hdr.mxFrame;
      if( pnCkpt ) *pnCkpt = (int)(walCkptInfo(pWal)->nBackfill);
    }
  }

  if( isChanged ){
    /* If a new wal-index header was loaded before the checkpoint was 
    ** performed, then the pager-cache associated with pWal is now
    ** out of date. So zero the cached wal-index header to ensure that
    ** next time the pager opens a snapshot on this database it knows that
    ** the cache needs to be reset.
    */
    memset(&pWal->hdr, 0, sizeof(WalIndexHdr));
  }

  walDisableBlocking(pWal);
  sqlite3WalDb(pWal, 0);

  /* Release the locks. */
  sqlite3WalEndWriteTransaction(pWal);
  if( pWal->ckptLock ){
    walUnlockExclusive(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK, 1);
    pWal->ckptLock = 0;
  }
  WALTRACE(("WAL%p: checkpoint %s\n", pWal, rc ? "failed" : "ok"));
#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SETLK_TIMEOUT
  if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY_TIMEOUT ) rc = SQLITE_BUSY;
#endif
  return (rc==SQLITE_OK && eMode!=eMode2 ? SQLITE_BUSY : rc);
}

/* Return the value to pass to a sqlite3_wal_hook callback, the
** number of frames in the WAL at the point of the last commit since
** sqlite3WalCallback() was called.  If no commits have occurred since
** the last call, then return 0.
*/
int sqlite3WalCallback(Wal *pWal){
  u32 ret = 0;
  if( pWal ){
    ret = pWal->iCallback;
    pWal->iCallback = 0;
  }
  return (int)ret;
}

/*
** This function is called to change the WAL subsystem into or out
** of locking_mode=EXCLUSIVE.
**
** If op is zero, then attempt to change from locking_mode=EXCLUSIVE
** into locking_mode=NORMAL.  This means that we must acquire a lock
** on the pWal->readLock byte.  If the WAL is already in locking_mode=NORMAL
** or if the acquisition of the lock fails, then return 0.  If the
** transition out of exclusive-mode is successful, return 1.  This
** operation must occur while the pager is still holding the exclusive
** lock on the main database file.
**
** If op is one, then change from locking_mode=NORMAL into 
** locking_mode=EXCLUSIVE.  This means that the pWal->readLock must
** be released.  Return 1 if the transition is made and 0 if the
** WAL is already in exclusive-locking mode - meaning that this
** routine is a no-op.  The pager must already hold the exclusive lock
** on the main database file before invoking this operation.
**
** If op is negative, then do a dry-run of the op==1 case but do
** not actually change anything. The pager uses this to see if it
** should acquire the database exclusive lock prior to invoking
** the op==1 case.
*/
int sqlite3WalExclusiveMode(Wal *pWal, int op){
  int rc;
  assert( pWal->writeLock==0 );
  assert( pWal->exclusiveMode!=WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE || op==-1 );

  /* pWal->readLock is usually set, but might be -1 if there was a 
  ** prior error while attempting to acquire are read-lock. This cannot 
  ** happen if the connection is actually in exclusive mode (as no xShmLock
  ** locks are taken in this case). Nor should the pager attempt to
  ** upgrade to exclusive-mode following such an error.
  */
  assert( pWal->readLock>=0 || pWal->lockError );
  assert( pWal->readLock>=0 || (op<=0 && pWal->exclusiveMode==0) );

  if( op==0 ){
    if( pWal->exclusiveMode!=WAL_NORMAL_MODE ){
      pWal->exclusiveMode = WAL_NORMAL_MODE;
      if( walLockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(pWal->readLock))!=SQLITE_OK ){
        pWal->exclusiveMode = WAL_EXCLUSIVE_MODE;
      }
      rc = pWal->exclusiveMode==WAL_NORMAL_MODE;
    }else{
      /* Already in locking_mode=NORMAL */
      rc = 0;
    }
  }else if( op>0 ){
    assert( pWal->exclusiveMode==WAL_NORMAL_MODE );
    assert( pWal->readLock>=0 );
    walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_READ_LOCK(pWal->readLock));
    pWal->exclusiveMode = WAL_EXCLUSIVE_MODE;
    rc = 1;
  }else{
    rc = pWal->exclusiveMode==WAL_NORMAL_MODE;
  }
  return rc;
}

/* 
** Return true if the argument is non-NULL and the WAL module is using
** heap-memory for the wal-index. Otherwise, if the argument is NULL or the
** WAL module is using shared-memory, return false. 
*/
int sqlite3WalHeapMemory(Wal *pWal){
  return (pWal && pWal->exclusiveMode==WAL_HEAPMEMORY_MODE );
}

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT
/* Create a snapshot object.  The content of a snapshot is opaque to
** every other subsystem, so the WAL module can put whatever it needs
** in the object.
*/
int sqlite3WalSnapshotGet(Wal *pWal, sqlite3_snapshot **ppSnapshot){
  int rc = SQLITE_OK;
  WalIndexHdr *pRet;
  static const u32 aZero[4] = { 0, 0, 0, 0 };

  assert( pWal->readLock>=0 && pWal->writeLock==0 );

  if( memcmp(&pWal->hdr.aFrameCksum[0],aZero,16)==0 ){
    *ppSnapshot = 0;
    return SQLITE_ERROR;
  }
  pRet = (WalIndexHdr*)sqlite3_malloc(sizeof(WalIndexHdr));
  if( pRet==0 ){
    rc = SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT;
  }else{
    memcpy(pRet, &pWal->hdr, sizeof(WalIndexHdr));
    *ppSnapshot = (sqlite3_snapshot*)pRet;
  }

  return rc;
}

/* Try to open on pSnapshot when the next read-transaction starts
*/
void sqlite3WalSnapshotOpen(
  Wal *pWal, 
  sqlite3_snapshot *pSnapshot
){
  pWal->pSnapshot = (WalIndexHdr*)pSnapshot;
}

/* 
** Return a +ve value if snapshot p1 is newer than p2. A -ve value if
** p1 is older than p2 and zero if p1 and p2 are the same snapshot.
*/
int sqlite3_snapshot_cmp(sqlite3_snapshot *p1, sqlite3_snapshot *p2){
  WalIndexHdr *pHdr1 = (WalIndexHdr*)p1;
  WalIndexHdr *pHdr2 = (WalIndexHdr*)p2;

  /* aSalt[0] is a copy of the value stored in the wal file header. It
  ** is incremented each time the wal file is restarted.  */
  if( pHdr1->aSalt[0]<pHdr2->aSalt[0] ) return -1;
  if( pHdr1->aSalt[0]>pHdr2->aSalt[0] ) return +1;
  if( pHdr1->mxFrame<pHdr2->mxFrame ) return -1;
  if( pHdr1->mxFrame>pHdr2->mxFrame ) return +1;
  return 0;
}

/*
** The caller currently has a read transaction open on the database.
** This function takes a SHARED lock on the CHECKPOINTER slot and then
** checks if the snapshot passed as the second argument is still 
** available. If so, SQLITE_OK is returned.
**
** If the snapshot is not available, SQLITE_ERROR is returned. Or, if
** the CHECKPOINTER lock cannot be obtained, SQLITE_BUSY. If any error
** occurs (any value other than SQLITE_OK is returned), the CHECKPOINTER
** lock is released before returning.
*/
int sqlite3WalSnapshotCheck(Wal *pWal, sqlite3_snapshot *pSnapshot){
  int rc;
  rc = walLockShared(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK);
  if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){
    WalIndexHdr *pNew = (WalIndexHdr*)pSnapshot;
    if( memcmp(pNew->aSalt, pWal->hdr.aSalt, sizeof(pWal->hdr.aSalt))
     || pNew->mxFrame<walCkptInfo(pWal)->nBackfillAttempted
    ){
      rc = SQLITE_ERROR_SNAPSHOT;
      walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK);
    }
  }
  return rc;
}

/*
** Release a lock obtained by an earlier successful call to
** sqlite3WalSnapshotCheck().
*/
void sqlite3WalSnapshotUnlock(Wal *pWal){
  assert( pWal );
  walUnlockShared(pWal, WAL_CKPT_LOCK);
}


#endif /* SQLITE_ENABLE_SNAPSHOT */

#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_ZIPVFS
/*
** If the argument is not NULL, it points to a Wal object that holds a
** read-lock. This function returns the database page-size if it is known,
** or zero if it is not (or if pWal is NULL).
*/
int sqlite3WalFramesize(Wal *pWal){
  assert( pWal==0 || pWal->readLock>=0 );
  return (pWal ? pWal->szPage : 0);
}
#endif

/* Return the sqlite3_file object for the WAL file
*/
sqlite3_file *sqlite3WalFile(Wal *pWal){
  return pWal->pWalFd;
}

#endif /* #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_WAL */