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author | Kahrl <kahrl@gmx.net> | 2015-01-04 05:10:07 +0100 |
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committer | Kahrl <kahrl@gmx.net> | 2015-01-04 05:21:59 +0100 |
commit | 060ae29eafbca089824cfbcedc9bc36b7fda5d5e (patch) | |
tree | 47af0760a13c5c8dd1129de39461518eb46034e9 /src/sqlite/sqlite3.h | |
parent | 3c3887bb198c07b50ad3451f228aadfe6fd25168 (diff) | |
download | minetest-060ae29eafbca089824cfbcedc9bc36b7fda5d5e.tar.gz minetest-060ae29eafbca089824cfbcedc9bc36b7fda5d5e.tar.bz2 minetest-060ae29eafbca089824cfbcedc9bc36b7fda5d5e.zip |
Update bundled SQLite to 3.8.7.4
Diffstat (limited to 'src/sqlite/sqlite3.h')
-rw-r--r-- | src/sqlite/sqlite3.h | 1440 |
1 files changed, 1126 insertions, 314 deletions
diff --git a/src/sqlite/sqlite3.h b/src/sqlite/sqlite3.h index ed9edbd20..c31f126db 100644 --- a/src/sqlite/sqlite3.h +++ b/src/sqlite/sqlite3.h @@ -107,9 +107,9 @@ extern "C" { ** [sqlite3_libversion_number()], [sqlite3_sourceid()], ** [sqlite_version()] and [sqlite_source_id()]. */ -#define SQLITE_VERSION "3.7.7.1" -#define SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER 3007007 -#define SQLITE_SOURCE_ID "2011-06-28 17:39:05 af0d91adf497f5f36ec3813f04235a6e195a605f" +#define SQLITE_VERSION "3.8.7.4" +#define SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER 3008007 +#define SQLITE_SOURCE_ID "2014-12-09 01:34:36 f66f7a17b78ba617acde90fc810107f34f1a1f2e" /* ** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Library Version Numbers @@ -177,7 +177,7 @@ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_compileoption_get(int N); ** CAPI3REF: Test To See If The Library Is Threadsafe ** ** ^The sqlite3_threadsafe() function returns zero if and only if -** SQLite was compiled mutexing code omitted due to the +** SQLite was compiled with mutexing code omitted due to the ** [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] compile-time option being set to 0. ** ** SQLite can be compiled with or without mutexes. When @@ -219,7 +219,8 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_threadsafe(void); ** the opaque structure named "sqlite3". It is useful to think of an sqlite3 ** pointer as an object. The [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()], and ** [sqlite3_open_v2()] interfaces are its constructors, and [sqlite3_close()] -** is its destructor. There are many other interfaces (such as +** and [sqlite3_close_v2()] are its destructors. There are many other +** interfaces (such as ** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()], [sqlite3_create_function()], and ** [sqlite3_busy_timeout()] to name but three) that are methods on an ** sqlite3 object. @@ -266,28 +267,46 @@ typedef sqlite_uint64 sqlite3_uint64; /* ** CAPI3REF: Closing A Database Connection ** -** ^The sqlite3_close() routine is the destructor for the [sqlite3] object. -** ^Calls to sqlite3_close() return SQLITE_OK if the [sqlite3] object is -** successfully destroyed and all associated resources are deallocated. -** -** Applications must [sqlite3_finalize | finalize] all [prepared statements] -** and [sqlite3_blob_close | close] all [BLOB handles] associated with -** the [sqlite3] object prior to attempting to close the object. ^If -** sqlite3_close() is called on a [database connection] that still has -** outstanding [prepared statements] or [BLOB handles], then it returns -** SQLITE_BUSY. -** -** ^If [sqlite3_close()] is invoked while a transaction is open, +** ^The sqlite3_close() and sqlite3_close_v2() routines are destructors +** for the [sqlite3] object. +** ^Calls to sqlite3_close() and sqlite3_close_v2() return [SQLITE_OK] if +** the [sqlite3] object is successfully destroyed and all associated +** resources are deallocated. +** +** ^If the database connection is associated with unfinalized prepared +** statements or unfinished sqlite3_backup objects then sqlite3_close() +** will leave the database connection open and return [SQLITE_BUSY]. +** ^If sqlite3_close_v2() is called with unfinalized prepared statements +** and/or unfinished sqlite3_backups, then the database connection becomes +** an unusable "zombie" which will automatically be deallocated when the +** last prepared statement is finalized or the last sqlite3_backup is +** finished. The sqlite3_close_v2() interface is intended for use with +** host languages that are garbage collected, and where the order in which +** destructors are called is arbitrary. +** +** Applications should [sqlite3_finalize | finalize] all [prepared statements], +** [sqlite3_blob_close | close] all [BLOB handles], and +** [sqlite3_backup_finish | finish] all [sqlite3_backup] objects associated +** with the [sqlite3] object prior to attempting to close the object. ^If +** sqlite3_close_v2() is called on a [database connection] that still has +** outstanding [prepared statements], [BLOB handles], and/or +** [sqlite3_backup] objects then it returns [SQLITE_OK] and the deallocation +** of resources is deferred until all [prepared statements], [BLOB handles], +** and [sqlite3_backup] objects are also destroyed. +** +** ^If an [sqlite3] object is destroyed while a transaction is open, ** the transaction is automatically rolled back. ** -** The C parameter to [sqlite3_close(C)] must be either a NULL +** The C parameter to [sqlite3_close(C)] and [sqlite3_close_v2(C)] +** must be either a NULL ** pointer or an [sqlite3] object pointer obtained ** from [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()], or ** [sqlite3_open_v2()], and not previously closed. -** ^Calling sqlite3_close() with a NULL pointer argument is a -** harmless no-op. +** ^Calling sqlite3_close() or sqlite3_close_v2() with a NULL pointer +** argument is a harmless no-op. */ -SQLITE_API int sqlite3_close(sqlite3 *); +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_close(sqlite3*); +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_close_v2(sqlite3*); /* ** The type for a callback function. @@ -351,7 +370,7 @@ typedef int (*sqlite3_callback)(void*,int,char**, char**); ** <ul> ** <li> The application must insure that the 1st parameter to sqlite3_exec() ** is a valid and open [database connection]. -** <li> The application must not close [database connection] specified by +** <li> The application must not close the [database connection] specified by ** the 1st parameter to sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running. ** <li> The application must not modify the SQL statement text passed into ** the 2nd parameter of sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running. @@ -367,16 +386,14 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec( /* ** CAPI3REF: Result Codes -** KEYWORDS: SQLITE_OK {error code} {error codes} -** KEYWORDS: {result code} {result codes} +** KEYWORDS: {result code definitions} ** ** Many SQLite functions return an integer result code from the set shown -** here in order to indicates success or failure. +** here in order to indicate success or failure. ** ** New error codes may be added in future versions of SQLite. ** -** See also: [SQLITE_IOERR_READ | extended result codes], -** [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] [SQLITE_ROLLBACK | result codes]. +** See also: [extended result code definitions] */ #define SQLITE_OK 0 /* Successful result */ /* beginning-of-error-codes */ @@ -406,32 +423,27 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec( #define SQLITE_FORMAT 24 /* Auxiliary database format error */ #define SQLITE_RANGE 25 /* 2nd parameter to sqlite3_bind out of range */ #define SQLITE_NOTADB 26 /* File opened that is not a database file */ +#define SQLITE_NOTICE 27 /* Notifications from sqlite3_log() */ +#define SQLITE_WARNING 28 /* Warnings from sqlite3_log() */ #define SQLITE_ROW 100 /* sqlite3_step() has another row ready */ #define SQLITE_DONE 101 /* sqlite3_step() has finished executing */ /* end-of-error-codes */ /* ** CAPI3REF: Extended Result Codes -** KEYWORDS: {extended error code} {extended error codes} -** KEYWORDS: {extended result code} {extended result codes} +** KEYWORDS: {extended result code definitions} ** -** In its default configuration, SQLite API routines return one of 26 integer -** [SQLITE_OK | result codes]. However, experience has shown that many of +** In its default configuration, SQLite API routines return one of 30 integer +** [result codes]. However, experience has shown that many of ** these result codes are too coarse-grained. They do not provide as ** much information about problems as programmers might like. In an effort to ** address this, newer versions of SQLite (version 3.3.8 and later) include ** support for additional result codes that provide more detailed information -** about errors. The extended result codes are enabled or disabled +** about errors. These [extended result codes] are enabled or disabled ** on a per database connection basis using the -** [sqlite3_extended_result_codes()] API. -** -** Some of the available extended result codes are listed here. -** One may expect the number of extended result codes will be expand -** over time. Software that uses extended result codes should expect -** to see new result codes in future releases of SQLite. -** -** The SQLITE_OK result code will never be extended. It will always -** be exactly zero. +** [sqlite3_extended_result_codes()] API. Or, the extended code for +** the most recent error can be obtained using +** [sqlite3_extended_errcode()]. */ #define SQLITE_IOERR_READ (SQLITE_IOERR | (1<<8)) #define SQLITE_IOERR_SHORT_READ (SQLITE_IOERR | (2<<8)) @@ -455,12 +467,37 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec( #define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMLOCK (SQLITE_IOERR | (20<<8)) #define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMMAP (SQLITE_IOERR | (21<<8)) #define SQLITE_IOERR_SEEK (SQLITE_IOERR | (22<<8)) +#define SQLITE_IOERR_DELETE_NOENT (SQLITE_IOERR | (23<<8)) +#define SQLITE_IOERR_MMAP (SQLITE_IOERR | (24<<8)) +#define SQLITE_IOERR_GETTEMPPATH (SQLITE_IOERR | (25<<8)) +#define SQLITE_IOERR_CONVPATH (SQLITE_IOERR | (26<<8)) #define SQLITE_LOCKED_SHAREDCACHE (SQLITE_LOCKED | (1<<8)) #define SQLITE_BUSY_RECOVERY (SQLITE_BUSY | (1<<8)) +#define SQLITE_BUSY_SNAPSHOT (SQLITE_BUSY | (2<<8)) #define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_NOTEMPDIR (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (1<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_ISDIR (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (2<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_FULLPATH (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (3<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_CONVPATH (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (4<<8)) #define SQLITE_CORRUPT_VTAB (SQLITE_CORRUPT | (1<<8)) #define SQLITE_READONLY_RECOVERY (SQLITE_READONLY | (1<<8)) #define SQLITE_READONLY_CANTLOCK (SQLITE_READONLY | (2<<8)) +#define SQLITE_READONLY_ROLLBACK (SQLITE_READONLY | (3<<8)) +#define SQLITE_READONLY_DBMOVED (SQLITE_READONLY | (4<<8)) +#define SQLITE_ABORT_ROLLBACK (SQLITE_ABORT | (2<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_CHECK (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (1<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_COMMITHOOK (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (2<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_FOREIGNKEY (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (3<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_FUNCTION (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (4<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_NOTNULL (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (5<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_PRIMARYKEY (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (6<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_TRIGGER (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (7<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_UNIQUE (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (8<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_VTAB (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT | (9<<8)) +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT_ROWID (SQLITE_CONSTRAINT |(10<<8)) +#define SQLITE_NOTICE_RECOVER_WAL (SQLITE_NOTICE | (1<<8)) +#define SQLITE_NOTICE_RECOVER_ROLLBACK (SQLITE_NOTICE | (2<<8)) +#define SQLITE_WARNING_AUTOINDEX (SQLITE_WARNING | (1<<8)) +#define SQLITE_AUTH_USER (SQLITE_AUTH | (1<<8)) /* ** CAPI3REF: Flags For File Open Operations @@ -476,6 +513,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec( #define SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE 0x00000010 /* VFS only */ #define SQLITE_OPEN_AUTOPROXY 0x00000020 /* VFS only */ #define SQLITE_OPEN_URI 0x00000040 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */ +#define SQLITE_OPEN_MEMORY 0x00000080 /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */ #define SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_DB 0x00000100 /* VFS only */ #define SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_DB 0x00000200 /* VFS only */ #define SQLITE_OPEN_TRANSIENT_DB 0x00000400 /* VFS only */ @@ -495,7 +533,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec( ** CAPI3REF: Device Characteristics ** ** The xDeviceCharacteristics method of the [sqlite3_io_methods] -** object returns an integer which is a vector of the these +** object returns an integer which is a vector of these ** bit values expressing I/O characteristics of the mass storage ** device that holds the file that the [sqlite3_io_methods] ** refers to. @@ -509,7 +547,15 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec( ** first then the size of the file is extended, never the other ** way around. The SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL property means that ** information is written to disk in the same order as calls -** to xWrite(). +** to xWrite(). The SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE property means that +** after reboot following a crash or power loss, the only bytes in a +** file that were written at the application level might have changed +** and that adjacent bytes, even bytes within the same sector are +** guaranteed to be unchanged. The SQLITE_IOCAP_UNDELETABLE_WHEN_OPEN +** flag indicate that a file cannot be deleted when open. The +** SQLITE_IOCAP_IMMUTABLE flag indicates that the file is on +** read-only media and cannot be changed even by processes with +** elevated privileges. */ #define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC 0x00000001 #define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC512 0x00000002 @@ -523,6 +569,8 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec( #define SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND 0x00000200 #define SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL 0x00000400 #define SQLITE_IOCAP_UNDELETABLE_WHEN_OPEN 0x00000800 +#define SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE 0x00001000 +#define SQLITE_IOCAP_IMMUTABLE 0x00002000 /* ** CAPI3REF: File Locking Levels @@ -629,7 +677,7 @@ struct sqlite3_file { ** locking strategy (for example to use dot-file locks), to inquire ** about the status of a lock, or to break stale locks. The SQLite ** core reserves all opcodes less than 100 for its own use. -** A [SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE | list of opcodes] less than 100 is available. +** A [file control opcodes | list of opcodes] less than 100 is available. ** Applications that define a custom xFileControl method should use opcodes ** greater than 100 to avoid conflicts. VFS implementations should ** return [SQLITE_NOTFOUND] for file control opcodes that they do not @@ -694,11 +742,15 @@ struct sqlite3_io_methods { void (*xShmBarrier)(sqlite3_file*); int (*xShmUnmap)(sqlite3_file*, int deleteFlag); /* Methods above are valid for version 2 */ + int (*xFetch)(sqlite3_file*, sqlite3_int64 iOfst, int iAmt, void **pp); + int (*xUnfetch)(sqlite3_file*, sqlite3_int64 iOfst, void *p); + /* Methods above are valid for version 3 */ /* Additional methods may be added in future releases */ }; /* ** CAPI3REF: Standard File Control Opcodes +** KEYWORDS: {file control opcodes} {file control opcode} ** ** These integer constants are opcodes for the xFileControl method ** of the [sqlite3_io_methods] object and for the [sqlite3_file_control()] @@ -711,7 +763,8 @@ struct sqlite3_io_methods { ** into an integer that the pArg argument points to. This capability ** is used during testing and only needs to be supported when SQLITE_TEST ** is defined. -** +** <ul> +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT]] ** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT] opcode is used by SQLite to give the VFS ** layer a hint of how large the database file will grow to be during the ** current transaction. This hint is not guaranteed to be accurate but it @@ -719,6 +772,7 @@ struct sqlite3_io_methods { ** file space based on this hint in order to help writes to the database ** file run faster. ** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE]] ** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE] opcode is used to request that the VFS ** extends and truncates the database file in chunks of a size specified ** by the user. The fourth argument to [sqlite3_file_control()] should @@ -727,30 +781,195 @@ struct sqlite3_io_methods { ** chunks (say 1MB at a time), may reduce file-system fragmentation and ** improve performance on some systems. ** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER]] ** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER] opcode is used to obtain a pointer ** to the [sqlite3_file] object associated with a particular database ** connection. See the [sqlite3_file_control()] documentation for ** additional information. ** -** ^(The [SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED] opcode is generated internally by -** SQLite and sent to all VFSes in place of a call to the xSync method -** when the database connection has [PRAGMA synchronous] set to OFF.)^ -** Some specialized VFSes need this signal in order to operate correctly -** when [PRAGMA synchronous | PRAGMA synchronous=OFF] is set, but most -** VFSes do not need this signal and should silently ignore this opcode. -** Applications should not call [sqlite3_file_control()] with this -** opcode as doing so may disrupt the operation of the specialized VFSes -** that do require it. +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED]] +** No longer in use. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC]] +** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC] opcode is generated internally by SQLite and +** sent to the VFS immediately before the xSync method is invoked on a +** database file descriptor. Or, if the xSync method is not invoked +** because the user has configured SQLite with +** [PRAGMA synchronous | PRAGMA synchronous=OFF] it is invoked in place +** of the xSync method. In most cases, the pointer argument passed with +** this file-control is NULL. However, if the database file is being synced +** as part of a multi-database commit, the argument points to a nul-terminated +** string containing the transactions master-journal file name. VFSes that +** do not need this signal should silently ignore this opcode. Applications +** should not call [sqlite3_file_control()] with this opcode as doing so may +** disrupt the operation of the specialized VFSes that do require it. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_PHASETWO]] +** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_PHASETWO] opcode is generated internally by SQLite +** and sent to the VFS after a transaction has been committed immediately +** but before the database is unlocked. VFSes that do not need this signal +** should silently ignore this opcode. Applications should not call +** [sqlite3_file_control()] with this opcode as doing so may disrupt the +** operation of the specialized VFSes that do require it. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY]] +** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY] opcode is used to configure automatic +** retry counts and intervals for certain disk I/O operations for the +** windows [VFS] in order to provide robustness in the presence of +** anti-virus programs. By default, the windows VFS will retry file read, +** file write, and file delete operations up to 10 times, with a delay +** of 25 milliseconds before the first retry and with the delay increasing +** by an additional 25 milliseconds with each subsequent retry. This +** opcode allows these two values (10 retries and 25 milliseconds of delay) +** to be adjusted. The values are changed for all database connections +** within the same process. The argument is a pointer to an array of two +** integers where the first integer i the new retry count and the second +** integer is the delay. If either integer is negative, then the setting +** is not changed but instead the prior value of that setting is written +** into the array entry, allowing the current retry settings to be +** interrogated. The zDbName parameter is ignored. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL]] +** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL] opcode is used to set or query the +** persistent [WAL | Write Ahead Log] setting. By default, the auxiliary +** write ahead log and shared memory files used for transaction control +** are automatically deleted when the latest connection to the database +** closes. Setting persistent WAL mode causes those files to persist after +** close. Persisting the files is useful when other processes that do not +** have write permission on the directory containing the database file want +** to read the database file, as the WAL and shared memory files must exist +** in order for the database to be readable. The fourth parameter to +** [sqlite3_file_control()] for this opcode should be a pointer to an integer. +** That integer is 0 to disable persistent WAL mode or 1 to enable persistent +** WAL mode. If the integer is -1, then it is overwritten with the current +** WAL persistence setting. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE]] +** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE] opcode is used to set or query the +** persistent "powersafe-overwrite" or "PSOW" setting. The PSOW setting +** determines the [SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE] bit of the +** xDeviceCharacteristics methods. The fourth parameter to +** [sqlite3_file_control()] for this opcode should be a pointer to an integer. +** That integer is 0 to disable zero-damage mode or 1 to enable zero-damage +** mode. If the integer is -1, then it is overwritten with the current +** zero-damage mode setting. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE]] +** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE] opcode is invoked by SQLite after opening +** a write transaction to indicate that, unless it is rolled back for some +** reason, the entire database file will be overwritten by the current +** transaction. This is used by VACUUM operations. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME]] +** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME] opcode can be used to obtain the names of +** all [VFSes] in the VFS stack. The names are of all VFS shims and the +** final bottom-level VFS are written into memory obtained from +** [sqlite3_malloc()] and the result is stored in the char* variable +** that the fourth parameter of [sqlite3_file_control()] points to. +** The caller is responsible for freeing the memory when done. As with +** all file-control actions, there is no guarantee that this will actually +** do anything. Callers should initialize the char* variable to a NULL +** pointer in case this file-control is not implemented. This file-control +** is intended for diagnostic use only. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]] +** ^Whenever a [PRAGMA] statement is parsed, an [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] +** file control is sent to the open [sqlite3_file] object corresponding +** to the database file to which the pragma statement refers. ^The argument +** to the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control is an array of +** pointers to strings (char**) in which the second element of the array +** is the name of the pragma and the third element is the argument to the +** pragma or NULL if the pragma has no argument. ^The handler for an +** [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control can optionally make the first element +** of the char** argument point to a string obtained from [sqlite3_mprintf()] +** or the equivalent and that string will become the result of the pragma or +** the error message if the pragma fails. ^If the +** [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control returns [SQLITE_NOTFOUND], then normal +** [PRAGMA] processing continues. ^If the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] +** file control returns [SQLITE_OK], then the parser assumes that the +** VFS has handled the PRAGMA itself and the parser generates a no-op +** prepared statement. ^If the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control returns +** any result code other than [SQLITE_OK] or [SQLITE_NOTFOUND], that means +** that the VFS encountered an error while handling the [PRAGMA] and the +** compilation of the PRAGMA fails with an error. ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] +** file control occurs at the beginning of pragma statement analysis and so +** it is able to override built-in [PRAGMA] statements. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_BUSYHANDLER]] +** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_BUSYHANDLER] +** file-control may be invoked by SQLite on the database file handle +** shortly after it is opened in order to provide a custom VFS with access +** to the connections busy-handler callback. The argument is of type (void **) +** - an array of two (void *) values. The first (void *) actually points +** to a function of type (int (*)(void *)). In order to invoke the connections +** busy-handler, this function should be invoked with the second (void *) in +** the array as the only argument. If it returns non-zero, then the operation +** should be retried. If it returns zero, the custom VFS should abandon the +** current operation. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_TEMPFILENAME]] +** ^Application can invoke the [SQLITE_FCNTL_TEMPFILENAME] file-control +** to have SQLite generate a +** temporary filename using the same algorithm that is followed to generate +** temporary filenames for TEMP tables and other internal uses. The +** argument should be a char** which will be filled with the filename +** written into memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc()]. The caller should +** invoke [sqlite3_free()] on the result to avoid a memory leak. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE]] +** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE] file control is used to query or set the +** maximum number of bytes that will be used for memory-mapped I/O. +** The argument is a pointer to a value of type sqlite3_int64 that +** is an advisory maximum number of bytes in the file to memory map. The +** pointer is overwritten with the old value. The limit is not changed if +** the value originally pointed to is negative, and so the current limit +** can be queried by passing in a pointer to a negative number. This +** file-control is used internally to implement [PRAGMA mmap_size]. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_TRACE]] +** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_TRACE] file control provides advisory information +** to the VFS about what the higher layers of the SQLite stack are doing. +** This file control is used by some VFS activity tracing [shims]. +** The argument is a zero-terminated string. Higher layers in the +** SQLite stack may generate instances of this file control if +** the [SQLITE_USE_FCNTL_TRACE] compile-time option is enabled. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_HAS_MOVED]] +** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_HAS_MOVED] file control interprets its argument as a +** pointer to an integer and it writes a boolean into that integer depending +** on whether or not the file has been renamed, moved, or deleted since it +** was first opened. +** +** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_SET_HANDLE]] +** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_SET_HANDLE] opcode is used for debugging. This +** opcode causes the xFileControl method to swap the file handle with the one +** pointed to by the pArg argument. This capability is used during testing +** and only needs to be supported when SQLITE_TEST is defined. +** +** </ul> */ -#define SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE 1 -#define SQLITE_GET_LOCKPROXYFILE 2 -#define SQLITE_SET_LOCKPROXYFILE 3 -#define SQLITE_LAST_ERRNO 4 -#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT 5 -#define SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE 6 -#define SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER 7 -#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED 8 - +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE 1 +#define SQLITE_GET_LOCKPROXYFILE 2 +#define SQLITE_SET_LOCKPROXYFILE 3 +#define SQLITE_LAST_ERRNO 4 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT 5 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE 6 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER 7 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED 8 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY 9 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL 10 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE 11 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME 12 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE 13 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA 14 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_BUSYHANDLER 15 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_TEMPFILENAME 16 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE 18 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_TRACE 19 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_HAS_MOVED 20 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC 21 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_PHASETWO 22 +#define SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_SET_HANDLE 23 /* ** CAPI3REF: Mutex Handle @@ -805,7 +1024,7 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_mutex sqlite3_mutex; ** from xFullPathname() with an optional suffix added. ** ^If a suffix is added to the zFilename parameter, it will ** consist of a single "-" character followed by no more than -** 10 alphanumeric and/or "-" characters. +** 11 alphanumeric and/or "-" characters. ** ^SQLite further guarantees that ** the string will be valid and unchanged until xClose() is ** called. Because of the previous sentence, @@ -1178,16 +1397,10 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_config(sqlite3*, int op, ...); ** order to verify that SQLite recovers gracefully from such ** conditions. ** -** The xMalloc and xFree methods must work like the -** malloc() and free() functions from the standard C library. -** The xRealloc method must work like realloc() from the standard C library -** with the exception that if the second argument to xRealloc is zero, -** xRealloc must be a no-op - it must not perform any allocation or -** deallocation. ^SQLite guarantees that the second argument to +** The xMalloc, xRealloc, and xFree methods must work like the +** malloc(), realloc() and free() functions from the standard C library. +** ^SQLite guarantees that the second argument to ** xRealloc is always a value returned by a prior call to xRoundup. -** And so in cases where xRoundup always returns a positive number, -** xRealloc can perform exactly as the standard library realloc() and -** still be in compliance with this specification. ** ** xSize should return the allocated size of a memory allocation ** previously obtained from xMalloc or xRealloc. The allocated size @@ -1201,7 +1414,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_config(sqlite3*, int op, ...); ** or [sqlite3_realloc()] first calls xRoundup. If xRoundup returns 0, ** that causes the corresponding memory allocation to fail. ** -** The xInit method initializes the memory allocator. (For example, +** The xInit method initializes the memory allocator. For example, ** it might allocate any require mutexes or initialize internal data ** structures. The xShutdown method is invoked (indirectly) by ** [sqlite3_shutdown()] and should deallocate any resources acquired @@ -1342,7 +1555,7 @@ struct sqlite3_mem_methods { ** <dd> ^This option specifies a static memory buffer that SQLite can use for ** the database page cache with the default page cache implementation. ** This configuration should not be used if an application-define page -** cache implementation is loaded using the SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE option. +** cache implementation is loaded using the SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2 option. ** There are three arguments to this option: A pointer to 8-byte aligned ** memory, the size of each page buffer (sz), and the number of pages (N). ** The sz argument should be the size of the largest database page @@ -1373,8 +1586,8 @@ struct sqlite3_mem_methods { ** allocator is engaged to handle all of SQLites memory allocation needs. ** The first pointer (the memory pointer) must be aligned to an 8-byte ** boundary or subsequent behavior of SQLite will be undefined. -** The minimum allocation size is capped at 2^12. Reasonable values -** for the minimum allocation size are 2^5 through 2^8.</dd> +** The minimum allocation size is capped at 2**12. Reasonable values +** for the minimum allocation size are 2**5 through 2**8.</dd> ** ** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX</dt> ** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to an @@ -1411,19 +1624,21 @@ struct sqlite3_mem_methods { ** verb to [sqlite3_db_config()] can be used to change the lookaside ** configuration on individual connections.)^ </dd> ** -** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE</dt> +** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2</dt> ** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to -** an [sqlite3_pcache_methods] object. This object specifies the interface +** an [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] object. This object specifies the interface ** to a custom page cache implementation.)^ ^SQLite makes a copy of the ** object and uses it for page cache memory allocations.</dd> ** -** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE</dt> +** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2</dt> ** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to an -** [sqlite3_pcache_methods] object. SQLite copies of the current +** [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] object. SQLite copies of the current ** page cache implementation into that object.)^ </dd> ** ** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG</dt> -** <dd> ^The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG option takes two arguments: a pointer to a +** <dd> The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG option is used to configure the SQLite +** global [error log]. +** (^The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG option takes two arguments: a pointer to a ** function with a call signature of void(*)(void*,int,const char*), ** and a pointer to void. ^If the function pointer is not NULL, it is ** invoked by [sqlite3_log()] to process each logging event. ^If the @@ -1441,17 +1656,73 @@ struct sqlite3_mem_methods { ** function must be threadsafe. </dd> ** ** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_URI]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_URI -** <dd> This option takes a single argument of type int. If non-zero, then +** <dd>^(This option takes a single argument of type int. If non-zero, then ** URI handling is globally enabled. If the parameter is zero, then URI handling -** is globally disabled. If URI handling is globally enabled, all filenames +** is globally disabled.)^ ^If URI handling is globally enabled, all filenames ** passed to [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open_v2()], [sqlite3_open16()] or ** specified as part of [ATTACH] commands are interpreted as URIs, regardless ** of whether or not the [SQLITE_OPEN_URI] flag is set when the database -** connection is opened. If it is globally disabled, filenames are +** connection is opened. ^If it is globally disabled, filenames are ** only interpreted as URIs if the SQLITE_OPEN_URI flag is set when the -** database connection is opened. By default, URI handling is globally +** database connection is opened. ^(By default, URI handling is globally ** disabled. The default value may be changed by compiling with the -** [SQLITE_USE_URI] symbol defined. +** [SQLITE_USE_URI] symbol defined.)^ +** +** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN +** <dd>^This option takes a single integer argument which is interpreted as +** a boolean in order to enable or disable the use of covering indices for +** full table scans in the query optimizer. ^The default setting is determined +** by the [SQLITE_ALLOW_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN] compile-time option, or is "on" +** if that compile-time option is omitted. +** The ability to disable the use of covering indices for full table scans +** is because some incorrectly coded legacy applications might malfunction +** when the optimization is enabled. Providing the ability to +** disable the optimization allows the older, buggy application code to work +** without change even with newer versions of SQLite. +** +** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE]] [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE]] +** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE and SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE +** <dd> These options are obsolete and should not be used by new code. +** They are retained for backwards compatibility but are now no-ops. +** </dd> +** +** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG]] +** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG +** <dd>This option is only available if sqlite is compiled with the +** [SQLITE_ENABLE_SQLLOG] pre-processor macro defined. The first argument should +** be a pointer to a function of type void(*)(void*,sqlite3*,const char*, int). +** The second should be of type (void*). The callback is invoked by the library +** in three separate circumstances, identified by the value passed as the +** fourth parameter. If the fourth parameter is 0, then the database connection +** passed as the second argument has just been opened. The third argument +** points to a buffer containing the name of the main database file. If the +** fourth parameter is 1, then the SQL statement that the third parameter +** points to has just been executed. Or, if the fourth parameter is 2, then +** the connection being passed as the second parameter is being closed. The +** third parameter is passed NULL In this case. An example of using this +** configuration option can be seen in the "test_sqllog.c" source file in +** the canonical SQLite source tree.</dd> +** +** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE]] +** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE +** <dd>^SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE takes two 64-bit integer (sqlite3_int64) values +** that are the default mmap size limit (the default setting for +** [PRAGMA mmap_size]) and the maximum allowed mmap size limit. +** ^The default setting can be overridden by each database connection using +** either the [PRAGMA mmap_size] command, or by using the +** [SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE] file control. ^(The maximum allowed mmap size +** cannot be changed at run-time. Nor may the maximum allowed mmap size +** exceed the compile-time maximum mmap size set by the +** [SQLITE_MAX_MMAP_SIZE] compile-time option.)^ +** ^If either argument to this option is negative, then that argument is +** changed to its compile-time default. +** +** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE]] +** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE +** <dd>^This option is only available if SQLite is compiled for Windows +** with the [SQLITE_WIN32_MALLOC] pre-processor macro defined. +** SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE takes a 32-bit unsigned integer value +** that specifies the maximum size of the created heap. ** </dl> */ #define SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD 1 /* nil */ @@ -1467,10 +1738,16 @@ struct sqlite3_mem_methods { #define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX 11 /* sqlite3_mutex_methods* */ /* previously SQLITE_CONFIG_CHUNKALLOC 12 which is now unused. */ #define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE 13 /* int int */ -#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE 14 /* sqlite3_pcache_methods* */ -#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE 15 /* sqlite3_pcache_methods* */ +#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE 14 /* no-op */ +#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE 15 /* no-op */ #define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG 16 /* xFunc, void* */ #define SQLITE_CONFIG_URI 17 /* int */ +#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2 18 /* sqlite3_pcache_methods2* */ +#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2 19 /* sqlite3_pcache_methods2* */ +#define SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN 20 /* int */ +#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG 21 /* xSqllog, void* */ +#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE 22 /* sqlite3_int64, sqlite3_int64 */ +#define SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE 23 /* int nByte */ /* ** CAPI3REF: Database Connection Configuration Options @@ -1547,19 +1824,21 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_extended_result_codes(sqlite3*, int onoff); /* ** CAPI3REF: Last Insert Rowid ** -** ^Each entry in an SQLite table has a unique 64-bit signed +** ^Each entry in most SQLite tables (except for [WITHOUT ROWID] tables) +** has a unique 64-bit signed ** integer key called the [ROWID | "rowid"]. ^The rowid is always available ** as an undeclared column named ROWID, OID, or _ROWID_ as long as those ** names are not also used by explicitly declared columns. ^If ** the table has a column of type [INTEGER PRIMARY KEY] then that column ** is another alias for the rowid. ** -** ^This routine returns the [rowid] of the most recent -** successful [INSERT] into the database from the [database connection] -** in the first argument. ^As of SQLite version 3.7.7, this routines -** records the last insert rowid of both ordinary tables and [virtual tables]. -** ^If no successful [INSERT]s -** have ever occurred on that database connection, zero is returned. +** ^The sqlite3_last_insert_rowid(D) interface returns the [rowid] of the +** most recent successful [INSERT] into a rowid table or [virtual table] +** on database connection D. +** ^Inserts into [WITHOUT ROWID] tables are not recorded. +** ^If no successful [INSERT]s into rowid tables +** have ever occurred on the database connection D, +** then sqlite3_last_insert_rowid(D) returns zero. ** ** ^(If an [INSERT] occurs within a trigger or within a [virtual table] ** method, then this routine will return the [rowid] of the inserted @@ -1751,27 +2030,33 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_complete16(const void *sql); /* ** CAPI3REF: Register A Callback To Handle SQLITE_BUSY Errors ** -** ^This routine sets a callback function that might be invoked whenever -** an attempt is made to open a database table that another thread -** or process has locked. +** ^The sqlite3_busy_handler(D,X,P) routine sets a callback function X +** that might be invoked with argument P whenever +** an attempt is made to access a database table associated with +** [database connection] D when another thread +** or process has the table locked. +** The sqlite3_busy_handler() interface is used to implement +** [sqlite3_busy_timeout()] and [PRAGMA busy_timeout]. ** -** ^If the busy callback is NULL, then [SQLITE_BUSY] or [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED] +** ^If the busy callback is NULL, then [SQLITE_BUSY] ** is returned immediately upon encountering the lock. ^If the busy callback ** is not NULL, then the callback might be invoked with two arguments. ** ** ^The first argument to the busy handler is a copy of the void* pointer which ** is the third argument to sqlite3_busy_handler(). ^The second argument to ** the busy handler callback is the number of times that the busy handler has -** been invoked for this locking event. ^If the +** been invoked for the same locking event. ^If the ** busy callback returns 0, then no additional attempts are made to -** access the database and [SQLITE_BUSY] or [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED] is returned. +** access the database and [SQLITE_BUSY] is returned +** to the application. ** ^If the callback returns non-zero, then another attempt -** is made to open the database for reading and the cycle repeats. +** is made to access the database and the cycle repeats. ** ** The presence of a busy handler does not guarantee that it will be invoked ** when there is lock contention. ^If SQLite determines that invoking the busy ** handler could result in a deadlock, it will go ahead and return [SQLITE_BUSY] -** or [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED] instead of invoking the busy handler. +** to the application instead of invoking the +** busy handler. ** Consider a scenario where one process is holding a read lock that ** it is trying to promote to a reserved lock and ** a second process is holding a reserved lock that it is trying @@ -1785,28 +2070,15 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_complete16(const void *sql); ** ** ^The default busy callback is NULL. ** -** ^The [SQLITE_BUSY] error is converted to [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED] -** when SQLite is in the middle of a large transaction where all the -** changes will not fit into the in-memory cache. SQLite will -** already hold a RESERVED lock on the database file, but it needs -** to promote this lock to EXCLUSIVE so that it can spill cache -** pages into the database file without harm to concurrent -** readers. ^If it is unable to promote the lock, then the in-memory -** cache will be left in an inconsistent state and so the error -** code is promoted from the relatively benign [SQLITE_BUSY] to -** the more severe [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED]. ^This error code promotion -** forces an automatic rollback of the changes. See the -** <a href="/cvstrac/wiki?p=CorruptionFollowingBusyError"> -** CorruptionFollowingBusyError</a> wiki page for a discussion of why -** this is important. -** ** ^(There can only be a single busy handler defined for each ** [database connection]. Setting a new busy handler clears any ** previously set handler.)^ ^Note that calling [sqlite3_busy_timeout()] -** will also set or clear the busy handler. +** or evaluating [PRAGMA busy_timeout=N] will change the +** busy handler and thus clear any previously set busy handler. ** ** The busy callback should not take any actions which modify the -** database connection that invoked the busy handler. Any such actions +** database connection that invoked the busy handler. In other words, +** the busy handler is not reentrant. Any such actions ** result in undefined behavior. ** ** A busy handler must not close the database connection @@ -1822,15 +2094,17 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_busy_handler(sqlite3*, int(*)(void*,int), void*); ** will sleep multiple times until at least "ms" milliseconds of sleeping ** have accumulated. ^After at least "ms" milliseconds of sleeping, ** the handler returns 0 which causes [sqlite3_step()] to return -** [SQLITE_BUSY] or [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED]. +** [SQLITE_BUSY]. ** ** ^Calling this routine with an argument less than or equal to zero ** turns off all busy handlers. ** ** ^(There can only be a single busy handler for a particular -** [database connection] any any given moment. If another busy handler +** [database connection] at any given moment. If another busy handler ** was defined (using [sqlite3_busy_handler()]) prior to calling ** this routine, that other busy handler is cleared.)^ +** +** See also: [PRAGMA busy_timeout] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_busy_timeout(sqlite3*, int ms); @@ -1955,7 +2229,7 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_free_table(char **result); ** All of the usual printf() formatting options apply. In addition, there ** is are "%q", "%Q", and "%z" options. ** -** ^(The %q option works like %s in that it substitutes a null-terminated +** ^(The %q option works like %s in that it substitutes a nul-terminated ** string from the argument list. But %q also doubles every '\'' character. ** %q is designed for use inside a string literal.)^ By doubling each '\'' ** character it escapes that character and allows it to be inserted into @@ -2030,6 +2304,10 @@ SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_vsnprintf(int,char*,const char*, va_list); ** sqlite3_malloc() is zero or negative then sqlite3_malloc() returns ** a NULL pointer. ** +** ^The sqlite3_malloc64(N) routine works just like +** sqlite3_malloc(N) except that N is an unsigned 64-bit integer instead +** of a signed 32-bit integer. +** ** ^Calling sqlite3_free() with a pointer previously returned ** by sqlite3_malloc() or sqlite3_realloc() releases that memory so ** that it might be reused. ^The sqlite3_free() routine is @@ -2041,24 +2319,38 @@ SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_vsnprintf(int,char*,const char*, va_list); ** might result if sqlite3_free() is called with a non-NULL pointer that ** was not obtained from sqlite3_malloc() or sqlite3_realloc(). ** -** ^(The sqlite3_realloc() interface attempts to resize a -** prior memory allocation to be at least N bytes, where N is the -** second parameter. The memory allocation to be resized is the first -** parameter.)^ ^ If the first parameter to sqlite3_realloc() +** ^The sqlite3_realloc(X,N) interface attempts to resize a +** prior memory allocation X to be at least N bytes. +** ^If the X parameter to sqlite3_realloc(X,N) ** is a NULL pointer then its behavior is identical to calling -** sqlite3_malloc(N) where N is the second parameter to sqlite3_realloc(). -** ^If the second parameter to sqlite3_realloc() is zero or +** sqlite3_malloc(N). +** ^If the N parameter to sqlite3_realloc(X,N) is zero or ** negative then the behavior is exactly the same as calling -** sqlite3_free(P) where P is the first parameter to sqlite3_realloc(). -** ^sqlite3_realloc() returns a pointer to a memory allocation -** of at least N bytes in size or NULL if sufficient memory is unavailable. +** sqlite3_free(X). +** ^sqlite3_realloc(X,N) returns a pointer to a memory allocation +** of at least N bytes in size or NULL if insufficient memory is available. ** ^If M is the size of the prior allocation, then min(N,M) bytes ** of the prior allocation are copied into the beginning of buffer returned -** by sqlite3_realloc() and the prior allocation is freed. -** ^If sqlite3_realloc() returns NULL, then the prior allocation -** is not freed. -** -** ^The memory returned by sqlite3_malloc() and sqlite3_realloc() +** by sqlite3_realloc(X,N) and the prior allocation is freed. +** ^If sqlite3_realloc(X,N) returns NULL and N is positive, then the +** prior allocation is not freed. +** +** ^The sqlite3_realloc64(X,N) interfaces works the same as +** sqlite3_realloc(X,N) except that N is a 64-bit unsigned integer instead +** of a 32-bit signed integer. +** +** ^If X is a memory allocation previously obtained from sqlite3_malloc(), +** sqlite3_malloc64(), sqlite3_realloc(), or sqlite3_realloc64(), then +** sqlite3_msize(X) returns the size of that memory allocation in bytes. +** ^The value returned by sqlite3_msize(X) might be larger than the number +** of bytes requested when X was allocated. ^If X is a NULL pointer then +** sqlite3_msize(X) returns zero. If X points to something that is not +** the beginning of memory allocation, or if it points to a formerly +** valid memory allocation that has now been freed, then the behavior +** of sqlite3_msize(X) is undefined and possibly harmful. +** +** ^The memory returned by sqlite3_malloc(), sqlite3_realloc(), +** sqlite3_malloc64(), and sqlite3_realloc64() ** is always aligned to at least an 8 byte boundary, or to a ** 4 byte boundary if the [SQLITE_4_BYTE_ALIGNED_MALLOC] compile-time ** option is used. @@ -2068,12 +2360,12 @@ SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_vsnprintf(int,char*,const char*, va_list); ** implementation of these routines to be omitted. That capability ** is no longer provided. Only built-in memory allocators can be used. ** -** The Windows OS interface layer calls +** Prior to SQLite version 3.7.10, the Windows OS interface layer called ** the system malloc() and free() directly when converting ** filenames between the UTF-8 encoding used by SQLite ** and whatever filename encoding is used by the particular Windows -** installation. Memory allocation errors are detected, but -** they are reported back as [SQLITE_CANTOPEN] or +** installation. Memory allocation errors were detected, but +** they were reported back as [SQLITE_CANTOPEN] or ** [SQLITE_IOERR] rather than [SQLITE_NOMEM]. ** ** The pointer arguments to [sqlite3_free()] and [sqlite3_realloc()] @@ -2086,8 +2378,11 @@ SQLITE_API char *sqlite3_vsnprintf(int,char*,const char*, va_list); ** [sqlite3_free()] or [sqlite3_realloc()]. */ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_malloc(int); +SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_malloc64(sqlite3_uint64); SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_realloc(void*, int); +SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_realloc64(void*, sqlite3_uint64); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_free(void*); +SQLITE_API sqlite3_uint64 sqlite3_msize(void*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Memory Allocator Statistics @@ -2125,11 +2420,13 @@ SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_memory_highwater(int resetFlag); ** applications to access the same PRNG for other purposes. ** ** ^A call to this routine stores N bytes of randomness into buffer P. +** ^If N is less than one, then P can be a NULL pointer. ** -** ^The first time this routine is invoked (either internally or by -** the application) the PRNG is seeded using randomness obtained -** from the xRandomness method of the default [sqlite3_vfs] object. -** ^On all subsequent invocations, the pseudo-randomness is generated +** ^If this routine has not been previously called or if the previous +** call had N less than one, then the PRNG is seeded using randomness +** obtained from the xRandomness method of the default [sqlite3_vfs] object. +** ^If the previous call to this routine had an N of 1 or more then +** the pseudo-randomness is generated ** internally and without recourse to the [sqlite3_vfs] xRandomness ** method. */ @@ -2230,8 +2527,8 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_set_authorizer( ** [sqlite3_set_authorizer | authorizer documentation] for additional ** information. ** -** Note that SQLITE_IGNORE is also used as a [SQLITE_ROLLBACK | return code] -** from the [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] interface. +** Note that SQLITE_IGNORE is also used as a [conflict resolution mode] +** returned from the [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] interface. */ #define SQLITE_DENY 1 /* Abort the SQL statement with an error */ #define SQLITE_IGNORE 2 /* Don't allow access, but don't generate an error */ @@ -2289,6 +2586,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_set_authorizer( #define SQLITE_FUNCTION 31 /* NULL Function Name */ #define SQLITE_SAVEPOINT 32 /* Operation Savepoint Name */ #define SQLITE_COPY 0 /* No longer used */ +#define SQLITE_RECURSIVE 33 /* NULL NULL */ /* ** CAPI3REF: Tracing And Profiling Functions @@ -2304,6 +2602,9 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_set_authorizer( ** as each triggered subprogram is entered. The callbacks for triggers ** contain a UTF-8 SQL comment that identifies the trigger.)^ ** +** The [SQLITE_TRACE_SIZE_LIMIT] compile-time option can be used to limit +** the length of [bound parameter] expansion in the output of sqlite3_trace(). +** ** ^The callback function registered by sqlite3_profile() is invoked ** as each SQL statement finishes. ^The profile callback contains ** the original statement text and an estimate of wall-clock time @@ -2329,9 +2630,10 @@ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL void *sqlite3_profile(sqlite3*, ** interface is to keep a GUI updated during a large query. ** ** ^The parameter P is passed through as the only parameter to the -** callback function X. ^The parameter N is the number of +** callback function X. ^The parameter N is the approximate number of ** [virtual machine instructions] that are evaluated between successive -** invocations of the callback X. +** invocations of the callback X. ^If N is less than one then the progress +** handler is disabled. ** ** ^Only a single progress handler may be defined at one time per ** [database connection]; setting a new progress handler cancels the @@ -2367,9 +2669,9 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_progress_handler(sqlite3*, int, int(*)(void*), void*); ** an English language description of the error following a failure of any ** of the sqlite3_open() routines. ** -** ^The default encoding for the database will be UTF-8 if -** sqlite3_open() or sqlite3_open_v2() is called and -** UTF-16 in the native byte order if sqlite3_open16() is used. +** ^The default encoding will be UTF-8 for databases created using +** sqlite3_open() or sqlite3_open_v2(). ^The default encoding for databases +** created using sqlite3_open16() will be UTF-16 in the native byte order. ** ** Whether or not an error occurs when it is opened, resources ** associated with the [database connection] handle should be released by @@ -2457,13 +2759,14 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_progress_handler(sqlite3*, int, int(*)(void*), void*); ** then it is interpreted as an absolute path. ^If the path does not begin ** with a '/' (meaning that the authority section is omitted from the URI) ** then the path is interpreted as a relative path. -** ^On windows, the first component of an absolute path -** is a drive specification (e.g. "C:"). +** ^(On windows, the first component of an absolute path +** is a drive specification (e.g. "C:").)^ ** ** [[core URI query parameters]] ** The query component of a URI may contain parameters that are interpreted ** either by SQLite itself, or by a [VFS | custom VFS implementation]. -** SQLite interprets the following three query parameters: +** SQLite and its built-in [VFSes] interpret the +** following query parameters: ** ** <ul> ** <li> <b>vfs</b>: ^The "vfs" parameter may be used to specify the name of @@ -2474,18 +2777,20 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_progress_handler(sqlite3*, int, int(*)(void*), void*); ** present, then the VFS specified by the option takes precedence over ** the value passed as the fourth parameter to sqlite3_open_v2(). ** -** <li> <b>mode</b>: ^(The mode parameter may be set to either "ro", "rw" or -** "rwc". Attempting to set it to any other value is an error)^. +** <li> <b>mode</b>: ^(The mode parameter may be set to either "ro", "rw", +** "rwc", or "memory". Attempting to set it to any other value is +** an error)^. ** ^If "ro" is specified, then the database is opened for read-only ** access, just as if the [SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY] flag had been set in the -** third argument to sqlite3_prepare_v2(). ^If the mode option is set to +** third argument to sqlite3_open_v2(). ^If the mode option is set to ** "rw", then the database is opened for read-write (but not create) ** access, as if SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE (but not SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE) had ** been set. ^Value "rwc" is equivalent to setting both -** SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE and SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE. ^If sqlite3_open_v2() is -** used, it is an error to specify a value for the mode parameter that is -** less restrictive than that specified by the flags passed as the third -** parameter. +** SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE and SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE. ^If the mode option is +** set to "memory" then a pure [in-memory database] that never reads +** or writes from disk is used. ^It is an error to specify a value for +** the mode parameter that is less restrictive than that specified by +** the flags passed in the third parameter to sqlite3_open_v2(). ** ** <li> <b>cache</b>: ^The cache parameter may be set to either "shared" or ** "private". ^Setting it to "shared" is equivalent to setting the @@ -2493,8 +2798,30 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_progress_handler(sqlite3*, int, int(*)(void*), void*); ** sqlite3_open_v2(). ^Setting the cache parameter to "private" is ** equivalent to setting the SQLITE_OPEN_PRIVATECACHE bit. ** ^If sqlite3_open_v2() is used and the "cache" parameter is present in -** a URI filename, its value overrides any behaviour requested by setting +** a URI filename, its value overrides any behavior requested by setting ** SQLITE_OPEN_PRIVATECACHE or SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE flag. +** +** <li> <b>psow</b>: ^The psow parameter indicates whether or not the +** [powersafe overwrite] property does or does not apply to the +** storage media on which the database file resides. +** +** <li> <b>nolock</b>: ^The nolock parameter is a boolean query parameter +** which if set disables file locking in rollback journal modes. This +** is useful for accessing a database on a filesystem that does not +** support locking. Caution: Database corruption might result if two +** or more processes write to the same database and any one of those +** processes uses nolock=1. +** +** <li> <b>immutable</b>: ^The immutable parameter is a boolean query +** parameter that indicates that the database file is stored on +** read-only media. ^When immutable is set, SQLite assumes that the +** database file cannot be changed, even by a process with higher +** privilege, and so the database is opened read-only and all locking +** and change detection is disabled. Caution: Setting the immutable +** property on a database file that does in fact change can result +** in incorrect query results and/or [SQLITE_CORRUPT] errors. +** See also: [SQLITE_IOCAP_IMMUTABLE]. +** ** </ul> ** ** ^Specifying an unknown parameter in the query component of a URI is not an @@ -2524,8 +2851,9 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_progress_handler(sqlite3*, int, int(*)(void*), void*); ** Open file "data.db" in the current directory for read-only access. ** Regardless of whether or not shared-cache mode is enabled by ** default, use a private cache. -** <tr><td> file:/home/fred/data.db?vfs=unix-nolock <td> -** Open file "/home/fred/data.db". Use the special VFS "unix-nolock". +** <tr><td> file:/home/fred/data.db?vfs=unix-dotfile <td> +** Open file "/home/fred/data.db". Use the special VFS "unix-dotfile" +** that uses dot-files in place of posix advisory locking. ** <tr><td> file:data.db?mode=readonly <td> ** An error. "readonly" is not a valid option for the "mode" parameter. ** </table> @@ -2544,6 +2872,12 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_progress_handler(sqlite3*, int, int(*)(void*), void*); ** codepage is currently defined. Filenames containing international ** characters must be converted to UTF-8 prior to passing them into ** sqlite3_open() or sqlite3_open_v2(). +** +** <b>Note to Windows Runtime users:</b> The temporary directory must be set +** prior to calling sqlite3_open() or sqlite3_open_v2(). Otherwise, various +** features that require the use of temporary files may fail. +** +** See also: [sqlite3_temp_directory] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_open( const char *filename, /* Database filename (UTF-8) */ @@ -2563,21 +2897,45 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_open_v2( /* ** CAPI3REF: Obtain Values For URI Parameters ** -** This is a utility routine, useful to VFS implementations, that checks +** These are utility routines, useful to VFS implementations, that check ** to see if a database file was a URI that contained a specific query -** parameter, and if so obtains the value of the query parameter. -** -** The zFilename argument is the filename pointer passed into the xOpen() -** method of a VFS implementation. The zParam argument is the name of the -** query parameter we seek. This routine returns the value of the zParam -** parameter if it exists. If the parameter does not exist, this routine -** returns a NULL pointer. -** -** If the zFilename argument to this function is not a pointer that SQLite -** passed into the xOpen VFS method, then the behavior of this routine -** is undefined and probably undesirable. +** parameter, and if so obtains the value of that query parameter. +** +** If F is the database filename pointer passed into the xOpen() method of +** a VFS implementation when the flags parameter to xOpen() has one or +** more of the [SQLITE_OPEN_URI] or [SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_DB] bits set and +** P is the name of the query parameter, then +** sqlite3_uri_parameter(F,P) returns the value of the P +** parameter if it exists or a NULL pointer if P does not appear as a +** query parameter on F. If P is a query parameter of F +** has no explicit value, then sqlite3_uri_parameter(F,P) returns +** a pointer to an empty string. +** +** The sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) routine assumes that P is a boolean +** parameter and returns true (1) or false (0) according to the value +** of P. The sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) routine returns true (1) if the +** value of query parameter P is one of "yes", "true", or "on" in any +** case or if the value begins with a non-zero number. The +** sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) routines returns false (0) if the value of +** query parameter P is one of "no", "false", or "off" in any case or +** if the value begins with a numeric zero. If P is not a query +** parameter on F or if the value of P is does not match any of the +** above, then sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) returns (B!=0). +** +** The sqlite3_uri_int64(F,P,D) routine converts the value of P into a +** 64-bit signed integer and returns that integer, or D if P does not +** exist. If the value of P is something other than an integer, then +** zero is returned. +** +** If F is a NULL pointer, then sqlite3_uri_parameter(F,P) returns NULL and +** sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) returns B. If F is not a NULL pointer and +** is not a database file pathname pointer that SQLite passed into the xOpen +** VFS method, then the behavior of this routine is undefined and probably +** undesirable. */ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_uri_parameter(const char *zFilename, const char *zParam); +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_uri_boolean(const char *zFile, const char *zParam, int bDefault); +SQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_uri_int64(const char*, const char*, sqlite3_int64); /* @@ -2599,6 +2957,11 @@ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_uri_parameter(const char *zFilename, const char * ** However, the error string might be overwritten or deallocated by ** subsequent calls to other SQLite interface functions.)^ ** +** ^The sqlite3_errstr() interface returns the English-language text +** that describes the [result code], as UTF-8. +** ^(Memory to hold the error message string is managed internally +** and must not be freed by the application)^. +** ** When the serialized [threading mode] is in use, it might be the ** case that a second error occurs on a separate thread in between ** the time of the first error and the call to these interfaces. @@ -2617,6 +2980,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_errcode(sqlite3 *db); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_extended_errcode(sqlite3 *db); SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_errmsg(sqlite3*); SQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_errmsg16(sqlite3*); +SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_errstr(int); /* ** CAPI3REF: SQL Statement Object @@ -2735,6 +3099,10 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_limit(sqlite3*, int id, int newVal); ** ** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_TRIGGER_DEPTH]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_TRIGGER_DEPTH</dt> ** <dd>The maximum depth of recursion for triggers.</dd>)^ +** +** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_WORKER_THREADS]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_WORKER_THREADS</dt> +** <dd>The maximum number of auxiliary worker threads that a single +** [prepared statement] may start.</dd>)^ ** </dl> */ #define SQLITE_LIMIT_LENGTH 0 @@ -2748,6 +3116,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_limit(sqlite3*, int id, int newVal); #define SQLITE_LIMIT_LIKE_PATTERN_LENGTH 8 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER 9 #define SQLITE_LIMIT_TRIGGER_DEPTH 10 +#define SQLITE_LIMIT_WORKER_THREADS 11 /* ** CAPI3REF: Compiling An SQL Statement @@ -2773,7 +3142,8 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_limit(sqlite3*, int id, int newVal); ** that the supplied string is nul-terminated, then there is a small ** performance advantage to be gained by passing an nByte parameter that ** is equal to the number of bytes in the input string <i>including</i> -** the nul-terminator bytes. +** the nul-terminator bytes as this saves SQLite from having to +** make a copy of the input string. ** ** ^If pzTail is not NULL then *pzTail is made to point to the first byte ** past the end of the first SQL statement in zSql. These routines only @@ -2803,7 +3173,8 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_limit(sqlite3*, int id, int newVal); ** <li> ** ^If the database schema changes, instead of returning [SQLITE_SCHEMA] as it ** always used to do, [sqlite3_step()] will automatically recompile the SQL -** statement and try to run it again. +** statement and try to run it again. As many as [SQLITE_MAX_SCHEMA_RETRY] +** retries will occur before sqlite3_step() gives up and returns an error. ** </li> ** ** <li> @@ -2824,8 +3195,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_limit(sqlite3*, int id, int newVal); ** ^The specific value of WHERE-clause [parameter] might influence the ** choice of query plan if the parameter is the left-hand side of a [LIKE] ** or [GLOB] operator or if the parameter is compared to an indexed column -** and the [SQLITE_ENABLE_STAT2] compile-time option is enabled. -** the +** and the [SQLITE_ENABLE_STAT3] compile-time option is enabled. ** </li> ** </ol> */ @@ -2899,6 +3269,25 @@ SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_sql(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_readonly(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); /* +** CAPI3REF: Determine If A Prepared Statement Has Been Reset +** +** ^The sqlite3_stmt_busy(S) interface returns true (non-zero) if the +** [prepared statement] S has been stepped at least once using +** [sqlite3_step(S)] but has not run to completion and/or has not +** been reset using [sqlite3_reset(S)]. ^The sqlite3_stmt_busy(S) +** interface returns false if S is a NULL pointer. If S is not a +** NULL pointer and is not a pointer to a valid [prepared statement] +** object, then the behavior is undefined and probably undesirable. +** +** This interface can be used in combination [sqlite3_next_stmt()] +** to locate all prepared statements associated with a database +** connection that are in need of being reset. This can be used, +** for example, in diagnostic routines to search for prepared +** statements that are holding a transaction open. +*/ +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_busy(sqlite3_stmt*); + +/* ** CAPI3REF: Dynamically Typed Value Object ** KEYWORDS: {protected sqlite3_value} {unprotected sqlite3_value} ** @@ -2988,18 +3377,31 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_context sqlite3_context; ** parameter [SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER] (default value: 999). ** ** ^The third argument is the value to bind to the parameter. +** ^If the third parameter to sqlite3_bind_text() or sqlite3_bind_text16() +** or sqlite3_bind_blob() is a NULL pointer then the fourth parameter +** is ignored and the end result is the same as sqlite3_bind_null(). ** ** ^(In those routines that have a fourth argument, its value is the ** number of bytes in the parameter. To be clear: the value is the ** number of <u>bytes</u> in the value, not the number of characters.)^ -** ^If the fourth parameter is negative, the length of the string is +** ^If the fourth parameter to sqlite3_bind_text() or sqlite3_bind_text16() +** is negative, then the length of the string is ** the number of bytes up to the first zero terminator. -** -** ^The fifth argument to sqlite3_bind_blob(), sqlite3_bind_text(), and -** sqlite3_bind_text16() is a destructor used to dispose of the BLOB or +** If the fourth parameter to sqlite3_bind_blob() is negative, then +** the behavior is undefined. +** If a non-negative fourth parameter is provided to sqlite3_bind_text() +** or sqlite3_bind_text16() or sqlite3_bind_text64() then +** that parameter must be the byte offset +** where the NUL terminator would occur assuming the string were NUL +** terminated. If any NUL characters occur at byte offsets less than +** the value of the fourth parameter then the resulting string value will +** contain embedded NULs. The result of expressions involving strings +** with embedded NULs is undefined. +** +** ^The fifth argument to the BLOB and string binding interfaces +** is a destructor used to dispose of the BLOB or ** string after SQLite has finished with it. ^The destructor is called -** to dispose of the BLOB or string even if the call to sqlite3_bind_blob(), -** sqlite3_bind_text(), or sqlite3_bind_text16() fails. +** to dispose of the BLOB or string even if the call to bind API fails. ** ^If the fifth argument is ** the special value [SQLITE_STATIC], then SQLite assumes that the ** information is in static, unmanaged space and does not need to be freed. @@ -3007,6 +3409,14 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_context sqlite3_context; ** SQLite makes its own private copy of the data immediately, before ** the sqlite3_bind_*() routine returns. ** +** ^The sixth argument to sqlite3_bind_text64() must be one of +** [SQLITE_UTF8], [SQLITE_UTF16], [SQLITE_UTF16BE], or [SQLITE_UTF16LE] +** to specify the encoding of the text in the third parameter. If +** the sixth argument to sqlite3_bind_text64() is not one of the +** allowed values shown above, or if the text encoding is different +** from the encoding specified by the sixth parameter, then the behavior +** is undefined. +** ** ^The sqlite3_bind_zeroblob() routine binds a BLOB of length N that ** is filled with zeroes. ^A zeroblob uses a fixed amount of memory ** (just an integer to hold its size) while it is being processed. @@ -3027,6 +3437,9 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_context sqlite3_context; ** ** ^The sqlite3_bind_* routines return [SQLITE_OK] on success or an ** [error code] if anything goes wrong. +** ^[SQLITE_TOOBIG] might be returned if the size of a string or BLOB +** exceeds limits imposed by [sqlite3_limit]([SQLITE_LIMIT_LENGTH]) or +** [SQLITE_MAX_LENGTH]. ** ^[SQLITE_RANGE] is returned if the parameter ** index is out of range. ^[SQLITE_NOMEM] is returned if malloc() fails. ** @@ -3034,12 +3447,16 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_context sqlite3_context; ** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_name()], and [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()]. */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_blob(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const void*, int n, void(*)(void*)); +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_blob64(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const void*, sqlite3_uint64, + void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_double(sqlite3_stmt*, int, double); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_int(sqlite3_stmt*, int, int); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_int64(sqlite3_stmt*, int, sqlite3_int64); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_null(sqlite3_stmt*, int); -SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const char*, int n, void(*)(void*)); +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text(sqlite3_stmt*,int,const char*,int,void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text16(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const void*, int, void(*)(void*)); +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text64(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const char*, sqlite3_uint64, + void(*)(void*), unsigned char encoding); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_value(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const sqlite3_value*); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_zeroblob(sqlite3_stmt*, int, int n); @@ -3327,6 +3744,12 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_step(sqlite3_stmt*); ** (via calls to the [sqlite3_column_int | sqlite3_column_*()] of ** interfaces) then sqlite3_data_count(P) returns 0. ** ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) routine also returns 0 if P is a NULL pointer. +** ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) routine returns 0 if the previous call to +** [sqlite3_step](P) returned [SQLITE_DONE]. ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) +** will return non-zero if previous call to [sqlite3_step](P) returned +** [SQLITE_ROW], except in the case of the [PRAGMA incremental_vacuum] +** where it always returns zero since each step of that multi-step +** pragma returns 0 columns of data. ** ** See also: [sqlite3_column_count()] */ @@ -3426,7 +3849,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_data_count(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); ** bytes in the string, not the number of characters. ** ** ^Strings returned by sqlite3_column_text() and sqlite3_column_text16(), -** even empty strings, are always zero terminated. ^The return +** even empty strings, are always zero-terminated. ^The return ** value from sqlite3_column_blob() for a zero-length BLOB is a NULL pointer. ** ** ^The object returned by [sqlite3_column_value()] is an @@ -3449,19 +3872,19 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_data_count(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); ** ** <tr><td> NULL <td> INTEGER <td> Result is 0 ** <tr><td> NULL <td> FLOAT <td> Result is 0.0 -** <tr><td> NULL <td> TEXT <td> Result is NULL pointer -** <tr><td> NULL <td> BLOB <td> Result is NULL pointer +** <tr><td> NULL <td> TEXT <td> Result is a NULL pointer +** <tr><td> NULL <td> BLOB <td> Result is a NULL pointer ** <tr><td> INTEGER <td> FLOAT <td> Convert from integer to float ** <tr><td> INTEGER <td> TEXT <td> ASCII rendering of the integer ** <tr><td> INTEGER <td> BLOB <td> Same as INTEGER->TEXT -** <tr><td> FLOAT <td> INTEGER <td> Convert from float to integer +** <tr><td> FLOAT <td> INTEGER <td> [CAST] to INTEGER ** <tr><td> FLOAT <td> TEXT <td> ASCII rendering of the float -** <tr><td> FLOAT <td> BLOB <td> Same as FLOAT->TEXT -** <tr><td> TEXT <td> INTEGER <td> Use atoi() -** <tr><td> TEXT <td> FLOAT <td> Use atof() +** <tr><td> FLOAT <td> BLOB <td> [CAST] to BLOB +** <tr><td> TEXT <td> INTEGER <td> [CAST] to INTEGER +** <tr><td> TEXT <td> FLOAT <td> [CAST] to REAL ** <tr><td> TEXT <td> BLOB <td> No change -** <tr><td> BLOB <td> INTEGER <td> Convert to TEXT then use atoi() -** <tr><td> BLOB <td> FLOAT <td> Convert to TEXT then use atof() +** <tr><td> BLOB <td> INTEGER <td> [CAST] to INTEGER +** <tr><td> BLOB <td> FLOAT <td> [CAST] to REAL ** <tr><td> BLOB <td> TEXT <td> Add a zero terminator if needed ** </table> ** </blockquote>)^ @@ -3517,7 +3940,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_data_count(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); ** described above, or until [sqlite3_step()] or [sqlite3_reset()] or ** [sqlite3_finalize()] is called. ^The memory space used to hold strings ** and BLOBs is freed automatically. Do <b>not</b> pass the pointers returned -** [sqlite3_column_blob()], [sqlite3_column_text()], etc. into +** from [sqlite3_column_blob()], [sqlite3_column_text()], etc. into ** [sqlite3_free()]. ** ** ^(If a memory allocation error occurs during the evaluation of any @@ -3626,15 +4049,24 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_reset(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); ** ** ^The fourth parameter, eTextRep, specifies what ** [SQLITE_UTF8 | text encoding] this SQL function prefers for -** its parameters. Every SQL function implementation must be able to work -** with UTF-8, UTF-16le, or UTF-16be. But some implementations may be -** more efficient with one encoding than another. ^An application may -** invoke sqlite3_create_function() or sqlite3_create_function16() multiple -** times with the same function but with different values of eTextRep. +** its parameters. The application should set this parameter to +** [SQLITE_UTF16LE] if the function implementation invokes +** [sqlite3_value_text16le()] on an input, or [SQLITE_UTF16BE] if the +** implementation invokes [sqlite3_value_text16be()] on an input, or +** [SQLITE_UTF16] if [sqlite3_value_text16()] is used, or [SQLITE_UTF8] +** otherwise. ^The same SQL function may be registered multiple times using +** different preferred text encodings, with different implementations for +** each encoding. ** ^When multiple implementations of the same function are available, SQLite ** will pick the one that involves the least amount of data conversion. -** If there is only a single implementation which does not care what text -** encoding is used, then the fourth argument should be [SQLITE_ANY]. +** +** ^The fourth parameter may optionally be ORed with [SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC] +** to signal that the function will always return the same result given +** the same inputs within a single SQL statement. Most SQL functions are +** deterministic. The built-in [random()] SQL function is an example of a +** function that is not deterministic. The SQLite query planner is able to +** perform additional optimizations on deterministic functions, so use +** of the [SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC] flag is recommended where possible. ** ** ^(The fifth parameter is an arbitrary pointer. The implementation of the ** function can gain access to this pointer using [sqlite3_user_data()].)^ @@ -3720,10 +4152,20 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_function_v2( #define SQLITE_UTF16LE 2 #define SQLITE_UTF16BE 3 #define SQLITE_UTF16 4 /* Use native byte order */ -#define SQLITE_ANY 5 /* sqlite3_create_function only */ +#define SQLITE_ANY 5 /* Deprecated */ #define SQLITE_UTF16_ALIGNED 8 /* sqlite3_create_collation only */ /* +** CAPI3REF: Function Flags +** +** These constants may be ORed together with the +** [SQLITE_UTF8 | preferred text encoding] as the fourth argument +** to [sqlite3_create_function()], [sqlite3_create_function16()], or +** [sqlite3_create_function_v2()]. +*/ +#define SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC 0x800 + +/* ** CAPI3REF: Deprecated Functions ** DEPRECATED ** @@ -3739,7 +4181,8 @@ SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_expired(sqlite3_stmt*); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_transfer_bindings(sqlite3_stmt*, sqlite3_stmt*); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_global_recover(void); SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED void sqlite3_thread_cleanup(void); -SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_memory_alarm(void(*)(void*,sqlite3_int64,int),void*,sqlite3_int64); +SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_memory_alarm(void(*)(void*,sqlite3_int64,int), + void*,sqlite3_int64); #endif /* @@ -3762,7 +4205,7 @@ SQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_memory_alarm(void(*)(void*,sqlite3_int6 ** object results in undefined behavior. ** ** ^These routines work just like the corresponding [column access functions] -** except that these routines take a single [protected sqlite3_value] object +** except that these routines take a single [protected sqlite3_value] object ** pointer instead of a [sqlite3_stmt*] pointer and an integer column number. ** ** ^The sqlite3_value_text16() interface extracts a UTF-16 string @@ -3819,14 +4262,17 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_numeric_type(sqlite3_value*); ** In those cases, sqlite3_aggregate_context() might be called for the ** first time from within xFinal().)^ ** -** ^The sqlite3_aggregate_context(C,N) routine returns a NULL pointer if N is -** less than or equal to zero or if a memory allocate error occurs. +** ^The sqlite3_aggregate_context(C,N) routine returns a NULL pointer +** when first called if N is less than or equal to zero or if a memory +** allocate error occurs. ** ** ^(The amount of space allocated by sqlite3_aggregate_context(C,N) is ** determined by the N parameter on first successful call. Changing the ** value of N in subsequent call to sqlite3_aggregate_context() within ** the same aggregate function instance will not resize the memory -** allocation.)^ +** allocation.)^ Within the xFinal callback, it is customary to set +** N=0 in calls to sqlite3_aggregate_context(C,N) so that no +** pointless memory allocations occur. ** ** ^SQLite automatically frees the memory allocated by ** sqlite3_aggregate_context() when the aggregate query concludes. @@ -3869,41 +4315,49 @@ SQLITE_API sqlite3 *sqlite3_context_db_handle(sqlite3_context*); /* ** CAPI3REF: Function Auxiliary Data ** -** The following two functions may be used by scalar SQL functions to +** These functions may be used by (non-aggregate) SQL functions to ** associate metadata with argument values. If the same value is passed to ** multiple invocations of the same SQL function during query execution, under -** some circumstances the associated metadata may be preserved. This may -** be used, for example, to add a regular-expression matching scalar -** function. The compiled version of the regular expression is stored as -** metadata associated with the SQL value passed as the regular expression -** pattern. The compiled regular expression can be reused on multiple -** invocations of the same function so that the original pattern string -** does not need to be recompiled on each invocation. +** some circumstances the associated metadata may be preserved. An example +** of where this might be useful is in a regular-expression matching +** function. The compiled version of the regular expression can be stored as +** metadata associated with the pattern string. +** Then as long as the pattern string remains the same, +** the compiled regular expression can be reused on multiple +** invocations of the same function. ** ** ^The sqlite3_get_auxdata() interface returns a pointer to the metadata ** associated by the sqlite3_set_auxdata() function with the Nth argument -** value to the application-defined function. ^If no metadata has been ever -** been set for the Nth argument of the function, or if the corresponding -** function parameter has changed since the meta-data was set, -** then sqlite3_get_auxdata() returns a NULL pointer. -** -** ^The sqlite3_set_auxdata() interface saves the metadata -** pointed to by its 3rd parameter as the metadata for the N-th -** argument of the application-defined function. Subsequent -** calls to sqlite3_get_auxdata() might return this data, if it has -** not been destroyed. -** ^If it is not NULL, SQLite will invoke the destructor -** function given by the 4th parameter to sqlite3_set_auxdata() on -** the metadata when the corresponding function parameter changes -** or when the SQL statement completes, whichever comes first. -** -** SQLite is free to call the destructor and drop metadata on any -** parameter of any function at any time. ^The only guarantee is that -** the destructor will be called before the metadata is dropped. +** value to the application-defined function. ^If there is no metadata +** associated with the function argument, this sqlite3_get_auxdata() interface +** returns a NULL pointer. +** +** ^The sqlite3_set_auxdata(C,N,P,X) interface saves P as metadata for the N-th +** argument of the application-defined function. ^Subsequent +** calls to sqlite3_get_auxdata(C,N) return P from the most recent +** sqlite3_set_auxdata(C,N,P,X) call if the metadata is still valid or +** NULL if the metadata has been discarded. +** ^After each call to sqlite3_set_auxdata(C,N,P,X) where X is not NULL, +** SQLite will invoke the destructor function X with parameter P exactly +** once, when the metadata is discarded. +** SQLite is free to discard the metadata at any time, including: <ul> +** <li> when the corresponding function parameter changes, or +** <li> when [sqlite3_reset()] or [sqlite3_finalize()] is called for the +** SQL statement, or +** <li> when sqlite3_set_auxdata() is invoked again on the same parameter, or +** <li> during the original sqlite3_set_auxdata() call when a memory +** allocation error occurs. </ul>)^ +** +** Note the last bullet in particular. The destructor X in +** sqlite3_set_auxdata(C,N,P,X) might be called immediately, before the +** sqlite3_set_auxdata() interface even returns. Hence sqlite3_set_auxdata() +** should be called near the end of the function implementation and the +** function implementation should not make any use of P after +** sqlite3_set_auxdata() has been called. ** ** ^(In practice, metadata is preserved between function calls for -** expressions that are constant at compile time. This includes literal -** values and [parameters].)^ +** function parameters that are compile-time constants, including literal +** values and [parameters] and expressions composed from the same.)^ ** ** These routines must be called from the same thread in which ** the SQL function is running. @@ -3924,7 +4378,7 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_set_auxdata(sqlite3_context*, int N, void*, void (*)(voi ** the content before returning. ** ** The typedef is necessary to work around problems in certain -** C++ compilers. See ticket #2191. +** C++ compilers. */ typedef void (*sqlite3_destructor_type)(void*); #define SQLITE_STATIC ((sqlite3_destructor_type)0) @@ -3977,11 +4431,11 @@ typedef void (*sqlite3_destructor_type)(void*); ** the error code is SQLITE_ERROR. ^A subsequent call to sqlite3_result_error() ** or sqlite3_result_error16() resets the error code to SQLITE_ERROR. ** -** ^The sqlite3_result_toobig() interface causes SQLite to throw an error -** indicating that a string or BLOB is too long to represent. +** ^The sqlite3_result_error_toobig() interface causes SQLite to throw an +** error indicating that a string or BLOB is too long to represent. ** -** ^The sqlite3_result_nomem() interface causes SQLite to throw an error -** indicating that a memory allocation failed. +** ^The sqlite3_result_error_nomem() interface causes SQLite to throw an +** error indicating that a memory allocation failed. ** ** ^The sqlite3_result_int() interface sets the return value ** of the application-defined function to be the 32-bit signed integer @@ -3998,6 +4452,10 @@ typedef void (*sqlite3_destructor_type)(void*); ** set the return value of the application-defined function to be ** a text string which is represented as UTF-8, UTF-16 native byte order, ** UTF-16 little endian, or UTF-16 big endian, respectively. +** ^The sqlite3_result_text64() interface sets the return value of an +** application-defined function to be a text string in an encoding +** specified by the fifth (and last) parameter, which must be one +** of [SQLITE_UTF8], [SQLITE_UTF16], [SQLITE_UTF16BE], or [SQLITE_UTF16LE]. ** ^SQLite takes the text result from the application from ** the 2nd parameter of the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces. ** ^If the 3rd parameter to the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces @@ -4006,7 +4464,12 @@ typedef void (*sqlite3_destructor_type)(void*); ** ^If the 3rd parameter to the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces ** is non-negative, then as many bytes (not characters) of the text ** pointed to by the 2nd parameter are taken as the application-defined -** function result. +** function result. If the 3rd parameter is non-negative, then it +** must be the byte offset into the string where the NUL terminator would +** appear if the string where NUL terminated. If any NUL characters occur +** in the string at a byte offset that is less than the value of the 3rd +** parameter, then the resulting string will contain embedded NULs and the +** result of expressions operating on strings with embedded NULs is undefined. ** ^If the 4th parameter to the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces ** or sqlite3_result_blob is a non-NULL pointer, then SQLite calls that ** function as the destructor on the text or BLOB result when it has @@ -4036,6 +4499,7 @@ typedef void (*sqlite3_destructor_type)(void*); ** the [sqlite3_context] pointer, the results are undefined. */ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_blob(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int, void(*)(void*)); +SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_blob64(sqlite3_context*,const void*,sqlite3_uint64,void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_double(sqlite3_context*, double); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error(sqlite3_context*, const char*, int); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error16(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int); @@ -4046,6 +4510,8 @@ SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_int(sqlite3_context*, int); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_int64(sqlite3_context*, sqlite3_int64); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_null(sqlite3_context*); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text(sqlite3_context*, const char*, int, void(*)(void*)); +SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text64(sqlite3_context*, const char*,sqlite3_uint64, + void(*)(void*), unsigned char encoding); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int, void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16le(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int,void(*)(void*)); SQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16be(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int,void(*)(void*)); @@ -4203,6 +4669,11 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_key( sqlite3 *db, /* Database to be rekeyed */ const void *pKey, int nKey /* The key */ ); +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_key_v2( + sqlite3 *db, /* Database to be rekeyed */ + const char *zDbName, /* Name of the database */ + const void *pKey, int nKey /* The key */ +); /* ** Change the key on an open database. If the current database is not @@ -4216,6 +4687,11 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rekey( sqlite3 *db, /* Database to be rekeyed */ const void *pKey, int nKey /* The new key */ ); +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rekey_v2( + sqlite3 *db, /* Database to be rekeyed */ + const char *zDbName, /* Name of the database */ + const void *pKey, int nKey /* The new key */ +); /* ** Specify the activation key for a SEE database. Unless @@ -4265,6 +4741,13 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_sleep(int); ** is a NULL pointer, then SQLite performs a search for an appropriate ** temporary file directory. ** +** Applications are strongly discouraged from using this global variable. +** It is required to set a temporary folder on Windows Runtime (WinRT). +** But for all other platforms, it is highly recommended that applications +** neither read nor write this variable. This global variable is a relic +** that exists for backwards compatibility of legacy applications and should +** be avoided in new projects. +** ** It is not safe to read or modify this variable in more than one ** thread at a time. It is not safe to read or modify this variable ** if a [database connection] is being used at the same time in a separate @@ -4283,10 +4766,67 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_sleep(int); ** Hence, if this variable is modified directly, either it should be ** made NULL or made to point to memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc] ** or else the use of the [temp_store_directory pragma] should be avoided. +** Except when requested by the [temp_store_directory pragma], SQLite +** does not free the memory that sqlite3_temp_directory points to. If +** the application wants that memory to be freed, it must do +** so itself, taking care to only do so after all [database connection] +** objects have been destroyed. +** +** <b>Note to Windows Runtime users:</b> The temporary directory must be set +** prior to calling [sqlite3_open] or [sqlite3_open_v2]. Otherwise, various +** features that require the use of temporary files may fail. Here is an +** example of how to do this using C++ with the Windows Runtime: +** +** <blockquote><pre> +** LPCWSTR zPath = Windows::Storage::ApplicationData::Current-> +** TemporaryFolder->Path->Data(); +** char zPathBuf[MAX_PATH + 1]; +** memset(zPathBuf, 0, sizeof(zPathBuf)); +** WideCharToMultiByte(CP_UTF8, 0, zPath, -1, zPathBuf, sizeof(zPathBuf), +** NULL, NULL); +** sqlite3_temp_directory = sqlite3_mprintf("%s", zPathBuf); +** </pre></blockquote> */ SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXTERN char *sqlite3_temp_directory; /* +** CAPI3REF: Name Of The Folder Holding Database Files +** +** ^(If this global variable is made to point to a string which is +** the name of a folder (a.k.a. directory), then all database files +** specified with a relative pathname and created or accessed by +** SQLite when using a built-in windows [sqlite3_vfs | VFS] will be assumed +** to be relative to that directory.)^ ^If this variable is a NULL +** pointer, then SQLite assumes that all database files specified +** with a relative pathname are relative to the current directory +** for the process. Only the windows VFS makes use of this global +** variable; it is ignored by the unix VFS. +** +** Changing the value of this variable while a database connection is +** open can result in a corrupt database. +** +** It is not safe to read or modify this variable in more than one +** thread at a time. It is not safe to read or modify this variable +** if a [database connection] is being used at the same time in a separate +** thread. +** It is intended that this variable be set once +** as part of process initialization and before any SQLite interface +** routines have been called and that this variable remain unchanged +** thereafter. +** +** ^The [data_store_directory pragma] may modify this variable and cause +** it to point to memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc]. ^Furthermore, +** the [data_store_directory pragma] always assumes that any string +** that this variable points to is held in memory obtained from +** [sqlite3_malloc] and the pragma may attempt to free that memory +** using [sqlite3_free]. +** Hence, if this variable is modified directly, either it should be +** made NULL or made to point to memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc] +** or else the use of the [data_store_directory pragma] should be avoided. +*/ +SQLITE_API SQLITE_EXTERN char *sqlite3_data_directory; + +/* ** CAPI3REF: Test For Auto-Commit Mode ** KEYWORDS: {autocommit mode} ** @@ -4322,6 +4862,31 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_get_autocommit(sqlite3*); SQLITE_API sqlite3 *sqlite3_db_handle(sqlite3_stmt*); /* +** CAPI3REF: Return The Filename For A Database Connection +** +** ^The sqlite3_db_filename(D,N) interface returns a pointer to a filename +** associated with database N of connection D. ^The main database file +** has the name "main". If there is no attached database N on the database +** connection D, or if database N is a temporary or in-memory database, then +** a NULL pointer is returned. +** +** ^The filename returned by this function is the output of the +** xFullPathname method of the [VFS]. ^In other words, the filename +** will be an absolute pathname, even if the filename used +** to open the database originally was a URI or relative pathname. +*/ +SQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_db_filename(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDbName); + +/* +** CAPI3REF: Determine if a database is read-only +** +** ^The sqlite3_db_readonly(D,N) interface returns 1 if the database N +** of connection D is read-only, 0 if it is read/write, or -1 if N is not +** the name of a database on connection D. +*/ +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_readonly(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDbName); + +/* ** CAPI3REF: Find the next prepared statement ** ** ^This interface returns a pointer to the next [prepared statement] after @@ -4356,13 +4921,15 @@ SQLITE_API sqlite3_stmt *sqlite3_next_stmt(sqlite3 *pDb, sqlite3_stmt *pStmt); ** on the same [database connection] D, or NULL for ** the first call for each function on D. ** +** The commit and rollback hook callbacks are not reentrant. ** The callback implementation must not do anything that will modify ** the database connection that invoked the callback. Any actions ** to modify the database connection must be deferred until after the ** completion of the [sqlite3_step()] call that triggered the commit ** or rollback hook in the first place. -** Note that [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] both modify their -** database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph. +** Note that running any other SQL statements, including SELECT statements, +** or merely calling [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] will modify +** the database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph. ** ** ^Registering a NULL function disables the callback. ** @@ -4388,12 +4955,13 @@ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_rollback_hook(sqlite3*, void(*)(void *), void*); ** ** ^The sqlite3_update_hook() interface registers a callback function ** with the [database connection] identified by the first argument -** to be invoked whenever a row is updated, inserted or deleted. +** to be invoked whenever a row is updated, inserted or deleted in +** a rowid table. ** ^Any callback set by a previous call to this function ** for the same database connection is overridden. ** ** ^The second argument is a pointer to the function to invoke when a -** row is updated, inserted or deleted. +** row is updated, inserted or deleted in a rowid table. ** ^The first argument to the callback is a copy of the third argument ** to sqlite3_update_hook(). ** ^The second callback argument is one of [SQLITE_INSERT], [SQLITE_DELETE], @@ -4406,6 +4974,7 @@ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_rollback_hook(sqlite3*, void(*)(void *), void*); ** ** ^(The update hook is not invoked when internal system tables are ** modified (i.e. sqlite_master and sqlite_sequence).)^ +** ^The update hook is not invoked when [WITHOUT ROWID] tables are modified. ** ** ^In the current implementation, the update hook ** is not invoked when duplication rows are deleted because of an @@ -4437,7 +5006,6 @@ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_update_hook( /* ** CAPI3REF: Enable Or Disable Shared Pager Cache -** KEYWORDS: {shared cache} ** ** ^(This routine enables or disables the sharing of the database cache ** and schema data structures between [database connection | connections] @@ -4460,6 +5028,9 @@ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_update_hook( ** future releases of SQLite. Applications that care about shared ** cache setting should set it explicitly. ** +** This interface is threadsafe on processors where writing a +** 32-bit integer is atomic. +** ** See Also: [SQLite Shared-Cache Mode] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_enable_shared_cache(int); @@ -4475,10 +5046,25 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_enable_shared_cache(int); ** which might be more or less than the amount requested. ** ^The sqlite3_release_memory() routine is a no-op returning zero ** if SQLite is not compiled with [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT]. +** +** See also: [sqlite3_db_release_memory()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_release_memory(int); /* +** CAPI3REF: Free Memory Used By A Database Connection +** +** ^The sqlite3_db_release_memory(D) interface attempts to free as much heap +** memory as possible from database connection D. Unlike the +** [sqlite3_release_memory()] interface, this interface is in effect even +** when the [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT] compile-time option is +** omitted. +** +** See also: [sqlite3_release_memory()] +*/ +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_release_memory(sqlite3*); + +/* ** CAPI3REF: Impose A Limit On Heap Size ** ** ^The sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64() interface sets and/or queries the @@ -4492,7 +5078,8 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_release_memory(int); ** is advisory only. ** ** ^The return value from sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64() is the size of -** the soft heap limit prior to the call. ^If the argument N is negative +** the soft heap limit prior to the call, or negative in the case of an +** error. ^If the argument N is negative ** then no change is made to the soft heap limit. Hence, the current ** size of the soft heap limit can be determined by invoking ** sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64() with a negative argument. @@ -4508,7 +5095,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_release_memory(int); ** [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS],...) start-time option and ** the [SQLITE_DEFAULT_MEMSTATUS] compile-time option. ** <li> An alternative page cache implementation is specified using -** [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE],...). +** [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2],...). ** <li> The page cache allocates from its own memory pool supplied ** by [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE],...) rather than ** from the heap. @@ -4621,11 +5208,20 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_table_column_metadata( ** ^This interface loads an SQLite extension library from the named file. ** ** ^The sqlite3_load_extension() interface attempts to load an -** SQLite extension library contained in the file zFile. +** [SQLite extension] library contained in the file zFile. If +** the file cannot be loaded directly, attempts are made to load +** with various operating-system specific extensions added. +** So for example, if "samplelib" cannot be loaded, then names like +** "samplelib.so" or "samplelib.dylib" or "samplelib.dll" might +** be tried also. ** ** ^The entry point is zProc. -** ^zProc may be 0, in which case the name of the entry point -** defaults to "sqlite3_extension_init". +** ^(zProc may be 0, in which case SQLite will try to come up with an +** entry point name on its own. It first tries "sqlite3_extension_init". +** If that does not work, it constructs a name "sqlite3_X_init" where the +** X is consists of the lower-case equivalent of all ASCII alphabetic +** characters in the filename from the last "/" to the first following +** "." and omitting any initial "lib".)^ ** ^The sqlite3_load_extension() interface returns ** [SQLITE_OK] on success and [SQLITE_ERROR] if something goes wrong. ** ^If an error occurs and pzErrMsg is not 0, then the @@ -4651,11 +5247,11 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_load_extension( ** CAPI3REF: Enable Or Disable Extension Loading ** ** ^So as not to open security holes in older applications that are -** unprepared to deal with extension loading, and as a means of disabling -** extension loading while evaluating user-entered SQL, the following API +** unprepared to deal with [extension loading], and as a means of disabling +** [extension loading] while evaluating user-entered SQL, the following API ** is provided to turn the [sqlite3_load_extension()] mechanism on and off. ** -** ^Extension loading is off by default. See ticket #1863. +** ^Extension loading is off by default. ** ^Call the sqlite3_enable_load_extension() routine with onoff==1 ** to turn extension loading on and call it with onoff==0 to turn ** it back off again. @@ -4667,7 +5263,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_enable_load_extension(sqlite3 *db, int onoff); ** ** ^This interface causes the xEntryPoint() function to be invoked for ** each new [database connection] that is created. The idea here is that -** xEntryPoint() is the entry point for a statically linked SQLite extension +** xEntryPoint() is the entry point for a statically linked [SQLite extension] ** that is to be automatically loaded into all new database connections. ** ** ^(Even though the function prototype shows that xEntryPoint() takes @@ -4695,11 +5291,24 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_enable_load_extension(sqlite3 *db, int onoff); ** on the list of automatic extensions is a harmless no-op. ^No entry point ** will be called more than once for each database connection that is opened. ** -** See also: [sqlite3_reset_auto_extension()]. +** See also: [sqlite3_reset_auto_extension()] +** and [sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension()] */ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_auto_extension(void (*xEntryPoint)(void)); /* +** CAPI3REF: Cancel Automatic Extension Loading +** +** ^The [sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension(X)] interface unregisters the +** initialization routine X that was registered using a prior call to +** [sqlite3_auto_extension(X)]. ^The [sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension(X)] +** routine returns 1 if initialization routine X was successfully +** unregistered and it returns 0 if X was not on the list of initialization +** routines. +*/ +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_cancel_auto_extension(void (*xEntryPoint)(void)); + +/* ** CAPI3REF: Reset Automatic Extension Loading ** ** ^This interface disables all automatic extensions previously @@ -4823,10 +5432,22 @@ struct sqlite3_module { ** the correct order to satisfy the ORDER BY clause so that no separate ** sorting step is required. ** -** ^The estimatedCost value is an estimate of the cost of doing the -** particular lookup. A full scan of a table with N entries should have -** a cost of N. A binary search of a table of N entries should have a -** cost of approximately log(N). +** ^The estimatedCost value is an estimate of the cost of a particular +** strategy. A cost of N indicates that the cost of the strategy is similar +** to a linear scan of an SQLite table with N rows. A cost of log(N) +** indicates that the expense of the operation is similar to that of a +** binary search on a unique indexed field of an SQLite table with N rows. +** +** ^The estimatedRows value is an estimate of the number of rows that +** will be returned by the strategy. +** +** IMPORTANT: The estimatedRows field was added to the sqlite3_index_info +** structure for SQLite version 3.8.2. If a virtual table extension is +** used with an SQLite version earlier than 3.8.2, the results of attempting +** to read or write the estimatedRows field are undefined (but are likely +** to included crashing the application). The estimatedRows field should +** therefore only be used if [sqlite3_libversion_number()] returns a +** value greater than or equal to 3008002. */ struct sqlite3_index_info { /* Inputs */ @@ -4851,7 +5472,9 @@ struct sqlite3_index_info { char *idxStr; /* String, possibly obtained from sqlite3_malloc */ int needToFreeIdxStr; /* Free idxStr using sqlite3_free() if true */ int orderByConsumed; /* True if output is already ordered */ - double estimatedCost; /* Estimated cost of using this index */ + double estimatedCost; /* Estimated cost of using this index */ + /* Fields below are only available in SQLite 3.8.2 and later */ + sqlite3_int64 estimatedRows; /* Estimated number of rows returned */ }; /* @@ -5055,6 +5678,9 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_blob sqlite3_blob; ** interface. Use the [UPDATE] SQL command to change the size of a ** blob. ** +** ^The [sqlite3_blob_open()] interface will fail for a [WITHOUT ROWID] +** table. Incremental BLOB I/O is not possible on [WITHOUT ROWID] tables. +** ** ^The [sqlite3_bind_zeroblob()] and [sqlite3_result_zeroblob()] interfaces ** and the built-in [zeroblob] SQL function can be used, if desired, ** to create an empty, zero-filled blob in which to read or write using @@ -5249,17 +5875,16 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_vfs_unregister(sqlite3_vfs*); ** implementations are available in the SQLite core: ** ** <ul> -** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_OS2 -** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_PTHREAD +** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_PTHREADS ** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_W32 ** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_NOOP ** </ul>)^ ** ** ^The SQLITE_MUTEX_NOOP implementation is a set of routines ** that does no real locking and is appropriate for use in -** a single-threaded application. ^The SQLITE_MUTEX_OS2, -** SQLITE_MUTEX_PTHREAD, and SQLITE_MUTEX_W32 implementations -** are appropriate for use on OS/2, Unix, and Windows. +** a single-threaded application. ^The SQLITE_MUTEX_PTHREADS and +** SQLITE_MUTEX_W32 implementations are appropriate for use on Unix +** and Windows. ** ** ^(If SQLite is compiled with the SQLITE_MUTEX_APPDEF preprocessor ** macro defined (with "-DSQLITE_MUTEX_APPDEF=1"), then no mutex @@ -5280,10 +5905,12 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_vfs_unregister(sqlite3_vfs*); ** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE ** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MASTER ** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MEM -** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MEM2 +** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_OPEN ** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_PRNG ** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_LRU -** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_LRU2 +** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_PMEM +** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_APP1 +** <li> SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_APP2 ** </ul>)^ ** ** ^The first two constants (SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST and SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE) @@ -5448,7 +6075,7 @@ struct sqlite3_mutex_methods { ** ^These routines should return true if the mutex in their argument ** is held or not held, respectively, by the calling thread. ** -** ^The implementation is not required to provided versions of these +** ^The implementation is not required to provide versions of these ** routines that actually work. If the implementation does not provide working ** versions of these routines, it should at least provide stubs that always ** return true so that one does not get spurious assertion failures. @@ -5487,6 +6114,9 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_mutex_notheld(sqlite3_mutex*); #define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_LRU 6 /* lru page list */ #define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_LRU2 7 /* NOT USED */ #define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_PMEM 7 /* sqlite3PageMalloc() */ +#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_APP1 8 /* For use by application */ +#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_APP2 9 /* For use by application */ +#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_APP3 10 /* For use by application */ /* ** CAPI3REF: Retrieve the mutex for a database connection @@ -5576,10 +6206,15 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_test_control(int op, ...); #define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_RESERVE 14 #define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_OPTIMIZATIONS 15 #define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_ISKEYWORD 16 -#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_PGHDRSZ 17 -#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_SCRATCHMALLOC 18 -#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_LOCALTIME_FAULT 19 -#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_LAST 19 +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_SCRATCHMALLOC 17 +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_LOCALTIME_FAULT 18 +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_EXPLAIN_STMT 19 /* NOT USED */ +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_NEVER_CORRUPT 20 +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_VDBE_COVERAGE 21 +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_BYTEORDER 22 +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_ISINIT 23 +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_SORTER_MMAP 24 +#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_LAST 24 /* ** CAPI3REF: SQLite Runtime Status @@ -5770,12 +6405,12 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_status(sqlite3*, int op, int *pCur, int *pHiwtr, int r ** the current value is always zero.)^ ** ** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_USED</dt> -** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of of bytes of heap +** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of bytes of heap ** memory used by all pager caches associated with the database connection.)^ ** ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_USED is always 0. ** ** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_SCHEMA_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_SCHEMA_USED</dt> -** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of of bytes of heap +** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of bytes of heap ** memory used to store the schema for all databases associated ** with the connection - main, temp, and any [ATTACH]-ed databases.)^ ** ^The full amount of memory used by the schemas is reported, even if the @@ -5784,11 +6419,40 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_status(sqlite3*, int op, int *pCur, int *pHiwtr, int r ** ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_SCHEMA_USED is always 0. ** ** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_STMT_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_STMT_USED</dt> -** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of of bytes of heap +** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of bytes of heap ** and lookaside memory used by all prepared statements associated with ** the database connection.)^ ** ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_STMT_USED is always 0. ** </dd> +** +** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_HIT]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_HIT</dt> +** <dd>This parameter returns the number of pager cache hits that have +** occurred.)^ ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_HIT +** is always 0. +** </dd> +** +** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_MISS]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_MISS</dt> +** <dd>This parameter returns the number of pager cache misses that have +** occurred.)^ ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_MISS +** is always 0. +** </dd> +** +** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_WRITE]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_WRITE</dt> +** <dd>This parameter returns the number of dirty cache entries that have +** been written to disk. Specifically, the number of pages written to the +** wal file in wal mode databases, or the number of pages written to the +** database file in rollback mode databases. Any pages written as part of +** transaction rollback or database recovery operations are not included. +** If an IO or other error occurs while writing a page to disk, the effect +** on subsequent SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_WRITE requests is undefined.)^ ^The +** highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_WRITE is always 0. +** </dd> +** +** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_DEFERRED_FKS]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_DEFERRED_FKS</dt> +** <dd>This parameter returns zero for the current value if and only if +** all foreign key constraints (deferred or immediate) have been +** resolved.)^ ^The highwater mark is always 0. +** </dd> ** </dl> */ #define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_USED 0 @@ -5798,7 +6462,11 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_status(sqlite3*, int op, int *pCur, int *pHiwtr, int r #define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_HIT 4 #define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_MISS_SIZE 5 #define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_MISS_FULL 6 -#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_MAX 6 /* Largest defined DBSTATUS */ +#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_HIT 7 +#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_MISS 8 +#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_WRITE 9 +#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_DEFERRED_FKS 10 +#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_MAX 10 /* Largest defined DBSTATUS */ /* @@ -5853,11 +6521,20 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_status(sqlite3_stmt*, int op,int resetFlg); ** improvement performance by adding permanent indices that do not ** need to be reinitialized each time the statement is run.</dd> ** +** [[SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_VM_STEP]] <dt>SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_VM_STEP</dt> +** <dd>^This is the number of virtual machine operations executed +** by the prepared statement if that number is less than or equal +** to 2147483647. The number of virtual machine operations can be +** used as a proxy for the total work done by the prepared statement. +** If the number of virtual machine operations exceeds 2147483647 +** then the value returned by this statement status code is undefined. +** </dd> ** </dl> */ #define SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_FULLSCAN_STEP 1 #define SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_SORT 2 #define SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_AUTOINDEX 3 +#define SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_VM_STEP 4 /* ** CAPI3REF: Custom Page Cache Object @@ -5868,17 +6545,33 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_status(sqlite3_stmt*, int op,int resetFlg); ** sqlite3_pcache object except by holding and passing pointers ** to the object. ** -** See [sqlite3_pcache_methods] for additional information. +** See [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] for additional information. */ typedef struct sqlite3_pcache sqlite3_pcache; /* +** CAPI3REF: Custom Page Cache Object +** +** The sqlite3_pcache_page object represents a single page in the +** page cache. The page cache will allocate instances of this +** object. Various methods of the page cache use pointers to instances +** of this object as parameters or as their return value. +** +** See [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] for additional information. +*/ +typedef struct sqlite3_pcache_page sqlite3_pcache_page; +struct sqlite3_pcache_page { + void *pBuf; /* The content of the page */ + void *pExtra; /* Extra information associated with the page */ +}; + +/* ** CAPI3REF: Application Defined Page Cache. ** KEYWORDS: {page cache} ** -** ^(The [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE], ...) interface can +** ^(The [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2], ...) interface can ** register an alternative page cache implementation by passing in an -** instance of the sqlite3_pcache_methods structure.)^ +** instance of the sqlite3_pcache_methods2 structure.)^ ** In many applications, most of the heap memory allocated by ** SQLite is used for the page cache. ** By implementing a @@ -5892,7 +6585,7 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_pcache sqlite3_pcache; ** extreme measure that is only needed by the most demanding applications. ** The built-in page cache is recommended for most uses. ** -** ^(The contents of the sqlite3_pcache_methods structure are copied to an +** ^(The contents of the sqlite3_pcache_methods2 structure are copied to an ** internal buffer by SQLite within the call to [sqlite3_config]. Hence ** the application may discard the parameter after the call to ** [sqlite3_config()] returns.)^ @@ -5901,7 +6594,7 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_pcache sqlite3_pcache; ** ^(The xInit() method is called once for each effective ** call to [sqlite3_initialize()])^ ** (usually only once during the lifetime of the process). ^(The xInit() -** method is passed a copy of the sqlite3_pcache_methods.pArg value.)^ +** method is passed a copy of the sqlite3_pcache_methods2.pArg value.)^ ** The intent of the xInit() method is to set up global data structures ** required by the custom page cache implementation. ** ^(If the xInit() method is NULL, then the @@ -5928,17 +6621,15 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_pcache sqlite3_pcache; ** SQLite will typically create one cache instance for each open database file, ** though this is not guaranteed. ^The ** first parameter, szPage, is the size in bytes of the pages that must -** be allocated by the cache. ^szPage will not be a power of two. ^szPage -** will the page size of the database file that is to be cached plus an -** increment (here called "R") of less than 250. SQLite will use the -** extra R bytes on each page to store metadata about the underlying -** database page on disk. The value of R depends +** be allocated by the cache. ^szPage will always a power of two. ^The +** second parameter szExtra is a number of bytes of extra storage +** associated with each page cache entry. ^The szExtra parameter will +** a number less than 250. SQLite will use the +** extra szExtra bytes on each page to store metadata about the underlying +** database page on disk. The value passed into szExtra depends ** on the SQLite version, the target platform, and how SQLite was compiled. -** ^(R is constant for a particular build of SQLite. Except, there are two -** distinct values of R when SQLite is compiled with the proprietary -** ZIPVFS extension.)^ ^The second argument to -** xCreate(), bPurgeable, is true if the cache being created will -** be used to cache database pages of a file stored on disk, or +** ^The third argument to xCreate(), bPurgeable, is true if the cache being +** created will be used to cache database pages of a file stored on disk, or ** false if it is used for an in-memory database. The cache implementation ** does not have to do anything special based with the value of bPurgeable; ** it is purely advisory. ^On a cache where bPurgeable is false, SQLite will @@ -5962,11 +6653,16 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_pcache sqlite3_pcache; ** ** [[the xFetch() page cache methods]] ** The xFetch() method locates a page in the cache and returns a pointer to -** the page, or a NULL pointer. -** A "page", in this context, means a buffer of szPage bytes aligned at an -** 8-byte boundary. The page to be fetched is determined by the key. ^The -** minimum key value is 1. After it has been retrieved using xFetch, the page -** is considered to be "pinned". +** an sqlite3_pcache_page object associated with that page, or a NULL pointer. +** The pBuf element of the returned sqlite3_pcache_page object will be a +** pointer to a buffer of szPage bytes used to store the content of a +** single database page. The pExtra element of sqlite3_pcache_page will be +** a pointer to the szExtra bytes of extra storage that SQLite has requested +** for each entry in the page cache. +** +** The page to be fetched is determined by the key. ^The minimum key value +** is 1. After it has been retrieved using xFetch, the page is considered +** to be "pinned". ** ** If the requested page is already in the page cache, then the page cache ** implementation must return a pointer to the page buffer with its content @@ -5975,7 +6671,7 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_pcache sqlite3_pcache; ** parameter to help it determined what action to take: ** ** <table border=1 width=85% align=center> -** <tr><th> createFlag <th> Behaviour when page is not already in cache +** <tr><th> createFlag <th> Behavior when page is not already in cache ** <tr><td> 0 <td> Do not allocate a new page. Return NULL. ** <tr><td> 1 <td> Allocate a new page if it easy and convenient to do so. ** Otherwise return NULL. @@ -6019,8 +6715,37 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_pcache sqlite3_pcache; ** ^The xDestroy() method is used to delete a cache allocated by xCreate(). ** All resources associated with the specified cache should be freed. ^After ** calling the xDestroy() method, SQLite considers the [sqlite3_pcache*] -** handle invalid, and will not use it with any other sqlite3_pcache_methods +** handle invalid, and will not use it with any other sqlite3_pcache_methods2 ** functions. +** +** [[the xShrink() page cache method]] +** ^SQLite invokes the xShrink() method when it wants the page cache to +** free up as much of heap memory as possible. The page cache implementation +** is not obligated to free any memory, but well-behaved implementations should +** do their best. +*/ +typedef struct sqlite3_pcache_methods2 sqlite3_pcache_methods2; +struct sqlite3_pcache_methods2 { + int iVersion; + void *pArg; + int (*xInit)(void*); + void (*xShutdown)(void*); + sqlite3_pcache *(*xCreate)(int szPage, int szExtra, int bPurgeable); + void (*xCachesize)(sqlite3_pcache*, int nCachesize); + int (*xPagecount)(sqlite3_pcache*); + sqlite3_pcache_page *(*xFetch)(sqlite3_pcache*, unsigned key, int createFlag); + void (*xUnpin)(sqlite3_pcache*, sqlite3_pcache_page*, int discard); + void (*xRekey)(sqlite3_pcache*, sqlite3_pcache_page*, + unsigned oldKey, unsigned newKey); + void (*xTruncate)(sqlite3_pcache*, unsigned iLimit); + void (*xDestroy)(sqlite3_pcache*); + void (*xShrink)(sqlite3_pcache*); +}; + +/* +** This is the obsolete pcache_methods object that has now been replaced +** by sqlite3_pcache_methods2. This object is not used by SQLite. It is +** retained in the header file for backwards compatibility only. */ typedef struct sqlite3_pcache_methods sqlite3_pcache_methods; struct sqlite3_pcache_methods { @@ -6037,6 +6762,7 @@ struct sqlite3_pcache_methods { void (*xDestroy)(sqlite3_pcache*); }; + /* ** CAPI3REF: Online Backup Object ** @@ -6366,17 +7092,33 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_unlock_notify( /* ** CAPI3REF: String Comparison ** -** ^The [sqlite3_strnicmp()] API allows applications and extensions to -** compare the contents of two buffers containing UTF-8 strings in a -** case-independent fashion, using the same definition of case independence -** that SQLite uses internally when comparing identifiers. +** ^The [sqlite3_stricmp()] and [sqlite3_strnicmp()] APIs allow applications +** and extensions to compare the contents of two buffers containing UTF-8 +** strings in a case-independent fashion, using the same definition of "case +** independence" that SQLite uses internally when comparing identifiers. */ +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_stricmp(const char *, const char *); SQLITE_API int sqlite3_strnicmp(const char *, const char *, int); /* +** CAPI3REF: String Globbing +* +** ^The [sqlite3_strglob(P,X)] interface returns zero if string X matches +** the glob pattern P, and it returns non-zero if string X does not match +** the glob pattern P. ^The definition of glob pattern matching used in +** [sqlite3_strglob(P,X)] is the same as for the "X GLOB P" operator in the +** SQL dialect used by SQLite. ^The sqlite3_strglob(P,X) function is case +** sensitive. +** +** Note that this routine returns zero on a match and non-zero if the strings +** do not match, the same as [sqlite3_stricmp()] and [sqlite3_strnicmp()]. +*/ +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_strglob(const char *zGlob, const char *zStr); + +/* ** CAPI3REF: Error Logging Interface ** -** ^The [sqlite3_log()] interface writes a message into the error log +** ^The [sqlite3_log()] interface writes a message into the [error log] ** established by the [SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG] option to [sqlite3_config()]. ** ^If logging is enabled, the zFormat string and subsequent arguments are ** used with [sqlite3_snprintf()] to generate the final output string. @@ -6456,6 +7198,9 @@ SQLITE_API void *sqlite3_wal_hook( ** ^The [wal_autocheckpoint pragma] can be used to invoke this interface ** from SQL. ** +** ^Checkpoints initiated by this mechanism are +** [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2|PASSIVE]. +** ** ^Every new [database connection] defaults to having the auto-checkpoint ** enabled with a threshold of 1000 or [SQLITE_DEFAULT_WAL_AUTOCHECKPOINT] ** pages. The use of this interface @@ -6472,6 +7217,10 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint(sqlite3 *db, int N); ** empty string, then a checkpoint is run on all databases of ** connection D. ^If the database connection D is not in ** [WAL | write-ahead log mode] then this interface is a harmless no-op. +** ^The [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(D,X)] interface initiates a +** [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2|PASSIVE] checkpoint. +** Use the [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2()] interface to get a FULL +** or RESET checkpoint. ** ** ^The [wal_checkpoint pragma] can be used to invoke this interface ** from SQL. ^The [sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint()] interface and the @@ -6494,10 +7243,12 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDb); ** Checkpoint as many frames as possible without waiting for any database ** readers or writers to finish. Sync the db file if all frames in the log ** are checkpointed. This mode is the same as calling -** sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(). The busy-handler callback is never invoked. +** sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(). The [sqlite3_busy_handler|busy-handler callback] +** is never invoked. ** ** <dt>SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_FULL<dd> -** This mode blocks (calls the busy-handler callback) until there is no +** This mode blocks (it invokes the +** [sqlite3_busy_handler|busy-handler callback]) until there is no ** database writer and all readers are reading from the most recent database ** snapshot. It then checkpoints all frames in the log file and syncs the ** database file. This call blocks database writers while it is running, @@ -6505,7 +7256,8 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDb); ** ** <dt>SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_RESTART<dd> ** This mode works the same way as SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_FULL, except after -** checkpointing the log file it blocks (calls the busy-handler callback) +** checkpointing the log file it blocks (calls the +** [sqlite3_busy_handler|busy-handler callback]) ** until all readers are reading from the database file only. This ensures ** that the next client to write to the database file restarts the log file ** from the beginning. This call blocks database writers while it is running, @@ -6643,6 +7395,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict(sqlite3 *); /* ** CAPI3REF: Conflict resolution modes +** KEYWORDS: {conflict resolution mode} ** ** These constants are returned by [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] to ** inform a [virtual table] implementation what the [ON CONFLICT] mode @@ -6671,7 +7424,7 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict(sqlite3 *); #ifdef __cplusplus } /* End of the 'extern "C"' block */ #endif -#endif +#endif /* _SQLITE3_H_ */ /* ** 2010 August 30 @@ -6695,6 +7448,16 @@ extern "C" { #endif typedef struct sqlite3_rtree_geometry sqlite3_rtree_geometry; +typedef struct sqlite3_rtree_query_info sqlite3_rtree_query_info; + +/* The double-precision datatype used by RTree depends on the +** SQLITE_RTREE_INT_ONLY compile-time option. +*/ +#ifdef SQLITE_RTREE_INT_ONLY + typedef sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_rtree_dbl; +#else + typedef double sqlite3_rtree_dbl; +#endif /* ** Register a geometry callback named zGeom that can be used as part of an @@ -6705,7 +7468,7 @@ typedef struct sqlite3_rtree_geometry sqlite3_rtree_geometry; SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rtree_geometry_callback( sqlite3 *db, const char *zGeom, - int (*xGeom)(sqlite3_rtree_geometry *, int nCoord, double *aCoord, int *pRes), + int (*xGeom)(sqlite3_rtree_geometry*, int, sqlite3_rtree_dbl*,int*), void *pContext ); @@ -6717,11 +7480,60 @@ SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rtree_geometry_callback( struct sqlite3_rtree_geometry { void *pContext; /* Copy of pContext passed to s_r_g_c() */ int nParam; /* Size of array aParam[] */ - double *aParam; /* Parameters passed to SQL geom function */ + sqlite3_rtree_dbl *aParam; /* Parameters passed to SQL geom function */ void *pUser; /* Callback implementation user data */ void (*xDelUser)(void *); /* Called by SQLite to clean up pUser */ }; +/* +** Register a 2nd-generation geometry callback named zScore that can be +** used as part of an R-Tree geometry query as follows: +** +** SELECT ... FROM <rtree> WHERE <rtree col> MATCH $zQueryFunc(... params ...) +*/ +SQLITE_API int sqlite3_rtree_query_callback( + sqlite3 *db, + const char *zQueryFunc, + int (*xQueryFunc)(sqlite3_rtree_query_info*), + void *pContext, + void (*xDestructor)(void*) +); + + +/* +** A pointer to a structure of the following type is passed as the +** argument to scored geometry callback registered using +** sqlite3_rtree_query_callback(). +** +** Note that the first 5 fields of this structure are identical to +** sqlite3_rtree_geometry. This structure is a subclass of +** sqlite3_rtree_geometry. +*/ +struct sqlite3_rtree_query_info { + void *pContext; /* pContext from when function registered */ + int nParam; /* Number of function parameters */ + sqlite3_rtree_dbl *aParam; /* value of function parameters */ + void *pUser; /* callback can use this, if desired */ + void (*xDelUser)(void*); /* function to free pUser */ + sqlite3_rtree_dbl *aCoord; /* Coordinates of node or entry to check */ + unsigned int *anQueue; /* Number of pending entries in the queue */ + int nCoord; /* Number of coordinates */ + int iLevel; /* Level of current node or entry */ + int mxLevel; /* The largest iLevel value in the tree */ + sqlite3_int64 iRowid; /* Rowid for current entry */ + sqlite3_rtree_dbl rParentScore; /* Score of parent node */ + int eParentWithin; /* Visibility of parent node */ + int eWithin; /* OUT: Visiblity */ + sqlite3_rtree_dbl rScore; /* OUT: Write the score here */ +}; + +/* +** Allowed values for sqlite3_rtree_query.eWithin and .eParentWithin. +*/ +#define NOT_WITHIN 0 /* Object completely outside of query region */ +#define PARTLY_WITHIN 1 /* Object partially overlaps query region */ +#define FULLY_WITHIN 2 /* Object fully contained within query region */ + #ifdef __cplusplus } /* end of the 'extern "C"' block */ |