1de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** 2001 September 15
3de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The author disclaims copyright to this source code.  In place of
5de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a legal notice, here is a blessing:
6de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
7de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**    May you do good and not evil.
8de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**    May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
9de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**    May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
10de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
11de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*************************************************************************
12de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This header file defines the interface that the SQLite library
13de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** presents to client programs.  If a C-function, structure, datatype,
14de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or constant definition does not appear in this file, then it is
15de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not a published API of SQLite, is subject to change without
16de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** notice, and should not be referenced by programs that use SQLite.
17de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
18de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Some of the definitions that are in this file are marked as
19de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** "experimental".  Experimental interfaces are normally new
20de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** features recently added to SQLite.  We do not anticipate changes
21de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to experimental interfaces but reserve the right to make minor changes
22de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if experience from use "in the wild" suggest such changes are prudent.
23de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
24de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The official C-language API documentation for SQLite is derived
25de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from comments in this file.  This file is the authoritative source
26de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on how SQLite interfaces are suppose to operate.
27de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
28de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The name of this file under configuration management is "sqlite.h.in".
29de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The makefile makes some minor changes to this file (such as inserting
30de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the version number) and changes its name to "sqlite3.h" as
31de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** part of the build process.
32de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
33de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifndef _SQLITE3_H_
34de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define _SQLITE3_H_
35de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#include <stdarg.h>     /* Needed for the definition of va_list */
36de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
37de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
38de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Make sure we can call this stuff from C++.
39de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
40de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef __cplusplus
41de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noriextern "C" {
42de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
43de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
44de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
45de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
46de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Add the ability to override 'extern'
47de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
48de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifndef SQLITE_EXTERN
49de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori# define SQLITE_EXTERN extern
50de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
51de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
52de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifndef SQLITE_API
53de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori# define SQLITE_API
54de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
55de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
56de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
57de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
58de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These no-op macros are used in front of interfaces to mark those
59de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces as either deprecated or experimental.  New applications
60de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** should not use deprecated interfaces - they are support for backwards
61de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compatibility only.  Application writers should be aware that
62de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** experimental interfaces are subject to change in point releases.
63de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
64de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These macros used to resolve to various kinds of compiler magic that
65de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** would generate warning messages when they were used.  But that
66de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compiler magic ended up generating such a flurry of bug reports
67de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that we have taken it all out and gone back to using simple
68de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** noop macros.
69de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
70de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DEPRECATED
71de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL
72de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
73de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
74de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Ensure these symbols were not defined by some previous header file.
75de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
76de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef SQLITE_VERSION
77de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori# undef SQLITE_VERSION
78de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
79de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER
80de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori# undef SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER
81de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
82de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
83de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
84de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Compile-Time Library Version Numbers
85de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
86de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The [SQLITE_VERSION] C preprocessor macro in the sqlite3.h header
87de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** evaluates to a string literal that is the SQLite version in the
88de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** format "X.Y.Z" where X is the major version number (always 3 for
89de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite3) and Y is the minor version number and Z is the release number.)^
90de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER] C preprocessor macro resolves to an integer
91de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the value (X*1000000 + Y*1000 + Z) where X, Y, and Z are the same
92de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** numbers used in [SQLITE_VERSION].)^
93de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER for any given release of SQLite will also
94de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be larger than the release from which it is derived.  Either Y will
95de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be held constant and Z will be incremented or else Y will be incremented
96de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and Z will be reset to zero.
97de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
98de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Since version 3.6.18, SQLite source code has been stored in the
99de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <a href="http://www.fossil-scm.org/">Fossil configuration management
100de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** system</a>.  ^The SQLITE_SOURCE_ID macro evaluates to
101de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a string which identifies a particular check-in of SQLite
102de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** within its configuration management system.  ^The SQLITE_SOURCE_ID
103de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** string contains the date and time of the check-in (UTC) and an SHA1
104de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** hash of the entire source tree.
105de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
106de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_libversion()],
107de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_libversion_number()], [sqlite3_sourceid()],
108de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite_version()] and [sqlite_source_id()].
109de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
110c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown#define SQLITE_VERSION        "3.7.11"
111c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown#define SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER 3007011
112c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown#define SQLITE_SOURCE_ID      "2012-03-20 11:35:50 00bb9c9ce4f465e6ac321ced2a9d0062dc364669"
113de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
114de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
115de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Library Version Numbers
116de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: sqlite3_version, sqlite3_sourceid
117de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
118de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These interfaces provide the same information as the [SQLITE_VERSION],
119de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER], and [SQLITE_SOURCE_ID] C preprocessor macros
120de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** but are associated with the library instead of the header file.  ^(Cautious
121de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** programmers might include assert() statements in their application to
122de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** verify that values returned by these interfaces match the macros in
123de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the header, and thus insure that the application is
124de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compiled with matching library and header files.
125de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
126de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
127de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** assert( sqlite3_libversion_number()==SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER );
128de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** assert( strcmp(sqlite3_sourceid(),SQLITE_SOURCE_ID)==0 );
129de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** assert( strcmp(sqlite3_libversion(),SQLITE_VERSION)==0 );
130de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>)^
131de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
132de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_version[] string constant contains the text of [SQLITE_VERSION]
133de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** macro.  ^The sqlite3_libversion() function returns a pointer to the
134de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the sqlite3_version[] string constant.  The sqlite3_libversion()
135de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function is provided for use in DLLs since DLL users usually do not have
136de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** direct access to string constants within the DLL.  ^The
137de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_libversion_number() function returns an integer equal to
138de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_VERSION_NUMBER].  ^The sqlite3_sourceid() function returns
139de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a pointer to a string constant whose value is the same as the
140de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_SOURCE_ID] C preprocessor macro.
141de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
142de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite_version()] and [sqlite_source_id()].
143de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
144de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_EXTERN const char sqlite3_version[];
145de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_libversion(void);
146de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_sourceid(void);
147de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_libversion_number(void);
148de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
149de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
150de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Library Compilation Options Diagnostics
151de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
152de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_compileoption_used() function returns 0 or 1
153de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** indicating whether the specified option was defined at
154de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compile time.  ^The SQLITE_ prefix may be omitted from the
155de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** option name passed to sqlite3_compileoption_used().
156de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
157de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_compileoption_get() function allows iterating
158de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** over the list of options that were defined at compile time by
159de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returning the N-th compile time option string.  ^If N is out of range,
160de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_compileoption_get() returns a NULL pointer.  ^The SQLITE_
161de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prefix is omitted from any strings returned by
162de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_compileoption_get().
163de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
164de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Support for the diagnostic functions sqlite3_compileoption_used()
165de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and sqlite3_compileoption_get() may be omitted by specifying the
166de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_OMIT_COMPILEOPTION_DIAGS] option at compile time.
167de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
168de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: SQL functions [sqlite_compileoption_used()] and
169de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite_compileoption_get()] and the [compile_options pragma].
170de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
171de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_COMPILEOPTION_DIAGS
172de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_compileoption_used(const char *zOptName);
173de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_compileoption_get(int N);
174de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
175de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
176de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
177de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Test To See If The Library Is Threadsafe
178de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
179de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_threadsafe() function returns zero if and only if
18090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** SQLite was compiled with mutexing code omitted due to the
181de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] compile-time option being set to 0.
182de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
183de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite can be compiled with or without mutexes.  When
184de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] C preprocessor macro is 1 or 2, mutexes
185de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are enabled and SQLite is threadsafe.  When the
186de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] macro is 0,
187de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the mutexes are omitted.  Without the mutexes, it is not safe
188de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to use SQLite concurrently from more than one thread.
189de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
190de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Enabling mutexes incurs a measurable performance penalty.
191de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** So if speed is of utmost importance, it makes sense to disable
192de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the mutexes.  But for maximum safety, mutexes should be enabled.
193de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The default behavior is for mutexes to be enabled.
194de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
195de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This interface can be used by an application to make sure that the
196de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** version of SQLite that it is linking against was compiled with
197de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the desired setting of the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] macro.
198de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
199de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This interface only reports on the compile-time mutex setting
200de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE] flag.  If SQLite is compiled with
201de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_THREADSAFE=1 or =2 then mutexes are enabled by default but
202de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be fully or partially disabled using a call to [sqlite3_config()]
203de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the verbs [SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD], [SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD],
204de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX].  ^(The return value of the
205de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_threadsafe() function shows only the compile-time setting of
206de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** thread safety, not any run-time changes to that setting made by
207de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_config(). In other words, the return value from sqlite3_threadsafe()
208de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is unchanged by calls to sqlite3_config().)^
209de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
210de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See the [threading mode] documentation for additional information.
211de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
212de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_threadsafe(void);
213de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
214de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
215de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Database Connection Handle
216de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {database connection} {database connections}
217de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
218de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Each open SQLite database is represented by a pointer to an instance of
219de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the opaque structure named "sqlite3".  It is useful to think of an sqlite3
220de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointer as an object.  The [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()], and
221de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_open_v2()] interfaces are its constructors, and [sqlite3_close()]
222de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is its destructor.  There are many other interfaces (such as
223de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()], [sqlite3_create_function()], and
224de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_busy_timeout()] to name but three) that are methods on an
225de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3 object.
226de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
227de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3 sqlite3;
228de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
229de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
230de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: 64-Bit Integer Types
231de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: sqlite_int64 sqlite_uint64
232de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
233de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Because there is no cross-platform way to specify 64-bit integer types
234de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite includes typedefs for 64-bit signed and unsigned integers.
235de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
236de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_int64 and sqlite3_uint64 are the preferred type definitions.
237de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite_int64 and sqlite_uint64 types are supported for backwards
238de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compatibility only.
239de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
240de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_int64 and sqlite_int64 types can store integer values
241de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** between -9223372036854775808 and +9223372036854775807 inclusive.  ^The
242de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_uint64 and sqlite_uint64 types can store integer values
243de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** between 0 and +18446744073709551615 inclusive.
244de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
245de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef SQLITE_INT64_TYPE
246de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  typedef SQLITE_INT64_TYPE sqlite_int64;
247de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  typedef unsigned SQLITE_INT64_TYPE sqlite_uint64;
248de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#elif defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__BORLANDC__)
249de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  typedef __int64 sqlite_int64;
250de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  typedef unsigned __int64 sqlite_uint64;
251de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#else
252de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  typedef long long int sqlite_int64;
253de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  typedef unsigned long long int sqlite_uint64;
254de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
255de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef sqlite_int64 sqlite3_int64;
256de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef sqlite_uint64 sqlite3_uint64;
257de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
258de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
259de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If compiling for a processor that lacks floating point support,
260de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** substitute integer for floating-point.
261de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
262de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef SQLITE_OMIT_FLOATING_POINT
263de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori# define double sqlite3_int64
264de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
265de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
266de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
267de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Closing A Database Connection
268de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
269de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_close() routine is the destructor for the [sqlite3] object.
270de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calls to sqlite3_close() return SQLITE_OK if the [sqlite3] object is
271de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** successfully destroyed and all associated resources are deallocated.
272de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
273de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Applications must [sqlite3_finalize | finalize] all [prepared statements]
274de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and [sqlite3_blob_close | close] all [BLOB handles] associated with
275de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [sqlite3] object prior to attempting to close the object.  ^If
276de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_close() is called on a [database connection] that still has
277de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** outstanding [prepared statements] or [BLOB handles], then it returns
278de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_BUSY.
279de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
280de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If [sqlite3_close()] is invoked while a transaction is open,
281de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the transaction is automatically rolled back.
282de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
283de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The C parameter to [sqlite3_close(C)] must be either a NULL
284de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointer or an [sqlite3] object pointer obtained
285de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()], or
286de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_open_v2()], and not previously closed.
287de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calling sqlite3_close() with a NULL pointer argument is a
288de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** harmless no-op.
289de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
290de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_close(sqlite3 *);
291de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
292de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
293de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The type for a callback function.
294de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This is legacy and deprecated.  It is included for historical
295de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compatibility and is not documented.
296de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
297de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef int (*sqlite3_callback)(void*,int,char**, char**);
298de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
299de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
300de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: One-Step Query Execution Interface
301de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
302de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_exec() interface is a convenience wrapper around
303de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()], [sqlite3_step()], and [sqlite3_finalize()],
304de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that allows an application to run multiple statements of SQL
305de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** without having to use a lot of C code.
306de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
307de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_exec() interface runs zero or more UTF-8 encoded,
308de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** semicolon-separate SQL statements passed into its 2nd argument,
309de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the context of the [database connection] passed in as its 1st
310de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument.  ^If the callback function of the 3rd argument to
311de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_exec() is not NULL, then it is invoked for each result row
312de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** coming out of the evaluated SQL statements.  ^The 4th argument to
31390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** sqlite3_exec() is relayed through to the 1st argument of each
314de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback invocation.  ^If the callback pointer to sqlite3_exec()
315de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is NULL, then no callback is ever invoked and result rows are
316de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ignored.
317de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
318de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If an error occurs while evaluating the SQL statements passed into
319de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_exec(), then execution of the current statement stops and
320de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** subsequent statements are skipped.  ^If the 5th parameter to sqlite3_exec()
321de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not NULL then any error message is written into memory obtained
322de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from [sqlite3_malloc()] and passed back through the 5th parameter.
323de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** To avoid memory leaks, the application should invoke [sqlite3_free()]
324de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on error message strings returned through the 5th parameter of
325de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of sqlite3_exec() after the error message string is no longer needed.
326de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the 5th parameter to sqlite3_exec() is not NULL and no errors
327de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** occur, then sqlite3_exec() sets the pointer in its 5th parameter to
328de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** NULL before returning.
329de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
330de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If an sqlite3_exec() callback returns non-zero, the sqlite3_exec()
331de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine returns SQLITE_ABORT without invoking the callback again and
332de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** without running any subsequent SQL statements.
333de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
334de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The 2nd argument to the sqlite3_exec() callback function is the
335de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** number of columns in the result.  ^The 3rd argument to the sqlite3_exec()
336de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback is an array of pointers to strings obtained as if from
337de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_column_text()], one for each column.  ^If an element of a
338de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** result row is NULL then the corresponding string pointer for the
339de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_exec() callback is a NULL pointer.  ^The 4th argument to the
340de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_exec() callback is an array of pointers to strings where each
341de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** entry represents the name of corresponding result column as obtained
342de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from [sqlite3_column_name()].
343de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
344de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the 2nd parameter to sqlite3_exec() is a NULL pointer, a pointer
345de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to an empty string, or a pointer that contains only whitespace and/or
346de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL comments, then no SQL statements are evaluated and the database
347de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not changed.
348de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
349de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Restrictions:
350de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
351de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
352de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> The application must insure that the 1st parameter to sqlite3_exec()
353de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      is a valid and open [database connection].
354de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> The application must not close [database connection] specified by
355de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      the 1st parameter to sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running.
356de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> The application must not modify the SQL statement text passed into
357de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      the 2nd parameter of sqlite3_exec() while sqlite3_exec() is running.
358de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>
359de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
360de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_exec(
361de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,                                  /* An open database */
362de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *sql,                           /* SQL to be evaluated */
363de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*callback)(void*,int,char**,char**),  /* Callback function */
364de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *,                                    /* 1st argument to callback */
365de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  char **errmsg                              /* Error msg written here */
366de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
367de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
368de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
369de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Result Codes
370de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: SQLITE_OK {error code} {error codes}
371de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {result code} {result codes}
372de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
373de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Many SQLite functions return an integer result code from the set shown
37490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** here in order to indicate success or failure.
375de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
376de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** New error codes may be added in future versions of SQLite.
377de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
37890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** See also: [SQLITE_IOERR_READ | extended result codes],
37990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] [SQLITE_ROLLBACK | result codes].
380de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
381de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OK           0   /* Successful result */
382de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/* beginning-of-error-codes */
383de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ERROR        1   /* SQL error or missing database */
384de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INTERNAL     2   /* Internal logic error in SQLite */
385de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_PERM         3   /* Access permission denied */
386de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ABORT        4   /* Callback routine requested an abort */
387de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_BUSY         5   /* The database file is locked */
388de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LOCKED       6   /* A table in the database is locked */
389de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_NOMEM        7   /* A malloc() failed */
390de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_READONLY     8   /* Attempt to write a readonly database */
391de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INTERRUPT    9   /* Operation terminated by sqlite3_interrupt()*/
392de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR       10   /* Some kind of disk I/O error occurred */
393de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CORRUPT     11   /* The database disk image is malformed */
39490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_NOTFOUND    12   /* Unknown opcode in sqlite3_file_control() */
395de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_FULL        13   /* Insertion failed because database is full */
396de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN    14   /* Unable to open the database file */
397de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_PROTOCOL    15   /* Database lock protocol error */
398de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_EMPTY       16   /* Database is empty */
399de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SCHEMA      17   /* The database schema changed */
400de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TOOBIG      18   /* String or BLOB exceeds size limit */
401de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT  19   /* Abort due to constraint violation */
402de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MISMATCH    20   /* Data type mismatch */
403de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MISUSE      21   /* Library used incorrectly */
404de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_NOLFS       22   /* Uses OS features not supported on host */
405de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_AUTH        23   /* Authorization denied */
406de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_FORMAT      24   /* Auxiliary database format error */
407de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_RANGE       25   /* 2nd parameter to sqlite3_bind out of range */
408de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_NOTADB      26   /* File opened that is not a database file */
409de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ROW         100  /* sqlite3_step() has another row ready */
410de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DONE        101  /* sqlite3_step() has finished executing */
411de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/* end-of-error-codes */
412de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
413de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
414de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Extended Result Codes
415de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {extended error code} {extended error codes}
416de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {extended result code} {extended result codes}
417de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
418de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In its default configuration, SQLite API routines return one of 26 integer
419de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_OK | result codes].  However, experience has shown that many of
420de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** these result codes are too coarse-grained.  They do not provide as
421de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** much information about problems as programmers might like.  In an effort to
422de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** address this, newer versions of SQLite (version 3.3.8 and later) include
423de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** support for additional result codes that provide more detailed information
424de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** about errors. The extended result codes are enabled or disabled
425de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on a per database connection basis using the
426de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_extended_result_codes()] API.
427de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
428de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Some of the available extended result codes are listed here.
429de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** One may expect the number of extended result codes will be expand
430de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** over time.  Software that uses extended result codes should expect
431de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to see new result codes in future releases of SQLite.
432de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
433de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLITE_OK result code will never be extended.  It will always
434de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be exactly zero.
435de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
436de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_READ              (SQLITE_IOERR | (1<<8))
437de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHORT_READ        (SQLITE_IOERR | (2<<8))
438de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_WRITE             (SQLITE_IOERR | (3<<8))
439de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_FSYNC             (SQLITE_IOERR | (4<<8))
440de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_DIR_FSYNC         (SQLITE_IOERR | (5<<8))
441de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_TRUNCATE          (SQLITE_IOERR | (6<<8))
442de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_FSTAT             (SQLITE_IOERR | (7<<8))
443de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_UNLOCK            (SQLITE_IOERR | (8<<8))
444de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_RDLOCK            (SQLITE_IOERR | (9<<8))
445de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_DELETE            (SQLITE_IOERR | (10<<8))
446de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED           (SQLITE_IOERR | (11<<8))
447de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_NOMEM             (SQLITE_IOERR | (12<<8))
448de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_ACCESS            (SQLITE_IOERR | (13<<8))
449de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_CHECKRESERVEDLOCK (SQLITE_IOERR | (14<<8))
450de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_LOCK              (SQLITE_IOERR | (15<<8))
451de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_CLOSE             (SQLITE_IOERR | (16<<8))
452de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_DIR_CLOSE         (SQLITE_IOERR | (17<<8))
453de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMOPEN           (SQLITE_IOERR | (18<<8))
454de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMSIZE           (SQLITE_IOERR | (19<<8))
455de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMLOCK           (SQLITE_IOERR | (20<<8))
45690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_IOERR_SHMMAP            (SQLITE_IOERR | (21<<8))
45790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_IOERR_SEEK              (SQLITE_IOERR | (22<<8))
458de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LOCKED_SHAREDCACHE      (SQLITE_LOCKED |  (1<<8))
459de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_BUSY_RECOVERY           (SQLITE_BUSY   |  (1<<8))
460de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN_NOTEMPDIR      (SQLITE_CANTOPEN | (1<<8))
46190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CORRUPT_VTAB            (SQLITE_CORRUPT | (1<<8))
46290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_READONLY_RECOVERY       (SQLITE_READONLY | (1<<8))
46390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_READONLY_CANTLOCK       (SQLITE_READONLY | (2<<8))
464c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown#define SQLITE_ABORT_ROLLBACK          (SQLITE_ABORT | (2<<8))
465de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
466de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
467de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Flags For File Open Operations
468de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
469de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These bit values are intended for use in the
470de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** 3rd parameter to the [sqlite3_open_v2()] interface and
47190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** in the 4th parameter to the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] method.
472de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
473de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY         0x00000001  /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
474de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE        0x00000002  /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
475de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE           0x00000004  /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
476de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE    0x00000008  /* VFS only */
477de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE        0x00000010  /* VFS only */
478de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_AUTOPROXY        0x00000020  /* VFS only */
47990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_OPEN_URI              0x00000040  /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
480de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_DB          0x00000100  /* VFS only */
481de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_DB          0x00000200  /* VFS only */
482de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_TRANSIENT_DB     0x00000400  /* VFS only */
483de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_JOURNAL     0x00000800  /* VFS only */
484de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_JOURNAL     0x00001000  /* VFS only */
485de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_SUBJOURNAL       0x00002000  /* VFS only */
486de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_MASTER_JOURNAL   0x00004000  /* VFS only */
487de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_NOMUTEX          0x00008000  /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
488de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_FULLMUTEX        0x00010000  /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
489de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE      0x00020000  /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
490de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_PRIVATECACHE     0x00040000  /* Ok for sqlite3_open_v2() */
491de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_OPEN_WAL              0x00080000  /* VFS only */
492de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
49390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/* Reserved:                         0x00F00000 */
49490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
495de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
496de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Device Characteristics
497de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
498de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xDeviceCharacteristics method of the [sqlite3_io_methods]
499de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** object returns an integer which is a vector of the these
500de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** bit values expressing I/O characteristics of the mass storage
501de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** device that holds the file that the [sqlite3_io_methods]
502de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** refers to.
503de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
504de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC property means that all writes of
505de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** any size are atomic.  The SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMICnnn values
506de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mean that writes of blocks that are nnn bytes in size and
507de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are aligned to an address which is an integer multiple of
508de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** nnn are atomic.  The SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND value means
509de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that when data is appended to a file, the data is appended
510de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** first then the size of the file is extended, never the other
511de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** way around.  The SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL property means that
512de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** information is written to disk in the same order as calls
51390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to xWrite().  The SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE property means that
51490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** after reboot following a crash or power loss, the only bytes in a
51590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** file that were written at the application level might have changed
51690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** and that adjacent bytes, even bytes within the same sector are
51790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** guaranteed to be unchanged.
518de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
519de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC                 0x00000001
520de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC512              0x00000002
521de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC1K               0x00000004
522de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC2K               0x00000008
523de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC4K               0x00000010
524de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC8K               0x00000020
525de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC16K              0x00000040
526de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC32K              0x00000080
527de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC64K              0x00000100
528de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND            0x00000200
529de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL             0x00000400
530de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IOCAP_UNDELETABLE_WHEN_OPEN  0x00000800
53190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE    0x00001000
532de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
533de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
534de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: File Locking Levels
535de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
536de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite uses one of these integer values as the second
537de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument to calls it makes to the xLock() and xUnlock() methods
538de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of an [sqlite3_io_methods] object.
539de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
540de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LOCK_NONE          0
541de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LOCK_SHARED        1
542de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LOCK_RESERVED      2
543de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LOCK_PENDING       3
544de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE     4
545de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
546de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
547de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Synchronization Type Flags
548de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
549de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When SQLite invokes the xSync() method of an
550de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_io_methods] object it uses a combination of
551de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** these integer values as the second argument.
552de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
553de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When the SQLITE_SYNC_DATAONLY flag is used, it means that the
554de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sync operation only needs to flush data to mass storage.  Inode
555de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** information need not be flushed. If the lower four bits of the flag
556de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** equal SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL, that means to use normal fsync() semantics.
557de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the lower four bits equal SQLITE_SYNC_FULL, that means
558de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to use Mac OS X style fullsync instead of fsync().
55995c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
56095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** Do not confuse the SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL and SQLITE_SYNC_FULL flags
56195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** with the [PRAGMA synchronous]=NORMAL and [PRAGMA synchronous]=FULL
56295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** settings.  The [synchronous pragma] determines when calls to the
56395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** xSync VFS method occur and applies uniformly across all platforms.
56495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** The SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL and SQLITE_SYNC_FULL flags determine how
56595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** energetic or rigorous or forceful the sync operations are and
56695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** only make a difference on Mac OSX for the default SQLite code.
56795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** (Third-party VFS implementations might also make the distinction
56895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** between SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL and SQLITE_SYNC_FULL, but among the
56995c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** operating systems natively supported by SQLite, only Mac OSX
57095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** cares about the difference.)
571de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
572de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL        0x00002
573de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SYNC_FULL          0x00003
574de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SYNC_DATAONLY      0x00010
575de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
576de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
577de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: OS Interface Open File Handle
578de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
579de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** An [sqlite3_file] object represents an open file in the
580de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_vfs | OS interface layer].  Individual OS interface
581de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementations will
582de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** want to subclass this object by appending additional fields
583de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for their own use.  The pMethods entry is a pointer to an
584de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_io_methods] object that defines methods for performing
585de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** I/O operations on the open file.
586de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
587de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_file sqlite3_file;
588de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_file {
589de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const struct sqlite3_io_methods *pMethods;  /* Methods for an open file */
590de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
591de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
592de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
593de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: OS Interface File Virtual Methods Object
594de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
59590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Every file opened by the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] method populates an
596de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_file] object (or, more commonly, a subclass of the
597de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_file] object) with a pointer to an instance of this object.
598de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This object defines the methods used to perform various operations
599de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** against the open file represented by the [sqlite3_file] object.
600de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
60190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] method sets the sqlite3_file.pMethods element
602de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to a non-NULL pointer, then the sqlite3_io_methods.xClose method
60390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** may be invoked even if the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] reported that it failed.  The
60490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** only way to prevent a call to xClose following a failed [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen]
60590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is for the [sqlite3_vfs.xOpen] to set the sqlite3_file.pMethods element
60690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to NULL.
607de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
608de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The flags argument to xSync may be one of [SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL] or
609de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_SYNC_FULL].  The first choice is the normal fsync().
610de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The second choice is a Mac OS X style fullsync.  The [SQLITE_SYNC_DATAONLY]
611de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** flag may be ORed in to indicate that only the data of the file
612de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and not its inode needs to be synced.
613de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
614de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The integer values to xLock() and xUnlock() are one of
615de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
616de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_NONE],
617de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_SHARED],
618de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_RESERVED],
619de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_PENDING], or
620de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE].
621de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>
622de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xLock() increases the lock. xUnlock() decreases the lock.
623de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xCheckReservedLock() method checks whether any database connection,
624de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** either in this process or in some other process, is holding a RESERVED,
625de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** PENDING, or EXCLUSIVE lock on the file.  It returns true
626de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if such a lock exists and false otherwise.
627de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
628de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xFileControl() method is a generic interface that allows custom
629de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** VFS implementations to directly control an open file using the
630de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_file_control()] interface.  The second "op" argument is an
631de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** integer opcode.  The third argument is a generic pointer intended to
632de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** point to a structure that may contain arguments or space in which to
633de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** write return values.  Potential uses for xFileControl() might be
634de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** functions to enable blocking locks with timeouts, to change the
635de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** locking strategy (for example to use dot-file locks), to inquire
636de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** about the status of a lock, or to break stale locks.  The SQLite
637de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** core reserves all opcodes less than 100 for its own use.
638de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A [SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE | list of opcodes] less than 100 is available.
639de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Applications that define a custom xFileControl method should use opcodes
64090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** greater than 100 to avoid conflicts.  VFS implementations should
64190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** return [SQLITE_NOTFOUND] for file control opcodes that they do not
64290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** recognize.
643de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
644de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xSectorSize() method returns the sector size of the
645de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** device that underlies the file.  The sector size is the
646de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** minimum write that can be performed without disturbing
647de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** other bytes in the file.  The xDeviceCharacteristics()
648de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** method returns a bit vector describing behaviors of the
649de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** underlying device:
650de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
651de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
652de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC]
653de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC512]
654de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC1K]
655de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC2K]
656de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC4K]
657de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC8K]
658de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC16K]
659de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC32K]
660de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC64K]
661de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND]
662de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL]
663de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>
664de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
665de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMIC property means that all writes of
666de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** any size are atomic.  The SQLITE_IOCAP_ATOMICnnn values
667de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mean that writes of blocks that are nnn bytes in size and
668de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are aligned to an address which is an integer multiple of
669de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** nnn are atomic.  The SQLITE_IOCAP_SAFE_APPEND value means
670de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that when data is appended to a file, the data is appended
671de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** first then the size of the file is extended, never the other
672de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** way around.  The SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL property means that
673de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** information is written to disk in the same order as calls
674de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to xWrite().
675de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
676de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If xRead() returns SQLITE_IOERR_SHORT_READ it must also fill
677de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the unread portions of the buffer with zeros.  A VFS that
678de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** fails to zero-fill short reads might seem to work.  However,
679de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** failure to zero-fill short reads will eventually lead to
680de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database corruption.
681de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
682de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_io_methods sqlite3_io_methods;
683de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_io_methods {
684de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int iVersion;
685de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xClose)(sqlite3_file*);
686de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xRead)(sqlite3_file*, void*, int iAmt, sqlite3_int64 iOfst);
687de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xWrite)(sqlite3_file*, const void*, int iAmt, sqlite3_int64 iOfst);
688de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xTruncate)(sqlite3_file*, sqlite3_int64 size);
689de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xSync)(sqlite3_file*, int flags);
690de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xFileSize)(sqlite3_file*, sqlite3_int64 *pSize);
691de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xLock)(sqlite3_file*, int);
692de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xUnlock)(sqlite3_file*, int);
693de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xCheckReservedLock)(sqlite3_file*, int *pResOut);
694de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xFileControl)(sqlite3_file*, int op, void *pArg);
695de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xSectorSize)(sqlite3_file*);
696de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xDeviceCharacteristics)(sqlite3_file*);
697de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /* Methods above are valid for version 1 */
698de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xShmMap)(sqlite3_file*, int iPg, int pgsz, int, void volatile**);
699de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xShmLock)(sqlite3_file*, int offset, int n, int flags);
700de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xShmBarrier)(sqlite3_file*);
701de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xShmUnmap)(sqlite3_file*, int deleteFlag);
702de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /* Methods above are valid for version 2 */
703de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /* Additional methods may be added in future releases */
704de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
705de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
706de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
707de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Standard File Control Opcodes
708de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
709de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These integer constants are opcodes for the xFileControl method
710de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the [sqlite3_io_methods] object and for the [sqlite3_file_control()]
711de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface.
712de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
713de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE] opcode is used for debugging.  This
714de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** opcode causes the xFileControl method to write the current state of
715de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the lock (one of [SQLITE_LOCK_NONE], [SQLITE_LOCK_SHARED],
716de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_LOCK_RESERVED], [SQLITE_LOCK_PENDING], or [SQLITE_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE])
717de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** into an integer that the pArg argument points to. This capability
718de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is used during testing and only needs to be supported when SQLITE_TEST
719de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is defined.
720c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <ul>
721c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT]]
722de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT] opcode is used by SQLite to give the VFS
723de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** layer a hint of how large the database file will grow to be during the
724de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** current transaction.  This hint is not guaranteed to be accurate but it
725de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is often close.  The underlying VFS might choose to preallocate database
726de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** file space based on this hint in order to help writes to the database
727de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** file run faster.
728de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
729c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE]]
730de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE] opcode is used to request that the VFS
731de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** extends and truncates the database file in chunks of a size specified
732de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by the user. The fourth argument to [sqlite3_file_control()] should
733de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** point to an integer (type int) containing the new chunk-size to use
734de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for the nominated database. Allocating database file space in large
735de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** chunks (say 1MB at a time), may reduce file-system fragmentation and
736de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** improve performance on some systems.
73790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
738c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER]]
73990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The [SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER] opcode is used to obtain a pointer
74090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to the [sqlite3_file] object associated with a particular database
74190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** connection.  See the [sqlite3_file_control()] documentation for
74290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** additional information.
74390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
744c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED]]
74590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(The [SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED] opcode is generated internally by
74690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** SQLite and sent to all VFSes in place of a call to the xSync method
74790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** when the database connection has [PRAGMA synchronous] set to OFF.)^
74890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Some specialized VFSes need this signal in order to operate correctly
74990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** when [PRAGMA synchronous | PRAGMA synchronous=OFF] is set, but most
75090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** VFSes do not need this signal and should silently ignore this opcode.
75190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Applications should not call [sqlite3_file_control()] with this
75290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** opcode as doing so may disrupt the operation of the specialized VFSes
75390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** that do require it.
75490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
755c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY]]
75690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY] opcode is used to configure automatic
75790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** retry counts and intervals for certain disk I/O operations for the
75890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** windows [VFS] in order to provide robustness in the presence of
75990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** anti-virus programs.  By default, the windows VFS will retry file read,
76090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** file write, and file delete operations up to 10 times, with a delay
76190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** of 25 milliseconds before the first retry and with the delay increasing
76290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** by an additional 25 milliseconds with each subsequent retry.  This
76390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** opcode allows these two values (10 retries and 25 milliseconds of delay)
76490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to be adjusted.  The values are changed for all database connections
76590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** within the same process.  The argument is a pointer to an array of two
76690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** integers where the first integer i the new retry count and the second
76790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** integer is the delay.  If either integer is negative, then the setting
76890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is not changed but instead the prior value of that setting is written
76990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** into the array entry, allowing the current retry settings to be
77090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** interrogated.  The zDbName parameter is ignored.
77190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
772c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL]]
77390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL] opcode is used to set or query the
77490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** persistent [WAL | Write AHead Log] setting.  By default, the auxiliary
77590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** write ahead log and shared memory files used for transaction control
77690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** are automatically deleted when the latest connection to the database
77790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** closes.  Setting persistent WAL mode causes those files to persist after
77890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** close.  Persisting the files is useful when other processes that do not
77990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** have write permission on the directory containing the database file want
78090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to read the database file, as the WAL and shared memory files must exist
78190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** in order for the database to be readable.  The fourth parameter to
78290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_file_control()] for this opcode should be a pointer to an integer.
78390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** That integer is 0 to disable persistent WAL mode or 1 to enable persistent
78490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** WAL mode.  If the integer is -1, then it is overwritten with the current
78590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** WAL persistence setting.
78690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
787c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE]]
78890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE] opcode is used to set or query the
78990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** persistent "powersafe-overwrite" or "PSOW" setting.  The PSOW setting
79090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** determines the [SQLITE_IOCAP_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE] bit of the
79190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** xDeviceCharacteristics methods. The fourth parameter to
79290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_file_control()] for this opcode should be a pointer to an integer.
79390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** That integer is 0 to disable zero-damage mode or 1 to enable zero-damage
79490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** mode.  If the integer is -1, then it is overwritten with the current
79590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** zero-damage mode setting.
79690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
797c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE]]
79890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE] opcode is invoked by SQLite after opening
79990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a write transaction to indicate that, unless it is rolled back for some
80090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** reason, the entire database file will be overwritten by the current
80190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** transaction. This is used by VACUUM operations.
80290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
803c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME]]
80490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME] opcode can be used to obtain the names of
80590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** all [VFSes] in the VFS stack.  The names are of all VFS shims and the
80690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** final bottom-level VFS are written into memory obtained from
80790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_malloc()] and the result is stored in the char* variable
80890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** that the fourth parameter of [sqlite3_file_control()] points to.
80990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The caller is responsible for freeing the memory when done.  As with
81090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** all file-control actions, there is no guarantee that this will actually
81190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** do anything.  Callers should initialize the char* variable to a NULL
81290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** pointer in case this file-control is not implemented.  This file-control
81390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is intended for diagnostic use only.
814c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown**
815c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** <li>[[SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]]
816c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** ^Whenever a [PRAGMA] statement is parsed, an [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]
817c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** file control is sent to the open [sqlite3_file] object corresponding
818c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** to the database file to which the pragma statement refers. ^The argument
819c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** to the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control is an array of
820c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** pointers to strings (char**) in which the second element of the array
821c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** is the name of the pragma and the third element is the argument to the
822c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** pragma or NULL if the pragma has no argument.  ^The handler for an
823c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control can optionally make the first element
824c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** of the char** argument point to a string obtained from [sqlite3_mprintf()]
825c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** or the equivalent and that string will become the result of the pragma or
826c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** the error message if the pragma fails. ^If the
827c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control returns [SQLITE_NOTFOUND], then normal
828c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** [PRAGMA] processing continues.  ^If the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]
829c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** file control returns [SQLITE_OK], then the parser assumes that the
830c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** VFS has handled the PRAGMA itself and the parser generates a no-op
831c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** prepared statement.  ^If the [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA] file control returns
832c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** any result code other than [SQLITE_OK] or [SQLITE_NOTFOUND], that means
833c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** that the VFS encountered an error while handling the [PRAGMA] and the
834c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** compilation of the PRAGMA fails with an error.  ^The [SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA]
835c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** file control occurs at the beginning of pragma statement analysis and so
836c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** it is able to override built-in [PRAGMA] statements.
837c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** </ul>
83890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
83990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE               1
84090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_GET_LOCKPROXYFILE             2
84190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_SET_LOCKPROXYFILE             3
84290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_LAST_ERRNO                    4
84390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_HINT               5
84490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_CHUNK_SIZE              6
84590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER            7
84690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_SYNC_OMITTED            8
84790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_WIN32_AV_RETRY          9
84890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_PERSIST_WAL            10
84990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_OVERWRITE              11
85090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_VFSNAME                12
85190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_POWERSAFE_OVERWRITE    13
852c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown#define SQLITE_FCNTL_PRAGMA                 14
853de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
854de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
855de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Mutex Handle
856de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
857de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The mutex module within SQLite defines [sqlite3_mutex] to be an
858de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** abstract type for a mutex object.  The SQLite core never looks
859de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** at the internal representation of an [sqlite3_mutex].  It only
860de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** deals with pointers to the [sqlite3_mutex] object.
861de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
862de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Mutexes are created using [sqlite3_mutex_alloc()].
863de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
864de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_mutex sqlite3_mutex;
865de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
866de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
867de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: OS Interface Object
868de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
869de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** An instance of the sqlite3_vfs object defines the interface between
870de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the SQLite core and the underlying operating system.  The "vfs"
87190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** in the name of the object stands for "virtual file system".  See
87290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the [VFS | VFS documentation] for further information.
873de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
874de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The value of the iVersion field is initially 1 but may be larger in
875de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** future versions of SQLite.  Additional fields may be appended to this
876de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** object when the iVersion value is increased.  Note that the structure
877de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the sqlite3_vfs object changes in the transaction between
878de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite version 3.5.9 and 3.6.0 and yet the iVersion field was not
879de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** modified.
880de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
881de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The szOsFile field is the size of the subclassed [sqlite3_file]
882de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** structure used by this VFS.  mxPathname is the maximum length of
883de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a pathname in this VFS.
884de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
885de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Registered sqlite3_vfs objects are kept on a linked list formed by
886de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the pNext pointer.  The [sqlite3_vfs_register()]
887de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and [sqlite3_vfs_unregister()] interfaces manage this list
888de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in a thread-safe way.  The [sqlite3_vfs_find()] interface
889de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** searches the list.  Neither the application code nor the VFS
890de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation should use the pNext pointer.
891de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
892de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The pNext field is the only field in the sqlite3_vfs
893de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** structure that SQLite will ever modify.  SQLite will only access
894de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or modify this field while holding a particular static mutex.
895de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The application should never modify anything within the sqlite3_vfs
896de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** object once the object has been registered.
897de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
898de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The zName field holds the name of the VFS module.  The name must
899de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be unique across all VFS modules.
900de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
90190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[sqlite3_vfs.xOpen]]
902de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite guarantees that the zFilename parameter to xOpen
903de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is either a NULL pointer or string obtained
904de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from xFullPathname() with an optional suffix added.
905de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If a suffix is added to the zFilename parameter, it will
906de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** consist of a single "-" character followed by no more than
90790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** 11 alphanumeric and/or "-" characters.
908de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite further guarantees that
909de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the string will be valid and unchanged until xClose() is
910de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** called. Because of the previous sentence,
911de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [sqlite3_file] can safely store a pointer to the
912de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** filename if it needs to remember the filename for some reason.
913de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the zFilename parameter to xOpen is a NULL pointer then xOpen
914de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** must invent its own temporary name for the file.  ^Whenever the
915de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xFilename parameter is NULL it will also be the case that the
916de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** flags parameter will include [SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE].
917de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
918de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The flags argument to xOpen() includes all bits set in
919de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the flags argument to [sqlite3_open_v2()].  Or if [sqlite3_open()]
920de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [sqlite3_open16()] is used, then flags includes at least
921de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE] | [SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE].
922de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If xOpen() opens a file read-only then it sets *pOutFlags to
923de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** include [SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY].  Other bits in *pOutFlags may be set.
924de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
925de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(SQLite will also add one of the following flags to the xOpen()
926de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call, depending on the object being opened:
927de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
928de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
929de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  [SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_DB]
930de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  [SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_JOURNAL]
931de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  [SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_DB]
932de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  [SQLITE_OPEN_TEMP_JOURNAL]
933de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  [SQLITE_OPEN_TRANSIENT_DB]
934de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  [SQLITE_OPEN_SUBJOURNAL]
935de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  [SQLITE_OPEN_MASTER_JOURNAL]
936de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  [SQLITE_OPEN_WAL]
937de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>)^
938de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
939de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The file I/O implementation can use the object type flags to
940de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** change the way it deals with files.  For example, an application
941de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that does not care about crash recovery or rollback might make
942de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the open of a journal file a no-op.  Writes to this journal would
943de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** also be no-ops, and any attempt to read the journal would return
944de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_IOERR.  Or the implementation might recognize that a database
945de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** file will be doing page-aligned sector reads and writes in a random
946de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** order and set up its I/O subsystem accordingly.
947de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
948de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite might also add one of the following flags to the xOpen method:
949de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
950de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
951de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE]
952de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE]
953de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>
954de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
955de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE] flag means the file should be
956de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** deleted when it is closed.  ^The [SQLITE_OPEN_DELETEONCLOSE]
957de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will be set for TEMP databases and their journals, transient
958de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** databases, and subjournals.
959de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
960de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE] flag is always used in conjunction
961de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the [SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE] flag, which are both directly
962de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** analogous to the O_EXCL and O_CREAT flags of the POSIX open()
963de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** API.  The SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE flag, when paired with the
964de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE, is used to indicate that file should always
965de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be created, and that it is an error if it already exists.
966de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** It is <i>not</i> used to indicate the file should be opened
967de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for exclusive access.
968de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
969de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^At least szOsFile bytes of memory are allocated by SQLite
970de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to hold the  [sqlite3_file] structure passed as the third
971de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument to xOpen.  The xOpen method does not have to
972de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocate the structure; it should just fill it in.  Note that
973de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the xOpen method must set the sqlite3_file.pMethods to either
974de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a valid [sqlite3_io_methods] object or to NULL.  xOpen must do
975de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this even if the open fails.  SQLite expects that the sqlite3_file.pMethods
976de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** element will be valid after xOpen returns regardless of the success
977de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or failure of the xOpen call.
978de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
97990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[sqlite3_vfs.xAccess]]
980de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The flags argument to xAccess() may be [SQLITE_ACCESS_EXISTS]
981de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to test for the existence of a file, or [SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE] to
982de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** test whether a file is readable and writable, or [SQLITE_ACCESS_READ]
983de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to test whether a file is at least readable.   The file can be a
984de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** directory.
985de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
986de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite will always allocate at least mxPathname+1 bytes for the
987de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** output buffer xFullPathname.  The exact size of the output buffer
988de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is also passed as a parameter to both  methods. If the output buffer
989de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not large enough, [SQLITE_CANTOPEN] should be returned. Since this is
990de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** handled as a fatal error by SQLite, vfs implementations should endeavor
991de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to prevent this by setting mxPathname to a sufficiently large value.
992de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
993de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xRandomness(), xSleep(), xCurrentTime(), and xCurrentTimeInt64()
994de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces are not strictly a part of the filesystem, but they are
995de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** included in the VFS structure for completeness.
996de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xRandomness() function attempts to return nBytes bytes
997de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of good-quality randomness into zOut.  The return value is
998de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the actual number of bytes of randomness obtained.
999de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xSleep() method causes the calling thread to sleep for at
1000de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** least the number of microseconds given.  ^The xCurrentTime()
1001de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** method returns a Julian Day Number for the current date and time as
1002de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a floating point value.
1003de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The xCurrentTimeInt64() method returns, as an integer, the Julian
100490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Day Number multiplied by 86400000 (the number of milliseconds in
1005de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a 24-hour day).
1006de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite will use the xCurrentTimeInt64() method to get the current
1007de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** date and time if that method is available (if iVersion is 2 or
1008de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** greater and the function pointer is not NULL) and will fall back
1009de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to xCurrentTime() if xCurrentTimeInt64() is unavailable.
101090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
101190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The xSetSystemCall(), xGetSystemCall(), and xNestSystemCall() interfaces
101290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** are not used by the SQLite core.  These optional interfaces are provided
101390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** by some VFSes to facilitate testing of the VFS code. By overriding
101490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** system calls with functions under its control, a test program can
101590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** simulate faults and error conditions that would otherwise be difficult
101690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** or impossible to induce.  The set of system calls that can be overridden
101790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** varies from one VFS to another, and from one version of the same VFS to the
101890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** next.  Applications that use these interfaces must be prepared for any
101990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** or all of these interfaces to be NULL or for their behavior to change
102090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** from one release to the next.  Applications must not attempt to access
102190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** any of these methods if the iVersion of the VFS is less than 3.
1022de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1023de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_vfs sqlite3_vfs;
102490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Browntypedef void (*sqlite3_syscall_ptr)(void);
1025de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_vfs {
102690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int iVersion;            /* Structure version number (currently 3) */
1027de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int szOsFile;            /* Size of subclassed sqlite3_file */
1028de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int mxPathname;          /* Maximum file pathname length */
1029de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_vfs *pNext;      /* Next registered VFS */
1030de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zName;       /* Name of this virtual file system */
1031de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pAppData;          /* Pointer to application-specific data */
1032de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xOpen)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, sqlite3_file*,
1033de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori               int flags, int *pOutFlags);
1034de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xDelete)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, int syncDir);
1035de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xAccess)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, int flags, int *pResOut);
1036de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xFullPathname)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, int nOut, char *zOut);
1037de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *(*xDlOpen)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zFilename);
1038de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xDlError)(sqlite3_vfs*, int nByte, char *zErrMsg);
1039de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*(*xDlSym)(sqlite3_vfs*,void*, const char *zSymbol))(void);
1040de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xDlClose)(sqlite3_vfs*, void*);
1041de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xRandomness)(sqlite3_vfs*, int nByte, char *zOut);
1042de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xSleep)(sqlite3_vfs*, int microseconds);
1043de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xCurrentTime)(sqlite3_vfs*, double*);
1044de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xGetLastError)(sqlite3_vfs*, int, char *);
1045de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /*
1046de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  ** The methods above are in version 1 of the sqlite_vfs object
1047de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  ** definition.  Those that follow are added in version 2 or later
1048de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  */
1049de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xCurrentTimeInt64)(sqlite3_vfs*, sqlite3_int64*);
1050de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /*
1051de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  ** The methods above are in versions 1 and 2 of the sqlite_vfs object.
105290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  ** Those below are for version 3 and greater.
105390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  */
105490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int (*xSetSystemCall)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName, sqlite3_syscall_ptr);
105590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  sqlite3_syscall_ptr (*xGetSystemCall)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName);
105690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  const char *(*xNextSystemCall)(sqlite3_vfs*, const char *zName);
105790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  /*
105890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  ** The methods above are in versions 1 through 3 of the sqlite_vfs object.
1059de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  ** New fields may be appended in figure versions.  The iVersion
1060de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  ** value will increment whenever this happens.
1061de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  */
1062de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
1063de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1064de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1065de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Flags for the xAccess VFS method
1066de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1067de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These integer constants can be used as the third parameter to
1068de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the xAccess method of an [sqlite3_vfs] object.  They determine
1069de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** what kind of permissions the xAccess method is looking for.
1070de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** With SQLITE_ACCESS_EXISTS, the xAccess method
1071de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** simply checks whether the file exists.
1072de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** With SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE, the xAccess method
1073de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** checks whether the named directory is both readable and writable
1074de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (in other words, if files can be added, removed, and renamed within
1075de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the directory).
1076de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE constant is currently used only by the
1077de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [temp_store_directory pragma], though this could change in a future
1078de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** release of SQLite.
1079de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** With SQLITE_ACCESS_READ, the xAccess method
1080de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** checks whether the file is readable.  The SQLITE_ACCESS_READ constant is
1081de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** currently unused, though it might be used in a future release of
1082de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite.
1083de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1084de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ACCESS_EXISTS    0
1085de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE 1   /* Used by PRAGMA temp_store_directory */
1086de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ACCESS_READ      2   /* Unused */
1087de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1088de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1089de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Flags for the xShmLock VFS method
1090de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1091de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These integer constants define the various locking operations
1092de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allowed by the xShmLock method of [sqlite3_io_methods].  The
1093de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** following are the only legal combinations of flags to the
1094de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xShmLock method:
1095de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1096de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
1097de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_SHM_LOCK | SQLITE_SHM_SHARED
1098de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_SHM_LOCK | SQLITE_SHM_EXCLUSIVE
1099de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_SHM_UNLOCK | SQLITE_SHM_SHARED
1100de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_SHM_UNLOCK | SQLITE_SHM_EXCLUSIVE
1101de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>
1102de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1103de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When unlocking, the same SHARED or EXCLUSIVE flag must be supplied as
1104de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** was given no the corresponding lock.
1105de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1106de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xShmLock method can transition between unlocked and SHARED or
1107de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** between unlocked and EXCLUSIVE.  It cannot transition between SHARED
1108de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and EXCLUSIVE.
1109de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1110de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SHM_UNLOCK       1
1111de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SHM_LOCK         2
1112de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SHM_SHARED       4
1113de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SHM_EXCLUSIVE    8
1114de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1115de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1116de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Maximum xShmLock index
1117de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1118de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xShmLock method on [sqlite3_io_methods] may use values
1119de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** between 0 and this upper bound as its "offset" argument.
1120de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLite core will never attempt to acquire or release a
1121de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** lock outside of this range
1122de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1123de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SHM_NLOCK        8
1124de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1125de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1126de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1127de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Initialize The SQLite Library
1128de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1129de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_initialize() routine initializes the
1130de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite library.  ^The sqlite3_shutdown() routine
1131de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** deallocates any resources that were allocated by sqlite3_initialize().
1132de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines are designed to aid in process initialization and
1133de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** shutdown on embedded systems.  Workstation applications using
1134de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite normally do not need to invoke either of these routines.
1135de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1136de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A call to sqlite3_initialize() is an "effective" call if it is
1137de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the first time sqlite3_initialize() is invoked during the lifetime of
1138de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the process, or if it is the first time sqlite3_initialize() is invoked
1139de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** following a call to sqlite3_shutdown().  ^(Only an effective call
1140de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of sqlite3_initialize() does any initialization.  All other calls
1141de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are harmless no-ops.)^
1142de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1143de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A call to sqlite3_shutdown() is an "effective" call if it is the first
1144de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call to sqlite3_shutdown() since the last sqlite3_initialize().  ^(Only
1145de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an effective call to sqlite3_shutdown() does any deinitialization.
1146de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** All other valid calls to sqlite3_shutdown() are harmless no-ops.)^
1147de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1148de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_initialize() interface is threadsafe, but sqlite3_shutdown()
1149de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not.  The sqlite3_shutdown() interface must only be called from a
1150de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** single thread.  All open [database connections] must be closed and all
1151de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** other SQLite resources must be deallocated prior to invoking
1152de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_shutdown().
1153de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1154de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Among other things, ^sqlite3_initialize() will invoke
1155de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_os_init().  Similarly, ^sqlite3_shutdown()
1156de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will invoke sqlite3_os_end().
1157de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1158de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_initialize() routine returns [SQLITE_OK] on success.
1159de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If for some reason, sqlite3_initialize() is unable to initialize
1160de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the library (perhaps it is unable to allocate a needed resource such
1161de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as a mutex) it returns an [error code] other than [SQLITE_OK].
1162de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1163de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_initialize() routine is called internally by many other
1164de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite interfaces so that an application usually does not need to
1165de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invoke sqlite3_initialize() directly.  For example, [sqlite3_open()]
1166de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** calls sqlite3_initialize() so the SQLite library will be automatically
1167de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** initialized when [sqlite3_open()] is called if it has not be initialized
1168de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** already.  ^However, if SQLite is compiled with the [SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOINIT]
1169de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compile-time option, then the automatic calls to sqlite3_initialize()
1170de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are omitted and the application must call sqlite3_initialize() directly
1171de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prior to using any other SQLite interface.  For maximum portability,
1172de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it is recommended that applications always invoke sqlite3_initialize()
1173de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** directly prior to using any other SQLite interface.  Future releases
1174de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of SQLite may require this.  In other words, the behavior exhibited
1175de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when SQLite is compiled with [SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOINIT] might become the
1176de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** default behavior in some future release of SQLite.
1177de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1178de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_os_init() routine does operating-system specific
1179de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** initialization of the SQLite library.  The sqlite3_os_end()
1180de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine undoes the effect of sqlite3_os_init().  Typical tasks
1181de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** performed by these routines include allocation or deallocation
1182de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of static resources, initialization of global variables,
1183de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** setting up a default [sqlite3_vfs] module, or setting up
1184de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a default configuration using [sqlite3_config()].
1185de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1186de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The application should never invoke either sqlite3_os_init()
1187de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or sqlite3_os_end() directly.  The application should only invoke
1188de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_initialize() and sqlite3_shutdown().  The sqlite3_os_init()
1189de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface is called automatically by sqlite3_initialize() and
1190de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_os_end() is called by sqlite3_shutdown().  Appropriate
1191de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementations for sqlite3_os_init() and sqlite3_os_end()
1192de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are built into SQLite when it is compiled for Unix, Windows, or OS/2.
1193de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When [custom builds | built for other platforms]
1194de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (using the [SQLITE_OS_OTHER=1] compile-time
1195de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** option) the application must supply a suitable implementation for
1196de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_os_init() and sqlite3_os_end().  An application-supplied
1197de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation of sqlite3_os_init() or sqlite3_os_end()
1198de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** must return [SQLITE_OK] on success and some other [error code] upon
1199de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** failure.
1200de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1201de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_initialize(void);
1202de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_shutdown(void);
1203de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_os_init(void);
1204de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_os_end(void);
1205de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1206de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1207de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Configuring The SQLite Library
1208de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1209de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_config() interface is used to make global configuration
1210de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** changes to SQLite in order to tune SQLite to the specific needs of
1211de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the application.  The default configuration is recommended for most
1212de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** applications and so this routine is usually not necessary.  It is
1213de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** provided to support rare applications with unusual needs.
1214de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1215de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_config() interface is not threadsafe.  The application
1216de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** must insure that no other SQLite interfaces are invoked by other
1217de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** threads while sqlite3_config() is running.  Furthermore, sqlite3_config()
1218de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** may only be invoked prior to library initialization using
1219de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_initialize()] or after shutdown by [sqlite3_shutdown()].
1220de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If sqlite3_config() is called after [sqlite3_initialize()] and before
1221de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_shutdown()] then it will return SQLITE_MISUSE.
1222de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Note, however, that ^sqlite3_config() can be called as part of the
1223de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation of an application-defined [sqlite3_os_init()].
1224de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1225de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The first argument to sqlite3_config() is an integer
122690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [configuration option] that determines
1227de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** what property of SQLite is to be configured.  Subsequent arguments
122890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** vary depending on the [configuration option]
1229de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the first argument.
1230de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1231de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^When a configuration option is set, sqlite3_config() returns [SQLITE_OK].
1232de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the option is unknown or SQLite is unable to set the option
1233de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then this routine returns a non-zero [error code].
1234de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1235de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_config(int, ...);
1236de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1237de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1238de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Configure database connections
1239de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1240de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_db_config() interface is used to make configuration
1241de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** changes to a [database connection].  The interface is similar to
1242de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_config()] except that the changes apply to a single
124390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [database connection] (specified in the first argument).
1244de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1245de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The second argument to sqlite3_db_config(D,V,...)  is the
124690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE | configuration verb] - an integer code
124790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** that indicates what aspect of the [database connection] is being configured.
124890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Subsequent arguments vary depending on the configuration verb.
1249de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1250de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calls to sqlite3_db_config() return SQLITE_OK if and only if
1251de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the call is considered successful.
1252de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1253de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_config(sqlite3*, int op, ...);
1254de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1255de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1256de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Memory Allocation Routines
1257de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1258de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** An instance of this object defines the interface between SQLite
1259de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and low-level memory allocation routines.
1260de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1261de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This object is used in only one place in the SQLite interface.
1262de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A pointer to an instance of this object is the argument to
1263de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_config()] when the configuration option is
1264de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC] or [SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC].
1265de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** By creating an instance of this object
1266de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and passing it to [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC])
1267de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** during configuration, an application can specify an alternative
1268de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory allocation subsystem for SQLite to use for all of its
1269de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** dynamic memory needs.
1270de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1271de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Note that SQLite comes with several [built-in memory allocators]
1272de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that are perfectly adequate for the overwhelming majority of applications
1273de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and that this object is only useful to a tiny minority of applications
1274de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with specialized memory allocation requirements.  This object is
1275de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** also used during testing of SQLite in order to specify an alternative
1276de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory allocator that simulates memory out-of-memory conditions in
1277de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** order to verify that SQLite recovers gracefully from such
1278de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** conditions.
1279de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
128090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The xMalloc, xRealloc, and xFree methods must work like the
128190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** malloc(), realloc() and free() functions from the standard C library.
128290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^SQLite guarantees that the second argument to
1283de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xRealloc is always a value returned by a prior call to xRoundup.
1284de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1285de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xSize should return the allocated size of a memory allocation
1286de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** previously obtained from xMalloc or xRealloc.  The allocated size
1287de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is always at least as big as the requested size but may be larger.
1288de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1289de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xRoundup method returns what would be the allocated size of
1290de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a memory allocation given a particular requested size.  Most memory
1291de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocators round up memory allocations at least to the next multiple
1292de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of 8.  Some allocators round up to a larger multiple or to a power of 2.
1293de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Every memory allocation request coming in through [sqlite3_malloc()]
1294de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [sqlite3_realloc()] first calls xRoundup.  If xRoundup returns 0,
1295de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that causes the corresponding memory allocation to fail.
1296de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1297de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xInit method initializes the memory allocator.  (For example,
1298de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it might allocate any require mutexes or initialize internal data
1299de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** structures.  The xShutdown method is invoked (indirectly) by
1300de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_shutdown()] and should deallocate any resources acquired
1301de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by xInit.  The pAppData pointer is used as the only parameter to
1302de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xInit and xShutdown.
1303de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1304de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite holds the [SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MASTER] mutex when it invokes
1305de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the xInit method, so the xInit method need not be threadsafe.  The
1306de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xShutdown method is only called from [sqlite3_shutdown()] so it does
1307de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not need to be threadsafe either.  For all other methods, SQLite
1308de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** holds the [SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MEM] mutex as long as the
1309de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS] configuration option is turned on (which
1310de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it is by default) and so the methods are automatically serialized.
1311de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** However, if [SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS] is disabled, then the other
1312de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** methods must be threadsafe or else make their own arrangements for
1313de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** serialization.
1314de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1315de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite will never invoke xInit() more than once without an intervening
1316de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call to xShutdown().
1317de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1318de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_mem_methods sqlite3_mem_methods;
1319de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_mem_methods {
1320de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *(*xMalloc)(int);         /* Memory allocation function */
1321de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xFree)(void*);          /* Free a prior allocation */
1322de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *(*xRealloc)(void*,int);  /* Resize an allocation */
1323de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xSize)(void*);           /* Return the size of an allocation */
1324de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xRoundup)(int);          /* Round up request size to allocation size */
1325de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xInit)(void*);           /* Initialize the memory allocator */
1326de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xShutdown)(void*);      /* Deinitialize the memory allocator */
1327de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pAppData;                /* Argument to xInit() and xShutdown() */
1328de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
1329de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1330de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1331de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Configuration Options
133290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** KEYWORDS: {configuration option}
1333de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1334de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These constants are the available integer configuration options that
1335de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be passed as the first argument to the [sqlite3_config()] interface.
1336de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1337de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** New configuration options may be added in future releases of SQLite.
1338de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Existing configuration options might be discontinued.  Applications
1339de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** should check the return code from [sqlite3_config()] to make sure that
1340de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the call worked.  The [sqlite3_config()] interface will return a
1341de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** non-zero [error code] if a discontinued or unsupported configuration option
1342de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is invoked.
1343de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1344de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dl>
134590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD</dt>
1346de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>There are no arguments to this option.  ^This option sets the
1347de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [threading mode] to Single-thread.  In other words, it disables
1348de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** all mutexing and puts SQLite into a mode where it can only be used
1349de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by a single thread.   ^If SQLite is compiled with
1350de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
1351de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it is not possible to change the [threading mode] from its default
1352de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value of Single-thread and so [sqlite3_config()] will return
1353de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_ERROR] if called with the SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD
1354de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** configuration option.</dd>
1355de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
135690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD</dt>
1357de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>There are no arguments to this option.  ^This option sets the
1358de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [threading mode] to Multi-thread.  In other words, it disables
1359de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mutexing on [database connection] and [prepared statement] objects.
1360de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The application is responsible for serializing access to
1361de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connections] and [prepared statements].  But other mutexes
1362de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are enabled so that SQLite will be safe to use in a multi-threaded
1363de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** environment as long as no two threads attempt to use the same
1364de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection] at the same time.  ^If SQLite is compiled with
1365de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
1366de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it is not possible to set the Multi-thread [threading mode] and
1367de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_config()] will return [SQLITE_ERROR] if called with the
1368de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD configuration option.</dd>
1369de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
137090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED</dt>
1371de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>There are no arguments to this option.  ^This option sets the
1372de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [threading mode] to Serialized. In other words, this option enables
1373de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** all mutexes including the recursive
1374de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mutexes on [database connection] and [prepared statement] objects.
1375de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In this mode (which is the default when SQLite is compiled with
1376de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_THREADSAFE=1]) the SQLite library will itself serialize access
1377de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to [database connections] and [prepared statements] so that the
1378de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** application is free to use the same [database connection] or the
1379de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** same [prepared statement] in different threads at the same time.
1380de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If SQLite is compiled with
1381de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
1382de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it is not possible to set the Serialized [threading mode] and
1383de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_config()] will return [SQLITE_ERROR] if called with the
1384de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED configuration option.</dd>
1385de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
138690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC</dt>
1387de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to an
1388de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** instance of the [sqlite3_mem_methods] structure.  The argument specifies
1389de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** alternative low-level memory allocation routines to be used in place of
1390de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the memory allocation routines built into SQLite.)^ ^SQLite makes
1391de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** its own private copy of the content of the [sqlite3_mem_methods] structure
1392de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** before the [sqlite3_config()] call returns.</dd>
1393de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
139490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC</dt>
1395de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to an
1396de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** instance of the [sqlite3_mem_methods] structure.  The [sqlite3_mem_methods]
1397de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** structure is filled with the currently defined memory allocation routines.)^
1398de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This option can be used to overload the default memory allocation
1399de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routines with a wrapper that simulations memory allocation failure or
1400de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** tracks memory usage, for example. </dd>
1401de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
140290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS</dt>
1403de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^This option takes single argument of type int, interpreted as a
1404de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** boolean, which enables or disables the collection of memory allocation
1405de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** statistics. ^(When memory allocation statistics are disabled, the
1406de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** following SQLite interfaces become non-operational:
1407de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <ul>
1408de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li> [sqlite3_memory_used()]
1409de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li> [sqlite3_memory_highwater()]
1410de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li> [sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64()]
1411de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li> [sqlite3_status()]
1412de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   </ul>)^
1413de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Memory allocation statistics are enabled by default unless SQLite is
1414de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compiled with [SQLITE_DEFAULT_MEMSTATUS]=0 in which case memory
1415de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocation statistics are disabled by default.
1416de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dd>
1417de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
141890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH</dt>
1419de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^This option specifies a static memory buffer that SQLite can use for
1420de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** scratch memory.  There are three arguments:  A pointer an 8-byte
142190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** aligned memory buffer from which the scratch allocations will be
1422de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** drawn, the size of each scratch allocation (sz),
1423de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the maximum number of scratch allocations (N).  The sz
1424de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument must be a multiple of 16.
1425de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The first argument must be a pointer to an 8-byte aligned buffer
1426de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of at least sz*N bytes of memory.
1427de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite will use no more than two scratch buffers per thread.  So
1428de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** N should be set to twice the expected maximum number of threads.
1429de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite will never require a scratch buffer that is more than 6
1430de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** times the database page size. ^If SQLite needs needs additional
1431de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** scratch memory beyond what is provided by this configuration option, then
1432de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_malloc()] will be used to obtain the memory needed.</dd>
1433de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
143490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE</dt>
1435de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^This option specifies a static memory buffer that SQLite can use for
143690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the database page cache with the default page cache implementation.
1437de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This configuration should not be used if an application-define page
143890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** cache implementation is loaded using the SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2 option.
1439de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** There are three arguments to this option: A pointer to 8-byte aligned
1440de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory, the size of each page buffer (sz), and the number of pages (N).
1441de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sz argument should be the size of the largest database page
1442de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (a power of two between 512 and 32768) plus a little extra for each
1443de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** page header.  ^The page header size is 20 to 40 bytes depending on
1444de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the host architecture.  ^It is harmless, apart from the wasted memory,
1445de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to make sz a little too large.  The first
1446de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument should point to an allocation of at least sz*N bytes of memory.
1447de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite will use the memory provided by the first argument to satisfy its
1448de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory needs for the first N pages that it adds to cache.  ^If additional
1449de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** page cache memory is needed beyond what is provided by this option, then
1450de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite goes to [sqlite3_malloc()] for the additional storage space.
1451de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The pointer in the first argument must
1452de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be aligned to an 8-byte boundary or subsequent behavior of SQLite
1453de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will be undefined.</dd>
1454de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
145590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP</dt>
1456de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^This option specifies a static memory buffer that SQLite will use
1457de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for all of its dynamic memory allocation needs beyond those provided
1458de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for by [SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH] and [SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE].
1459de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** There are three arguments: An 8-byte aligned pointer to the memory,
1460de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the number of bytes in the memory buffer, and the minimum allocation size.
1461de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the first pointer (the memory pointer) is NULL, then SQLite reverts
1462de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to using its default memory allocator (the system malloc() implementation),
1463de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** undoing any prior invocation of [SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC].  ^If the
1464de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory pointer is not NULL and either [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMSYS3] or
1465de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMSYS5] are defined, then the alternative memory
1466de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocator is engaged to handle all of SQLites memory allocation needs.
1467de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The first pointer (the memory pointer) must be aligned to an 8-byte
146890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** boundary or subsequent behavior of SQLite will be undefined.
146990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The minimum allocation size is capped at 2**12. Reasonable values
147090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** for the minimum allocation size are 2**5 through 2**8.</dd>
1471de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
147290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX</dt>
1473de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to an
1474de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** instance of the [sqlite3_mutex_methods] structure.  The argument specifies
1475de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** alternative low-level mutex routines to be used in place
1476de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the mutex routines built into SQLite.)^  ^SQLite makes a copy of the
1477de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** content of the [sqlite3_mutex_methods] structure before the call to
1478de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_config()] returns. ^If SQLite is compiled with
1479de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
1480de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the entire mutexing subsystem is omitted from the build and hence calls to
1481de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_config()] with the SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX configuration option will
1482de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** return [SQLITE_ERROR].</dd>
1483de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
148490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX</dt>
1485de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to an
1486de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** instance of the [sqlite3_mutex_methods] structure.  The
1487de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_mutex_methods]
1488de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** structure is filled with the currently defined mutex routines.)^
1489de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This option can be used to overload the default mutex allocation
1490de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routines with a wrapper used to track mutex usage for performance
1491de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** profiling or testing, for example.   ^If SQLite is compiled with
1492de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [SQLITE_THREADSAFE | SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] compile-time option then
1493de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the entire mutexing subsystem is omitted from the build and hence calls to
1494de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_config()] with the SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX configuration option will
1495de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** return [SQLITE_ERROR].</dd>
1496de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
149790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE</dt>
1498de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^(This option takes two arguments that determine the default
1499de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory allocation for the lookaside memory allocator on each
1500de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection].  The first argument is the
1501de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** size of each lookaside buffer slot and the second is the number of
1502de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** slots allocated to each database connection.)^  ^(This option sets the
1503de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <i>default</i> lookaside size. The [SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE]
1504de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** verb to [sqlite3_db_config()] can be used to change the lookaside
1505de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** configuration on individual connections.)^ </dd>
1506de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
150790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2</dt>
1508de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to
150990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** an [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] object.  This object specifies the interface
1510de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to a custom page cache implementation.)^  ^SQLite makes a copy of the
1511de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** object and uses it for page cache memory allocations.</dd>
1512de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
151390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2</dt>
1514de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^(This option takes a single argument which is a pointer to an
151590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] object.  SQLite copies of the current
1516de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** page cache implementation into that object.)^ </dd>
1517de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
151890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG</dt>
1519de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG option takes two arguments: a pointer to a
1520de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function with a call signature of void(*)(void*,int,const char*),
1521de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and a pointer to void. ^If the function pointer is not NULL, it is
1522de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invoked by [sqlite3_log()] to process each logging event.  ^If the
1523de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function pointer is NULL, the [sqlite3_log()] interface becomes a no-op.
1524de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The void pointer that is the second argument to SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG is
1525de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** passed through as the first parameter to the application-defined logger
1526de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function whenever that function is invoked.  ^The second parameter to
1527de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the logger function is a copy of the first parameter to the corresponding
1528de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_log()] call and is intended to be a [result code] or an
1529de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [extended result code].  ^The third parameter passed to the logger is
1530de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** log message after formatting via [sqlite3_snprintf()].
1531de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLite logging interface is not reentrant; the logger function
1532de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** supplied by the application must not invoke any SQLite interface.
1533de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In a multi-threaded application, the application-defined logger
1534de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function must be threadsafe. </dd>
1535de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
153690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_URI]] <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_URI
153790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd> This option takes a single argument of type int. If non-zero, then
153890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** URI handling is globally enabled. If the parameter is zero, then URI handling
153990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is globally disabled. If URI handling is globally enabled, all filenames
154090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** passed to [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open_v2()], [sqlite3_open16()] or
154190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** specified as part of [ATTACH] commands are interpreted as URIs, regardless
154290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** of whether or not the [SQLITE_OPEN_URI] flag is set when the database
154390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** connection is opened. If it is globally disabled, filenames are
154490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** only interpreted as URIs if the SQLITE_OPEN_URI flag is set when the
154590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** database connection is opened. By default, URI handling is globally
154690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** disabled. The default value may be changed by compiling with the
154790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_USE_URI] symbol defined.
154890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
154990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE]] [[SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE]]
155090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dt>SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE and SQLITE_CONFNIG_GETPCACHE
155190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd> These options are obsolete and should not be used by new code.
155290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** They are retained for backwards compatibility but are now no-ops.
1553de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dl>
1554de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1555de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD  1  /* nil */
1556de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD   2  /* nil */
1557de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED    3  /* nil */
1558de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC        4  /* sqlite3_mem_methods* */
1559de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC     5  /* sqlite3_mem_methods* */
1560de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH       6  /* void*, int sz, int N */
1561de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE     7  /* void*, int sz, int N */
1562de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP          8  /* void*, int nByte, int min */
1563de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS     9  /* boolean */
1564de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX        10  /* sqlite3_mutex_methods* */
1565de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX     11  /* sqlite3_mutex_methods* */
1566de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/* previously SQLITE_CONFIG_CHUNKALLOC 12 which is now unused. */
1567de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE    13  /* int int */
156890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE       14  /* no-op */
156990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE    15  /* no-op */
1570de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG          16  /* xFunc, void* */
157190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CONFIG_URI          17  /* int */
157290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2      18  /* sqlite3_pcache_methods2* */
157390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2   19  /* sqlite3_pcache_methods2* */
1574de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1575de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1576de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Database Connection Configuration Options
1577de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1578de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These constants are the available integer configuration options that
1579de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be passed as the second argument to the [sqlite3_db_config()] interface.
1580de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1581de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** New configuration options may be added in future releases of SQLite.
1582de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Existing configuration options might be discontinued.  Applications
1583de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** should check the return code from [sqlite3_db_config()] to make sure that
1584de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the call worked.  ^The [sqlite3_db_config()] interface will return a
1585de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** non-zero [error code] if a discontinued or unsupported configuration option
1586de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is invoked.
1587de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1588de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dl>
1589de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE</dt>
1590de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd> ^This option takes three additional arguments that determine the
1591de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [lookaside memory allocator] configuration for the [database connection].
1592de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first argument (the third parameter to [sqlite3_db_config()] is a
159390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** pointer to a memory buffer to use for lookaside memory.
1594de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first argument after the SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE verb
1595de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** may be NULL in which case SQLite will allocate the
1596de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** lookaside buffer itself using [sqlite3_malloc()]. ^The second argument is the
1597de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** size of each lookaside buffer slot.  ^The third argument is the number of
1598de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** slots.  The size of the buffer in the first argument must be greater than
1599de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or equal to the product of the second and third arguments.  The buffer
1600de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** must be aligned to an 8-byte boundary.  ^If the second argument to
1601de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE is not a multiple of 8, it is internally
1602de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** rounded down to the next smaller multiple of 8.  ^(The lookaside memory
1603de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** configuration for a database connection can only be changed when that
1604de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connection is not currently using lookaside memory, or in other words
1605de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when the "current value" returned by
1606de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_db_status](D,[SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE],...) is zero.
1607de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Any attempt to change the lookaside memory configuration when lookaside
1608de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory is in use leaves the configuration unchanged and returns
1609de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_BUSY].)^</dd>
1610de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
161190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_FKEY</dt>
161290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd> ^This option is used to enable or disable the enforcement of
161390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [foreign key constraints].  There should be two additional arguments.
161490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The first argument is an integer which is 0 to disable FK enforcement,
161590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** positive to enable FK enforcement or negative to leave FK enforcement
161690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** unchanged.  The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which
161790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether FK enforcement is off or on
161890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** following this call.  The second parameter may be a NULL pointer, in
161990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** which case the FK enforcement setting is not reported back. </dd>
162090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
162190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dt>SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_TRIGGER</dt>
162290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd> ^This option is used to enable or disable [CREATE TRIGGER | triggers].
162390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** There should be two additional arguments.
162490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The first argument is an integer which is 0 to disable triggers,
162590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** positive to enable triggers or negative to leave the setting unchanged.
162690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The second parameter is a pointer to an integer into which
162790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is written 0 or 1 to indicate whether triggers are disabled or enabled
162890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** following this call.  The second parameter may be a NULL pointer, in
162990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** which case the trigger setting is not reported back. </dd>
163090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
1631de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dl>
1632de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
163390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE       1001  /* void* int int */
163490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_FKEY     1002  /* int int* */
163590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBCONFIG_ENABLE_TRIGGER  1003  /* int int* */
1636de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1637de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1638de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1639de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Enable Or Disable Extended Result Codes
1640de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1641de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_extended_result_codes() routine enables or disables the
1642de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [extended result codes] feature of SQLite. ^The extended result
1643de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** codes are disabled by default for historical compatibility.
1644de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1645de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_extended_result_codes(sqlite3*, int onoff);
1646de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1647de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1648de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Last Insert Rowid
1649de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1650de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Each entry in an SQLite table has a unique 64-bit signed
1651de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** integer key called the [ROWID | "rowid"]. ^The rowid is always available
1652de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as an undeclared column named ROWID, OID, or _ROWID_ as long as those
1653de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** names are not also used by explicitly declared columns. ^If
1654de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the table has a column of type [INTEGER PRIMARY KEY] then that column
1655de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is another alias for the rowid.
1656de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1657de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This routine returns the [rowid] of the most recent
1658de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** successful [INSERT] into the database from the [database connection]
165990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** in the first argument.  ^As of SQLite version 3.7.7, this routines
166090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** records the last insert rowid of both ordinary tables and [virtual tables].
166190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^If no successful [INSERT]s
1662de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** have ever occurred on that database connection, zero is returned.
1663de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
166490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(If an [INSERT] occurs within a trigger or within a [virtual table]
166590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** method, then this routine will return the [rowid] of the inserted
166690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** row as long as the trigger or virtual table method is running.
166790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** But once the trigger or virtual table method ends, the value returned
166890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** by this routine reverts to what it was before the trigger or virtual
166990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** table method began.)^
1670de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1671de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^An [INSERT] that fails due to a constraint violation is not a
1672de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** successful [INSERT] and does not change the value returned by this
1673de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine.  ^Thus INSERT OR FAIL, INSERT OR IGNORE, INSERT OR ROLLBACK,
1674de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and INSERT OR ABORT make no changes to the return value of this
1675de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine when their insertion fails.  ^(When INSERT OR REPLACE
1676de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** encounters a constraint violation, it does not fail.  The
1677de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** INSERT continues to completion after deleting rows that caused
1678de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the constraint problem so INSERT OR REPLACE will always change
1679de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the return value of this interface.)^
1680de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1681de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^For the purposes of this routine, an [INSERT] is considered to
1682de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be successful even if it is subsequently rolled back.
1683de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1684de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This function is accessible to SQL statements via the
1685de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [last_insert_rowid() SQL function].
1686de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1687de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If a separate thread performs a new [INSERT] on the same
1688de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database connection while the [sqlite3_last_insert_rowid()]
1689de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function is running and thus changes the last insert [rowid],
1690de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the value returned by [sqlite3_last_insert_rowid()] is
1691de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** unpredictable and might not equal either the old or the new
1692de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** last insert [rowid].
1693de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1694de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_last_insert_rowid(sqlite3*);
1695de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1696de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1697de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Count The Number Of Rows Modified
1698de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1699de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This function returns the number of database rows that were changed
1700de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or inserted or deleted by the most recently completed SQL statement
1701de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on the [database connection] specified by the first parameter.
1702de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Only changes that are directly specified by the [INSERT], [UPDATE],
1703de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [DELETE] statement are counted.  Auxiliary changes caused by
1704de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** triggers or [foreign key actions] are not counted.)^ Use the
1705de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_total_changes()] function to find the total number of changes
1706de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** including changes caused by triggers and foreign key actions.
1707de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1708de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Changes to a view that are simulated by an [INSTEAD OF trigger]
1709de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are not counted.  Only real table changes are counted.
1710de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1711de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(A "row change" is a change to a single row of a single table
1712de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** caused by an INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE statement.  Rows that
1713de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are changed as side effects of [REPLACE] constraint resolution,
1714de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** rollback, ABORT processing, [DROP TABLE], or by any other
1715de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mechanisms do not count as direct row changes.)^
1716de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1717de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A "trigger context" is a scope of execution that begins and
1718de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ends with the script of a [CREATE TRIGGER | trigger].
1719de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Most SQL statements are
1720de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** evaluated outside of any trigger.  This is the "top level"
1721de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** trigger context.  If a trigger fires from the top level, a
1722de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** new trigger context is entered for the duration of that one
1723de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** trigger.  Subtriggers create subcontexts for their duration.
1724de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1725de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calling [sqlite3_exec()] or [sqlite3_step()] recursively does
1726de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not create a new trigger context.
1727de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1728de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This function returns the number of direct row changes in the
1729de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** most recent INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement within the same
1730de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** trigger context.
1731de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1732de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Thus, when called from the top level, this function returns the
1733de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** number of changes in the most recent INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE
1734de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that also occurred at the top level.  ^(Within the body of a trigger,
1735de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the sqlite3_changes() interface can be called to find the number of
1736de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** changes in the most recently completed INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE
1737de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** statement within the body of the same trigger.
1738de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** However, the number returned does not include changes
1739de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** caused by subtriggers since those have their own context.)^
1740de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1741de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also the [sqlite3_total_changes()] interface, the
1742de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [count_changes pragma], and the [changes() SQL function].
1743de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1744de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If a separate thread makes changes on the same database connection
1745de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** while [sqlite3_changes()] is running then the value returned
1746de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is unpredictable and not meaningful.
1747de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1748de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_changes(sqlite3*);
1749de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1750de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1751de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Total Number Of Rows Modified
1752de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1753de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This function returns the number of row changes caused by [INSERT],
1754de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [UPDATE] or [DELETE] statements since the [database connection] was opened.
1755de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The count returned by sqlite3_total_changes() includes all changes
1756de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from all [CREATE TRIGGER | trigger] contexts and changes made by
1757de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [foreign key actions]. However,
1758de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the count does not include changes used to implement [REPLACE] constraints,
1759de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** do rollbacks or ABORT processing, or [DROP TABLE] processing.  The
1760de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** count does not include rows of views that fire an [INSTEAD OF trigger],
1761de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** though if the INSTEAD OF trigger makes changes of its own, those changes
1762de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are counted.)^
1763de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_total_changes() function counts the changes as soon as
1764de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the statement that makes them is completed (when the statement handle
1765de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is passed to [sqlite3_reset()] or [sqlite3_finalize()]).
1766de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1767de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also the [sqlite3_changes()] interface, the
1768de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [count_changes pragma], and the [total_changes() SQL function].
1769de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1770de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If a separate thread makes changes on the same database connection
1771de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** while [sqlite3_total_changes()] is running then the value
1772de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned is unpredictable and not meaningful.
1773de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1774de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_total_changes(sqlite3*);
1775de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1776de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1777de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Interrupt A Long-Running Query
1778de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1779de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This function causes any pending database operation to abort and
1780de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** return at its earliest opportunity. This routine is typically
1781de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** called in response to a user action such as pressing "Cancel"
1782de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or Ctrl-C where the user wants a long query operation to halt
1783de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** immediately.
1784de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1785de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^It is safe to call this routine from a thread different from the
1786de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** thread that is currently running the database operation.  But it
1787de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not safe to call this routine with a [database connection] that
1788de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is closed or might close before sqlite3_interrupt() returns.
1789de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1790de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If an SQL operation is very nearly finished at the time when
1791de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_interrupt() is called, then it might not have an opportunity
1792de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be interrupted and might continue to completion.
1793de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1794de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^An SQL operation that is interrupted will return [SQLITE_INTERRUPT].
1795de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the interrupted SQL operation is an INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE
1796de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that is inside an explicit transaction, then the entire transaction
1797de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will be rolled back automatically.
1798de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1799de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_interrupt(D) call is in effect until all currently running
1800de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL statements on [database connection] D complete.  ^Any new SQL statements
1801de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that are started after the sqlite3_interrupt() call and before the
1802de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** running statements reaches zero are interrupted as if they had been
1803de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** running prior to the sqlite3_interrupt() call.  ^New SQL statements
1804de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that are started after the running statement count reaches zero are
1805de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not effected by the sqlite3_interrupt().
1806de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A call to sqlite3_interrupt(D) that occurs when there are no running
1807de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL statements is a no-op and has no effect on SQL statements
1808de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that are started after the sqlite3_interrupt() call returns.
1809de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1810de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the database connection closes while [sqlite3_interrupt()]
1811de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is running then bad things will likely happen.
1812de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1813de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_interrupt(sqlite3*);
1814de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1815de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1816de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Determine If An SQL Statement Is Complete
1817de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1818de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines are useful during command-line input to determine if the
1819de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** currently entered text seems to form a complete SQL statement or
1820de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if additional input is needed before sending the text into
1821de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite for parsing.  ^These routines return 1 if the input string
1822de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** appears to be a complete SQL statement.  ^A statement is judged to be
1823de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** complete if it ends with a semicolon token and is not a prefix of a
1824de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** well-formed CREATE TRIGGER statement.  ^Semicolons that are embedded within
1825de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** string literals or quoted identifier names or comments are not
1826de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** independent tokens (they are part of the token in which they are
1827de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** embedded) and thus do not count as a statement terminator.  ^Whitespace
1828de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and comments that follow the final semicolon are ignored.
1829de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1830de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These routines return 0 if the statement is incomplete.  ^If a
1831de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory allocation fails, then SQLITE_NOMEM is returned.
1832de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1833de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These routines do not parse the SQL statements thus
1834de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will not detect syntactically incorrect SQL.
1835de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1836de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(If SQLite has not been initialized using [sqlite3_initialize()] prior
1837de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to invoking sqlite3_complete16() then sqlite3_initialize() is invoked
1838de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** automatically by sqlite3_complete16().  If that initialization fails,
1839de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the return value from sqlite3_complete16() will be non-zero
1840de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** regardless of whether or not the input SQL is complete.)^
1841de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1842de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The input to [sqlite3_complete()] must be a zero-terminated
1843de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** UTF-8 string.
1844de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1845de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The input to [sqlite3_complete16()] must be a zero-terminated
1846de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** UTF-16 string in native byte order.
1847de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1848de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_complete(const char *sql);
1849de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_complete16(const void *sql);
1850de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1851de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1852de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Register A Callback To Handle SQLITE_BUSY Errors
1853de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1854de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This routine sets a callback function that might be invoked whenever
1855de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an attempt is made to open a database table that another thread
1856de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or process has locked.
1857de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1858de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the busy callback is NULL, then [SQLITE_BUSY] or [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED]
1859de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is returned immediately upon encountering the lock.  ^If the busy callback
1860de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not NULL, then the callback might be invoked with two arguments.
1861de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1862de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first argument to the busy handler is a copy of the void* pointer which
1863de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is the third argument to sqlite3_busy_handler().  ^The second argument to
1864de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the busy handler callback is the number of times that the busy handler has
1865de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** been invoked for this locking event.  ^If the
1866de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** busy callback returns 0, then no additional attempts are made to
1867de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** access the database and [SQLITE_BUSY] or [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED] is returned.
1868de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the callback returns non-zero, then another attempt
1869de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is made to open the database for reading and the cycle repeats.
1870de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1871de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The presence of a busy handler does not guarantee that it will be invoked
1872de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when there is lock contention. ^If SQLite determines that invoking the busy
1873de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** handler could result in a deadlock, it will go ahead and return [SQLITE_BUSY]
1874de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED] instead of invoking the busy handler.
1875de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Consider a scenario where one process is holding a read lock that
1876de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it is trying to promote to a reserved lock and
1877de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a second process is holding a reserved lock that it is trying
1878de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to promote to an exclusive lock.  The first process cannot proceed
1879de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** because it is blocked by the second and the second process cannot
1880de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** proceed because it is blocked by the first.  If both processes
1881de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invoke the busy handlers, neither will make any progress.  Therefore,
1882de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite returns [SQLITE_BUSY] for the first process, hoping that this
1883de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will induce the first process to release its read lock and allow
1884de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the second process to proceed.
1885de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1886de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The default busy callback is NULL.
1887de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1888de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [SQLITE_BUSY] error is converted to [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED]
1889de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when SQLite is in the middle of a large transaction where all the
1890de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** changes will not fit into the in-memory cache.  SQLite will
1891de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** already hold a RESERVED lock on the database file, but it needs
1892de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to promote this lock to EXCLUSIVE so that it can spill cache
1893de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pages into the database file without harm to concurrent
1894de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** readers.  ^If it is unable to promote the lock, then the in-memory
1895de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** cache will be left in an inconsistent state and so the error
1896de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** code is promoted from the relatively benign [SQLITE_BUSY] to
1897de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the more severe [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED].  ^This error code promotion
1898de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** forces an automatic rollback of the changes.  See the
1899de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <a href="/cvstrac/wiki?p=CorruptionFollowingBusyError">
1900de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CorruptionFollowingBusyError</a> wiki page for a discussion of why
1901de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this is important.
1902de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1903de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(There can only be a single busy handler defined for each
1904de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection].  Setting a new busy handler clears any
1905de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** previously set handler.)^  ^Note that calling [sqlite3_busy_timeout()]
1906de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will also set or clear the busy handler.
1907de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1908de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The busy callback should not take any actions which modify the
1909de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database connection that invoked the busy handler.  Any such actions
1910de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** result in undefined behavior.
1911de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1912de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A busy handler must not close the database connection
1913de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [prepared statement] that invoked the busy handler.
1914de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1915de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_busy_handler(sqlite3*, int(*)(void*,int), void*);
1916de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1917de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1918de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Set A Busy Timeout
1919de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1920de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This routine sets a [sqlite3_busy_handler | busy handler] that sleeps
1921de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for a specified amount of time when a table is locked.  ^The handler
1922de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will sleep multiple times until at least "ms" milliseconds of sleeping
1923de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** have accumulated.  ^After at least "ms" milliseconds of sleeping,
1924de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the handler returns 0 which causes [sqlite3_step()] to return
1925de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_BUSY] or [SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED].
1926de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1927de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calling this routine with an argument less than or equal to zero
1928de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** turns off all busy handlers.
1929de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1930de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(There can only be a single busy handler for a particular
1931de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection] any any given moment.  If another busy handler
1932de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** was defined  (using [sqlite3_busy_handler()]) prior to calling
1933de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this routine, that other busy handler is cleared.)^
1934de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
1935de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_busy_timeout(sqlite3*, int ms);
1936de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
1937de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
1938de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Convenience Routines For Running Queries
1939de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
194095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** This is a legacy interface that is preserved for backwards compatibility.
194195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** Use of this interface is not recommended.
194295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
1943de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Definition: A <b>result table</b> is memory data structure created by the
1944de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_get_table()] interface.  A result table records the
1945de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** complete query results from one or more queries.
1946de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1947de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The table conceptually has a number of rows and columns.  But
1948de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** these numbers are not part of the result table itself.  These
1949de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** numbers are obtained separately.  Let N be the number of rows
1950de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and M be the number of columns.
1951de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1952de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A result table is an array of pointers to zero-terminated UTF-8 strings.
1953de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** There are (N+1)*M elements in the array.  The first M pointers point
1954de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to zero-terminated strings that  contain the names of the columns.
1955de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The remaining entries all point to query results.  NULL values result
1956de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in NULL pointers.  All other values are in their UTF-8 zero-terminated
1957de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** string representation as returned by [sqlite3_column_text()].
1958de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1959de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A result table might consist of one or more memory allocations.
1960de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** It is not safe to pass a result table directly to [sqlite3_free()].
1961de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A result table should be deallocated using [sqlite3_free_table()].
1962de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
196395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^(As an example of the result table format, suppose a query result
1964de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is as follows:
1965de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1966de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
1967de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        Name        | Age
1968de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        -----------------------
1969de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        Alice       | 43
1970de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        Bob         | 28
1971de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        Cindy       | 21
1972de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>
1973de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1974de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** There are two column (M==2) and three rows (N==3).  Thus the
1975de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** result table has 8 entries.  Suppose the result table is stored
1976de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in an array names azResult.  Then azResult holds this content:
1977de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1978de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
1979de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        azResult&#91;0] = "Name";
1980de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        azResult&#91;1] = "Age";
1981de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        azResult&#91;2] = "Alice";
1982de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        azResult&#91;3] = "43";
1983de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        azResult&#91;4] = "Bob";
1984de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        azResult&#91;5] = "28";
1985de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        azResult&#91;6] = "Cindy";
1986de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**        azResult&#91;7] = "21";
198795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>)^
1988de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1989de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_get_table() function evaluates one or more
1990de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** semicolon-separated SQL statements in the zero-terminated UTF-8
1991de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** string of its 2nd parameter and returns a result table to the
1992de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointer given in its 3rd parameter.
1993de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
1994de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** After the application has finished with the result from sqlite3_get_table(),
199595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** it must pass the result table pointer to sqlite3_free_table() in order to
1996de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** release the memory that was malloced.  Because of the way the
1997de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_malloc()] happens within sqlite3_get_table(), the calling
1998de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function must not try to call [sqlite3_free()] directly.  Only
1999de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_free_table()] is able to release the memory properly and safely.
2000de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
200195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** The sqlite3_get_table() interface is implemented as a wrapper around
2002de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_exec()].  The sqlite3_get_table() routine does not have access
2003de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to any internal data structures of SQLite.  It uses only the public
2004de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface defined here.  As a consequence, errors that occur in the
2005de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** wrapper layer outside of the internal [sqlite3_exec()] call are not
2006de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** reflected in subsequent calls to [sqlite3_errcode()] or
200795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** [sqlite3_errmsg()].
2008de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2009de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_get_table(
2010de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,          /* An open database */
2011de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zSql,     /* SQL to be evaluated */
2012de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  char ***pazResult,    /* Results of the query */
2013de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int *pnRow,           /* Number of result rows written here */
2014de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int *pnColumn,        /* Number of result columns written here */
2015de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  char **pzErrmsg       /* Error msg written here */
2016de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2017de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_free_table(char **result);
2018de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2019de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2020de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Formatted String Printing Functions
2021de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2022de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines are work-alikes of the "printf()" family of functions
2023de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from the standard C library.
2024de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2025de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_mprintf() and sqlite3_vmprintf() routines write their
2026de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** results into memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc()].
2027de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The strings returned by these two routines should be
2028de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** released by [sqlite3_free()].  ^Both routines return a
2029de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** NULL pointer if [sqlite3_malloc()] is unable to allocate enough
2030de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory to hold the resulting string.
2031de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
203290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(The sqlite3_snprintf() routine is similar to "snprintf()" from
2033de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the standard C library.  The result is written into the
2034de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** buffer supplied as the second parameter whose size is given by
2035de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the first parameter. Note that the order of the
2036de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** first two parameters is reversed from snprintf().)^  This is an
2037de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** historical accident that cannot be fixed without breaking
2038de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** backwards compatibility.  ^(Note also that sqlite3_snprintf()
2039de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returns a pointer to its buffer instead of the number of
2040de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** characters actually written into the buffer.)^  We admit that
2041de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the number of characters written would be a more useful return
2042de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value but we cannot change the implementation of sqlite3_snprintf()
2043de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** now without breaking compatibility.
2044de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2045de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^As long as the buffer size is greater than zero, sqlite3_snprintf()
2046de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** guarantees that the buffer is always zero-terminated.  ^The first
2047de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter "n" is the total size of the buffer, including space for
2048de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the zero terminator.  So the longest string that can be completely
2049de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** written will be n-1 characters.
2050de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
205190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The sqlite3_vsnprintf() routine is a varargs version of sqlite3_snprintf().
205290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
2053de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines all implement some additional formatting
2054de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** options that are useful for constructing SQL statements.
2055de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** All of the usual printf() formatting options apply.  In addition, there
2056de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is are "%q", "%Q", and "%z" options.
2057de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
205890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(The %q option works like %s in that it substitutes a nul-terminated
2059de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** string from the argument list.  But %q also doubles every '\'' character.
2060de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** %q is designed for use inside a string literal.)^  By doubling each '\''
2061de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** character it escapes that character and allows it to be inserted into
2062de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the string.
2063de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2064de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** For example, assume the string variable zText contains text as follows:
2065de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2066de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
2067de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  char *zText = "It's a happy day!";
2068de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>
2069de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2070de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** One can use this text in an SQL statement as follows:
2071de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2072de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
2073de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  char *zSQL = sqlite3_mprintf("INSERT INTO table VALUES('%q')", zText);
2074de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  sqlite3_exec(db, zSQL, 0, 0, 0);
2075de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  sqlite3_free(zSQL);
2076de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>
2077de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2078de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Because the %q format string is used, the '\'' character in zText
2079de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is escaped and the SQL generated is as follows:
2080de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2081de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
2082de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  INSERT INTO table1 VALUES('It''s a happy day!')
2083de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>
2084de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2085de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This is correct.  Had we used %s instead of %q, the generated SQL
2086de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** would have looked like this:
2087de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2088de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
2089de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  INSERT INTO table1 VALUES('It's a happy day!');
2090de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>
2091de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2092de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This second example is an SQL syntax error.  As a general rule you should
2093de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** always use %q instead of %s when inserting text into a string literal.
2094de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2095de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The %Q option works like %q except it also adds single quotes around
2096de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the outside of the total string.  Additionally, if the parameter in the
2097de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument list is a NULL pointer, %Q substitutes the text "NULL" (without
2098de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** single quotes).)^  So, for example, one could say:
2099de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2100de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
2101de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  char *zSQL = sqlite3_mprintf("INSERT INTO table VALUES(%Q)", zText);
2102de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  sqlite3_exec(db, zSQL, 0, 0, 0);
2103de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  sqlite3_free(zSQL);
2104de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>
2105de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2106de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The code above will render a correct SQL statement in the zSQL
2107de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** variable even if the zText variable is a NULL pointer.
2108de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2109de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The "%z" formatting option works like "%s" but with the
2110de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** addition that after the string has been read and copied into
2111de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the result, [sqlite3_free()] is called on the input string.)^
2112de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2113de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API char *sqlite3_mprintf(const char*,...);
2114de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API char *sqlite3_vmprintf(const char*, va_list);
2115de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API char *sqlite3_snprintf(int,char*,const char*, ...);
211690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API char *sqlite3_vsnprintf(int,char*,const char*, va_list);
2117de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2118de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2119de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Memory Allocation Subsystem
2120de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2121de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLite core uses these three routines for all of its own
2122de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** internal memory allocation needs. "Core" in the previous sentence
2123de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** does not include operating-system specific VFS implementation.  The
2124de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Windows VFS uses native malloc() and free() for some operations.
2125de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2126de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_malloc() routine returns a pointer to a block
2127de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of memory at least N bytes in length, where N is the parameter.
2128de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If sqlite3_malloc() is unable to obtain sufficient free
2129de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory, it returns a NULL pointer.  ^If the parameter N to
2130de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_malloc() is zero or negative then sqlite3_malloc() returns
2131de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a NULL pointer.
2132de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2133de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calling sqlite3_free() with a pointer previously returned
2134de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by sqlite3_malloc() or sqlite3_realloc() releases that memory so
2135de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that it might be reused.  ^The sqlite3_free() routine is
2136de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a no-op if is called with a NULL pointer.  Passing a NULL pointer
2137de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to sqlite3_free() is harmless.  After being freed, memory
2138de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** should neither be read nor written.  Even reading previously freed
2139de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory might result in a segmentation fault or other severe error.
2140de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Memory corruption, a segmentation fault, or other severe error
2141de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** might result if sqlite3_free() is called with a non-NULL pointer that
2142de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** was not obtained from sqlite3_malloc() or sqlite3_realloc().
2143de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2144de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The sqlite3_realloc() interface attempts to resize a
2145de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prior memory allocation to be at least N bytes, where N is the
2146de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** second parameter.  The memory allocation to be resized is the first
2147de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter.)^ ^ If the first parameter to sqlite3_realloc()
2148de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is a NULL pointer then its behavior is identical to calling
2149de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_malloc(N) where N is the second parameter to sqlite3_realloc().
2150de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the second parameter to sqlite3_realloc() is zero or
2151de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** negative then the behavior is exactly the same as calling
2152de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_free(P) where P is the first parameter to sqlite3_realloc().
2153de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^sqlite3_realloc() returns a pointer to a memory allocation
2154de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of at least N bytes in size or NULL if sufficient memory is unavailable.
2155de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If M is the size of the prior allocation, then min(N,M) bytes
2156de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the prior allocation are copied into the beginning of buffer returned
2157de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by sqlite3_realloc() and the prior allocation is freed.
2158de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If sqlite3_realloc() returns NULL, then the prior allocation
2159de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not freed.
2160de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2161de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The memory returned by sqlite3_malloc() and sqlite3_realloc()
2162de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is always aligned to at least an 8 byte boundary, or to a
2163de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** 4 byte boundary if the [SQLITE_4_BYTE_ALIGNED_MALLOC] compile-time
2164de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** option is used.
2165de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2166de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In SQLite version 3.5.0 and 3.5.1, it was possible to define
2167de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the SQLITE_OMIT_MEMORY_ALLOCATION which would cause the built-in
2168de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation of these routines to be omitted.  That capability
2169de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is no longer provided.  Only built-in memory allocators can be used.
2170de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2171de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The Windows OS interface layer calls
2172de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the system malloc() and free() directly when converting
2173de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** filenames between the UTF-8 encoding used by SQLite
2174de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and whatever filename encoding is used by the particular Windows
2175de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** installation.  Memory allocation errors are detected, but
2176de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** they are reported back as [SQLITE_CANTOPEN] or
2177de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_IOERR] rather than [SQLITE_NOMEM].
2178de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2179de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The pointer arguments to [sqlite3_free()] and [sqlite3_realloc()]
2180de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** must be either NULL or else pointers obtained from a prior
2181de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invocation of [sqlite3_malloc()] or [sqlite3_realloc()] that have
2182de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not yet been released.
2183de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2184de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The application must not read or write any part of
2185de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a block of memory after it has been released using
2186de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_free()] or [sqlite3_realloc()].
2187de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2188de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_malloc(int);
2189de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_realloc(void*, int);
2190de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_free(void*);
2191de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2192de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2193de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Memory Allocator Statistics
2194de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2195de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite provides these two interfaces for reporting on the status
2196de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the [sqlite3_malloc()], [sqlite3_free()], and [sqlite3_realloc()]
2197de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routines, which form the built-in memory allocation subsystem.
2198de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2199de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_memory_used()] routine returns the number of bytes
2200de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of memory currently outstanding (malloced but not freed).
2201de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_memory_highwater()] routine returns the maximum
2202de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value of [sqlite3_memory_used()] since the high-water mark
2203de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** was last reset.  ^The values returned by [sqlite3_memory_used()] and
2204de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_memory_highwater()] include any overhead
2205de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** added by SQLite in its implementation of [sqlite3_malloc()],
2206de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** but not overhead added by the any underlying system library
2207de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routines that [sqlite3_malloc()] may call.
2208de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2209de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The memory high-water mark is reset to the current value of
2210de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_memory_used()] if and only if the parameter to
2211de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_memory_highwater()] is true.  ^The value returned
2212de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by [sqlite3_memory_highwater(1)] is the high-water mark
2213de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prior to the reset.
2214de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2215de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_memory_used(void);
2216de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_memory_highwater(int resetFlag);
2217de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2218de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2219de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Pseudo-Random Number Generator
2220de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2221de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite contains a high-quality pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) used to
2222de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** select random [ROWID | ROWIDs] when inserting new records into a table that
2223de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** already uses the largest possible [ROWID].  The PRNG is also used for
2224de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the build-in random() and randomblob() SQL functions.  This interface allows
2225de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** applications to access the same PRNG for other purposes.
2226de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2227de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A call to this routine stores N bytes of randomness into buffer P.
2228de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2229de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first time this routine is invoked (either internally or by
2230de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the application) the PRNG is seeded using randomness obtained
2231de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from the xRandomness method of the default [sqlite3_vfs] object.
2232de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^On all subsequent invocations, the pseudo-randomness is generated
2233de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** internally and without recourse to the [sqlite3_vfs] xRandomness
2234de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** method.
2235de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2236de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_randomness(int N, void *P);
2237de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2238de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2239de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Compile-Time Authorization Callbacks
2240de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
224190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^This routine registers an authorizer callback with a particular
2242de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection], supplied in the first argument.
2243de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The authorizer callback is invoked as SQL statements are being compiled
2244de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by [sqlite3_prepare()] or its variants [sqlite3_prepare_v2()],
2245de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare16()] and [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()].  ^At various
2246de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** points during the compilation process, as logic is being created
2247de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to perform various actions, the authorizer callback is invoked to
2248de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** see if those actions are allowed.  ^The authorizer callback should
2249de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** return [SQLITE_OK] to allow the action, [SQLITE_IGNORE] to disallow the
2250de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** specific action but allow the SQL statement to continue to be
2251de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compiled, or [SQLITE_DENY] to cause the entire SQL statement to be
2252de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** rejected with an error.  ^If the authorizer callback returns
2253de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** any value other than [SQLITE_IGNORE], [SQLITE_OK], or [SQLITE_DENY]
2254de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or equivalent call that triggered
2255de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the authorizer will fail with an error message.
2256de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2257de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When the callback returns [SQLITE_OK], that means the operation
2258de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** requested is ok.  ^When the callback returns [SQLITE_DENY], the
2259de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or equivalent call that triggered the
2260de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** authorizer will fail with an error message explaining that
2261de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** access is denied.
2262de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2263de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first parameter to the authorizer callback is a copy of the third
2264de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter to the sqlite3_set_authorizer() interface. ^The second parameter
2265de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the callback is an integer [SQLITE_COPY | action code] that specifies
2266de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the particular action to be authorized. ^The third through sixth parameters
2267de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the callback are zero-terminated strings that contain additional
2268de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** details about the action to be authorized.
2269de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2270de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the action code is [SQLITE_READ]
2271de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the callback returns [SQLITE_IGNORE] then the
2272de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [prepared statement] statement is constructed to substitute
2273de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a NULL value in place of the table column that would have
2274de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** been read if [SQLITE_OK] had been returned.  The [SQLITE_IGNORE]
2275de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** return can be used to deny an untrusted user access to individual
2276de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** columns of a table.
2277de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the action code is [SQLITE_DELETE] and the callback returns
2278de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_IGNORE] then the [DELETE] operation proceeds but the
2279de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [truncate optimization] is disabled and all rows are deleted individually.
2280de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2281de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** An authorizer is used when [sqlite3_prepare | preparing]
2282de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL statements from an untrusted source, to ensure that the SQL statements
2283de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** do not try to access data they are not allowed to see, or that they do not
2284de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** try to execute malicious statements that damage the database.  For
2285de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** example, an application may allow a user to enter arbitrary
2286de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL queries for evaluation by a database.  But the application does
2287de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not want the user to be able to make arbitrary changes to the
2288de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database.  An authorizer could then be put in place while the
2289de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** user-entered SQL is being [sqlite3_prepare | prepared] that
2290de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** disallows everything except [SELECT] statements.
2291de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2292de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Applications that need to process SQL from untrusted sources
2293de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** might also consider lowering resource limits using [sqlite3_limit()]
2294de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and limiting database size using the [max_page_count] [PRAGMA]
2295de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in addition to using an authorizer.
2296de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2297de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Only a single authorizer can be in place on a database connection
2298de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** at a time.  Each call to sqlite3_set_authorizer overrides the
2299de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** previous call.)^  ^Disable the authorizer by installing a NULL callback.
2300de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The authorizer is disabled by default.
2301de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2302de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The authorizer callback must not do anything that will modify
2303de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the database connection that invoked the authorizer callback.
2304de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Note that [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] both modify their
2305de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph.
2306de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2307de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^When [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] is used to prepare a statement, the
2308de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** statement might be re-prepared during [sqlite3_step()] due to a
2309de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** schema change.  Hence, the application should ensure that the
2310de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** correct authorizer callback remains in place during the [sqlite3_step()].
2311de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2312de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Note that the authorizer callback is invoked only during
2313de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare()] or its variants.  Authorization is not
2314de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** performed during statement evaluation in [sqlite3_step()], unless
2315de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as stated in the previous paragraph, sqlite3_step() invokes
2316de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_prepare_v2() to reprepare a statement after a schema change.
2317de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2318de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_set_authorizer(
2319de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
2320de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xAuth)(void*,int,const char*,const char*,const char*,const char*),
2321de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pUserData
2322de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2323de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2324de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2325de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Authorizer Return Codes
2326de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2327de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [sqlite3_set_authorizer | authorizer callback function] must
2328de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** return either [SQLITE_OK] or one of these two constants in order
2329de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to signal SQLite whether or not the action is permitted.  See the
2330de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_set_authorizer | authorizer documentation] for additional
2331de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** information.
233290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
233390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Note that SQLITE_IGNORE is also used as a [SQLITE_ROLLBACK | return code]
233490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** from the [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] interface.
2335de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2336de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DENY   1   /* Abort the SQL statement with an error */
2337de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_IGNORE 2   /* Don't allow access, but don't generate an error */
2338de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2339de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2340de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Authorizer Action Codes
2341de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2342de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [sqlite3_set_authorizer()] interface registers a callback function
2343de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that is invoked to authorize certain SQL statement actions.  The
2344de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** second parameter to the callback is an integer code that specifies
2345de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** what action is being authorized.  These are the integer action codes that
2346de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the authorizer callback may be passed.
2347de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2348de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These action code values signify what kind of operation is to be
2349de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** authorized.  The 3rd and 4th parameters to the authorization
2350de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback function will be parameters or NULL depending on which of these
2351de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** codes is used as the second parameter.  ^(The 5th parameter to the
2352de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** authorizer callback is the name of the database ("main", "temp",
2353de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** etc.) if applicable.)^  ^The 6th parameter to the authorizer callback
2354de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is the name of the inner-most trigger or view that is responsible for
2355de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the access attempt or NULL if this access attempt is directly from
2356de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** top-level SQL code.
2357de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2358de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/******************************************* 3rd ************ 4th ***********/
2359de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_INDEX          1   /* Index Name      Table Name      */
2360de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_TABLE          2   /* Table Name      NULL            */
2361de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_TEMP_INDEX     3   /* Index Name      Table Name      */
2362de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_TEMP_TABLE     4   /* Table Name      NULL            */
2363de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_TEMP_TRIGGER   5   /* Trigger Name    Table Name      */
2364de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_TEMP_VIEW      6   /* View Name       NULL            */
2365de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_TRIGGER        7   /* Trigger Name    Table Name      */
2366de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_VIEW           8   /* View Name       NULL            */
2367de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DELETE                9   /* Table Name      NULL            */
2368de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_INDEX           10   /* Index Name      Table Name      */
2369de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_TABLE           11   /* Table Name      NULL            */
2370de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_TEMP_INDEX      12   /* Index Name      Table Name      */
2371de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_TEMP_TABLE      13   /* Table Name      NULL            */
2372de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_TEMP_TRIGGER    14   /* Trigger Name    Table Name      */
2373de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_TEMP_VIEW       15   /* View Name       NULL            */
2374de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_TRIGGER         16   /* Trigger Name    Table Name      */
2375de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_VIEW            17   /* View Name       NULL            */
2376de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INSERT               18   /* Table Name      NULL            */
2377de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_PRAGMA               19   /* Pragma Name     1st arg or NULL */
2378de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_READ                 20   /* Table Name      Column Name     */
2379de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SELECT               21   /* NULL            NULL            */
2380de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TRANSACTION          22   /* Operation       NULL            */
2381de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_UPDATE               23   /* Table Name      Column Name     */
2382de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ATTACH               24   /* Filename        NULL            */
2383de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DETACH               25   /* Database Name   NULL            */
2384de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ALTER_TABLE          26   /* Database Name   Table Name      */
2385de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_REINDEX              27   /* Index Name      NULL            */
2386de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ANALYZE              28   /* Table Name      NULL            */
2387de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_CREATE_VTABLE        29   /* Table Name      Module Name     */
2388de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_DROP_VTABLE          30   /* Table Name      Module Name     */
2389de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_FUNCTION             31   /* NULL            Function Name   */
2390de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_SAVEPOINT            32   /* Operation       Savepoint Name  */
2391de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_COPY                  0   /* No longer used */
2392de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2393de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2394de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Tracing And Profiling Functions
2395de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2396de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines register callback functions that can be used for
2397de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** tracing and profiling the execution of SQL statements.
2398de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2399de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The callback function registered by sqlite3_trace() is invoked at
2400de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** various times when an SQL statement is being run by [sqlite3_step()].
2401de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_trace() callback is invoked with a UTF-8 rendering of the
2402de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL statement text as the statement first begins executing.
2403de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Additional sqlite3_trace() callbacks might occur
2404de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as each triggered subprogram is entered.  The callbacks for triggers
2405de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** contain a UTF-8 SQL comment that identifies the trigger.)^
2406de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2407de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The callback function registered by sqlite3_profile() is invoked
2408de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as each SQL statement finishes.  ^The profile callback contains
2409de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the original statement text and an estimate of wall-clock time
2410de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of how long that statement took to run.  ^The profile callback
2411de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** time is in units of nanoseconds, however the current implementation
2412de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is only capable of millisecond resolution so the six least significant
2413de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** digits in the time are meaningless.  Future versions of SQLite
2414de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** might provide greater resolution on the profiler callback.  The
2415de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_profile() function is considered experimental and is
2416de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** subject to change in future versions of SQLite.
2417de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2418de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_trace(sqlite3*, void(*xTrace)(void*,const char*), void*);
2419de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL void *sqlite3_profile(sqlite3*,
2420de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori   void(*xProfile)(void*,const char*,sqlite3_uint64), void*);
2421de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2422de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2423de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Query Progress Callbacks
2424de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2425de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_progress_handler(D,N,X,P) interface causes the callback
2426de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function X to be invoked periodically during long running calls to
2427de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_exec()], [sqlite3_step()] and [sqlite3_get_table()] for
2428de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database connection D.  An example use for this
2429de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface is to keep a GUI updated during a large query.
2430de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2431de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The parameter P is passed through as the only parameter to the
2432de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback function X.  ^The parameter N is the number of
2433de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [virtual machine instructions] that are evaluated between successive
2434de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invocations of the callback X.
2435de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2436de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Only a single progress handler may be defined at one time per
2437de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection]; setting a new progress handler cancels the
2438de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** old one.  ^Setting parameter X to NULL disables the progress handler.
2439de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The progress handler is also disabled by setting N to a value less
2440de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** than 1.
2441de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2442de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the progress callback returns non-zero, the operation is
2443de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interrupted.  This feature can be used to implement a
2444de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** "Cancel" button on a GUI progress dialog box.
2445de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2446de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The progress handler callback must not do anything that will modify
2447de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the database connection that invoked the progress handler.
2448de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Note that [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] both modify their
2449de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph.
2450de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2451de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2452de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_progress_handler(sqlite3*, int, int(*)(void*), void*);
2453de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2454de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2455de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Opening A New Database Connection
2456de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
245790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^These routines open an SQLite database file as specified by the
2458de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** filename argument. ^The filename argument is interpreted as UTF-8 for
2459de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_open() and sqlite3_open_v2() and as UTF-16 in the native byte
2460de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** order for sqlite3_open16(). ^(A [database connection] handle is usually
2461de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned in *ppDb, even if an error occurs.  The only exception is that
2462de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if SQLite is unable to allocate memory to hold the [sqlite3] object,
2463de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a NULL will be written into *ppDb instead of a pointer to the [sqlite3]
2464de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** object.)^ ^(If the database is opened (and/or created) successfully, then
2465de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_OK] is returned.  Otherwise an [error code] is returned.)^ ^The
2466de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_errmsg()] or [sqlite3_errmsg16()] routines can be used to obtain
2467de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an English language description of the error following a failure of any
2468de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the sqlite3_open() routines.
2469de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2470de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The default encoding for the database will be UTF-8 if
2471de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_open() or sqlite3_open_v2() is called and
2472de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** UTF-16 in the native byte order if sqlite3_open16() is used.
2473de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2474de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Whether or not an error occurs when it is opened, resources
2475de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** associated with the [database connection] handle should be released by
2476de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** passing it to [sqlite3_close()] when it is no longer required.
2477de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2478de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_open_v2() interface works like sqlite3_open()
2479de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** except that it accepts two additional parameters for additional control
2480de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** over the new database connection.  ^(The flags parameter to
2481de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_open_v2() can take one of
2482de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the following three values, optionally combined with the
2483de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_OPEN_NOMUTEX], [SQLITE_OPEN_FULLMUTEX], [SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE],
248490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_OPEN_PRIVATECACHE], and/or [SQLITE_OPEN_URI] flags:)^
2485de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2486de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dl>
2487de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(<dt>[SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY]</dt>
2488de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The database is opened in read-only mode.  If the database does not
2489de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** already exist, an error is returned.</dd>)^
2490de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2491de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(<dt>[SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE]</dt>
2492de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The database is opened for reading and writing if possible, or reading
2493de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** only if the file is write protected by the operating system.  In either
2494de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** case the database must already exist, otherwise an error is returned.</dd>)^
2495de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2496de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(<dt>[SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE] | [SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE]</dt>
249790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd>The database is opened for reading and writing, and is created if
2498de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it does not already exist. This is the behavior that is always used for
2499de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_open() and sqlite3_open16().</dd>)^
2500de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dl>
2501de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2502de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the 3rd parameter to sqlite3_open_v2() is not one of the
250390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** combinations shown above optionally combined with other
250490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY | SQLITE_OPEN_* bits]
2505de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the behavior is undefined.
2506de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2507de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the [SQLITE_OPEN_NOMUTEX] flag is set, then the database connection
2508de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** opens in the multi-thread [threading mode] as long as the single-thread
2509de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mode has not been set at compile-time or start-time.  ^If the
2510de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_OPEN_FULLMUTEX] flag is set then the database connection opens
2511de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the serialized [threading mode] unless single-thread was
2512de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** previously selected at compile-time or start-time.
2513de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE] flag causes the database connection to be
2514de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** eligible to use [shared cache mode], regardless of whether or not shared
2515de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** cache is enabled using [sqlite3_enable_shared_cache()].  ^The
2516de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_OPEN_PRIVATECACHE] flag causes the database connection to not
2517de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** participate in [shared cache mode] even if it is enabled.
2518de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
251990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The fourth parameter to sqlite3_open_v2() is the name of the
252090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_vfs] object that defines the operating system interface that
252190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the new database connection should use.  ^If the fourth parameter is
252290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a NULL pointer then the default [sqlite3_vfs] object is used.
252390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
2524de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the filename is ":memory:", then a private, temporary in-memory database
2525de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is created for the connection.  ^This in-memory database will vanish when
2526de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the database connection is closed.  Future versions of SQLite might
2527de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** make use of additional special filenames that begin with the ":" character.
2528de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** It is recommended that when a database filename actually does begin with
2529de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a ":" character you should prefix the filename with a pathname such as
2530de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** "./" to avoid ambiguity.
2531de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2532de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the filename is an empty string, then a private, temporary
2533de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on-disk database will be created.  ^This private database will be
2534de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** automatically deleted as soon as the database connection is closed.
2535de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
253690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[URI filenames in sqlite3_open()]] <h3>URI Filenames</h3>
253790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
253890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^If [URI filename] interpretation is enabled, and the filename argument
253990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** begins with "file:", then the filename is interpreted as a URI. ^URI
254090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** filename interpretation is enabled if the [SQLITE_OPEN_URI] flag is
254190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** set in the fourth argument to sqlite3_open_v2(), or if it has
254290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** been enabled globally using the [SQLITE_CONFIG_URI] option with the
254390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_config()] method or by the [SQLITE_USE_URI] compile-time option.
254490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** As of SQLite version 3.7.7, URI filename interpretation is turned off
254590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** by default, but future releases of SQLite might enable URI filename
254690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** interpretation by default.  See "[URI filenames]" for additional
254790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** information.
254890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
254990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** URI filenames are parsed according to RFC 3986. ^If the URI contains an
255090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** authority, then it must be either an empty string or the string
255190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** "localhost". ^If the authority is not an empty string or "localhost", an
255290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** error is returned to the caller. ^The fragment component of a URI, if
255390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** present, is ignored.
255490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
255590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^SQLite uses the path component of the URI as the name of the disk file
255690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** which contains the database. ^If the path begins with a '/' character,
255790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** then it is interpreted as an absolute path. ^If the path does not begin
255890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** with a '/' (meaning that the authority section is omitted from the URI)
255990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** then the path is interpreted as a relative path.
256090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^On windows, the first component of an absolute path
256190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is a drive specification (e.g. "C:").
256290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
256390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[core URI query parameters]]
256490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The query component of a URI may contain parameters that are interpreted
256590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** either by SQLite itself, or by a [VFS | custom VFS implementation].
256690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** SQLite interprets the following three query parameters:
256790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
256890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <ul>
256990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   <li> <b>vfs</b>: ^The "vfs" parameter may be used to specify the name of
257090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     a VFS object that provides the operating system interface that should
257190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     be used to access the database file on disk. ^If this option is set to
257290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     an empty string the default VFS object is used. ^Specifying an unknown
257390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     VFS is an error. ^If sqlite3_open_v2() is used and the vfs option is
257490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     present, then the VFS specified by the option takes precedence over
257590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     the value passed as the fourth parameter to sqlite3_open_v2().
257690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
257790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   <li> <b>mode</b>: ^(The mode parameter may be set to either "ro", "rw" or
257890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     "rwc". Attempting to set it to any other value is an error)^.
257990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     ^If "ro" is specified, then the database is opened for read-only
258090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     access, just as if the [SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY] flag had been set in the
258190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     third argument to sqlite3_prepare_v2(). ^If the mode option is set to
258290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     "rw", then the database is opened for read-write (but not create)
258390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     access, as if SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE (but not SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE) had
258490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     been set. ^Value "rwc" is equivalent to setting both
258590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE and SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE. ^If sqlite3_open_v2() is
258690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     used, it is an error to specify a value for the mode parameter that is
258790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     less restrictive than that specified by the flags passed as the third
258890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     parameter.
258990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
259090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   <li> <b>cache</b>: ^The cache parameter may be set to either "shared" or
259190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     "private". ^Setting it to "shared" is equivalent to setting the
259290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE bit in the flags argument passed to
259390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     sqlite3_open_v2(). ^Setting the cache parameter to "private" is
259490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     equivalent to setting the SQLITE_OPEN_PRIVATECACHE bit.
259590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     ^If sqlite3_open_v2() is used and the "cache" parameter is present in
259690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     a URI filename, its value overrides any behaviour requested by setting
259790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     SQLITE_OPEN_PRIVATECACHE or SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE flag.
259890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** </ul>
259990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
260090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^Specifying an unknown parameter in the query component of a URI is not an
260190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** error.  Future versions of SQLite might understand additional query
260290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** parameters.  See "[query parameters with special meaning to SQLite]" for
260390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** additional information.
260490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
260590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[URI filename examples]] <h3>URI filename examples</h3>
260690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
260790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <table border="1" align=center cellpadding=5>
260890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <tr><th> URI filenames <th> Results
260990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <tr><td> file:data.db <td>
261090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          Open the file "data.db" in the current directory.
261190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <tr><td> file:/home/fred/data.db<br>
261290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          file:///home/fred/data.db <br>
261390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          file://localhost/home/fred/data.db <br> <td>
261490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          Open the database file "/home/fred/data.db".
261590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <tr><td> file://darkstar/home/fred/data.db <td>
261690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          An error. "darkstar" is not a recognized authority.
261790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <tr><td style="white-space:nowrap">
261890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/fred/Desktop/data.db
261990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**     <td> Windows only: Open the file "data.db" on fred's desktop on drive
262090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          C:. Note that the %20 escaping in this example is not strictly
262190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          necessary - space characters can be used literally
262290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          in URI filenames.
262390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <tr><td> file:data.db?mode=ro&cache=private <td>
262490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          Open file "data.db" in the current directory for read-only access.
262590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          Regardless of whether or not shared-cache mode is enabled by
262690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          default, use a private cache.
262790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <tr><td> file:/home/fred/data.db?vfs=unix-nolock <td>
262890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          Open file "/home/fred/data.db". Use the special VFS "unix-nolock".
262990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <tr><td> file:data.db?mode=readonly <td>
263090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**          An error. "readonly" is not a valid option for the "mode" parameter.
263190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** </table>
263290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
263390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^URI hexadecimal escape sequences (%HH) are supported within the path and
263490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** query components of a URI. A hexadecimal escape sequence consists of a
263590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** percent sign - "%" - followed by exactly two hexadecimal digits
263690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** specifying an octet value. ^Before the path or query components of a
263790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** URI filename are interpreted, they are encoded using UTF-8 and all
263890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** hexadecimal escape sequences replaced by a single byte containing the
263990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** corresponding octet. If this process generates an invalid UTF-8 encoding,
264090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the results are undefined.
2641de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2642de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <b>Note to Windows users:</b>  The encoding used for the filename argument
2643de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of sqlite3_open() and sqlite3_open_v2() must be UTF-8, not whatever
2644de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** codepage is currently defined.  Filenames containing international
2645de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** characters must be converted to UTF-8 prior to passing them into
2646de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_open() or sqlite3_open_v2().
2647de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2648de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_open(
2649de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *filename,   /* Database filename (UTF-8) */
2650de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 **ppDb          /* OUT: SQLite db handle */
2651de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2652de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_open16(
2653de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void *filename,   /* Database filename (UTF-16) */
2654de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 **ppDb          /* OUT: SQLite db handle */
2655de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2656de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_open_v2(
2657de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *filename,   /* Database filename (UTF-8) */
2658de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 **ppDb,         /* OUT: SQLite db handle */
2659de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int flags,              /* Flags */
2660de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zVfs        /* Name of VFS module to use */
2661de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2662de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2663de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
266490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Obtain Values For URI Parameters
266590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
266690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** These are utility routines, useful to VFS implementations, that check
266790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to see if a database file was a URI that contained a specific query
266890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** parameter, and if so obtains the value of that query parameter.
266990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
267090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If F is the database filename pointer passed into the xOpen() method of
267190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a VFS implementation when the flags parameter to xOpen() has one or
267290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** more of the [SQLITE_OPEN_URI] or [SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_DB] bits set and
267390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** P is the name of the query parameter, then
267490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** sqlite3_uri_parameter(F,P) returns the value of the P
267590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** parameter if it exists or a NULL pointer if P does not appear as a
267690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** query parameter on F.  If P is a query parameter of F
267790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** has no explicit value, then sqlite3_uri_parameter(F,P) returns
267890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a pointer to an empty string.
267990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
268090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) routine assumes that P is a boolean
268190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** parameter and returns true (1) or false (0) according to the value
2682c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** of P.  The sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) routine returns true (1) if the
2683c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** value of query parameter P is one of "yes", "true", or "on" in any
2684c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** case or if the value begins with a non-zero number.  The
2685c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) routines returns false (0) if the value of
2686c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** query parameter P is one of "no", "false", or "off" in any case or
2687c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** if the value begins with a numeric zero.  If P is not a query
2688c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** parameter on F or if the value of P is does not match any of the
2689c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** above, then sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) returns (B!=0).
269090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
269190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The sqlite3_uri_int64(F,P,D) routine converts the value of P into a
269290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** 64-bit signed integer and returns that integer, or D if P does not
269390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** exist.  If the value of P is something other than an integer, then
269490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** zero is returned.
269590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
269690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If F is a NULL pointer, then sqlite3_uri_parameter(F,P) returns NULL and
269790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** sqlite3_uri_boolean(F,P,B) returns B.  If F is not a NULL pointer and
269890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is not a database file pathname pointer that SQLite passed into the xOpen
269990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** VFS method, then the behavior of this routine is undefined and probably
270090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** undesirable.
270190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
270290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_uri_parameter(const char *zFilename, const char *zParam);
270390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API int sqlite3_uri_boolean(const char *zFile, const char *zParam, int bDefault);
270490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_uri_int64(const char*, const char*, sqlite3_int64);
270590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
270690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
270790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
2708de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Error Codes And Messages
2709de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2710de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_errcode() interface returns the numeric [result code] or
2711de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [extended result code] for the most recent failed sqlite3_* API call
2712de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** associated with a [database connection]. If a prior API call failed
2713de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** but the most recent API call succeeded, the return value from
2714de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_errcode() is undefined.  ^The sqlite3_extended_errcode()
2715de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface is the same except that it always returns the
2716de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [extended result code] even when extended result codes are
2717de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** disabled.
2718de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2719de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_errmsg() and sqlite3_errmsg16() return English-language
2720de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** text that describes the error, as either UTF-8 or UTF-16 respectively.
2721de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Memory to hold the error message string is managed internally.
2722de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The application does not need to worry about freeing the result.
2723de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** However, the error string might be overwritten or deallocated by
2724de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** subsequent calls to other SQLite interface functions.)^
2725de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2726de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When the serialized [threading mode] is in use, it might be the
2727de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** case that a second error occurs on a separate thread in between
2728de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the time of the first error and the call to these interfaces.
2729de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When that happens, the second error will be reported since these
2730de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces always report the most recent result.  To avoid
2731de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this, each thread can obtain exclusive use of the [database connection] D
2732de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by invoking [sqlite3_mutex_enter]([sqlite3_db_mutex](D)) before beginning
2733de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to use D and invoking [sqlite3_mutex_leave]([sqlite3_db_mutex](D)) after
2734de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** all calls to the interfaces listed here are completed.
2735de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2736de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If an interface fails with SQLITE_MISUSE, that means the interface
2737de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** was invoked incorrectly by the application.  In that case, the
2738de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** error code and message may or may not be set.
2739de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2740de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_errcode(sqlite3 *db);
2741de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_extended_errcode(sqlite3 *db);
2742de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_errmsg(sqlite3*);
2743de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_errmsg16(sqlite3*);
2744de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2745de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2746de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: SQL Statement Object
2747de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {prepared statement} {prepared statements}
2748de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2749de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** An instance of this object represents a single SQL statement.
2750de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This object is variously known as a "prepared statement" or a
2751de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** "compiled SQL statement" or simply as a "statement".
2752de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2753de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The life of a statement object goes something like this:
2754de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2755de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ol>
2756de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> Create the object using [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or a related
2757de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      function.
2758de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> Bind values to [host parameters] using the sqlite3_bind_*()
2759de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      interfaces.
2760de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> Run the SQL by calling [sqlite3_step()] one or more times.
2761de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> Reset the statement using [sqlite3_reset()] then go back
2762de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      to step 2.  Do this zero or more times.
2763de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> Destroy the object using [sqlite3_finalize()].
2764de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ol>
2765de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2766de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Refer to documentation on individual methods above for additional
2767de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** information.
2768de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2769de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_stmt sqlite3_stmt;
2770de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2771de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2772de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Run-time Limits
2773de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2774de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This interface allows the size of various constructs to be limited
2775de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on a connection by connection basis.  The first parameter is the
2776de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection] whose limit is to be set or queried.  The
2777de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** second parameter is one of the [limit categories] that define a
2778de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** class of constructs to be size limited.  The third parameter is the
2779de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** new limit for that construct.)^
2780de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2781de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the new limit is a negative number, the limit is unchanged.
2782de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(For each limit category SQLITE_LIMIT_<i>NAME</i> there is a
2783de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [limits | hard upper bound]
2784de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** set at compile-time by a C preprocessor macro called
2785de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [limits | SQLITE_MAX_<i>NAME</i>].
2786de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (The "_LIMIT_" in the name is changed to "_MAX_".))^
2787de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Attempts to increase a limit above its hard upper bound are
2788de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** silently truncated to the hard upper bound.
2789de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2790de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Regardless of whether or not the limit was changed, the
2791de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_limit()] interface returns the prior value of the limit.
2792de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Hence, to find the current value of a limit without changing it,
2793de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** simply invoke this interface with the third parameter set to -1.
2794de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2795de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Run-time limits are intended for use in applications that manage
2796de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** both their own internal database and also databases that are controlled
2797de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by untrusted external sources.  An example application might be a
2798de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** web browser that has its own databases for storing history and
2799de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** separate databases controlled by JavaScript applications downloaded
2800de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** off the Internet.  The internal databases can be given the
2801de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** large, default limits.  Databases managed by external sources can
2802de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be given much smaller limits designed to prevent a denial of service
2803de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** attack.  Developers might also want to use the [sqlite3_set_authorizer()]
2804de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface to further control untrusted SQL.  The size of the database
2805de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** created by an untrusted script can be contained using the
2806de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [max_page_count] [PRAGMA].
2807de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2808de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** New run-time limit categories may be added in future releases.
2809de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2810de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_limit(sqlite3*, int id, int newVal);
2811de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2812de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2813de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Run-Time Limit Categories
2814de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {limit category} {*limit categories}
2815de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2816de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These constants define various performance limits
2817de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that can be lowered at run-time using [sqlite3_limit()].
2818de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The synopsis of the meanings of the various limits is shown below.
2819de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Additional information is available at [limits | Limits in SQLite].
2820de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2821de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dl>
282290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_LENGTH]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_LENGTH</dt>
2823de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum size of any string or BLOB or table row, in bytes.<dd>)^
2824de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
282590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_SQL_LENGTH]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_SQL_LENGTH</dt>
2826de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum length of an SQL statement, in bytes.</dd>)^
2827de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
282890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_COLUMN]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_COLUMN</dt>
2829de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum number of columns in a table definition or in the
2830de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** result set of a [SELECT] or the maximum number of columns in an index
2831de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or in an ORDER BY or GROUP BY clause.</dd>)^
2832de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
283390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_EXPR_DEPTH]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_EXPR_DEPTH</dt>
2834de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum depth of the parse tree on any expression.</dd>)^
2835de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
283690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_COMPOUND_SELECT]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_COMPOUND_SELECT</dt>
2837de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum number of terms in a compound SELECT statement.</dd>)^
2838de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
283990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP</dt>
2840de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum number of instructions in a virtual machine program
2841de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** used to implement an SQL statement.  This limit is not currently
2842de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** enforced, though that might be added in some future release of
2843de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite.</dd>)^
2844de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
284590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_FUNCTION_ARG]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_FUNCTION_ARG</dt>
2846de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum number of arguments on a function.</dd>)^
2847de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
284890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_ATTACHED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_ATTACHED</dt>
2849de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum number of [ATTACH | attached databases].)^</dd>
2850de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
285190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_LIKE_PATTERN_LENGTH]]
2852de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_LIKE_PATTERN_LENGTH</dt>
2853de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum length of the pattern argument to the [LIKE] or
2854de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [GLOB] operators.</dd>)^
2855de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
285690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER]]
2857de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER</dt>
2858de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum index number of any [parameter] in an SQL statement.)^
2859de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
286090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_LIMIT_TRIGGER_DEPTH]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_LIMIT_TRIGGER_DEPTH</dt>
2861de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>The maximum depth of recursion for triggers.</dd>)^
2862de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dl>
2863de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2864de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_LENGTH                    0
2865de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_SQL_LENGTH                1
2866de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_COLUMN                    2
2867de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_EXPR_DEPTH                3
2868de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_COMPOUND_SELECT           4
2869de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_VDBE_OP                   5
2870de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_FUNCTION_ARG              6
2871de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_ATTACHED                  7
2872de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_LIKE_PATTERN_LENGTH       8
2873de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER           9
2874de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_LIMIT_TRIGGER_DEPTH            10
2875de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2876de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2877de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Compiling An SQL Statement
2878de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {SQL statement compiler}
2879de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2880de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** To execute an SQL query, it must first be compiled into a byte-code
2881de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** program using one of these routines.
2882de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2883de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The first argument, "db", is a [database connection] obtained from a
2884de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prior successful call to [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open_v2()] or
2885de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_open16()].  The database connection must not have been closed.
2886de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2887de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The second argument, "zSql", is the statement to be compiled, encoded
2888de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as either UTF-8 or UTF-16.  The sqlite3_prepare() and sqlite3_prepare_v2()
2889de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces use UTF-8, and sqlite3_prepare16() and sqlite3_prepare16_v2()
2890de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** use UTF-16.
2891de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2892de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the nByte argument is less than zero, then zSql is read up to the
2893de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** first zero terminator. ^If nByte is non-negative, then it is the maximum
2894de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** number of  bytes read from zSql.  ^When nByte is non-negative, the
2895de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** zSql string ends at either the first '\000' or '\u0000' character or
2896de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the nByte-th byte, whichever comes first. If the caller knows
2897de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that the supplied string is nul-terminated, then there is a small
2898de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** performance advantage to be gained by passing an nByte parameter that
2899de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is equal to the number of bytes in the input string <i>including</i>
290090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the nul-terminator bytes as this saves SQLite from having to
290190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** make a copy of the input string.
2902de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2903de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If pzTail is not NULL then *pzTail is made to point to the first byte
2904de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** past the end of the first SQL statement in zSql.  These routines only
2905de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compile the first statement in zSql, so *pzTail is left pointing to
2906de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** what remains uncompiled.
2907de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2908de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^*ppStmt is left pointing to a compiled [prepared statement] that can be
2909de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** executed using [sqlite3_step()].  ^If there is an error, *ppStmt is set
2910de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to NULL.  ^If the input text contains no SQL (if the input is an empty
2911de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** string or a comment) then *ppStmt is set to NULL.
2912de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The calling procedure is responsible for deleting the compiled
2913de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL statement using [sqlite3_finalize()] after it has finished with it.
2914de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ppStmt may not be NULL.
2915de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2916de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^On success, the sqlite3_prepare() family of routines return [SQLITE_OK];
2917de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** otherwise an [error code] is returned.
2918de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2919de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_prepare_v2() and sqlite3_prepare16_v2() interfaces are
2920de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** recommended for all new programs. The two older interfaces are retained
2921de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for backwards compatibility, but their use is discouraged.
2922de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^In the "v2" interfaces, the prepared statement
2923de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that is returned (the [sqlite3_stmt] object) contains a copy of the
2924de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** original SQL text. This causes the [sqlite3_step()] interface to
2925de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** behave differently in three ways:
2926de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2927de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ol>
2928de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>
2929de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the database schema changes, instead of returning [SQLITE_SCHEMA] as it
2930de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** always used to do, [sqlite3_step()] will automatically recompile the SQL
2931de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** statement and try to run it again.
2932de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </li>
2933de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2934de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>
2935de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^When an error occurs, [sqlite3_step()] will return one of the detailed
2936de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [error codes] or [extended error codes].  ^The legacy behavior was that
2937de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_step()] would only return a generic [SQLITE_ERROR] result code
2938de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the application would have to make a second call to [sqlite3_reset()]
2939de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in order to find the underlying cause of the problem. With the "v2" prepare
2940de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces, the underlying reason for the error is returned immediately.
2941de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </li>
2942de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2943de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>
2944de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the specific value bound to [parameter | host parameter] in the
2945de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** WHERE clause might influence the choice of query plan for a statement,
2946de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the statement will be automatically recompiled, as if there had been
2947de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a schema change, on the first  [sqlite3_step()] call following any change
2948de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the [sqlite3_bind_text | bindings] of that [parameter].
2949de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The specific value of WHERE-clause [parameter] might influence the
2950de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** choice of query plan if the parameter is the left-hand side of a [LIKE]
2951de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [GLOB] operator or if the parameter is compared to an indexed column
295290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** and the [SQLITE_ENABLE_STAT3] compile-time option is enabled.
2953de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the
2954de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </li>
2955de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ol>
2956de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2957de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_prepare(
2958de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,            /* Database handle */
2959de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zSql,       /* SQL statement, UTF-8 encoded */
2960de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nByte,              /* Maximum length of zSql in bytes. */
2961de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_stmt **ppStmt,  /* OUT: Statement handle */
2962de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char **pzTail     /* OUT: Pointer to unused portion of zSql */
2963de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2964de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_prepare_v2(
2965de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,            /* Database handle */
2966de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zSql,       /* SQL statement, UTF-8 encoded */
2967de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nByte,              /* Maximum length of zSql in bytes. */
2968de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_stmt **ppStmt,  /* OUT: Statement handle */
2969de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char **pzTail     /* OUT: Pointer to unused portion of zSql */
2970de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2971de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_prepare16(
2972de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,            /* Database handle */
2973de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void *zSql,       /* SQL statement, UTF-16 encoded */
2974de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nByte,              /* Maximum length of zSql in bytes. */
2975de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_stmt **ppStmt,  /* OUT: Statement handle */
2976de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void **pzTail     /* OUT: Pointer to unused portion of zSql */
2977de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2978de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_prepare16_v2(
2979de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,            /* Database handle */
2980de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void *zSql,       /* SQL statement, UTF-16 encoded */
2981de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nByte,              /* Maximum length of zSql in bytes. */
2982de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_stmt **ppStmt,  /* OUT: Statement handle */
2983de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void **pzTail     /* OUT: Pointer to unused portion of zSql */
2984de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
2985de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2986de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
2987de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Retrieving Statement SQL
2988de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
2989de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This interface can be used to retrieve a saved copy of the original
2990de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL text used to create a [prepared statement] if that statement was
2991de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compiled using either [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()].
2992de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
2993de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_sql(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt);
2994de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
2995de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
299695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Determine If An SQL Statement Writes The Database
299795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
299895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_stmt_readonly(X) interface returns true (non-zero) if
299990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** and only if the [prepared statement] X makes no direct changes to
300090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the content of the database file.
300190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
300290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Note that [application-defined SQL functions] or
300390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [virtual tables] might change the database indirectly as a side effect.
300490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(For example, if an application defines a function "eval()" that
300590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** calls [sqlite3_exec()], then the following SQL statement would
300690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** change the database file through side-effects:
300790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
300890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <blockquote><pre>
300990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**    SELECT eval('DELETE FROM t1') FROM t2;
301090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** </pre></blockquote>
301190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
301290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** But because the [SELECT] statement does not change the database file
301390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** directly, sqlite3_stmt_readonly() would still return true.)^
301490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
301590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^Transaction control statements such as [BEGIN], [COMMIT], [ROLLBACK],
301690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SAVEPOINT], and [RELEASE] cause sqlite3_stmt_readonly() to return true,
301790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** since the statements themselves do not actually modify the database but
301890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** rather they control the timing of when other statements modify the
301990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** database.  ^The [ATTACH] and [DETACH] statements also cause
302090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** sqlite3_stmt_readonly() to return true since, while those statements
302190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** change the configuration of a database connection, they do not make
302290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** changes to the content of the database files on disk.
302395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori*/
302495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_readonly(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt);
302595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori
302695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori/*
302790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Determine If A Prepared Statement Has Been Reset
302890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
302990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The sqlite3_stmt_busy(S) interface returns true (non-zero) if the
303090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [prepared statement] S has been stepped at least once using
303190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_step(S)] but has not run to completion and/or has not
303290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** been reset using [sqlite3_reset(S)].  ^The sqlite3_stmt_busy(S)
303390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** interface returns false if S is a NULL pointer.  If S is not a
303490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** NULL pointer and is not a pointer to a valid [prepared statement]
303590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** object, then the behavior is undefined and probably undesirable.
303690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
303790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** This interface can be used in combination [sqlite3_next_stmt()]
303890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to locate all prepared statements associated with a database
303990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** connection that are in need of being reset.  This can be used,
304090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** for example, in diagnostic routines to search for prepared
304190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** statements that are holding a transaction open.
304290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
304390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_busy(sqlite3_stmt*);
304490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
304590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
3046de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Dynamically Typed Value Object
3047de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {protected sqlite3_value} {unprotected sqlite3_value}
3048de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3049de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite uses the sqlite3_value object to represent all values
3050de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that can be stored in a database table. SQLite uses dynamic typing
3051de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for the values it stores.  ^Values stored in sqlite3_value objects
3052de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be integers, floating point values, strings, BLOBs, or NULL.
3053de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3054de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** An sqlite3_value object may be either "protected" or "unprotected".
3055de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Some interfaces require a protected sqlite3_value.  Other interfaces
3056de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will accept either a protected or an unprotected sqlite3_value.
3057de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Every interface that accepts sqlite3_value arguments specifies
3058de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** whether or not it requires a protected sqlite3_value.
3059de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3060de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The terms "protected" and "unprotected" refer to whether or not
306190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a mutex is held.  An internal mutex is held for a protected
3062de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_value object but no mutex is held for an unprotected
3063de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_value object.  If SQLite is compiled to be single-threaded
3064de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (with [SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0] and with [sqlite3_threadsafe()] returning 0)
3065de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or if SQLite is run in one of reduced mutex modes
3066de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD] or [SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD]
3067de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then there is no distinction between protected and unprotected
3068de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_value objects and they can be used interchangeably.  However,
3069de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for maximum code portability it is recommended that applications
3070de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** still make the distinction between protected and unprotected
3071de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_value objects even when not strictly required.
3072de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3073de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_value objects that are passed as parameters into the
3074de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation of [application-defined SQL functions] are protected.
3075de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_value object returned by
3076de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_column_value()] is unprotected.
3077de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Unprotected sqlite3_value objects may only be used with
3078de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_result_value()] and [sqlite3_bind_value()].
3079de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [sqlite3_value_blob | sqlite3_value_type()] family of
3080de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces require protected sqlite3_value objects.
3081de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3082de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct Mem sqlite3_value;
3083de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3084de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3085de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: SQL Function Context Object
3086de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3087de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The context in which an SQL function executes is stored in an
3088de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_context object.  ^A pointer to an sqlite3_context object
3089de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is always first parameter to [application-defined SQL functions].
3090de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The application-defined SQL function implementation will pass this
3091de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointer through into calls to [sqlite3_result_int | sqlite3_result()],
3092de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_aggregate_context()], [sqlite3_user_data()],
3093de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_context_db_handle()], [sqlite3_get_auxdata()],
3094de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and/or [sqlite3_set_auxdata()].
3095de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3096de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_context sqlite3_context;
3097de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3098de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3099de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Binding Values To Prepared Statements
3100de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {host parameter} {host parameters} {host parameter name}
3101de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {SQL parameter} {SQL parameters} {parameter binding}
3102de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3103de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(In the SQL statement text input to [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and its variants,
3104de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** literals may be replaced by a [parameter] that matches one of following
3105de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** templates:
3106de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3107de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
3108de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  ?
3109de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  ?NNN
3110de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  :VVV
3111de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  @VVV
3112de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  $VVV
3113de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>
3114de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3115de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In the templates above, NNN represents an integer literal,
3116de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and VVV represents an alphanumeric identifier.)^  ^The values of these
3117de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameters (also called "host parameter names" or "SQL parameters")
3118de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be set using the sqlite3_bind_*() routines defined here.
3119de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3120de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first argument to the sqlite3_bind_*() routines is always
3121de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a pointer to the [sqlite3_stmt] object returned from
3122de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or its variants.
3123de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3124de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The second argument is the index of the SQL parameter to be set.
3125de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The leftmost SQL parameter has an index of 1.  ^When the same named
3126de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL parameter is used more than once, second and subsequent
3127de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** occurrences have the same index as the first occurrence.
3128de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The index for named parameters can be looked up using the
3129de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()] API if desired.  ^The index
3130de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for "?NNN" parameters is the value of NNN.
3131de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The NNN value must be between 1 and the [sqlite3_limit()]
3132de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter [SQLITE_LIMIT_VARIABLE_NUMBER] (default value: 999).
3133de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3134de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The third argument is the value to bind to the parameter.
3135de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3136de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(In those routines that have a fourth argument, its value is the
3137de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** number of bytes in the parameter.  To be clear: the value is the
3138de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** number of <u>bytes</u> in the value, not the number of characters.)^
3139de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the fourth parameter is negative, the length of the string is
3140de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the number of bytes up to the first zero terminator.
314190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If a non-negative fourth parameter is provided to sqlite3_bind_text()
314290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** or sqlite3_bind_text16() then that parameter must be the byte offset
314390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** where the NUL terminator would occur assuming the string were NUL
314490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** terminated.  If any NUL characters occur at byte offsets less than
314590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the value of the fourth parameter then the resulting string value will
314690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** contain embedded NULs.  The result of expressions involving strings
314790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** with embedded NULs is undefined.
3148de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3149de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The fifth argument to sqlite3_bind_blob(), sqlite3_bind_text(), and
3150de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_bind_text16() is a destructor used to dispose of the BLOB or
315195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** string after SQLite has finished with it.  ^The destructor is called
315295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** to dispose of the BLOB or string even if the call to sqlite3_bind_blob(),
315395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** sqlite3_bind_text(), or sqlite3_bind_text16() fails.
315495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^If the fifth argument is
3155de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the special value [SQLITE_STATIC], then SQLite assumes that the
3156de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** information is in static, unmanaged space and does not need to be freed.
3157de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the fifth argument has the value [SQLITE_TRANSIENT], then
3158de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite makes its own private copy of the data immediately, before
3159de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the sqlite3_bind_*() routine returns.
3160de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3161de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_bind_zeroblob() routine binds a BLOB of length N that
3162de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is filled with zeroes.  ^A zeroblob uses a fixed amount of memory
3163de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (just an integer to hold its size) while it is being processed.
3164de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Zeroblobs are intended to serve as placeholders for BLOBs whose
3165de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** content is later written using
3166de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_blob_open | incremental BLOB I/O] routines.
3167de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A negative value for the zeroblob results in a zero-length BLOB.
3168de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3169de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If any of the sqlite3_bind_*() routines are called with a NULL pointer
3170de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for the [prepared statement] or with a prepared statement for which
3171de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_step()] has been called more recently than [sqlite3_reset()],
3172de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the call will return [SQLITE_MISUSE].  If any sqlite3_bind_()
3173de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine is passed a [prepared statement] that has been finalized, the
3174de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** result is undefined and probably harmful.
3175de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3176de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Bindings are not cleared by the [sqlite3_reset()] routine.
3177de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Unbound parameters are interpreted as NULL.
3178de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3179de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_bind_* routines return [SQLITE_OK] on success or an
3180de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [error code] if anything goes wrong.
3181de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^[SQLITE_RANGE] is returned if the parameter
3182de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** index is out of range.  ^[SQLITE_NOMEM] is returned if malloc() fails.
3183de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3184de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_bind_parameter_count()],
3185de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_name()], and [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()].
3186de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3187de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_blob(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const void*, int n, void(*)(void*));
3188de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_double(sqlite3_stmt*, int, double);
3189de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_int(sqlite3_stmt*, int, int);
3190de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_int64(sqlite3_stmt*, int, sqlite3_int64);
3191de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_null(sqlite3_stmt*, int);
3192de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const char*, int n, void(*)(void*));
3193de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_text16(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const void*, int, void(*)(void*));
3194de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_value(sqlite3_stmt*, int, const sqlite3_value*);
3195de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_zeroblob(sqlite3_stmt*, int, int n);
3196de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3197de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3198de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Number Of SQL Parameters
3199de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3200de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This routine can be used to find the number of [SQL parameters]
3201de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in a [prepared statement].  SQL parameters are tokens of the
3202de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** form "?", "?NNN", ":AAA", "$AAA", or "@AAA" that serve as
3203de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** placeholders for values that are [sqlite3_bind_blob | bound]
3204de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the parameters at a later time.
3205de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3206de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This routine actually returns the index of the largest (rightmost)
3207de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter. For all forms except ?NNN, this will correspond to the
3208de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** number of unique parameters.  If parameters of the ?NNN form are used,
3209de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** there may be gaps in the list.)^
3210de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3211de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()],
3212de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_name()], and
3213de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()].
3214de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3215de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_parameter_count(sqlite3_stmt*);
3216de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3217de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3218de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Name Of A Host Parameter
3219de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3220de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_bind_parameter_name(P,N) interface returns
3221de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the name of the N-th [SQL parameter] in the [prepared statement] P.
3222de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(SQL parameters of the form "?NNN" or ":AAA" or "@AAA" or "$AAA"
3223de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** have a name which is the string "?NNN" or ":AAA" or "@AAA" or "$AAA"
3224de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** respectively.
3225de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In other words, the initial ":" or "$" or "@" or "?"
3226de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is included as part of the name.)^
3227de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Parameters of the form "?" without a following integer have no name
3228de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and are referred to as "nameless" or "anonymous parameters".
3229de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3230de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first host parameter has an index of 1, not 0.
3231de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3232de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the value N is out of range or if the N-th parameter is
3233de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** nameless, then NULL is returned.  ^The returned string is
3234de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** always in UTF-8 encoding even if the named parameter was
3235de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** originally specified as UTF-16 in [sqlite3_prepare16()] or
3236de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()].
3237de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3238de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()],
3239de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_count()], and
3240de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()].
3241de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3242de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_bind_parameter_name(sqlite3_stmt*, int);
3243de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3244de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3245de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Index Of A Parameter With A Given Name
3246de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3247de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Return the index of an SQL parameter given its name.  ^The
3248de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** index value returned is suitable for use as the second
3249de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter to [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()].  ^A zero
3250de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is returned if no matching parameter is found.  ^The parameter
3251de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** name must be given in UTF-8 even if the original statement
3252de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** was prepared from UTF-16 text using [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()].
3253de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3254de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_bind_blob|sqlite3_bind()],
3255de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_count()], and
3256de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_bind_parameter_index()].
3257de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3258de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_bind_parameter_index(sqlite3_stmt*, const char *zName);
3259de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3260de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3261de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Reset All Bindings On A Prepared Statement
3262de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3263de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Contrary to the intuition of many, [sqlite3_reset()] does not reset
3264de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [sqlite3_bind_blob | bindings] on a [prepared statement].
3265de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Use this routine to reset all host parameters to NULL.
3266de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3267de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_clear_bindings(sqlite3_stmt*);
3268de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3269de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3270de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Number Of Columns In A Result Set
3271de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3272de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Return the number of columns in the result set returned by the
3273de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [prepared statement]. ^This routine returns 0 if pStmt is an SQL
3274de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** statement that does not return data (for example an [UPDATE]).
3275de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3276de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_data_count()]
3277de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3278de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_count(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt);
3279de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3280de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3281de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Column Names In A Result Set
3282de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3283de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These routines return the name assigned to a particular column
3284de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the result set of a [SELECT] statement.  ^The sqlite3_column_name()
3285de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface returns a pointer to a zero-terminated UTF-8 string
3286de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and sqlite3_column_name16() returns a pointer to a zero-terminated
3287de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** UTF-16 string.  ^The first parameter is the [prepared statement]
3288de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that implements the [SELECT] statement. ^The second parameter is the
3289de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** column number.  ^The leftmost column is number 0.
3290de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3291de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The returned string pointer is valid until either the [prepared statement]
329290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is destroyed by [sqlite3_finalize()] or until the statement is automatically
329390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** reprepared by the first call to [sqlite3_step()] for a particular run
329490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** or until the next call to
3295de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_column_name() or sqlite3_column_name16() on the same column.
3296de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3297de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If sqlite3_malloc() fails during the processing of either routine
3298de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (for example during a conversion from UTF-8 to UTF-16) then a
3299de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** NULL pointer is returned.
3300de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3301de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The name of a result column is the value of the "AS" clause for
3302de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that column, if there is an AS clause.  If there is no AS clause
3303de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the name of the column is unspecified and may change from
3304de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** one release of SQLite to the next.
3305de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3306de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_name(sqlite3_stmt*, int N);
3307de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_name16(sqlite3_stmt*, int N);
3308de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3309de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3310de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Source Of Data In A Query Result
3311de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3312de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These routines provide a means to determine the database, table, and
3313de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** table column that is the origin of a particular result column in
3314de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SELECT] statement.
3315de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The name of the database or table or column can be returned as
3316de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** either a UTF-8 or UTF-16 string.  ^The _database_ routines return
3317de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the database name, the _table_ routines return the table name, and
3318de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the origin_ routines return the column name.
3319de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The returned string is valid until the [prepared statement] is destroyed
332090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** using [sqlite3_finalize()] or until the statement is automatically
332190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** reprepared by the first call to [sqlite3_step()] for a particular run
332290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** or until the same information is requested
3323de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** again in a different encoding.
3324de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3325de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The names returned are the original un-aliased names of the
3326de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database, table, and column.
3327de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3328de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first argument to these interfaces is a [prepared statement].
3329de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These functions return information about the Nth result column returned by
3330de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the statement, where N is the second function argument.
3331de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The left-most column is column 0 for these routines.
3332de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3333de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the Nth column returned by the statement is an expression or
3334de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** subquery and is not a column value, then all of these functions return
3335de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** NULL.  ^These routine might also return NULL if a memory allocation error
3336de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** occurs.  ^Otherwise, they return the name of the attached database, table,
3337de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or column that query result column was extracted from.
3338de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3339de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^As with all other SQLite APIs, those whose names end with "16" return
3340de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** UTF-16 encoded strings and the other functions return UTF-8.
3341de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3342de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These APIs are only available if the library was compiled with the
3343de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_ENABLE_COLUMN_METADATA] C-preprocessor symbol.
3344de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3345de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If two or more threads call one or more of these routines against the same
3346de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prepared statement and column at the same time then the results are
3347de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** undefined.
3348de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3349de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If two or more threads call one or more
3350de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_column_database_name | column metadata interfaces]
3351de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for the same [prepared statement] and result column
3352de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** at the same time then the results are undefined.
3353de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3354de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_database_name(sqlite3_stmt*,int);
3355de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_database_name16(sqlite3_stmt*,int);
3356de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_table_name(sqlite3_stmt*,int);
3357de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_table_name16(sqlite3_stmt*,int);
3358de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_origin_name(sqlite3_stmt*,int);
3359de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_origin_name16(sqlite3_stmt*,int);
3360de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3361de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3362de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Declared Datatype Of A Query Result
3363de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3364de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The first parameter is a [prepared statement].
3365de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If this statement is a [SELECT] statement and the Nth column of the
3366de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned result set of that [SELECT] is a table column (not an
3367de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** expression or subquery) then the declared type of the table
3368de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** column is returned.)^  ^If the Nth column of the result set is an
3369de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** expression or subquery, then a NULL pointer is returned.
3370de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The returned string is always UTF-8 encoded.
3371de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3372de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(For example, given the database schema:
3373de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3374de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CREATE TABLE t1(c1 VARIANT);
3375de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3376de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the following statement to be compiled:
3377de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3378de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SELECT c1 + 1, c1 FROM t1;
3379de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3380de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this routine would return the string "VARIANT" for the second result
3381de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** column (i==1), and a NULL pointer for the first result column (i==0).)^
3382de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3383de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite uses dynamic run-time typing.  ^So just because a column
3384de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is declared to contain a particular type does not mean that the
3385de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** data stored in that column is of the declared type.  SQLite is
3386de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** strongly typed, but the typing is dynamic not static.  ^Type
3387de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is associated with individual values, not with the containers
3388de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** used to hold those values.
3389de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3390de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_column_decltype(sqlite3_stmt*,int);
3391de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_decltype16(sqlite3_stmt*,int);
3392de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3393de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3394de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Evaluate An SQL Statement
3395de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3396de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** After a [prepared statement] has been prepared using either
3397de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()] or one of the legacy
3398de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces [sqlite3_prepare()] or [sqlite3_prepare16()], this function
3399de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** must be called one or more times to evaluate the statement.
3400de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3401de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The details of the behavior of the sqlite3_step() interface depend
3402de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on whether the statement was prepared using the newer "v2" interface
3403de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()] or the older legacy
3404de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface [sqlite3_prepare()] and [sqlite3_prepare16()].  The use of the
3405de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** new "v2" interface is recommended for new applications but the legacy
3406de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface will continue to be supported.
3407de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3408de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^In the legacy interface, the return value will be either [SQLITE_BUSY],
3409de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_DONE], [SQLITE_ROW], [SQLITE_ERROR], or [SQLITE_MISUSE].
3410de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^With the "v2" interface, any of the other [result codes] or
3411de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [extended result codes] might be returned as well.
3412de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3413de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^[SQLITE_BUSY] means that the database engine was unable to acquire the
3414de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database locks it needs to do its job.  ^If the statement is a [COMMIT]
3415de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or occurs outside of an explicit transaction, then you can retry the
341690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** statement.  If the statement is not a [COMMIT] and occurs within an
3417de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** explicit transaction then you should rollback the transaction before
3418de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** continuing.
3419de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3420de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^[SQLITE_DONE] means that the statement has finished executing
3421de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** successfully.  sqlite3_step() should not be called again on this virtual
3422de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** machine without first calling [sqlite3_reset()] to reset the virtual
3423de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** machine back to its initial state.
3424de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3425de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the SQL statement being executed returns any data, then [SQLITE_ROW]
3426de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is returned each time a new row of data is ready for processing by the
3427de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** caller. The values may be accessed using the [column access functions].
3428de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_step() is called again to retrieve the next row of data.
3429de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3430de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^[SQLITE_ERROR] means that a run-time error (such as a constraint
3431de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** violation) has occurred.  sqlite3_step() should not be called again on
3432de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the VM. More information may be found by calling [sqlite3_errmsg()].
3433de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^With the legacy interface, a more specific error code (for example,
3434de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_INTERRUPT], [SQLITE_SCHEMA], [SQLITE_CORRUPT], and so forth)
3435de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be obtained by calling [sqlite3_reset()] on the
3436de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [prepared statement].  ^In the "v2" interface,
3437de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the more specific error code is returned directly by sqlite3_step().
3438de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3439de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_MISUSE] means that the this routine was called inappropriately.
3440de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Perhaps it was called on a [prepared statement] that has
3441de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** already been [sqlite3_finalize | finalized] or on one that had
3442de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** previously returned [SQLITE_ERROR] or [SQLITE_DONE].  Or it could
3443de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be the case that the same database connection is being used by two or
3444de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** more threads at the same moment in time.
3445de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
344690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** For all versions of SQLite up to and including 3.6.23.1, a call to
344790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_reset()] was required after sqlite3_step() returned anything
344890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** other than [SQLITE_ROW] before any subsequent invocation of
344990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** sqlite3_step().  Failure to reset the prepared statement using
345090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_reset()] would result in an [SQLITE_MISUSE] return from
345190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** sqlite3_step().  But after version 3.6.23.1, sqlite3_step() began
345290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** calling [sqlite3_reset()] automatically in this circumstance rather
345390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** than returning [SQLITE_MISUSE].  This is not considered a compatibility
345490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** break because any application that ever receives an SQLITE_MISUSE error
345590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is broken by definition.  The [SQLITE_OMIT_AUTORESET] compile-time option
345690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** can be used to restore the legacy behavior.
3457de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3458de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <b>Goofy Interface Alert:</b> In the legacy interface, the sqlite3_step()
3459de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** API always returns a generic error code, [SQLITE_ERROR], following any
3460de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** error other than [SQLITE_BUSY] and [SQLITE_MISUSE].  You must call
3461de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_reset()] or [sqlite3_finalize()] in order to find one of the
3462de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** specific [error codes] that better describes the error.
3463de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** We admit that this is a goofy design.  The problem has been fixed
3464de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the "v2" interface.  If you prepare all of your SQL statements
3465de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** using either [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or [sqlite3_prepare16_v2()] instead
3466de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the legacy [sqlite3_prepare()] and [sqlite3_prepare16()] interfaces,
3467de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the more specific [error codes] are returned directly
3468de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by sqlite3_step().  The use of the "v2" interface is recommended.
3469de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3470de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_step(sqlite3_stmt*);
3471de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3472de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3473de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Number of columns in a result set
3474de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3475de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) interface returns the number of columns in the
3476de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** current row of the result set of [prepared statement] P.
3477de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If prepared statement P does not have results ready to return
3478de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (via calls to the [sqlite3_column_int | sqlite3_column_*()] of
3479de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces) then sqlite3_data_count(P) returns 0.
3480de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) routine also returns 0 if P is a NULL pointer.
348190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The sqlite3_data_count(P) routine returns 0 if the previous call to
348290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_step](P) returned [SQLITE_DONE].  ^The sqlite3_data_count(P)
348390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** will return non-zero if previous call to [sqlite3_step](P) returned
348490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_ROW], except in the case of the [PRAGMA incremental_vacuum]
348590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** where it always returns zero since each step of that multi-step
348690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** pragma returns 0 columns of data.
3487de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3488de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_column_count()]
3489de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3490de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_data_count(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt);
3491de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3492de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3493de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Fundamental Datatypes
3494de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: SQLITE_TEXT
3495de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3496de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Every value in SQLite has one of five fundamental datatypes:
3497de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3498de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
3499de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> 64-bit signed integer
3500de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> 64-bit IEEE floating point number
3501de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> string
3502de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> BLOB
3503de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> NULL
3504de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>)^
3505de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3506de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These constants are codes for each of those types.
3507de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3508de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Note that the SQLITE_TEXT constant was also used in SQLite version 2
3509de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for a completely different meaning.  Software that links against both
3510de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite version 2 and SQLite version 3 should use SQLITE3_TEXT, not
3511de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_TEXT.
3512de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3513de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INTEGER  1
3514de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_FLOAT    2
3515de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_BLOB     4
3516de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_NULL     5
3517de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef SQLITE_TEXT
3518de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori# undef SQLITE_TEXT
3519de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#else
3520de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori# define SQLITE_TEXT     3
3521de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
3522de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE3_TEXT     3
3523de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3524de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3525de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Result Values From A Query
3526de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {column access functions}
3527de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3528de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines form the "result set" interface.
3529de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3530de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These routines return information about a single column of the current
3531de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** result row of a query.  ^In every case the first argument is a pointer
3532de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the [prepared statement] that is being evaluated (the [sqlite3_stmt*]
3533de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that was returned from [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] or one of its variants)
3534de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the second argument is the index of the column for which information
3535de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** should be returned. ^The leftmost column of the result set has the index 0.
3536de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The number of columns in the result can be determined using
3537de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_column_count()].
3538de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3539de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the SQL statement does not currently point to a valid row, or if the
3540de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** column index is out of range, the result is undefined.
3541de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines may only be called when the most recent call to
3542de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_step()] has returned [SQLITE_ROW] and neither
3543de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_reset()] nor [sqlite3_finalize()] have been called subsequently.
3544de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If any of these routines are called after [sqlite3_reset()] or
3545de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_finalize()] or after [sqlite3_step()] has returned
3546de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** something other than [SQLITE_ROW], the results are undefined.
3547de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If [sqlite3_step()] or [sqlite3_reset()] or [sqlite3_finalize()]
3548de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are called from a different thread while any of these routines
3549de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are pending, then the results are undefined.
3550de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3551de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_column_type() routine returns the
3552de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_INTEGER | datatype code] for the initial data type
3553de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the result column.  ^The returned value is one of [SQLITE_INTEGER],
3554de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_FLOAT], [SQLITE_TEXT], [SQLITE_BLOB], or [SQLITE_NULL].  The value
3555de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned by sqlite3_column_type() is only meaningful if no type
3556de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** conversions have occurred as described below.  After a type conversion,
3557de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the value returned by sqlite3_column_type() is undefined.  Future
3558de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** versions of SQLite may change the behavior of sqlite3_column_type()
3559de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** following a type conversion.
3560de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3561de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the result is a BLOB or UTF-8 string then the sqlite3_column_bytes()
3562de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine returns the number of bytes in that BLOB or string.
3563de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the result is a UTF-16 string, then sqlite3_column_bytes() converts
3564de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the string to UTF-8 and then returns the number of bytes.
3565de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the result is a numeric value then sqlite3_column_bytes() uses
3566de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_snprintf()] to convert that value to a UTF-8 string and returns
3567de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the number of bytes in that string.
3568de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the result is NULL, then sqlite3_column_bytes() returns zero.
3569de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3570de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the result is a BLOB or UTF-16 string then the sqlite3_column_bytes16()
3571de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine returns the number of bytes in that BLOB or string.
3572de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the result is a UTF-8 string, then sqlite3_column_bytes16() converts
3573de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the string to UTF-16 and then returns the number of bytes.
3574de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the result is a numeric value then sqlite3_column_bytes16() uses
3575de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_snprintf()] to convert that value to a UTF-16 string and returns
3576de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the number of bytes in that string.
3577de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the result is NULL, then sqlite3_column_bytes16() returns zero.
3578de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3579de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The values returned by [sqlite3_column_bytes()] and
3580de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_column_bytes16()] do not include the zero terminators at the end
3581de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the string.  ^For clarity: the values returned by
3582de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_column_bytes()] and [sqlite3_column_bytes16()] are the number of
3583de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** bytes in the string, not the number of characters.
3584de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3585de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Strings returned by sqlite3_column_text() and sqlite3_column_text16(),
358690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** even empty strings, are always zero-terminated.  ^The return
3587de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value from sqlite3_column_blob() for a zero-length BLOB is a NULL pointer.
3588de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3589de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The object returned by [sqlite3_column_value()] is an
3590de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [unprotected sqlite3_value] object.  An unprotected sqlite3_value object
3591de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** may only be used with [sqlite3_bind_value()] and [sqlite3_result_value()].
3592de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the [unprotected sqlite3_value] object returned by
3593de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_column_value()] is used in any other way, including calls
3594de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to routines like [sqlite3_value_int()], [sqlite3_value_text()],
3595de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [sqlite3_value_bytes()], then the behavior is undefined.
3596de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3597de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines attempt to convert the value where appropriate.  ^For
3598de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** example, if the internal representation is FLOAT and a text result
3599de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is requested, [sqlite3_snprintf()] is used internally to perform the
3600de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** conversion automatically.  ^(The following table details the conversions
3601de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that are applied:
3602de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3603de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote>
3604de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <table border="1">
3605de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><th> Internal<br>Type <th> Requested<br>Type <th>  Conversion
3606de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3607de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  NULL    <td> INTEGER   <td> Result is 0
3608de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  NULL    <td>  FLOAT    <td> Result is 0.0
3609de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  NULL    <td>   TEXT    <td> Result is NULL pointer
3610de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  NULL    <td>   BLOB    <td> Result is NULL pointer
3611de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> INTEGER  <td>  FLOAT    <td> Convert from integer to float
3612de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> INTEGER  <td>   TEXT    <td> ASCII rendering of the integer
3613de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> INTEGER  <td>   BLOB    <td> Same as INTEGER->TEXT
3614de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  FLOAT   <td> INTEGER   <td> Convert from float to integer
3615de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  FLOAT   <td>   TEXT    <td> ASCII rendering of the float
3616de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  FLOAT   <td>   BLOB    <td> Same as FLOAT->TEXT
3617de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  TEXT    <td> INTEGER   <td> Use atoi()
3618de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  TEXT    <td>  FLOAT    <td> Use atof()
3619de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  TEXT    <td>   BLOB    <td> No change
3620de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  BLOB    <td> INTEGER   <td> Convert to TEXT then use atoi()
3621de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  BLOB    <td>  FLOAT    <td> Convert to TEXT then use atof()
3622de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td>  BLOB    <td>   TEXT    <td> Add a zero terminator if needed
3623de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </table>
3624de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </blockquote>)^
3625de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3626de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The table above makes reference to standard C library functions atoi()
3627de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and atof().  SQLite does not really use these functions.  It has its
3628de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** own equivalent internal routines.  The atoi() and atof() names are
3629de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** used in the table for brevity and because they are familiar to most
3630de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** C programmers.
3631de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3632de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Note that when type conversions occur, pointers returned by prior
3633de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** calls to sqlite3_column_blob(), sqlite3_column_text(), and/or
3634de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_column_text16() may be invalidated.
3635de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Type conversions and pointer invalidations might occur
3636de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the following cases:
3637de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3638de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
3639de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> The initial content is a BLOB and sqlite3_column_text() or
3640de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      sqlite3_column_text16() is called.  A zero-terminator might
3641de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      need to be added to the string.</li>
3642de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> The initial content is UTF-8 text and sqlite3_column_bytes16() or
3643de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      sqlite3_column_text16() is called.  The content must be converted
3644de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      to UTF-16.</li>
3645de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> The initial content is UTF-16 text and sqlite3_column_bytes() or
3646de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      sqlite3_column_text() is called.  The content must be converted
3647de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      to UTF-8.</li>
3648de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>
3649de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3650de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Conversions between UTF-16be and UTF-16le are always done in place and do
3651de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not invalidate a prior pointer, though of course the content of the buffer
3652de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that the prior pointer references will have been modified.  Other kinds
3653de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of conversion are done in place when it is possible, but sometimes they
3654de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are not possible and in those cases prior pointers are invalidated.
3655de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3656de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The safest and easiest to remember policy is to invoke these routines
3657de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in one of the following ways:
3658de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3659de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
3660de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  <li>sqlite3_column_text() followed by sqlite3_column_bytes()</li>
3661de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  <li>sqlite3_column_blob() followed by sqlite3_column_bytes()</li>
3662de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**  <li>sqlite3_column_text16() followed by sqlite3_column_bytes16()</li>
3663de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>
3664de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3665de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In other words, you should call sqlite3_column_text(),
3666de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_column_blob(), or sqlite3_column_text16() first to force the result
3667de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** into the desired format, then invoke sqlite3_column_bytes() or
3668de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_column_bytes16() to find the size of the result.  Do not mix calls
3669de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to sqlite3_column_text() or sqlite3_column_blob() with calls to
3670de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_column_bytes16(), and do not mix calls to sqlite3_column_text16()
3671de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with calls to sqlite3_column_bytes().
3672de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3673de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The pointers returned are valid until a type conversion occurs as
3674de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** described above, or until [sqlite3_step()] or [sqlite3_reset()] or
3675de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_finalize()] is called.  ^The memory space used to hold strings
3676de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and BLOBs is freed automatically.  Do <b>not</b> pass the pointers returned
3677de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_column_blob()], [sqlite3_column_text()], etc. into
3678de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_free()].
3679de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3680de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(If a memory allocation error occurs during the evaluation of any
3681de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of these routines, a default value is returned.  The default value
3682de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is either the integer 0, the floating point number 0.0, or a NULL
3683de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointer.  Subsequent calls to [sqlite3_errcode()] will return
3684de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_NOMEM].)^
3685de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3686de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_blob(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3687de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_bytes(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3688de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_bytes16(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3689de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API double sqlite3_column_double(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3690de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_int(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3691de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_column_int64(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3692de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const unsigned char *sqlite3_column_text(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3693de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_column_text16(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3694de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_column_type(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3695de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_value *sqlite3_column_value(sqlite3_stmt*, int iCol);
3696de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3697de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3698de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Destroy A Prepared Statement Object
3699de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3700de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_finalize() function is called to delete a [prepared statement].
370190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^If the most recent evaluation of the statement encountered no errors
370295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** or if the statement is never been evaluated, then sqlite3_finalize() returns
370395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** SQLITE_OK.  ^If the most recent evaluation of statement S failed, then
370495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** sqlite3_finalize(S) returns the appropriate [error code] or
370595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** [extended error code].
370695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
370795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_finalize(S) routine can be called at any point during
370895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** the life cycle of [prepared statement] S:
370995c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** before statement S is ever evaluated, after
371095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** one or more calls to [sqlite3_reset()], or after any call
371195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** to [sqlite3_step()] regardless of whether or not the statement has
371295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** completed execution.
371395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
371495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^Invoking sqlite3_finalize() on a NULL pointer is a harmless no-op.
371595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
371695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** The application must finalize every [prepared statement] in order to avoid
371795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** resource leaks.  It is a grievous error for the application to try to use
371895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** a prepared statement after it has been finalized.  Any use of a prepared
371995c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** statement after it has been finalized can result in undefined and
372095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** undesirable behavior such as segfaults and heap corruption.
3721de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3722de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_finalize(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt);
3723de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3724de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3725de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Reset A Prepared Statement Object
3726de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3727de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_reset() function is called to reset a [prepared statement]
3728de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** object back to its initial state, ready to be re-executed.
3729de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Any SQL statement variables that had values bound to them using
3730de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [sqlite3_bind_blob | sqlite3_bind_*() API] retain their values.
3731de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Use [sqlite3_clear_bindings()] to reset the bindings.
3732de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3733de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_reset(S)] interface resets the [prepared statement] S
3734de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** back to the beginning of its program.
3735de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3736de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the most recent call to [sqlite3_step(S)] for the
3737de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [prepared statement] S returned [SQLITE_ROW] or [SQLITE_DONE],
3738de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or if [sqlite3_step(S)] has never before been called on S,
3739de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then [sqlite3_reset(S)] returns [SQLITE_OK].
3740de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3741de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the most recent call to [sqlite3_step(S)] for the
3742de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [prepared statement] S indicated an error, then
3743de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_reset(S)] returns an appropriate [error code].
3744de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3745de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_reset(S)] interface does not change the values
3746de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of any [sqlite3_bind_blob|bindings] on the [prepared statement] S.
3747de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3748de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_reset(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt);
3749de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3750de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3751de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Create Or Redefine SQL Functions
3752de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {function creation routines}
3753de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {application-defined SQL function}
3754de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {application-defined SQL functions}
3755de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3756de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These functions (collectively known as "function creation routines")
3757de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are used to add SQL functions or aggregates or to redefine the behavior
3758de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of existing SQL functions or aggregates.  The only differences between
3759de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** these routines are the text encoding expected for
376090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the second parameter (the name of the function being created)
3761de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the presence or absence of a destructor callback for
3762de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the application data pointer.
3763de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3764de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first parameter is the [database connection] to which the SQL
3765de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function is to be added.  ^If an application uses more than one database
3766de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connection then application-defined SQL functions must be added
3767de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to each database connection separately.
3768de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3769de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The second parameter is the name of the SQL function to be created or
3770de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** redefined.  ^The length of the name is limited to 255 bytes in a UTF-8
3771de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** representation, exclusive of the zero-terminator.  ^Note that the name
3772de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** length limit is in UTF-8 bytes, not characters nor UTF-16 bytes.
3773de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Any attempt to create a function with a longer name
3774de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will result in [SQLITE_MISUSE] being returned.
3775de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3776de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The third parameter (nArg)
3777de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is the number of arguments that the SQL function or
3778de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** aggregate takes. ^If this parameter is -1, then the SQL function or
3779de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** aggregate may take any number of arguments between 0 and the limit
3780de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** set by [sqlite3_limit]([SQLITE_LIMIT_FUNCTION_ARG]).  If the third
3781de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter is less than -1 or greater than 127 then the behavior is
3782de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** undefined.
3783de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3784de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The fourth parameter, eTextRep, specifies what
3785de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_UTF8 | text encoding] this SQL function prefers for
3786de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** its parameters.  Every SQL function implementation must be able to work
3787de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with UTF-8, UTF-16le, or UTF-16be.  But some implementations may be
3788de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** more efficient with one encoding than another.  ^An application may
3789de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invoke sqlite3_create_function() or sqlite3_create_function16() multiple
3790de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** times with the same function but with different values of eTextRep.
3791de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^When multiple implementations of the same function are available, SQLite
3792de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will pick the one that involves the least amount of data conversion.
3793de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If there is only a single implementation which does not care what text
3794de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** encoding is used, then the fourth argument should be [SQLITE_ANY].
3795de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3796de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The fifth parameter is an arbitrary pointer.  The implementation of the
3797de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function can gain access to this pointer using [sqlite3_user_data()].)^
3798de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
379990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The sixth, seventh and eighth parameters, xFunc, xStep and xFinal, are
3800de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointers to C-language functions that implement the SQL function or
3801de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** aggregate. ^A scalar SQL function requires an implementation of the xFunc
3802de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback only; NULL pointers must be passed as the xStep and xFinal
3803de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameters. ^An aggregate SQL function requires an implementation of xStep
3804de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and xFinal and NULL pointer must be passed for xFunc. ^To delete an existing
380590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** SQL function or aggregate, pass NULL pointers for all three function
3806de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callbacks.
3807de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
380890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(If the ninth parameter to sqlite3_create_function_v2() is not NULL,
380995c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** then it is destructor for the application data pointer.
381095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** The destructor is invoked when the function is deleted, either by being
381195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** overloaded or when the database connection closes.)^
381295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^The destructor is also invoked if the call to
381395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** sqlite3_create_function_v2() fails.
381495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^When the destructor callback of the tenth parameter is invoked, it
381595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** is passed a single argument which is a copy of the application data
381695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** pointer which was the fifth parameter to sqlite3_create_function_v2().
3817de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3818de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^It is permitted to register multiple implementations of the same
3819de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** functions with the same name but with either differing numbers of
3820de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** arguments or differing preferred text encodings.  ^SQLite will use
3821de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the implementation that most closely matches the way in which the
3822de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQL function is used.  ^A function implementation with a non-negative
3823de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** nArg parameter is a better match than a function implementation with
3824de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a negative nArg.  ^A function where the preferred text encoding
3825de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** matches the database encoding is a better
3826de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** match than a function where the encoding is different.
3827de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A function where the encoding difference is between UTF16le and UTF16be
3828de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is a closer match than a function where the encoding difference is
3829de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** between UTF8 and UTF16.
3830de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3831de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Built-in functions may be overloaded by new application-defined functions.
3832de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3833de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^An application-defined function is permitted to call other
3834de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite interfaces.  However, such calls must not
3835de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** close the database connection nor finalize or reset the prepared
3836de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** statement in which the function is running.
3837de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3838de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_function(
3839de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,
3840de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zFunctionName,
3841de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nArg,
3842de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int eTextRep,
3843de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pApp,
3844de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xFunc)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**),
3845de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xStep)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**),
3846de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xFinal)(sqlite3_context*)
3847de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
3848de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_function16(
3849de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,
3850de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void *zFunctionName,
3851de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nArg,
3852de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int eTextRep,
3853de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pApp,
3854de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xFunc)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**),
3855de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xStep)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**),
3856de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xFinal)(sqlite3_context*)
3857de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
3858de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_function_v2(
3859de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,
3860de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zFunctionName,
3861de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nArg,
3862de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int eTextRep,
3863de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pApp,
3864de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xFunc)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**),
3865de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xStep)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**),
3866de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xFinal)(sqlite3_context*),
3867de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void(*xDestroy)(void*)
3868de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
3869de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3870de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3871de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Text Encodings
3872de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3873de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These constant define integer codes that represent the various
3874de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** text encodings supported by SQLite.
3875de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3876de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_UTF8           1
3877de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_UTF16LE        2
3878de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_UTF16BE        3
3879de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_UTF16          4    /* Use native byte order */
3880de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_ANY            5    /* sqlite3_create_function only */
3881de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_UTF16_ALIGNED  8    /* sqlite3_create_collation only */
3882de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3883de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3884de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Deprecated Functions
3885de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** DEPRECATED
3886de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3887de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These functions are [deprecated].  In order to maintain
3888de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** backwards compatibility with older code, these functions continue
3889de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be supported.  However, new applications should avoid
3890de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the use of these functions.  To help encourage people to avoid
3891de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** using these functions, we are not going to tell you what they do.
3892de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3893de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_DEPRECATED
3894de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_aggregate_count(sqlite3_context*);
3895de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_expired(sqlite3_stmt*);
3896de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_transfer_bindings(sqlite3_stmt*, sqlite3_stmt*);
3897de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_global_recover(void);
3898de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED void sqlite3_thread_cleanup(void);
3899de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED int sqlite3_memory_alarm(void(*)(void*,sqlite3_int64,int),void*,sqlite3_int64);
3900de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
3901de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3902de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3903de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Obtaining SQL Function Parameter Values
3904de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3905de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The C-language implementation of SQL functions and aggregates uses
3906de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this set of interface routines to access the parameter values on
3907de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the function or aggregate.
3908de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3909de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xFunc (for scalar functions) or xStep (for aggregates) parameters
3910de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to [sqlite3_create_function()] and [sqlite3_create_function16()]
3911de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** define callbacks that implement the SQL functions and aggregates.
391290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The 3rd parameter to these callbacks is an array of pointers to
3913de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [protected sqlite3_value] objects.  There is one [sqlite3_value] object for
3914de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** each parameter to the SQL function.  These routines are used to
3915de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** extract values from the [sqlite3_value] objects.
3916de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3917de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines work only with [protected sqlite3_value] objects.
3918de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Any attempt to use these routines on an [unprotected sqlite3_value]
3919de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** object results in undefined behavior.
3920de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3921de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These routines work just like the corresponding [column access functions]
3922de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** except that  these routines take a single [protected sqlite3_value] object
3923de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointer instead of a [sqlite3_stmt*] pointer and an integer column number.
3924de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3925de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_value_text16() interface extracts a UTF-16 string
3926de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the native byte-order of the host machine.  ^The
3927de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_value_text16be() and sqlite3_value_text16le() interfaces
3928de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** extract UTF-16 strings as big-endian and little-endian respectively.
3929de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3930de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The sqlite3_value_numeric_type() interface attempts to apply
3931de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** numeric affinity to the value.  This means that an attempt is
3932de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** made to convert the value to an integer or floating point.  If
3933de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** such a conversion is possible without loss of information (in other
3934de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** words, if the value is a string that looks like a number)
3935de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the conversion is performed.  Otherwise no conversion occurs.
3936de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [SQLITE_INTEGER | datatype] after conversion is returned.)^
3937de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3938de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Please pay particular attention to the fact that the pointer returned
3939de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from [sqlite3_value_blob()], [sqlite3_value_text()], or
3940de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_value_text16()] can be invalidated by a subsequent call to
3941de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_value_bytes()], [sqlite3_value_bytes16()], [sqlite3_value_text()],
3942de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [sqlite3_value_text16()].
3943de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3944de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines must be called from the same thread as
3945de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the SQL function that supplied the [sqlite3_value*] parameters.
3946de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3947de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_value_blob(sqlite3_value*);
3948de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_bytes(sqlite3_value*);
3949de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_bytes16(sqlite3_value*);
3950de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API double sqlite3_value_double(sqlite3_value*);
3951de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_int(sqlite3_value*);
3952de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_value_int64(sqlite3_value*);
3953de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const unsigned char *sqlite3_value_text(sqlite3_value*);
3954de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_value_text16(sqlite3_value*);
3955de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_value_text16le(sqlite3_value*);
3956de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API const void *sqlite3_value_text16be(sqlite3_value*);
3957de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_type(sqlite3_value*);
3958de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_value_numeric_type(sqlite3_value*);
3959de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
3960de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
3961de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Obtain Aggregate Function Context
3962de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3963de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Implementations of aggregate SQL functions use this
3964de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine to allocate memory for storing their state.
3965de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3966de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first time the sqlite3_aggregate_context(C,N) routine is called
3967de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for a particular aggregate function, SQLite
3968de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocates N of memory, zeroes out that memory, and returns a pointer
3969de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the new memory. ^On second and subsequent calls to
3970de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_aggregate_context() for the same aggregate function instance,
3971de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the same buffer is returned.  Sqlite3_aggregate_context() is normally
3972de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** called once for each invocation of the xStep callback and then one
3973de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** last time when the xFinal callback is invoked.  ^(When no rows match
3974de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an aggregate query, the xStep() callback of the aggregate function
3975de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation is never called and xFinal() is called exactly once.
3976de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In those cases, sqlite3_aggregate_context() might be called for the
3977de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** first time from within xFinal().)^
3978de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3979de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_aggregate_context(C,N) routine returns a NULL pointer if N is
3980de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** less than or equal to zero or if a memory allocate error occurs.
3981de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3982de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The amount of space allocated by sqlite3_aggregate_context(C,N) is
3983de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** determined by the N parameter on first successful call.  Changing the
3984de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value of N in subsequent call to sqlite3_aggregate_context() within
3985de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the same aggregate function instance will not resize the memory
3986de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocation.)^
3987de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3988de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite automatically frees the memory allocated by
3989de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_aggregate_context() when the aggregate query concludes.
3990de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3991de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The first parameter must be a copy of the
3992de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_context | SQL function context] that is the first parameter
3993de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the xStep or xFinal callback routine that implements the aggregate
3994de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function.
3995de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
3996de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This routine must be called from the same thread in which
3997de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the aggregate SQL function is running.
3998de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
3999de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_aggregate_context(sqlite3_context*, int nBytes);
4000de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4001de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4002de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: User Data For Functions
4003de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4004de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_user_data() interface returns a copy of
4005de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the pointer that was the pUserData parameter (the 5th parameter)
4006de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the [sqlite3_create_function()]
4007de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and [sqlite3_create_function16()] routines that originally
4008de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** registered the application defined function.
4009de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4010de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This routine must be called from the same thread in which
4011de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the application-defined function is running.
4012de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4013de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_user_data(sqlite3_context*);
4014de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4015de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4016de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Database Connection For Functions
4017de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4018de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_context_db_handle() interface returns a copy of
4019de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the pointer to the [database connection] (the 1st parameter)
4020de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the [sqlite3_create_function()]
4021de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and [sqlite3_create_function16()] routines that originally
4022de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** registered the application defined function.
4023de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4024de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3 *sqlite3_context_db_handle(sqlite3_context*);
4025de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4026de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4027de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Function Auxiliary Data
4028de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4029de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The following two functions may be used by scalar SQL functions to
4030de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** associate metadata with argument values. If the same value is passed to
4031de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** multiple invocations of the same SQL function during query execution, under
4032de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** some circumstances the associated metadata may be preserved. This may
4033de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be used, for example, to add a regular-expression matching scalar
4034de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function. The compiled version of the regular expression is stored as
4035de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** metadata associated with the SQL value passed as the regular expression
4036de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pattern.  The compiled regular expression can be reused on multiple
4037de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invocations of the same function so that the original pattern string
4038de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** does not need to be recompiled on each invocation.
4039de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4040de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_get_auxdata() interface returns a pointer to the metadata
4041de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** associated by the sqlite3_set_auxdata() function with the Nth argument
4042de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value to the application-defined function. ^If no metadata has been ever
4043de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** been set for the Nth argument of the function, or if the corresponding
4044de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function parameter has changed since the meta-data was set,
4045de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then sqlite3_get_auxdata() returns a NULL pointer.
4046de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4047de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_set_auxdata() interface saves the metadata
4048de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointed to by its 3rd parameter as the metadata for the N-th
4049de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument of the application-defined function.  Subsequent
4050de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** calls to sqlite3_get_auxdata() might return this data, if it has
4051de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not been destroyed.
4052de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If it is not NULL, SQLite will invoke the destructor
4053de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function given by the 4th parameter to sqlite3_set_auxdata() on
4054de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the metadata when the corresponding function parameter changes
4055de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or when the SQL statement completes, whichever comes first.
4056de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4057de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite is free to call the destructor and drop metadata on any
4058de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter of any function at any time.  ^The only guarantee is that
4059de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the destructor will be called before the metadata is dropped.
4060de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4061de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(In practice, metadata is preserved between function calls for
4062de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** expressions that are constant at compile time. This includes literal
4063de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** values and [parameters].)^
4064de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4065de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines must be called from the same thread in which
4066de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the SQL function is running.
4067de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4068de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_get_auxdata(sqlite3_context*, int N);
4069de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_set_auxdata(sqlite3_context*, int N, void*, void (*)(void*));
4070de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4071de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4072de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4073de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Constants Defining Special Destructor Behavior
4074de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4075de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These are special values for the destructor that is passed in as the
4076de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** final argument to routines like [sqlite3_result_blob()].  ^If the destructor
4077de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument is SQLITE_STATIC, it means that the content pointer is constant
4078de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and will never change.  It does not need to be destroyed.  ^The
4079de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_TRANSIENT value means that the content will likely change in
4080de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the near future and that SQLite should make its own private copy of
4081de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the content before returning.
4082de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4083de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The typedef is necessary to work around problems in certain
4084de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** C++ compilers.  See ticket #2191.
4085de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4086de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef void (*sqlite3_destructor_type)(void*);
4087de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATIC      ((sqlite3_destructor_type)0)
4088de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TRANSIENT   ((sqlite3_destructor_type)-1)
4089de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4090de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4091de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Setting The Result Of An SQL Function
4092de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4093de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These routines are used by the xFunc or xFinal callbacks that
4094de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implement SQL functions and aggregates.  See
4095de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_create_function()] and [sqlite3_create_function16()]
4096de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for additional information.
4097de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4098de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These functions work very much like the [parameter binding] family of
4099de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** functions used to bind values to host parameters in prepared statements.
4100de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Refer to the [SQL parameter] documentation for additional information.
4101de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4102de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_blob() interface sets the result from
4103de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an application-defined function to be the BLOB whose content is pointed
4104de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to by the second parameter and which is N bytes long where N is the
4105de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** third parameter.
4106de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4107de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_zeroblob() interfaces set the result of
4108de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the application-defined function to be a BLOB containing all zero
4109de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** bytes and N bytes in size, where N is the value of the 2nd parameter.
4110de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4111de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_double() interface sets the result from
4112de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an application-defined function to be a floating point value specified
4113de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by its 2nd argument.
4114de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4115de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_error() and sqlite3_result_error16() functions
4116de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** cause the implemented SQL function to throw an exception.
4117de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite uses the string pointed to by the
4118de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** 2nd parameter of sqlite3_result_error() or sqlite3_result_error16()
4119de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as the text of an error message.  ^SQLite interprets the error
4120de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** message string from sqlite3_result_error() as UTF-8. ^SQLite
4121de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interprets the string from sqlite3_result_error16() as UTF-16 in native
4122de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** byte order.  ^If the third parameter to sqlite3_result_error()
4123de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or sqlite3_result_error16() is negative then SQLite takes as the error
4124de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** message all text up through the first zero character.
4125de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the third parameter to sqlite3_result_error() or
4126de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_result_error16() is non-negative then SQLite takes that many
4127de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** bytes (not characters) from the 2nd parameter as the error message.
4128de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_error() and sqlite3_result_error16()
4129de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routines make a private copy of the error message text before
4130de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** they return.  Hence, the calling function can deallocate or
4131de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** modify the text after they return without harm.
4132de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_error_code() function changes the error code
4133de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned by SQLite as a result of an error in a function.  ^By default,
4134de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the error code is SQLITE_ERROR.  ^A subsequent call to sqlite3_result_error()
4135de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or sqlite3_result_error16() resets the error code to SQLITE_ERROR.
4136de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4137de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_toobig() interface causes SQLite to throw an error
4138de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** indicating that a string or BLOB is too long to represent.
4139de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4140de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_nomem() interface causes SQLite to throw an error
4141de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** indicating that a memory allocation failed.
4142de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4143de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_int() interface sets the return value
4144de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the application-defined function to be the 32-bit signed integer
4145de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value given in the 2nd argument.
4146de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_int64() interface sets the return value
4147de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the application-defined function to be the 64-bit signed integer
4148de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value given in the 2nd argument.
4149de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4150de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_null() interface sets the return value
4151de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the application-defined function to be NULL.
4152de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4153de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_text(), sqlite3_result_text16(),
4154de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_result_text16le(), and sqlite3_result_text16be() interfaces
4155de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** set the return value of the application-defined function to be
4156de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a text string which is represented as UTF-8, UTF-16 native byte order,
4157de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** UTF-16 little endian, or UTF-16 big endian, respectively.
4158de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite takes the text result from the application from
4159de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the 2nd parameter of the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces.
4160de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the 3rd parameter to the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces
4161de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is negative, then SQLite takes result text from the 2nd parameter
4162de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** through the first zero character.
4163de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the 3rd parameter to the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces
4164de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is non-negative, then as many bytes (not characters) of the text
4165de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pointed to by the 2nd parameter are taken as the application-defined
416690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** function result.  If the 3rd parameter is non-negative, then it
416790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** must be the byte offset into the string where the NUL terminator would
416890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** appear if the string where NUL terminated.  If any NUL characters occur
416990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** in the string at a byte offset that is less than the value of the 3rd
417090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** parameter, then the resulting string will contain embedded NULs and the
417190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** result of expressions operating on strings with embedded NULs is undefined.
4172de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the 4th parameter to the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces
4173de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or sqlite3_result_blob is a non-NULL pointer, then SQLite calls that
4174de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function as the destructor on the text or BLOB result when it has
4175de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** finished using that result.
4176de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the 4th parameter to the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces or to
4177de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_result_blob is the special constant SQLITE_STATIC, then SQLite
4178de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** assumes that the text or BLOB result is in constant space and does not
4179de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** copy the content of the parameter nor call a destructor on the content
4180de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when it has finished using that result.
4181de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the 4th parameter to the sqlite3_result_text* interfaces
4182de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or sqlite3_result_blob is the special constant SQLITE_TRANSIENT
4183de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then SQLite makes a copy of the result into space obtained from
4184de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from [sqlite3_malloc()] before it returns.
4185de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4186de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_result_value() interface sets the result of
4187de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the application-defined function to be a copy the
4188de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [unprotected sqlite3_value] object specified by the 2nd parameter.  ^The
4189de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_result_value() interface makes a copy of the [sqlite3_value]
4190de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** so that the [sqlite3_value] specified in the parameter may change or
4191de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be deallocated after sqlite3_result_value() returns without harm.
4192de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A [protected sqlite3_value] object may always be used where an
4193de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [unprotected sqlite3_value] object is required, so either
4194de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** kind of [sqlite3_value] object can be used with this interface.
4195de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4196de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If these routines are called from within the different thread
4197de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** than the one containing the application-defined function that received
4198de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [sqlite3_context] pointer, the results are undefined.
4199de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4200de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_blob(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int, void(*)(void*));
4201de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_double(sqlite3_context*, double);
4202de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error(sqlite3_context*, const char*, int);
4203de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error16(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int);
4204de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error_toobig(sqlite3_context*);
4205de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error_nomem(sqlite3_context*);
4206de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_error_code(sqlite3_context*, int);
4207de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_int(sqlite3_context*, int);
4208de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_int64(sqlite3_context*, sqlite3_int64);
4209de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_null(sqlite3_context*);
4210de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text(sqlite3_context*, const char*, int, void(*)(void*));
4211de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int, void(*)(void*));
4212de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16le(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int,void(*)(void*));
4213de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_text16be(sqlite3_context*, const void*, int,void(*)(void*));
4214de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_value(sqlite3_context*, sqlite3_value*);
4215de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_result_zeroblob(sqlite3_context*, int n);
4216de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4217de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4218de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Define New Collating Sequences
4219de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4220de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These functions add, remove, or modify a [collation] associated
4221de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the [database connection] specified as the first argument.
4222de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4223de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The name of the collation is a UTF-8 string
4224de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for sqlite3_create_collation() and sqlite3_create_collation_v2()
4225de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and a UTF-16 string in native byte order for sqlite3_create_collation16().
4226de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Collation names that compare equal according to [sqlite3_strnicmp()] are
4227de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** considered to be the same name.
4228de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4229de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The third argument (eTextRep) must be one of the constants:
4230de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
4231de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_UTF8],
4232de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_UTF16LE],
4233de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_UTF16BE],
4234de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_UTF16], or
4235de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> [SQLITE_UTF16_ALIGNED].
4236de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>)^
4237de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The eTextRep argument determines the encoding of strings passed
4238de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the collating function callback, xCallback.
4239de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [SQLITE_UTF16] and [SQLITE_UTF16_ALIGNED] values for eTextRep
4240de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** force strings to be UTF16 with native byte order.
4241de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [SQLITE_UTF16_ALIGNED] value for eTextRep forces strings to begin
4242de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on an even byte address.
4243de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
424490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The fourth argument, pArg, is an application data pointer that is passed
4245de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** through as the first argument to the collating function callback.
4246de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4247de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The fifth argument, xCallback, is a pointer to the collating function.
4248de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Multiple collating functions can be registered using the same name but
4249de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with different eTextRep parameters and SQLite will use whichever
4250de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function requires the least amount of data transformation.
4251de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the xCallback argument is NULL then the collating function is
4252de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** deleted.  ^When all collating functions having the same name are deleted,
4253de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that collation is no longer usable.
4254de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4255de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The collating function callback is invoked with a copy of the pArg
4256de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** application data pointer and with two strings in the encoding specified
4257de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by the eTextRep argument.  The collating function must return an
4258de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** integer that is negative, zero, or positive
4259de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if the first string is less than, equal to, or greater than the second,
426090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** respectively.  A collating function must always return the same answer
4261de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** given the same inputs.  If two or more collating functions are registered
4262de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the same collation name (using different eTextRep values) then all
4263de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** must give an equivalent answer when invoked with equivalent strings.
4264de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The collating function must obey the following properties for all
4265de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** strings A, B, and C:
4266de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4267de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ol>
4268de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> If A==B then B==A.
4269de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> If A==B and B==C then A==C.
4270de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> If A&lt;B THEN B&gt;A.
4271de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> If A&lt;B and B&lt;C then A&lt;C.
4272de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ol>
4273de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4274de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If a collating function fails any of the above constraints and that
4275de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** collating function is  registered and used, then the behavior of SQLite
4276de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is undefined.
4277de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4278de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_create_collation_v2() works like sqlite3_create_collation()
4279de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the addition that the xDestroy callback is invoked on pArg when
4280de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the collating function is deleted.
4281de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Collating functions are deleted when they are overridden by later
4282de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** calls to the collation creation functions or when the
4283de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection] is closed using [sqlite3_close()].
4284de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
428595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^The xDestroy callback is <u>not</u> called if the
428695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** sqlite3_create_collation_v2() function fails.  Applications that invoke
428795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** sqlite3_create_collation_v2() with a non-NULL xDestroy argument should
428895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** check the return code and dispose of the application data pointer
428995c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** themselves rather than expecting SQLite to deal with it for them.
429095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** This is different from every other SQLite interface.  The inconsistency
429195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** is unfortunate but cannot be changed without breaking backwards
429295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** compatibility.
429395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
4294de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also:  [sqlite3_collation_needed()] and [sqlite3_collation_needed16()].
4295de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4296de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_collation(
4297de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
4298de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zName,
4299de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int eTextRep,
4300de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pArg,
4301de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int(*xCompare)(void*,int,const void*,int,const void*)
4302de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4303de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_collation_v2(
4304de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
4305de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zName,
4306de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int eTextRep,
4307de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pArg,
4308de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int(*xCompare)(void*,int,const void*,int,const void*),
4309de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void(*xDestroy)(void*)
4310de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4311de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_collation16(
4312de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
4313de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void *zName,
4314de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int eTextRep,
4315de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pArg,
4316de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int(*xCompare)(void*,int,const void*,int,const void*)
4317de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4318de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4319de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4320de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Collation Needed Callbacks
4321de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4322de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^To avoid having to register all collation sequences before a database
4323de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be used, a single callback function may be registered with the
4324de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection] to be invoked whenever an undefined collation
4325de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sequence is required.
4326de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4327de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the function is registered using the sqlite3_collation_needed() API,
4328de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then it is passed the names of undefined collation sequences as strings
4329de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** encoded in UTF-8. ^If sqlite3_collation_needed16() is used,
4330de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the names are passed as UTF-16 in machine native byte order.
4331de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A call to either function replaces the existing collation-needed callback.
4332de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4333de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(When the callback is invoked, the first argument passed is a copy
4334de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the second argument to sqlite3_collation_needed() or
4335de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_collation_needed16().  The second argument is the database
4336de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connection.  The third argument is one of [SQLITE_UTF8], [SQLITE_UTF16BE],
4337de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [SQLITE_UTF16LE], indicating the most desirable form of the collation
4338de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sequence function required.  The fourth parameter is the name of the
4339de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** required collation sequence.)^
4340de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4341de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The callback function should register the desired collation using
4342de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_create_collation()], [sqlite3_create_collation16()], or
4343de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_create_collation_v2()].
4344de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4345de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_collation_needed(
4346de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
4347de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void*,
4348de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void(*)(void*,sqlite3*,int eTextRep,const char*)
4349de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4350de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_collation_needed16(
4351de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
4352de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void*,
4353de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void(*)(void*,sqlite3*,int eTextRep,const void*)
4354de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4355de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4356de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef SQLITE_HAS_CODEC
4357de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4358de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Specify the key for an encrypted database.  This routine should be
4359de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** called right after sqlite3_open().
4360de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4361de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The code to implement this API is not available in the public release
4362de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of SQLite.
4363de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4364de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_key(
4365de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,                   /* Database to be rekeyed */
4366de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void *pKey, int nKey     /* The key */
4367de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4368de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4369de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4370de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Change the key on an open database.  If the current database is not
4371de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** encrypted, this routine will encrypt it.  If pNew==0 or nNew==0, the
4372de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database is decrypted.
4373de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4374de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The code to implement this API is not available in the public release
4375de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of SQLite.
4376de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4377de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_rekey(
4378de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,                   /* Database to be rekeyed */
4379de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const void *pKey, int nKey     /* The new key */
4380de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4381de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4382de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4383de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Specify the activation key for a SEE database.  Unless
4384de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** activated, none of the SEE routines will work.
4385de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4386de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_activate_see(
4387de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zPassPhrase        /* Activation phrase */
4388de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4389de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
4390de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4391de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_CEROD
4392de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4393de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Specify the activation key for a CEROD database.  Unless
4394de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** activated, none of the CEROD routines will work.
4395de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4396de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_activate_cerod(
4397de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zPassPhrase        /* Activation phrase */
4398de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4399de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
4400de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4401de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4402de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Suspend Execution For A Short Time
4403de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4404de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_sleep() function causes the current thread to suspend execution
4405de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for at least a number of milliseconds specified in its parameter.
4406de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4407de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the operating system does not support sleep requests with
4408de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** millisecond time resolution, then the time will be rounded up to
4409de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the nearest second. The number of milliseconds of sleep actually
4410de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** requested from the operating system is returned.
4411de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4412de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite implements this interface by calling the xSleep()
4413de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** method of the default [sqlite3_vfs] object.  If the xSleep() method
4414de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the default VFS is not implemented correctly, or not implemented at
4415de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** all, then the behavior of sqlite3_sleep() may deviate from the description
4416de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the previous paragraphs.
4417de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4418de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_sleep(int);
4419de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4420de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4421de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Name Of The Folder Holding Temporary Files
4422de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4423de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(If this global variable is made to point to a string which is
4424de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the name of a folder (a.k.a. directory), then all temporary files
4425de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** created by SQLite when using a built-in [sqlite3_vfs | VFS]
4426de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will be placed in that directory.)^  ^If this variable
4427de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is a NULL pointer, then SQLite performs a search for an appropriate
4428de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** temporary file directory.
4429de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4430de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** It is not safe to read or modify this variable in more than one
4431de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** thread at a time.  It is not safe to read or modify this variable
4432de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if a [database connection] is being used at the same time in a separate
4433de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** thread.
4434de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** It is intended that this variable be set once
4435de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as part of process initialization and before any SQLite interface
4436de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routines have been called and that this variable remain unchanged
4437de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** thereafter.
4438de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4439de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [temp_store_directory pragma] may modify this variable and cause
4440de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it to point to memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc].  ^Furthermore,
4441de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [temp_store_directory pragma] always assumes that any string
4442de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that this variable points to is held in memory obtained from
4443de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_malloc] and the pragma may attempt to free that memory
4444de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** using [sqlite3_free].
4445de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Hence, if this variable is modified directly, either it should be
4446de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** made NULL or made to point to memory obtained from [sqlite3_malloc]
4447de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or else the use of the [temp_store_directory pragma] should be avoided.
4448de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4449de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_EXTERN char *sqlite3_temp_directory;
4450de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4451de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4452de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Test For Auto-Commit Mode
4453de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {autocommit mode}
4454de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4455de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_get_autocommit() interface returns non-zero or
4456de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** zero if the given database connection is or is not in autocommit mode,
4457de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** respectively.  ^Autocommit mode is on by default.
4458de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Autocommit mode is disabled by a [BEGIN] statement.
4459de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Autocommit mode is re-enabled by a [COMMIT] or [ROLLBACK].
4460de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4461de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If certain kinds of errors occur on a statement within a multi-statement
4462de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** transaction (errors including [SQLITE_FULL], [SQLITE_IOERR],
4463de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_NOMEM], [SQLITE_BUSY], and [SQLITE_INTERRUPT]) then the
4464de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** transaction might be rolled back automatically.  The only way to
4465de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** find out whether SQLite automatically rolled back the transaction after
4466de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an error is to use this function.
4467de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4468de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If another thread changes the autocommit status of the database
4469de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connection while this routine is running, then the return value
4470de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is undefined.
4471de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4472de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_get_autocommit(sqlite3*);
4473de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4474de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4475de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Find The Database Handle Of A Prepared Statement
4476de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4477de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_db_handle interface returns the [database connection] handle
4478de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to which a [prepared statement] belongs.  ^The [database connection]
4479de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned by sqlite3_db_handle is the same [database connection]
4480de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that was the first argument
4481de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] call (or its variants) that was used to
4482de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** create the statement in the first place.
4483de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4484de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3 *sqlite3_db_handle(sqlite3_stmt*);
4485de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4486de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
448790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Return The Filename For A Database Connection
448890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
448990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The sqlite3_db_filename(D,N) interface returns a pointer to a filename
449090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** associated with database N of connection D.  ^The main database file
449190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** has the name "main".  If there is no attached database N on the database
449290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** connection D, or if database N is a temporary or in-memory database, then
449390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a NULL pointer is returned.
449490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
449590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The filename returned by this function is the output of the
449690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** xFullPathname method of the [VFS].  ^In other words, the filename
449790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** will be an absolute pathname, even if the filename used
449890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to open the database originally was a URI or relative pathname.
449990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
450090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API const char *sqlite3_db_filename(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDbName);
450190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
450290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
4503c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Determine if a database is read-only
4504c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown**
4505c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** ^The sqlite3_db_readonly(D,N) interface returns 1 if the database N
4506c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** of connection D is read-only, 0 if it is read/write, or -1 if N is not
4507c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** the name of a database on connection D.
4508c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown*/
4509c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff BrownSQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_readonly(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDbName);
4510c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown
4511c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown/*
4512de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Find the next prepared statement
4513de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4514de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This interface returns a pointer to the next [prepared statement] after
4515de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pStmt associated with the [database connection] pDb.  ^If pStmt is NULL
4516de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then this interface returns a pointer to the first prepared statement
4517de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** associated with the database connection pDb.  ^If no prepared statement
4518de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** satisfies the conditions of this routine, it returns NULL.
4519de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4520de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [database connection] pointer D in a call to
4521de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_next_stmt(D,S)] must refer to an open database
4522de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connection and in particular must not be a NULL pointer.
4523de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4524de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_stmt *sqlite3_next_stmt(sqlite3 *pDb, sqlite3_stmt *pStmt);
4525de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4526de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4527de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Commit And Rollback Notification Callbacks
4528de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4529de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_commit_hook() interface registers a callback
4530de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function to be invoked whenever a transaction is [COMMIT | committed].
4531de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Any callback set by a previous call to sqlite3_commit_hook()
4532de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for the same database connection is overridden.
4533de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_rollback_hook() interface registers a callback
4534de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function to be invoked whenever a transaction is [ROLLBACK | rolled back].
4535de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Any callback set by a previous call to sqlite3_rollback_hook()
4536de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for the same database connection is overridden.
4537de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The pArg argument is passed through to the callback.
4538de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the callback on a commit hook function returns non-zero,
4539de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the commit is converted into a rollback.
4540de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4541de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_commit_hook(D,C,P) and sqlite3_rollback_hook(D,C,P) functions
4542de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** return the P argument from the previous call of the same function
4543de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on the same [database connection] D, or NULL for
4544de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the first call for each function on D.
4545de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
454690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The commit and rollback hook callbacks are not reentrant.
4547de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The callback implementation must not do anything that will modify
4548de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the database connection that invoked the callback.  Any actions
4549de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to modify the database connection must be deferred until after the
4550de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** completion of the [sqlite3_step()] call that triggered the commit
4551de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or rollback hook in the first place.
455290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Note that running any other SQL statements, including SELECT statements,
455390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** or merely calling [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] will modify
455490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph.
4555de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4556de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Registering a NULL function disables the callback.
4557de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4558de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^When the commit hook callback routine returns zero, the [COMMIT]
4559de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** operation is allowed to continue normally.  ^If the commit hook
4560de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returns non-zero, then the [COMMIT] is converted into a [ROLLBACK].
4561de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The rollback hook is invoked on a rollback that results from a commit
4562de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** hook returning non-zero, just as it would be with any other rollback.
4563de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4564de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^For the purposes of this API, a transaction is said to have been
4565de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** rolled back if an explicit "ROLLBACK" statement is executed, or
4566de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an error or constraint causes an implicit rollback to occur.
4567de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The rollback callback is not invoked if a transaction is
4568de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** automatically rolled back because the database connection is closed.
4569de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4570de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also the [sqlite3_update_hook()] interface.
4571de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4572de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_commit_hook(sqlite3*, int(*)(void*), void*);
4573de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_rollback_hook(sqlite3*, void(*)(void *), void*);
4574de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4575de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4576de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Data Change Notification Callbacks
4577de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4578de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_update_hook() interface registers a callback function
4579de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the [database connection] identified by the first argument
4580de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be invoked whenever a row is updated, inserted or deleted.
4581de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Any callback set by a previous call to this function
4582de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for the same database connection is overridden.
4583de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4584de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The second argument is a pointer to the function to invoke when a
4585de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** row is updated, inserted or deleted.
4586de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first argument to the callback is a copy of the third argument
4587de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to sqlite3_update_hook().
4588de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The second callback argument is one of [SQLITE_INSERT], [SQLITE_DELETE],
4589de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [SQLITE_UPDATE], depending on the operation that caused the callback
4590de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be invoked.
4591de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The third and fourth arguments to the callback contain pointers to the
4592de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database and table name containing the affected row.
4593de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The final callback parameter is the [rowid] of the row.
4594de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^In the case of an update, this is the [rowid] after the update takes place.
4595de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4596de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The update hook is not invoked when internal system tables are
4597de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** modified (i.e. sqlite_master and sqlite_sequence).)^
4598de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4599de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^In the current implementation, the update hook
4600de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not invoked when duplication rows are deleted because of an
4601de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [ON CONFLICT | ON CONFLICT REPLACE] clause.  ^Nor is the update hook
4602de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invoked when rows are deleted using the [truncate optimization].
4603de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The exceptions defined in this paragraph might change in a future
4604de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** release of SQLite.
4605de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4606de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The update hook implementation must not do anything that will modify
4607de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the database connection that invoked the update hook.  Any actions
4608de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to modify the database connection must be deferred until after the
4609de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** completion of the [sqlite3_step()] call that triggered the update hook.
4610de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Note that [sqlite3_prepare_v2()] and [sqlite3_step()] both modify their
4611de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database connections for the meaning of "modify" in this paragraph.
4612de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4613de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_update_hook(D,C,P) function
4614de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returns the P argument from the previous call
4615de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on the same [database connection] D, or NULL for
4616de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the first call on D.
4617de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4618de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also the [sqlite3_commit_hook()] and [sqlite3_rollback_hook()]
4619de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces.
4620de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4621de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_update_hook(
4622de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
4623de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void(*)(void *,int ,char const *,char const *,sqlite3_int64),
4624de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void*
4625de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4626de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4627de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4628de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Enable Or Disable Shared Pager Cache
4629de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {shared cache}
4630de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4631de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This routine enables or disables the sharing of the database cache
4632de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and schema data structures between [database connection | connections]
4633de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the same database. Sharing is enabled if the argument is true
4634de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and disabled if the argument is false.)^
4635de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4636de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Cache sharing is enabled and disabled for an entire process.
4637de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This is a change as of SQLite version 3.5.0. In prior versions of SQLite,
4638de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sharing was enabled or disabled for each thread separately.
4639de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4640de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The cache sharing mode set by this interface effects all subsequent
4641de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** calls to [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open_v2()], and [sqlite3_open16()].
4642de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Existing database connections continue use the sharing mode
4643de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that was in effect at the time they were opened.)^
4644de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4645de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This routine returns [SQLITE_OK] if shared cache was enabled or disabled
4646de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** successfully.  An [error code] is returned otherwise.)^
4647de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4648de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Shared cache is disabled by default. But this might change in
4649de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** future releases of SQLite.  Applications that care about shared
4650de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** cache setting should set it explicitly.
4651de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4652de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See Also:  [SQLite Shared-Cache Mode]
4653de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4654de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_enable_shared_cache(int);
4655de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4656de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4657de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Attempt To Free Heap Memory
4658de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4659de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_release_memory() interface attempts to free N bytes
4660de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of heap memory by deallocating non-essential memory allocations
4661de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** held by the database library.   Memory used to cache database
4662de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pages to improve performance is an example of non-essential memory.
4663de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^sqlite3_release_memory() returns the number of bytes actually freed,
4664de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** which might be more or less than the amount requested.
4665de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_release_memory() routine is a no-op returning zero
4666de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if SQLite is not compiled with [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT].
466790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
466890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** See also: [sqlite3_db_release_memory()]
4669de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4670de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_release_memory(int);
4671de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4672de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
467390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Free Memory Used By A Database Connection
467490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
467590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The sqlite3_db_release_memory(D) interface attempts to free as much heap
467690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** memory as possible from database connection D. Unlike the
467790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_release_memory()] interface, this interface is effect even
467890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** when then [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT] compile-time option is
467990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** omitted.
468090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
468190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** See also: [sqlite3_release_memory()]
468290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
468390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_release_memory(sqlite3*);
468490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
468590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
4686de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Impose A Limit On Heap Size
4687de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4688de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64() interface sets and/or queries the
4689de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** soft limit on the amount of heap memory that may be allocated by SQLite.
4690de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite strives to keep heap memory utilization below the soft heap
4691de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** limit by reducing the number of pages held in the page cache
4692de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as heap memory usages approaches the limit.
4693de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The soft heap limit is "soft" because even though SQLite strives to stay
4694de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** below the limit, it will exceed the limit rather than generate
4695de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an [SQLITE_NOMEM] error.  In other words, the soft heap limit
4696de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is advisory only.
4697de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4698de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The return value from sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64() is the size of
469990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the soft heap limit prior to the call, or negative in the case of an
470090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** error.  ^If the argument N is negative
4701de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then no change is made to the soft heap limit.  Hence, the current
4702de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** size of the soft heap limit can be determined by invoking
4703de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64() with a negative argument.
4704de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4705de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the argument N is zero then the soft heap limit is disabled.
4706de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4707de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The soft heap limit is not enforced in the current implementation
4708de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if one or more of following conditions are true:
4709de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4710de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
4711de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> The soft heap limit is set to zero.
4712de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> Memory accounting is disabled using a combination of the
4713de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS],...) start-time option and
4714de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      the [SQLITE_DEFAULT_MEMSTATUS] compile-time option.
471590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <li> An alternative page cache implementation is specified using
471690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**      [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2],...).
4717de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> The page cache allocates from its own memory pool supplied
4718de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      by [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE],...) rather than
4719de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**      from the heap.
4720de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>)^
4721de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4722de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Beginning with SQLite version 3.7.3, the soft heap limit is enforced
4723de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** regardless of whether or not the [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT]
4724de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** compile-time option is invoked.  With [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT],
4725de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the soft heap limit is enforced on every memory allocation.  Without
4726de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT], the soft heap limit is only enforced
4727de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when memory is allocated by the page cache.  Testing suggests that because
4728de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the page cache is the predominate memory user in SQLite, most
4729de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** applications will achieve adequate soft heap limit enforcement without
4730de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the use of [SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMORY_MANAGEMENT].
4731de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4732de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The circumstances under which SQLite will enforce the soft heap limit may
4733de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** changes in future releases of SQLite.
4734de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4735de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_int64 sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64(sqlite3_int64 N);
4736de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4737de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4738de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Deprecated Soft Heap Limit Interface
4739de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** DEPRECATED
4740de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4741de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This is a deprecated version of the [sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64()]
4742de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface.  This routine is provided for historical compatibility
4743de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** only.  All new applications should use the
4744de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64()] interface rather than this one.
4745de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4746de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_DEPRECATED void sqlite3_soft_heap_limit(int N);
4747de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4748de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4749de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4750de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Extract Metadata About A Column Of A Table
4751de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4752de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This routine returns metadata about a specific column of a specific
4753de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database table accessible using the [database connection] handle
4754de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** passed as the first function argument.
4755de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4756de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The column is identified by the second, third and fourth parameters to
4757de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this function. ^The second parameter is either the name of the database
4758de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (i.e. "main", "temp", or an attached database) containing the specified
4759de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** table or NULL. ^If it is NULL, then all attached databases are searched
4760de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for the table using the same algorithm used by the database engine to
4761de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** resolve unqualified table references.
4762de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4763de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The third and fourth parameters to this function are the table and column
4764de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** name of the desired column, respectively. Neither of these parameters
4765de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** may be NULL.
4766de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4767de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Metadata is returned by writing to the memory locations passed as the 5th
4768de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and subsequent parameters to this function. ^Any of these arguments may be
4769de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** NULL, in which case the corresponding element of metadata is omitted.
4770de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4771de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(<blockquote>
4772de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <table border="1">
4773de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><th> Parameter <th> Output<br>Type <th>  Description
4774de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4775de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> 5th <td> const char* <td> Data type
4776de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> 6th <td> const char* <td> Name of default collation sequence
4777de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> 7th <td> int         <td> True if column has a NOT NULL constraint
4778de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> 8th <td> int         <td> True if column is part of the PRIMARY KEY
4779de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> 9th <td> int         <td> True if column is [AUTOINCREMENT]
4780de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </table>
4781de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </blockquote>)^
4782de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4783de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The memory pointed to by the character pointers returned for the
4784de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** declaration type and collation sequence is valid only until the next
4785de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call to any SQLite API function.
4786de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4787de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the specified table is actually a view, an [error code] is returned.
4788de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4789de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the specified column is "rowid", "oid" or "_rowid_" and an
4790de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [INTEGER PRIMARY KEY] column has been explicitly declared, then the output
4791de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameters are set for the explicitly declared column. ^(If there is no
4792de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** explicitly declared [INTEGER PRIMARY KEY] column, then the output
4793de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameters are set as follows:
4794de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4795de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <pre>
4796de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     data type: "INTEGER"
4797de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     collation sequence: "BINARY"
4798de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     not null: 0
4799de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     primary key: 1
4800de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     auto increment: 0
4801de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre>)^
4802de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4803de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This function may load one or more schemas from database files. If an
4804de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** error occurs during this process, or if the requested table or column
4805de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** cannot be found, an [error code] is returned and an error message left
4806de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in the [database connection] (to be retrieved using sqlite3_errmsg()).)^
4807de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4808de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This API is only available if the library was compiled with the
4809de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_ENABLE_COLUMN_METADATA] C-preprocessor symbol defined.
4810de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4811de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_table_column_metadata(
4812de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,                /* Connection handle */
4813de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zDbName,        /* Database name or NULL */
4814de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zTableName,     /* Table name */
4815de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zColumnName,    /* Column name */
4816de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  char const **pzDataType,    /* OUTPUT: Declared data type */
4817de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  char const **pzCollSeq,     /* OUTPUT: Collation sequence name */
4818de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int *pNotNull,              /* OUTPUT: True if NOT NULL constraint exists */
4819de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int *pPrimaryKey,           /* OUTPUT: True if column part of PK */
4820de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int *pAutoinc               /* OUTPUT: True if column is auto-increment */
4821de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4822de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4823de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4824de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Load An Extension
4825de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4826de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This interface loads an SQLite extension library from the named file.
4827de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4828de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_load_extension() interface attempts to load an
4829de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite extension library contained in the file zFile.
4830de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4831de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The entry point is zProc.
4832de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^zProc may be 0, in which case the name of the entry point
4833de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** defaults to "sqlite3_extension_init".
4834de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_load_extension() interface returns
4835de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_OK] on success and [SQLITE_ERROR] if something goes wrong.
4836de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If an error occurs and pzErrMsg is not 0, then the
4837de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_load_extension()] interface shall attempt to
4838de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** fill *pzErrMsg with error message text stored in memory
4839de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** obtained from [sqlite3_malloc()]. The calling function
4840de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** should free this memory by calling [sqlite3_free()].
4841de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4842de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Extension loading must be enabled using
4843de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_enable_load_extension()] prior to calling this API,
4844de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** otherwise an error will be returned.
4845de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4846de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also the [load_extension() SQL function].
4847de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4848de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_load_extension(
4849de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,          /* Load the extension into this database connection */
4850de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zFile,    /* Name of the shared library containing extension */
4851de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zProc,    /* Entry point.  Derived from zFile if 0 */
4852de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  char **pzErrMsg       /* Put error message here if not 0 */
4853de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
4854de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4855de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4856de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Enable Or Disable Extension Loading
4857de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4858de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^So as not to open security holes in older applications that are
4859de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** unprepared to deal with extension loading, and as a means of disabling
4860de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** extension loading while evaluating user-entered SQL, the following API
4861de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is provided to turn the [sqlite3_load_extension()] mechanism on and off.
4862de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4863de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Extension loading is off by default. See ticket #1863.
4864de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Call the sqlite3_enable_load_extension() routine with onoff==1
4865de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to turn extension loading on and call it with onoff==0 to turn
4866de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it back off again.
4867de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4868de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_enable_load_extension(sqlite3 *db, int onoff);
4869de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4870de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4871de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Automatically Load Statically Linked Extensions
4872de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4873de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This interface causes the xEntryPoint() function to be invoked for
4874de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** each new [database connection] that is created.  The idea here is that
4875de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xEntryPoint() is the entry point for a statically linked SQLite extension
4876de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that is to be automatically loaded into all new database connections.
4877de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4878de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Even though the function prototype shows that xEntryPoint() takes
4879de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** no arguments and returns void, SQLite invokes xEntryPoint() with three
4880de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** arguments and expects and integer result as if the signature of the
4881de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** entry point where as follows:
4882de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4883de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote><pre>
4884de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** &nbsp;  int xEntryPoint(
4885de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** &nbsp;    sqlite3 *db,
4886de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** &nbsp;    const char **pzErrMsg,
4887de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** &nbsp;    const struct sqlite3_api_routines *pThunk
4888de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** &nbsp;  );
4889de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre></blockquote>)^
4890de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4891de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the xEntryPoint routine encounters an error, it should make *pzErrMsg
4892de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** point to an appropriate error message (obtained from [sqlite3_mprintf()])
4893de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and return an appropriate [error code].  ^SQLite ensures that *pzErrMsg
4894de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is NULL before calling the xEntryPoint().  ^SQLite will invoke
4895de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_free()] on *pzErrMsg after xEntryPoint() returns.  ^If any
4896de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xEntryPoint() returns an error, the [sqlite3_open()], [sqlite3_open16()],
4897de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [sqlite3_open_v2()] call that provoked the xEntryPoint() will fail.
4898de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4899de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calling sqlite3_auto_extension(X) with an entry point X that is already
4900de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on the list of automatic extensions is a harmless no-op. ^No entry point
4901de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will be called more than once for each database connection that is opened.
4902de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4903de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_reset_auto_extension()].
4904de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4905de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_auto_extension(void (*xEntryPoint)(void));
4906de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4907de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4908de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Reset Automatic Extension Loading
4909de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4910de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This interface disables all automatic extensions previously
4911de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** registered using [sqlite3_auto_extension()].
4912de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4913de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_reset_auto_extension(void);
4914de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4915de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4916de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The interface to the virtual-table mechanism is currently considered
4917de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be experimental.  The interface might change in incompatible ways.
4918de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If this is a problem for you, do not use the interface at this time.
4919de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4920de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When the virtual-table mechanism stabilizes, we will declare the
4921de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface fixed, support it indefinitely, and remove this comment.
4922de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4923de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4924de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4925de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Structures used by the virtual table interface
4926de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4927de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_vtab sqlite3_vtab;
4928de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_index_info sqlite3_index_info;
4929de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_vtab_cursor sqlite3_vtab_cursor;
4930de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_module sqlite3_module;
4931de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4932de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4933de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Virtual Table Object
4934de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: sqlite3_module {virtual table module}
4935de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
493690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** This structure, sometimes called a "virtual table module",
4937de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** defines the implementation of a [virtual tables].
4938de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This structure consists mostly of methods for the module.
4939de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4940de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A virtual table module is created by filling in a persistent
4941de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** instance of this structure and passing a pointer to that instance
4942de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to [sqlite3_create_module()] or [sqlite3_create_module_v2()].
4943de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The registration remains valid until it is replaced by a different
4944de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** module or until the [database connection] closes.  The content
4945de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of this structure must not change while it is registered with
4946de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** any database connection.
4947de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
4948de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_module {
4949de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int iVersion;
4950de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xCreate)(sqlite3*, void *pAux,
4951de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori               int argc, const char *const*argv,
4952de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori               sqlite3_vtab **ppVTab, char**);
4953de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xConnect)(sqlite3*, void *pAux,
4954de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori               int argc, const char *const*argv,
4955de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori               sqlite3_vtab **ppVTab, char**);
4956de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xBestIndex)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab, sqlite3_index_info*);
4957de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xDisconnect)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab);
4958de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xDestroy)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab);
4959de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xOpen)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab, sqlite3_vtab_cursor **ppCursor);
4960de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xClose)(sqlite3_vtab_cursor*);
4961de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xFilter)(sqlite3_vtab_cursor*, int idxNum, const char *idxStr,
4962de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori                int argc, sqlite3_value **argv);
4963de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xNext)(sqlite3_vtab_cursor*);
4964de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xEof)(sqlite3_vtab_cursor*);
4965de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xColumn)(sqlite3_vtab_cursor*, sqlite3_context*, int);
4966de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xRowid)(sqlite3_vtab_cursor*, sqlite3_int64 *pRowid);
4967de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xUpdate)(sqlite3_vtab *, int, sqlite3_value **, sqlite3_int64 *);
4968de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xBegin)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab);
4969de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xSync)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab);
4970de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xCommit)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab);
4971de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xRollback)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab);
4972de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xFindFunction)(sqlite3_vtab *pVtab, int nArg, const char *zName,
4973de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori                       void (**pxFunc)(sqlite3_context*,int,sqlite3_value**),
4974de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori                       void **ppArg);
4975de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xRename)(sqlite3_vtab *pVtab, const char *zNew);
497690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  /* The methods above are in version 1 of the sqlite_module object. Those
497790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  ** below are for version 2 and greater. */
497890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int (*xSavepoint)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab, int);
497990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int (*xRelease)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab, int);
498090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int (*xRollbackTo)(sqlite3_vtab *pVTab, int);
4981de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
4982de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
4983de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
4984de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Virtual Table Indexing Information
4985de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: sqlite3_index_info
4986de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4987de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_index_info structure and its substructures is used as part
4988de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the [virtual table] interface to
4989de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pass information into and receive the reply from the [xBestIndex]
4990de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** method of a [virtual table module].  The fields under **Inputs** are the
4991de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** inputs to xBestIndex and are read-only.  xBestIndex inserts its
4992de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** results into the **Outputs** fields.
4993de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4994de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The aConstraint[] array records WHERE clause constraints of the form:
4995de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4996de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <blockquote>column OP expr</blockquote>
4997de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
4998de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** where OP is =, &lt;, &lt;=, &gt;, or &gt;=.)^  ^(The particular operator is
4999de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** stored in aConstraint[].op using one of the
5000de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_INDEX_CONSTRAINT_EQ | SQLITE_INDEX_CONSTRAINT_ values].)^
5001de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The index of the column is stored in
5002de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** aConstraint[].iColumn.)^  ^(aConstraint[].usable is TRUE if the
5003de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** expr on the right-hand side can be evaluated (and thus the constraint
5004de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is usable) and false if it cannot.)^
5005de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5006de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The optimizer automatically inverts terms of the form "expr OP column"
5007de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and makes other simplifications to the WHERE clause in an attempt to
5008de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** get as many WHERE clause terms into the form shown above as possible.
5009de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The aConstraint[] array only reports WHERE clause terms that are
5010de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** relevant to the particular virtual table being queried.
5011de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5012de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Information about the ORDER BY clause is stored in aOrderBy[].
5013de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Each term of aOrderBy records a column of the ORDER BY clause.
5014de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5015de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [xBestIndex] method must fill aConstraintUsage[] with information
5016de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** about what parameters to pass to xFilter.  ^If argvIndex>0 then
5017de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the right-hand side of the corresponding aConstraint[] is evaluated
5018de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and becomes the argvIndex-th entry in argv.  ^(If aConstraintUsage[].omit
5019de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is true, then the constraint is assumed to be fully handled by the
5020de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** virtual table and is not checked again by SQLite.)^
5021de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5022de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The idxNum and idxPtr values are recorded and passed into the
5023de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [xFilter] method.
5024de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^[sqlite3_free()] is used to free idxPtr if and only if
5025de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** needToFreeIdxPtr is true.
5026de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5027de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The orderByConsumed means that output from [xFilter]/[xNext] will occur in
5028de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the correct order to satisfy the ORDER BY clause so that no separate
5029de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sorting step is required.
5030de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5031de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The estimatedCost value is an estimate of the cost of doing the
5032de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** particular lookup.  A full scan of a table with N entries should have
5033de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a cost of N.  A binary search of a table of N entries should have a
5034de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** cost of approximately log(N).
5035de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5036de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_index_info {
5037de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /* Inputs */
5038de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nConstraint;           /* Number of entries in aConstraint */
5039de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  struct sqlite3_index_constraint {
5040de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori     int iColumn;              /* Column on left-hand side of constraint */
5041de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori     unsigned char op;         /* Constraint operator */
5042de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori     unsigned char usable;     /* True if this constraint is usable */
5043de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori     int iTermOffset;          /* Used internally - xBestIndex should ignore */
5044de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  } *aConstraint;            /* Table of WHERE clause constraints */
5045de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nOrderBy;              /* Number of terms in the ORDER BY clause */
5046de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  struct sqlite3_index_orderby {
5047de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori     int iColumn;              /* Column number */
5048de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori     unsigned char desc;       /* True for DESC.  False for ASC. */
5049de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  } *aOrderBy;               /* The ORDER BY clause */
5050de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /* Outputs */
5051de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  struct sqlite3_index_constraint_usage {
5052de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori    int argvIndex;           /* if >0, constraint is part of argv to xFilter */
5053de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori    unsigned char omit;      /* Do not code a test for this constraint */
5054de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  } *aConstraintUsage;
5055de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int idxNum;                /* Number used to identify the index */
5056de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  char *idxStr;              /* String, possibly obtained from sqlite3_malloc */
5057de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int needToFreeIdxStr;      /* Free idxStr using sqlite3_free() if true */
5058de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int orderByConsumed;       /* True if output is already ordered */
5059de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  double estimatedCost;      /* Estimated cost of using this index */
5060de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
5061de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5062de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5063de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Virtual Table Constraint Operator Codes
5064de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5065de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These macros defined the allowed values for the
5066de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_index_info].aConstraint[].op field.  Each value represents
5067de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an operator that is part of a constraint term in the wHERE clause of
5068de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a query that uses a [virtual table].
5069de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5070de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INDEX_CONSTRAINT_EQ    2
5071de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INDEX_CONSTRAINT_GT    4
5072de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INDEX_CONSTRAINT_LE    8
5073de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INDEX_CONSTRAINT_LT    16
5074de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INDEX_CONSTRAINT_GE    32
5075de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_INDEX_CONSTRAINT_MATCH 64
5076de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5077de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5078de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Register A Virtual Table Implementation
5079de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5080de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These routines are used to register a new [virtual table module] name.
5081de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Module names must be registered before
5082de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** creating a new [virtual table] using the module and before using a
5083de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** preexisting [virtual table] for the module.
5084de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5085de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The module name is registered on the [database connection] specified
5086de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by the first parameter.  ^The name of the module is given by the
5087de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** second parameter.  ^The third parameter is a pointer to
5088de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the implementation of the [virtual table module].   ^The fourth
5089de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter is an arbitrary client data pointer that is passed through
5090de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** into the [xCreate] and [xConnect] methods of the virtual table module
5091de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when a new virtual table is be being created or reinitialized.
5092de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5093de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_create_module_v2() interface has a fifth parameter which
5094de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is a pointer to a destructor for the pClientData.  ^SQLite will
5095de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invoke the destructor function (if it is not NULL) when SQLite
509695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** no longer needs the pClientData pointer.  ^The destructor will also
509795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** be invoked if the call to sqlite3_create_module_v2() fails.
509895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_create_module()
5099de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface is equivalent to sqlite3_create_module_v2() with a NULL
5100de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** destructor.
5101de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5102de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_module(
5103de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,               /* SQLite connection to register module with */
5104de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zName,         /* Name of the module */
5105de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const sqlite3_module *p,   /* Methods for the module */
5106de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pClientData          /* Client data for xCreate/xConnect */
5107de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
5108de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_create_module_v2(
5109de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,               /* SQLite connection to register module with */
5110de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zName,         /* Name of the module */
5111de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const sqlite3_module *p,   /* Methods for the module */
5112de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pClientData,         /* Client data for xCreate/xConnect */
5113de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void(*xDestroy)(void*)     /* Module destructor function */
5114de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
5115de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5116de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5117de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Virtual Table Instance Object
5118de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: sqlite3_vtab
5119de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5120de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Every [virtual table module] implementation uses a subclass
5121de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of this object to describe a particular instance
5122de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the [virtual table].  Each subclass will
5123de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be tailored to the specific needs of the module implementation.
5124de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The purpose of this superclass is to define certain fields that are
5125de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** common to all module implementations.
5126de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5127de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Virtual tables methods can set an error message by assigning a
5128de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** string obtained from [sqlite3_mprintf()] to zErrMsg.  The method should
5129de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** take care that any prior string is freed by a call to [sqlite3_free()]
5130de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prior to assigning a new string to zErrMsg.  ^After the error message
5131de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is delivered up to the client application, the string will be automatically
5132de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** freed by sqlite3_free() and the zErrMsg field will be zeroed.
5133de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5134de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_vtab {
5135de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const sqlite3_module *pModule;  /* The module for this virtual table */
5136de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nRef;                       /* NO LONGER USED */
5137de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  char *zErrMsg;                  /* Error message from sqlite3_mprintf() */
5138de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /* Virtual table implementations will typically add additional fields */
5139de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
5140de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5141de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5142de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Virtual Table Cursor Object
5143de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: sqlite3_vtab_cursor {virtual table cursor}
5144de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5145de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Every [virtual table module] implementation uses a subclass of the
5146de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** following structure to describe cursors that point into the
5147de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [virtual table] and are used
5148de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to loop through the virtual table.  Cursors are created using the
5149de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_module.xOpen | xOpen] method of the module and are destroyed
5150de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by the [sqlite3_module.xClose | xClose] method.  Cursors are used
5151de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by the [xFilter], [xNext], [xEof], [xColumn], and [xRowid] methods
5152de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the module.  Each module implementation will define
5153de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the content of a cursor structure to suit its own needs.
5154de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5155de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This superclass exists in order to define fields of the cursor that
5156de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are common to all implementations.
5157de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5158de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_vtab_cursor {
5159de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_vtab *pVtab;      /* Virtual table of this cursor */
5160de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  /* Virtual table implementations will typically add additional fields */
5161de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
5162de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5163de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5164de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Declare The Schema Of A Virtual Table
5165de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5166de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [xCreate] and [xConnect] methods of a
5167de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [virtual table module] call this interface
5168de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to declare the format (the names and datatypes of the columns) of
5169de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the virtual tables they implement.
5170de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5171de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_declare_vtab(sqlite3*, const char *zSQL);
5172de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5173de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5174de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Overload A Function For A Virtual Table
5175de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5176de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Virtual tables can provide alternative implementations of functions
5177de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** using the [xFindFunction] method of the [virtual table module].
5178de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** But global versions of those functions
5179de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** must exist in order to be overloaded.)^
5180de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5181de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This API makes sure a global version of a function with a particular
5182de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** name and number of parameters exists.  If no such function exists
5183de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** before this API is called, a new function is created.)^  ^The implementation
5184de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of the new function always causes an exception to be thrown.  So
5185de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the new function is not good for anything by itself.  Its only
5186de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** purpose is to be a placeholder function that can be overloaded
5187de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by a [virtual table].
5188de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5189de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_overload_function(sqlite3*, const char *zFuncName, int nArg);
5190de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5191de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5192de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The interface to the virtual-table mechanism defined above (back up
5193de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to a comment remarkably similar to this one) is currently considered
5194de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be experimental.  The interface might change in incompatible ways.
5195de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If this is a problem for you, do not use the interface at this time.
5196de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5197de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When the virtual-table mechanism stabilizes, we will declare the
5198de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface fixed, support it indefinitely, and remove this comment.
5199de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5200de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5201de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5202de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: A Handle To An Open BLOB
5203de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {BLOB handle} {BLOB handles}
5204de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5205de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** An instance of this object represents an open BLOB on which
5206de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_blob_open | incremental BLOB I/O] can be performed.
5207de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Objects of this type are created by [sqlite3_blob_open()]
5208de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and destroyed by [sqlite3_blob_close()].
5209de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_blob_read()] and [sqlite3_blob_write()] interfaces
5210de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be used to read or write small subsections of the BLOB.
5211de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_blob_bytes()] interface returns the size of the BLOB in bytes.
5212de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5213de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_blob sqlite3_blob;
5214de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5215de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5216de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Open A BLOB For Incremental I/O
5217de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5218de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This interfaces opens a [BLOB handle | handle] to the BLOB located
5219de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in row iRow, column zColumn, table zTable in database zDb;
5220de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in other words, the same BLOB that would be selected by:
5221de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5222de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <pre>
5223de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     SELECT zColumn FROM zDb.zTable WHERE [rowid] = iRow;
5224de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </pre>)^
5225de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5226de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the flags parameter is non-zero, then the BLOB is opened for read
5227de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and write access. ^If it is zero, the BLOB is opened for read access.
5228de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^It is not possible to open a column that is part of an index or primary
5229de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** key for writing. ^If [foreign key constraints] are enabled, it is
5230de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not possible to open a column that is part of a [child key] for writing.
5231de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5232de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Note that the database name is not the filename that contains
5233de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the database but rather the symbolic name of the database that
5234de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** appears after the AS keyword when the database is connected using [ATTACH].
5235de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^For the main database file, the database name is "main".
5236de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^For TEMP tables, the database name is "temp".
5237de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5238de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(On success, [SQLITE_OK] is returned and the new [BLOB handle] is written
5239de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to *ppBlob. Otherwise an [error code] is returned and *ppBlob is set
5240de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be a null pointer.)^
5241de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This function sets the [database connection] error code and message
5242de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** accessible via [sqlite3_errcode()] and [sqlite3_errmsg()] and related
5243de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** functions. ^Note that the *ppBlob variable is always initialized in a
5244de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** way that makes it safe to invoke [sqlite3_blob_close()] on *ppBlob
5245de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** regardless of the success or failure of this routine.
5246de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5247de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(If the row that a BLOB handle points to is modified by an
5248de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [UPDATE], [DELETE], or by [ON CONFLICT] side-effects
5249de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the BLOB handle is marked as "expired".
5250de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This is true if any column of the row is changed, even a column
5251de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** other than the one the BLOB handle is open on.)^
5252de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calls to [sqlite3_blob_read()] and [sqlite3_blob_write()] for
525390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** an expired BLOB handle fail with a return code of [SQLITE_ABORT].
5254de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Changes written into a BLOB prior to the BLOB expiring are not
5255de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** rolled back by the expiration of the BLOB.  Such changes will eventually
5256de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** commit if the transaction continues to completion.)^
5257de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5258de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Use the [sqlite3_blob_bytes()] interface to determine the size of
5259de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the opened blob.  ^The size of a blob may not be changed by this
5260de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface.  Use the [UPDATE] SQL command to change the size of a
5261de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** blob.
5262de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5263de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_bind_zeroblob()] and [sqlite3_result_zeroblob()] interfaces
5264de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the built-in [zeroblob] SQL function can be used, if desired,
5265de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to create an empty, zero-filled blob in which to read or write using
5266de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this interface.
5267de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5268de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** To avoid a resource leak, every open [BLOB handle] should eventually
5269de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be released by a call to [sqlite3_blob_close()].
5270de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5271de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_open(
5272de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
5273de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zDb,
5274de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zTable,
5275de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zColumn,
5276de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_int64 iRow,
5277de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int flags,
5278de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_blob **ppBlob
5279de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
5280de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5281de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
528295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Move a BLOB Handle to a New Row
528395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
528495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^This function is used to move an existing blob handle so that it points
528595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** to a different row of the same database table. ^The new row is identified
528695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** by the rowid value passed as the second argument. Only the row can be
528795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** changed. ^The database, table and column on which the blob handle is open
528895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** remain the same. Moving an existing blob handle to a new row can be
528995c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** faster than closing the existing handle and opening a new one.
529095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
529195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^(The new row must meet the same criteria as for [sqlite3_blob_open()] -
529295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** it must exist and there must be either a blob or text value stored in
529395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** the nominated column.)^ ^If the new row is not present in the table, or if
529495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** it does not contain a blob or text value, or if another error occurs, an
529595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** SQLite error code is returned and the blob handle is considered aborted.
529695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^All subsequent calls to [sqlite3_blob_read()], [sqlite3_blob_write()] or
529795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** [sqlite3_blob_reopen()] on an aborted blob handle immediately return
529895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** SQLITE_ABORT. ^Calling [sqlite3_blob_bytes()] on an aborted blob handle
529995c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** always returns zero.
530095c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
530195c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^This function sets the database handle error code and message.
530295c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori*/
530395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu NoriSQLITE_API SQLITE_EXPERIMENTAL int sqlite3_blob_reopen(sqlite3_blob *, sqlite3_int64);
530495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori
530595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori/*
5306de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Close A BLOB Handle
5307de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5308de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Closes an open [BLOB handle].
5309de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5310de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Closing a BLOB shall cause the current transaction to commit
5311de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if there are no other BLOBs, no pending prepared statements, and the
5312de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database connection is in [autocommit mode].
5313de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If any writes were made to the BLOB, they might be held in cache
5314de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** until the close operation if they will fit.
5315de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5316de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Closing the BLOB often forces the changes
5317de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** out to disk and so if any I/O errors occur, they will likely occur
5318de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** at the time when the BLOB is closed.  Any errors that occur during
5319de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** closing are reported as a non-zero return value.)^
5320de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5321de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The BLOB is closed unconditionally.  Even if this routine returns
5322de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an error code, the BLOB is still closed.)^
5323de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5324de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Calling this routine with a null pointer (such as would be returned
5325de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by a failed call to [sqlite3_blob_open()]) is a harmless no-op.
5326de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5327de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_close(sqlite3_blob *);
5328de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5329de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5330de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Return The Size Of An Open BLOB
5331de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5332de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Returns the size in bytes of the BLOB accessible via the
5333de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** successfully opened [BLOB handle] in its only argument.  ^The
5334de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** incremental blob I/O routines can only read or overwriting existing
5335de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** blob content; they cannot change the size of a blob.
5336de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5337de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This routine only works on a [BLOB handle] which has been created
5338de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by a prior successful call to [sqlite3_blob_open()] and which has not
5339de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** been closed by [sqlite3_blob_close()].  Passing any other pointer in
5340de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to this routine results in undefined and probably undesirable behavior.
5341de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5342de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_bytes(sqlite3_blob *);
5343de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5344de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5345de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Read Data From A BLOB Incrementally
5346de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5347de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This function is used to read data from an open [BLOB handle] into a
5348de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** caller-supplied buffer. N bytes of data are copied into buffer Z
5349de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from the open BLOB, starting at offset iOffset.)^
5350de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5351de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If offset iOffset is less than N bytes from the end of the BLOB,
5352de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_ERROR] is returned and no data is read.  ^If N or iOffset is
5353de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** less than zero, [SQLITE_ERROR] is returned and no data is read.
5354de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The size of the blob (and hence the maximum value of N+iOffset)
5355de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be determined using the [sqlite3_blob_bytes()] interface.
5356de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5357de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^An attempt to read from an expired [BLOB handle] fails with an
5358de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** error code of [SQLITE_ABORT].
5359de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5360de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(On success, sqlite3_blob_read() returns SQLITE_OK.
5361de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Otherwise, an [error code] or an [extended error code] is returned.)^
5362de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5363de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This routine only works on a [BLOB handle] which has been created
5364de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by a prior successful call to [sqlite3_blob_open()] and which has not
5365de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** been closed by [sqlite3_blob_close()].  Passing any other pointer in
5366de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to this routine results in undefined and probably undesirable behavior.
5367de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5368de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_blob_write()].
5369de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5370de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_read(sqlite3_blob *, void *Z, int N, int iOffset);
5371de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5372de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5373de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Write Data Into A BLOB Incrementally
5374de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5375de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This function is used to write data into an open [BLOB handle] from a
5376de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** caller-supplied buffer. ^N bytes of data are copied from the buffer Z
5377de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** into the open BLOB, starting at offset iOffset.
5378de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5379de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the [BLOB handle] passed as the first argument was not opened for
5380de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** writing (the flags parameter to [sqlite3_blob_open()] was zero),
5381de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this function returns [SQLITE_READONLY].
5382de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5383de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This function may only modify the contents of the BLOB; it is
5384de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not possible to increase the size of a BLOB using this API.
5385de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If offset iOffset is less than N bytes from the end of the BLOB,
5386de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_ERROR] is returned and no data is written.  ^If N is
5387de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** less than zero [SQLITE_ERROR] is returned and no data is written.
5388de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The size of the BLOB (and hence the maximum value of N+iOffset)
5389de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be determined using the [sqlite3_blob_bytes()] interface.
5390de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5391de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^An attempt to write to an expired [BLOB handle] fails with an
5392de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** error code of [SQLITE_ABORT].  ^Writes to the BLOB that occurred
5393de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** before the [BLOB handle] expired are not rolled back by the
5394de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** expiration of the handle, though of course those changes might
5395de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** have been overwritten by the statement that expired the BLOB handle
5396de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or by other independent statements.
5397de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5398de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(On success, sqlite3_blob_write() returns SQLITE_OK.
5399de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Otherwise, an  [error code] or an [extended error code] is returned.)^
5400de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5401de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This routine only works on a [BLOB handle] which has been created
5402de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by a prior successful call to [sqlite3_blob_open()] and which has not
5403de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** been closed by [sqlite3_blob_close()].  Passing any other pointer in
5404de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to this routine results in undefined and probably undesirable behavior.
5405de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5406de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_blob_read()].
5407de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5408de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_blob_write(sqlite3_blob *, const void *z, int n, int iOffset);
5409de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5410de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5411de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Virtual File System Objects
5412de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5413de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A virtual filesystem (VFS) is an [sqlite3_vfs] object
5414de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that SQLite uses to interact
5415de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the underlying operating system.  Most SQLite builds come with a
5416de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** single default VFS that is appropriate for the host computer.
5417de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** New VFSes can be registered and existing VFSes can be unregistered.
5418de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The following interfaces are provided.
5419de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5420de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_vfs_find() interface returns a pointer to a VFS given its name.
5421de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Names are case sensitive.
5422de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Names are zero-terminated UTF-8 strings.
5423de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If there is no match, a NULL pointer is returned.
5424de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If zVfsName is NULL then the default VFS is returned.
5425de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5426de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^New VFSes are registered with sqlite3_vfs_register().
5427de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Each new VFS becomes the default VFS if the makeDflt flag is set.
5428de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The same VFS can be registered multiple times without injury.
5429de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^To make an existing VFS into the default VFS, register it again
5430de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the makeDflt flag set.  If two different VFSes with the
5431de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** same name are registered, the behavior is undefined.  If a
5432de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** VFS is registered with a name that is NULL or an empty string,
5433de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the behavior is undefined.
5434de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5435de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Unregister a VFS with the sqlite3_vfs_unregister() interface.
5436de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(If the default VFS is unregistered, another VFS is chosen as
5437de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the default.  The choice for the new VFS is arbitrary.)^
5438de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5439de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_vfs *sqlite3_vfs_find(const char *zVfsName);
5440de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_vfs_register(sqlite3_vfs*, int makeDflt);
5441de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_vfs_unregister(sqlite3_vfs*);
5442de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5443de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5444de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Mutexes
5445de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5446de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLite core uses these routines for thread
5447de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** synchronization. Though they are intended for internal
5448de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** use by SQLite, code that links against SQLite is
5449de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** permitted to use any of these routines.
5450de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5451de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The SQLite source code contains multiple implementations
5452de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of these mutex routines.  An appropriate implementation
5453de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is selected automatically at compile-time.  ^(The following
5454de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementations are available in the SQLite core:
5455de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5456de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
5457de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>   SQLITE_MUTEX_OS2
545890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <li>   SQLITE_MUTEX_PTHREADS
5459de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>   SQLITE_MUTEX_W32
5460de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>   SQLITE_MUTEX_NOOP
5461de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>)^
5462de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5463de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The SQLITE_MUTEX_NOOP implementation is a set of routines
5464de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that does no real locking and is appropriate for use in
5465de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a single-threaded application.  ^The SQLITE_MUTEX_OS2,
546690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** SQLITE_MUTEX_PTHREADS, and SQLITE_MUTEX_W32 implementations
5467de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are appropriate for use on OS/2, Unix, and Windows.
5468de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5469de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(If SQLite is compiled with the SQLITE_MUTEX_APPDEF preprocessor
5470de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** macro defined (with "-DSQLITE_MUTEX_APPDEF=1"), then no mutex
5471de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation is included with the library. In this case the
5472de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** application must supply a custom mutex implementation using the
5473de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX] option of the sqlite3_config() function
5474de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** before calling sqlite3_initialize() or any other public sqlite3_
5475de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** function that calls sqlite3_initialize().)^
5476de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5477de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_mutex_alloc() routine allocates a new
5478de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mutex and returns a pointer to it. ^If it returns NULL
5479de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that means that a mutex could not be allocated.  ^SQLite
5480de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will unwind its stack and return an error.  ^(The argument
5481de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to sqlite3_mutex_alloc() is one of these integer constants:
5482de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5483de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
5484de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST
5485de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE
5486de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MASTER
5487de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MEM
5488de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MEM2
5489de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_PRNG
5490de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_LRU
5491de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li>  SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_LRU2
5492de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>)^
5493de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5494de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first two constants (SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST and SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE)
5495de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** cause sqlite3_mutex_alloc() to create
5496de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a new mutex.  ^The new mutex is recursive when SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE
5497de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is used but not necessarily so when SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST is used.
5498de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The mutex implementation does not need to make a distinction
5499de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** between SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE and SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST if it does
5500de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not want to.  ^SQLite will only request a recursive mutex in
5501de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** cases where it really needs one.  ^If a faster non-recursive mutex
5502de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation is available on the host platform, the mutex subsystem
5503de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** might return such a mutex in response to SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST.
5504de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5505de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The other allowed parameters to sqlite3_mutex_alloc() (anything other
5506de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** than SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST and SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE) each return
5507de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a pointer to a static preexisting mutex.  ^Six static mutexes are
5508de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** used by the current version of SQLite.  Future versions of SQLite
5509de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** may add additional static mutexes.  Static mutexes are for internal
5510de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** use by SQLite only.  Applications that use SQLite mutexes should
5511de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** use only the dynamic mutexes returned by SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST or
5512de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE.
5513de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5514de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Note that if one of the dynamic mutex parameters (SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST
5515de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE) is used then sqlite3_mutex_alloc()
5516de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returns a different mutex on every call.  ^But for the static
5517de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mutex types, the same mutex is returned on every call that has
5518de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the same type number.
5519de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5520de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_mutex_free() routine deallocates a previously
5521de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocated dynamic mutex.  ^SQLite is careful to deallocate every
5522de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** dynamic mutex that it allocates.  The dynamic mutexes must not be in
5523de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** use when they are deallocated.  Attempting to deallocate a static
5524de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mutex results in undefined behavior.  ^SQLite never deallocates
5525de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a static mutex.
5526de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5527de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_mutex_enter() and sqlite3_mutex_try() routines attempt
5528de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to enter a mutex.  ^If another thread is already within the mutex,
5529de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_mutex_enter() will block and sqlite3_mutex_try() will return
5530de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_BUSY.  ^The sqlite3_mutex_try() interface returns [SQLITE_OK]
5531de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** upon successful entry.  ^(Mutexes created using
5532de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE can be entered multiple times by the same thread.
5533de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In such cases the,
5534de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** mutex must be exited an equal number of times before another thread
5535de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can enter.)^  ^(If the same thread tries to enter any other
5536de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** kind of mutex more than once, the behavior is undefined.
5537de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite will never exhibit
5538de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** such behavior in its own use of mutexes.)^
5539de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5540de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Some systems (for example, Windows 95) do not support the operation
5541de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implemented by sqlite3_mutex_try().  On those systems, sqlite3_mutex_try()
5542de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will always return SQLITE_BUSY.  The SQLite core only ever uses
5543de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_mutex_try() as an optimization so this is acceptable behavior.)^
5544de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5545de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_mutex_leave() routine exits a mutex that was
5546de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** previously entered by the same thread.   ^(The behavior
5547de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is undefined if the mutex is not currently entered by the
5548de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** calling thread or is not currently allocated.  SQLite will
5549de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** never do either.)^
5550de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5551de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the argument to sqlite3_mutex_enter(), sqlite3_mutex_try(), or
5552de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_mutex_leave() is a NULL pointer, then all three routines
5553de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** behave as no-ops.
5554de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5555de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_mutex_held()] and [sqlite3_mutex_notheld()].
5556de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5557de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_mutex *sqlite3_mutex_alloc(int);
5558de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_mutex_free(sqlite3_mutex*);
5559de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_mutex_enter(sqlite3_mutex*);
5560de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_mutex_try(sqlite3_mutex*);
5561de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_mutex_leave(sqlite3_mutex*);
5562de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5563de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5564de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Mutex Methods Object
5565de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5566de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** An instance of this structure defines the low-level routines
5567de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** used to allocate and use mutexes.
5568de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5569de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Usually, the default mutex implementations provided by SQLite are
5570de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sufficient, however the user has the option of substituting a custom
5571de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation for specialized deployments or systems for which SQLite
5572de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** does not provide a suitable implementation. In this case, the user
5573de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** creates and populates an instance of this structure to pass
5574de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to sqlite3_config() along with the [SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX] option.
5575de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Additionally, an instance of this structure can be used as an
5576de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** output variable when querying the system for the current mutex
5577de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation, using the [SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX] option.
5578de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5579de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The xMutexInit method defined by this structure is invoked as
5580de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** part of system initialization by the sqlite3_initialize() function.
5581de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The xMutexInit routine is called by SQLite exactly once for each
5582de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** effective call to [sqlite3_initialize()].
5583de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5584de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The xMutexEnd method defined by this structure is invoked as
5585de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** part of system shutdown by the sqlite3_shutdown() function. The
5586de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation of this method is expected to release all outstanding
5587de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** resources obtained by the mutex methods implementation, especially
5588de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** those obtained by the xMutexInit method.  ^The xMutexEnd()
5589de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface is invoked exactly once for each call to [sqlite3_shutdown()].
5590de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5591de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The remaining seven methods defined by this structure (xMutexAlloc,
5592de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xMutexFree, xMutexEnter, xMutexTry, xMutexLeave, xMutexHeld and
5593de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xMutexNotheld) implement the following interfaces (respectively):
5594de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5595de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ul>
5596de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li>  [sqlite3_mutex_alloc()] </li>
5597de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li>  [sqlite3_mutex_free()] </li>
5598de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li>  [sqlite3_mutex_enter()] </li>
5599de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li>  [sqlite3_mutex_try()] </li>
5600de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li>  [sqlite3_mutex_leave()] </li>
5601de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li>  [sqlite3_mutex_held()] </li>
5602de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <li>  [sqlite3_mutex_notheld()] </li>
5603de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ul>)^
5604de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5605de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The only difference is that the public sqlite3_XXX functions enumerated
5606de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** above silently ignore any invocations that pass a NULL pointer instead
5607de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of a valid mutex handle. The implementations of the methods defined
5608de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by this structure are not required to handle this case, the results
5609de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of passing a NULL pointer instead of a valid mutex handle are undefined
5610de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (i.e. it is acceptable to provide an implementation that segfaults if
5611de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it is passed a NULL pointer).
5612de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5613de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xMutexInit() method must be threadsafe.  ^It must be harmless to
5614de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invoke xMutexInit() multiple times within the same process and without
5615de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** intervening calls to xMutexEnd().  Second and subsequent calls to
5616de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xMutexInit() must be no-ops.
5617de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5618de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^xMutexInit() must not use SQLite memory allocation ([sqlite3_malloc()]
5619de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and its associates).  ^Similarly, xMutexAlloc() must not use SQLite memory
5620de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocation for a static mutex.  ^However xMutexAlloc() may use SQLite
5621de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory allocation for a fast or recursive mutex.
5622de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5623de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite will invoke the xMutexEnd() method when [sqlite3_shutdown()] is
5624de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** called, but only if the prior call to xMutexInit returned SQLITE_OK.
5625de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If xMutexInit fails in any way, it is expected to clean up after itself
5626de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prior to returning.
5627de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5628de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_mutex_methods sqlite3_mutex_methods;
5629de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_mutex_methods {
5630de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xMutexInit)(void);
5631de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xMutexEnd)(void);
5632de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_mutex *(*xMutexAlloc)(int);
5633de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xMutexFree)(sqlite3_mutex *);
5634de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xMutexEnter)(sqlite3_mutex *);
5635de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xMutexTry)(sqlite3_mutex *);
5636de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xMutexLeave)(sqlite3_mutex *);
5637de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xMutexHeld)(sqlite3_mutex *);
5638de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xMutexNotheld)(sqlite3_mutex *);
5639de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
5640de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5641de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5642de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Mutex Verification Routines
5643de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5644de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_mutex_held() and sqlite3_mutex_notheld() routines
5645de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are intended for use inside assert() statements.  ^The SQLite core
5646de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** never uses these routines except inside an assert() and applications
5647de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are advised to follow the lead of the core.  ^The SQLite core only
5648de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** provides implementations for these routines when it is compiled
5649de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the SQLITE_DEBUG flag.  ^External mutex implementations
5650de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are only required to provide these routines if SQLITE_DEBUG is
5651de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** defined and if NDEBUG is not defined.
5652de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5653de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^These routines should return true if the mutex in their argument
5654de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is held or not held, respectively, by the calling thread.
5655de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
565690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The implementation is not required to provide versions of these
5657de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routines that actually work. If the implementation does not provide working
5658de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** versions of these routines, it should at least provide stubs that always
5659de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** return true so that one does not get spurious assertion failures.
5660de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5661de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the argument to sqlite3_mutex_held() is a NULL pointer then
5662de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the routine should return 1.   This seems counter-intuitive since
566390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** clearly the mutex cannot be held if it does not exist.  But
5664de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the reason the mutex does not exist is because the build is not
5665de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** using mutexes.  And we do not want the assert() containing the
5666de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call to sqlite3_mutex_held() to fail, so a non-zero return is
5667de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the appropriate thing to do.  ^The sqlite3_mutex_notheld()
5668de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface should also return 1 when given a NULL pointer.
5669de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5670de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifndef NDEBUG
5671de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_mutex_held(sqlite3_mutex*);
5672de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_mutex_notheld(sqlite3_mutex*);
5673de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
5674de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5675de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5676de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Mutex Types
5677de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5678de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [sqlite3_mutex_alloc()] interface takes a single argument
5679de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** which is one of these integer constants.
5680de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5681de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The set of static mutexes may change from one SQLite release to the
5682de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** next.  Applications that override the built-in mutex logic must be
5683de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** prepared to accommodate additional static mutexes.
5684de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5685de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MUTEX_FAST             0
5686de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MUTEX_RECURSIVE        1
5687de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MASTER    2
5688de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MEM       3  /* sqlite3_malloc() */
5689de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MEM2      4  /* NOT USED */
5690de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_OPEN      4  /* sqlite3BtreeOpen() */
5691de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_PRNG      5  /* sqlite3_random() */
5692de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_LRU       6  /* lru page list */
569390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_LRU2      7  /* NOT USED */
569490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_PMEM      7  /* sqlite3PageMalloc() */
5695de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5696de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5697de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Retrieve the mutex for a database connection
5698de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5699de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This interface returns a pointer the [sqlite3_mutex] object that
5700de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** serializes access to the [database connection] given in the argument
5701de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when the [threading mode] is Serialized.
5702de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the [threading mode] is Single-thread or Multi-thread then this
5703de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** routine returns a NULL pointer.
5704de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5705de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_mutex *sqlite3_db_mutex(sqlite3*);
5706de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5707de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5708de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Low-Level Control Of Database Files
5709de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5710de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_file_control()] interface makes a direct call to the
5711de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xFileControl method for the [sqlite3_io_methods] object associated
5712de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with a particular database identified by the second argument. ^The
571395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** name of the database is "main" for the main database or "temp" for the
5714de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** TEMP database, or the name that appears after the AS keyword for
5715de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** databases that are added using the [ATTACH] SQL command.
5716de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A NULL pointer can be used in place of "main" to refer to the
5717de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** main database file.
5718de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The third and fourth parameters to this routine
5719de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are passed directly through to the second and third parameters of
5720de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the xFileControl method.  ^The return value of the xFileControl
5721de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** method becomes the return value of this routine.
5722de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
572395c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** ^The SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER value for the op parameter causes
572495c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** a pointer to the underlying [sqlite3_file] object to be written into
572595c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** the space pointed to by the 4th parameter.  ^The SQLITE_FCNTL_FILE_POINTER
572695c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** case is a short-circuit path which does not actually invoke the
572795c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori** underlying sqlite3_io_methods.xFileControl method.
572895c34edce550d0869113085e0cd1b6b09e8fe38bVasu Nori**
5729de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the second parameter (zDbName) does not match the name of any
5730de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** open database file, then SQLITE_ERROR is returned.  ^This error
5731de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** code is not remembered and will not be recalled by [sqlite3_errcode()]
5732de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or [sqlite3_errmsg()].  The underlying xFileControl method might
5733de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** also return SQLITE_ERROR.  There is no way to distinguish between
5734de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an incorrect zDbName and an SQLITE_ERROR return from the underlying
5735de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xFileControl method.
5736de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5737de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE]
5738de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5739de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_file_control(sqlite3*, const char *zDbName, int op, void*);
5740de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5741de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5742de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Testing Interface
5743de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5744de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_test_control() interface is used to read out internal
5745de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** state of SQLite and to inject faults into SQLite for testing
5746de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** purposes.  ^The first parameter is an operation code that determines
5747de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the number, meaning, and operation of all subsequent parameters.
5748de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5749de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This interface is not for use by applications.  It exists solely
5750de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for verifying the correct operation of the SQLite library.  Depending
5751de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on how the SQLite library is compiled, this interface might not exist.
5752de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5753de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The details of the operation codes, their meanings, the parameters
5754de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** they take, and what they do are all subject to change without notice.
5755de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Unlike most of the SQLite API, this function is not guaranteed to
5756de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** operate consistently from one release to the next.
5757de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5758de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_test_control(int op, ...);
5759de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5760de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5761de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Testing Interface Operation Codes
5762de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5763de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These constants are the valid operation code parameters used
5764de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as the first argument to [sqlite3_test_control()].
5765de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5766de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These parameters and their meanings are subject to change
5767de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** without notice.  These values are for testing purposes only.
5768de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Applications should not use any of these parameters or the
5769de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_test_control()] interface.
5770de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5771de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_FIRST                    5
5772de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_PRNG_SAVE                5
5773de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_PRNG_RESTORE             6
5774de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_PRNG_RESET               7
5775de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_BITVEC_TEST              8
5776de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_FAULT_INSTALL            9
5777de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_BENIGN_MALLOC_HOOKS     10
5778de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_PENDING_BYTE            11
5779de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_ASSERT                  12
5780de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_ALWAYS                  13
5781de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_RESERVE                 14
5782de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_OPTIMIZATIONS           15
5783de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_ISKEYWORD               16
578490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_SCRATCHMALLOC           17
578590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_LOCALTIME_FAULT         18
578690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_EXPLAIN_STMT            19
578790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_TESTCTRL_LAST                    19
5788de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5789de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5790de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: SQLite Runtime Status
5791de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5792de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This interface is used to retrieve runtime status information
5793de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** about the performance of SQLite, and optionally to reset various
5794de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** highwater marks.  ^The first argument is an integer code for
5795de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the specific parameter to measure.  ^(Recognized integer codes
579690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** are of the form [status parameters | SQLITE_STATUS_...].)^
5797de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The current value of the parameter is returned into *pCurrent.
5798de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The highest recorded value is returned in *pHighwater.  ^If the
5799de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** resetFlag is true, then the highest record value is reset after
5800de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** *pHighwater is written.  ^(Some parameters do not record the highest
5801de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value.  For those parameters
5802de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** nothing is written into *pHighwater and the resetFlag is ignored.)^
5803de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Other parameters record only the highwater mark and not the current
5804de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value.  For these latter parameters nothing is written into *pCurrent.)^
5805de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5806de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_status() routine returns SQLITE_OK on success and a
5807de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** non-zero [error code] on failure.
5808de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5809de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This routine is threadsafe but is not atomic.  This routine can be
5810de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** called while other threads are running the same or different SQLite
5811de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interfaces.  However the values returned in *pCurrent and
5812de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** *pHighwater reflect the status of SQLite at different points in time
5813de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and it is possible that another thread might change the parameter
5814de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in between the times when *pCurrent and *pHighwater are written.
5815de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5816de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_db_status()]
5817de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5818de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_status(int op, int *pCurrent, int *pHighwater, int resetFlag);
5819de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5820de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5821de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5822de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Status Parameters
582390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** KEYWORDS: {status parameters}
5824de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5825de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These integer constants designate various run-time status parameters
5826de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that can be returned by [sqlite3_status()].
5827de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5828de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dl>
582990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_MEMORY_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_MEMORY_USED</dt>
5830de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter is the current amount of memory checked out
5831de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** using [sqlite3_malloc()], either directly or indirectly.  The
5832de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** figure includes calls made to [sqlite3_malloc()] by the application
5833de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and internal memory usage by the SQLite library.  Scratch memory
5834de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** controlled by [SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH] and auxiliary page-cache
5835de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory controlled by [SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE] is not included in
5836de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** this parameter.  The amount returned is the sum of the allocation
5837de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sizes as reported by the xSize method in [sqlite3_mem_methods].</dd>)^
5838de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
583990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_MALLOC_SIZE]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_MALLOC_SIZE</dt>
5840de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter records the largest memory allocation request
5841de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** handed to [sqlite3_malloc()] or [sqlite3_realloc()] (or their
5842de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** internal equivalents).  Only the value returned in the
5843de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** *pHighwater parameter to [sqlite3_status()] is of interest.
5844de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The value written into the *pCurrent parameter is undefined.</dd>)^
5845de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
584690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_MALLOC_COUNT]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_MALLOC_COUNT</dt>
584790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd>This parameter records the number of separate memory allocations
584890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** currently checked out.</dd>)^
5849de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
585090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_USED</dt>
5851de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter returns the number of pages used out of the
5852de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [pagecache memory allocator] that was configured using
5853de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE].  The
5854de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value returned is in pages, not in bytes.</dd>)^
5855de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
585690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_OVERFLOW]]
5857de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_OVERFLOW</dt>
5858de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter returns the number of bytes of page cache
5859de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocation which could not be satisfied by the [SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE]
5860de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** buffer and where forced to overflow to [sqlite3_malloc()].  The
5861de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned value includes allocations that overflowed because they
5862de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** where too large (they were larger than the "sz" parameter to
5863de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE]) and allocations that overflowed because
5864de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** no space was left in the page cache.</dd>)^
5865de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
586690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_SIZE]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_SIZE</dt>
5867de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter records the largest memory allocation request
5868de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** handed to [pagecache memory allocator].  Only the value returned in the
5869de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** *pHighwater parameter to [sqlite3_status()] is of interest.
5870de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The value written into the *pCurrent parameter is undefined.</dd>)^
5871de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
587290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_USED</dt>
5873de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter returns the number of allocations used out of the
5874de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [scratch memory allocator] configured using
5875de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH].  The value returned is in allocations, not
5876de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in bytes.  Since a single thread may only have one scratch allocation
5877de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** outstanding at time, this parameter also reports the number of threads
5878de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** using scratch memory at the same time.</dd>)^
5879de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
588090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_OVERFLOW]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_OVERFLOW</dt>
5881de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter returns the number of bytes of scratch memory
5882de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** allocation which could not be satisfied by the [SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH]
5883de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** buffer and where forced to overflow to [sqlite3_malloc()].  The values
5884de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned include overflows because the requested allocation was too
5885de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** larger (that is, because the requested allocation was larger than the
5886de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** "sz" parameter to [SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH]) and because no scratch buffer
5887de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** slots were available.
5888de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dd>)^
5889de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
589090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_SIZE]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_SIZE</dt>
5891de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter records the largest memory allocation request
5892de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** handed to [scratch memory allocator].  Only the value returned in the
5893de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** *pHighwater parameter to [sqlite3_status()] is of interest.
5894de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The value written into the *pCurrent parameter is undefined.</dd>)^
5895de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
589690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STATUS_PARSER_STACK]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_STATUS_PARSER_STACK</dt>
5897de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter records the deepest parser stack.  It is only
5898de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** meaningful if SQLite is compiled with [YYTRACKMAXSTACKDEPTH].</dd>)^
5899de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dl>
5900de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5901de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** New status parameters may be added from time to time.
5902de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5903de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_MEMORY_USED          0
5904de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_USED       1
5905de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_OVERFLOW   2
5906de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_USED         3
5907de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_OVERFLOW     4
5908de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_MALLOC_SIZE          5
5909de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_PARSER_STACK         6
5910de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_PAGECACHE_SIZE       7
5911de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_SCRATCH_SIZE         8
5912de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STATUS_MALLOC_COUNT         9
5913de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5914de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5915de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Database Connection Status
5916de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5917de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This interface is used to retrieve runtime status information
5918de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** about a single [database connection].  ^The first argument is the
5919de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database connection object to be interrogated.  ^The second argument
5920de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is an integer constant, taken from the set of
592190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_DBSTATUS options], that
5922de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** determines the parameter to interrogate.  The set of
592390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_DBSTATUS options] is likely
5924de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to grow in future releases of SQLite.
5925de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5926de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The current value of the requested parameter is written into *pCur
5927de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the highest instantaneous value is written into *pHiwtr.  ^If
5928de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the resetFlg is true, then the highest instantaneous value is
5929de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** reset back down to the current value.
5930de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5931de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_db_status() routine returns SQLITE_OK on success and a
5932de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** non-zero [error code] on failure.
5933de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5934de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_status()] and [sqlite3_stmt_status()].
5935de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
5936de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_db_status(sqlite3*, int op, int *pCur, int *pHiwtr, int resetFlg);
5937de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
5938de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
5939de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Status Parameters for database connections
594090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** KEYWORDS: {SQLITE_DBSTATUS options}
5941de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5942de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These constants are the available integer "verbs" that can be passed as
5943de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the second argument to the [sqlite3_db_status()] interface.
5944de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5945de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** New verbs may be added in future releases of SQLite. Existing verbs
5946de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** might be discontinued. Applications should check the return code from
5947de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_db_status()] to make sure that the call worked.
5948de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [sqlite3_db_status()] interface will return a non-zero error code
5949de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if a discontinued or unsupported verb is invoked.
5950de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
5951de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dl>
595290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_USED</dt>
5953de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter returns the number of lookaside memory slots currently
5954de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** checked out.</dd>)^
5955de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
595690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_HIT]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_HIT</dt>
595790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd>This parameter returns the number malloc attempts that were
595890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** satisfied using lookaside memory. Only the high-water value is meaningful;
595990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the current value is always zero.)^
596090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
596190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_MISS_SIZE]]
596290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_MISS_SIZE</dt>
596390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd>This parameter returns the number malloc attempts that might have
596490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** been satisfied using lookaside memory but failed due to the amount of
596590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** memory requested being larger than the lookaside slot size.
596690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Only the high-water value is meaningful;
596790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the current value is always zero.)^
596890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
596990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_MISS_FULL]]
597090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_MISS_FULL</dt>
597190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd>This parameter returns the number malloc attempts that might have
597290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** been satisfied using lookaside memory but failed due to all lookaside
597390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** memory already being in use.
597490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Only the high-water value is meaningful;
597590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the current value is always zero.)^
597690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
597790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_USED</dt>
5978de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of of bytes of heap
5979de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory used by all pager caches associated with the database connection.)^
5980de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_USED is always 0.
5981de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
598290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_SCHEMA_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_SCHEMA_USED</dt>
5983de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of of bytes of heap
5984de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** memory used to store the schema for all databases associated
5985de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** with the connection - main, temp, and any [ATTACH]-ed databases.)^
5986de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The full amount of memory used by the schemas is reported, even if the
5987de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** schema memory is shared with other database connections due to
5988de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [shared cache mode] being enabled.
5989de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_SCHEMA_USED is always 0.
5990de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
599190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_STMT_USED]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_STMT_USED</dt>
5992de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>This parameter returns the approximate number of of bytes of heap
5993de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and lookaside memory used by all prepared statements associated with
5994de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the database connection.)^
5995de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_STMT_USED is always 0.
5996de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dd>
599790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
599890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_HIT]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_HIT</dt>
599990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd>This parameter returns the number of pager cache hits that have
600090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** occurred.)^ ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_HIT
600190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is always 0.
600290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** </dd>
600390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
600490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_MISS]] ^(<dt>SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_MISS</dt>
600590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd>This parameter returns the number of pager cache misses that have
600690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** occurred.)^ ^The highwater mark associated with SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_MISS
600790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is always 0.
600890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** </dd>
6009de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dl>
6010de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
601190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_USED       0
601290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_USED           1
601390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_SCHEMA_USED          2
601490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_STMT_USED            3
601590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_HIT        4
601690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_MISS_SIZE  5
601790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_LOOKASIDE_MISS_FULL  6
601890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_HIT            7
601990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_CACHE_MISS           8
602090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_DBSTATUS_MAX                  8   /* Largest defined DBSTATUS */
6021de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6022de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6023de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6024de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Prepared Statement Status
6025de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6026de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(Each prepared statement maintains various
602790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_STMTSTATUS counters] that measure the number
6028de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of times it has performed specific operations.)^  These counters can
6029de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** be used to monitor the performance characteristics of the prepared
6030de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** statements.  For example, if the number of table steps greatly exceeds
6031de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the number of table searches or result rows, that would tend to indicate
6032de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that the prepared statement is using a full table scan rather than
6033de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an index.
6034de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6035de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(This interface is used to retrieve and reset counter values from
6036de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a [prepared statement].  The first argument is the prepared statement
6037de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** object to be interrogated.  The second argument
603890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is an integer code for a specific [SQLITE_STMTSTATUS counter]
6039de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be interrogated.)^
6040de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The current value of the requested counter is returned.
6041de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the resetFlg is true, then the counter is reset to zero after this
6042de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** interface call returns.
6043de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6044de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See also: [sqlite3_status()] and [sqlite3_db_status()].
6045de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6046de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_stmt_status(sqlite3_stmt*, int op,int resetFlg);
6047de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6048de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6049de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Status Parameters for prepared statements
605090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** KEYWORDS: {SQLITE_STMTSTATUS counter} {SQLITE_STMTSTATUS counters}
6051de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6052de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** These preprocessor macros define integer codes that name counter
6053de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** values associated with the [sqlite3_stmt_status()] interface.
6054de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The meanings of the various counters are as follows:
6055de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6056de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dl>
605790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_FULLSCAN_STEP]] <dt>SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_FULLSCAN_STEP</dt>
6058de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>^This is the number of times that SQLite has stepped forward in
6059de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a table as part of a full table scan.  Large numbers for this counter
6060de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** may indicate opportunities for performance improvement through
6061de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** careful use of indices.</dd>
6062de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
606390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_SORT]] <dt>SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_SORT</dt>
6064de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>^This is the number of sort operations that have occurred.
6065de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A non-zero value in this counter may indicate an opportunity to
6066de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** improvement performance through careful use of indices.</dd>
6067de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
606890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_AUTOINDEX]] <dt>SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_AUTOINDEX</dt>
6069de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <dd>^This is the number of rows inserted into transient indices that
6070de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** were created automatically in order to help joins run faster.
6071de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A non-zero value in this counter may indicate an opportunity to
6072de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** improvement performance by adding permanent indices that do not
6073de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** need to be reinitialized each time the statement is run.</dd>
6074de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </dl>
6075de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6076de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_FULLSCAN_STEP     1
6077de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_SORT              2
6078de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define SQLITE_STMTSTATUS_AUTOINDEX         3
6079de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6080de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6081de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Custom Page Cache Object
6082de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6083de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_pcache type is opaque.  It is implemented by
6084de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the pluggable module.  The SQLite core has no knowledge of
6085de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** its size or internal structure and never deals with the
6086de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_pcache object except by holding and passing pointers
6087de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the object.
6088de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
608990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** See [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] for additional information.
6090de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6091de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_pcache sqlite3_pcache;
6092de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6093de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
609490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Custom Page Cache Object
609590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
609690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The sqlite3_pcache_page object represents a single page in the
609790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** page cache.  The page cache will allocate instances of this
609890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** object.  Various methods of the page cache use pointers to instances
609990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** of this object as parameters or as their return value.
610090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
610190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** See [sqlite3_pcache_methods2] for additional information.
610290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
610390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Browntypedef struct sqlite3_pcache_page sqlite3_pcache_page;
610490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brownstruct sqlite3_pcache_page {
610590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void *pBuf;        /* The content of the page */
610690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void *pExtra;      /* Extra information associated with the page */
610790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown};
610890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
610990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
6110de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Application Defined Page Cache.
6111de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** KEYWORDS: {page cache}
6112de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
611390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(The [sqlite3_config]([SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2], ...) interface can
6114de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** register an alternative page cache implementation by passing in an
611590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** instance of the sqlite3_pcache_methods2 structure.)^
6116de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** In many applications, most of the heap memory allocated by
6117de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite is used for the page cache.
6118de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** By implementing a
6119de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** custom page cache using this API, an application can better control
6120de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the amount of memory consumed by SQLite, the way in which
6121de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that memory is allocated and released, and the policies used to
6122de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** determine exactly which parts of a database file are cached and for
6123de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** how long.
6124de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6125de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The alternative page cache mechanism is an
6126de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** extreme measure that is only needed by the most demanding applications.
6127de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The built-in page cache is recommended for most uses.
6128de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
612990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^(The contents of the sqlite3_pcache_methods2 structure are copied to an
6130de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** internal buffer by SQLite within the call to [sqlite3_config].  Hence
6131de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the application may discard the parameter after the call to
6132de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_config()] returns.)^
6133de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
613490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xInit() page cache method]]
6135de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The xInit() method is called once for each effective
6136de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call to [sqlite3_initialize()])^
6137de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** (usually only once during the lifetime of the process). ^(The xInit()
613890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** method is passed a copy of the sqlite3_pcache_methods2.pArg value.)^
6139de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The intent of the xInit() method is to set up global data structures
6140de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** required by the custom page cache implementation.
6141de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(If the xInit() method is NULL, then the
6142de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** built-in default page cache is used instead of the application defined
6143de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** page cache.)^
6144de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
614590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xShutdown() page cache method]]
6146de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The xShutdown() method is called by [sqlite3_shutdown()].
6147de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** It can be used to clean up
6148de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** any outstanding resources before process shutdown, if required.
6149de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The xShutdown() method may be NULL.
6150de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6151de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite automatically serializes calls to the xInit method,
6152de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** so the xInit method need not be threadsafe.  ^The
6153de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** xShutdown method is only called from [sqlite3_shutdown()] so it does
6154de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not need to be threadsafe either.  All other methods must be threadsafe
6155de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** in multithreaded applications.
6156de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6157de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite will never invoke xInit() more than once without an intervening
6158de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call to xShutdown().
6159de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
616090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xCreate() page cache methods]]
6161de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^SQLite invokes the xCreate() method to construct a new cache instance.
6162de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite will typically create one cache instance for each open database file,
6163de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** though this is not guaranteed. ^The
6164de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** first parameter, szPage, is the size in bytes of the pages that must
616590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** be allocated by the cache.  ^szPage will always a power of two.  ^The
616690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** second parameter szExtra is a number of bytes of extra storage
616790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** associated with each page cache entry.  ^The szExtra parameter will
616890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a number less than 250.  SQLite will use the
616990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** extra szExtra bytes on each page to store metadata about the underlying
617090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** database page on disk.  The value passed into szExtra depends
6171de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on the SQLite version, the target platform, and how SQLite was compiled.
617290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The third argument to xCreate(), bPurgeable, is true if the cache being
617390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** created will be used to cache database pages of a file stored on disk, or
6174de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** false if it is used for an in-memory database. The cache implementation
6175de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** does not have to do anything special based with the value of bPurgeable;
6176de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it is purely advisory.  ^On a cache where bPurgeable is false, SQLite will
6177de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** never invoke xUnpin() except to deliberately delete a page.
6178de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^In other words, calls to xUnpin() on a cache with bPurgeable set to
6179de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** false will always have the "discard" flag set to true.
6180de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Hence, a cache created with bPurgeable false will
6181de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** never contain any unpinned pages.
6182de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
618390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xCachesize() page cache method]]
6184de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The xCachesize() method may be called at any time by SQLite to set the
6185de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** suggested maximum cache-size (number of pages stored by) the cache
6186de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** instance passed as the first argument. This is the value configured using
6187de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the SQLite "[PRAGMA cache_size]" command.)^  As with the bPurgeable
6188de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter, the implementation is not required to do anything with this
6189de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** value; it is advisory only.
6190de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
619190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xPagecount() page cache methods]]
6192de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xPagecount() method must return the number of pages currently
6193de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** stored in the cache, both pinned and unpinned.
6194de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
619590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xFetch() page cache methods]]
6196de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xFetch() method locates a page in the cache and returns a pointer to
619790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** an sqlite3_pcache_page object associated with that page, or a NULL pointer.
619890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The pBuf element of the returned sqlite3_pcache_page object will be a
619990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** pointer to a buffer of szPage bytes used to store the content of a
620090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** single database page.  The pExtra element of sqlite3_pcache_page will be
620190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a pointer to the szExtra bytes of extra storage that SQLite has requested
620290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** for each entry in the page cache.
620390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
620490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The page to be fetched is determined by the key. ^The minimum key value
620590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is 1.  After it has been retrieved using xFetch, the page is considered
620690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** to be "pinned".
6207de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6208de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If the requested page is already in the page cache, then the page cache
6209de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** implementation must return a pointer to the page buffer with its content
6210de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** intact.  If the requested page is not already in the cache, then the
621190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** cache implementation should use the value of the createFlag
6212de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** parameter to help it determined what action to take:
6213de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6214de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <table border=1 width=85% align=center>
6215de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><th> createFlag <th> Behaviour when page is not already in cache
6216de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> 0 <td> Do not allocate a new page.  Return NULL.
6217de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> 1 <td> Allocate a new page if it easy and convenient to do so.
6218de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**                 Otherwise return NULL.
6219de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <tr><td> 2 <td> Make every effort to allocate a new page.  Only return
6220de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**                 NULL if allocating a new page is effectively impossible.
6221de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </table>
6222de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6223de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(SQLite will normally invoke xFetch() with a createFlag of 0 or 1.  SQLite
6224de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will only use a createFlag of 2 after a prior call with a createFlag of 1
6225de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** failed.)^  In between the to xFetch() calls, SQLite may
6226de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** attempt to unpin one or more cache pages by spilling the content of
6227de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pinned pages to disk and synching the operating system disk cache.
6228de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
622990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xUnpin() page cache method]]
6230de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^xUnpin() is called by SQLite with a pointer to a currently pinned page
6231de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** as its second argument.  If the third parameter, discard, is non-zero,
6232de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the page must be evicted from the cache.
6233de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the discard parameter is
6234de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** zero, then the page may be discarded or retained at the discretion of
6235de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** page cache implementation. ^The page cache implementation
6236de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** may choose to evict unpinned pages at any time.
6237de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6238de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The cache must not perform any reference counting. A single
6239de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call to xUnpin() unpins the page regardless of the number of prior calls
6240de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to xFetch().
6241de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
624290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xRekey() page cache methods]]
6243de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The xRekey() method is used to change the key value associated with the
6244de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** page passed as the second argument. If the cache
6245de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** previously contains an entry associated with newKey, it must be
6246de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** discarded. ^Any prior cache entry associated with newKey is guaranteed not
6247de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to be pinned.
6248de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6249de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When SQLite calls the xTruncate() method, the cache must discard all
6250de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** existing cache entries with page numbers (keys) greater than or equal
6251de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the value of the iLimit parameter passed to xTruncate(). If any
6252de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** of these pages are pinned, they are implicitly unpinned, meaning that
6253de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** they can be safely discarded.
6254de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
625590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xDestroy() page cache method]]
6256de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The xDestroy() method is used to delete a cache allocated by xCreate().
6257de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** All resources associated with the specified cache should be freed. ^After
6258de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** calling the xDestroy() method, SQLite considers the [sqlite3_pcache*]
625990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** handle invalid, and will not use it with any other sqlite3_pcache_methods2
6260de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** functions.
626190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
626290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[the xShrink() page cache method]]
626390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^SQLite invokes the xShrink() method when it wants the page cache to
626490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** free up as much of heap memory as possible.  The page cache implementation
626590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is not obligated to free any memory, but well-behaved implementations should
626690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** do their best.
626790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
626890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Browntypedef struct sqlite3_pcache_methods2 sqlite3_pcache_methods2;
626990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brownstruct sqlite3_pcache_methods2 {
627090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int iVersion;
627190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void *pArg;
627290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int (*xInit)(void*);
627390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void (*xShutdown)(void*);
627490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  sqlite3_pcache *(*xCreate)(int szPage, int szExtra, int bPurgeable);
627590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void (*xCachesize)(sqlite3_pcache*, int nCachesize);
627690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int (*xPagecount)(sqlite3_pcache*);
627790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  sqlite3_pcache_page *(*xFetch)(sqlite3_pcache*, unsigned key, int createFlag);
627890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void (*xUnpin)(sqlite3_pcache*, sqlite3_pcache_page*, int discard);
627990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void (*xRekey)(sqlite3_pcache*, sqlite3_pcache_page*,
628090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown      unsigned oldKey, unsigned newKey);
628190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void (*xTruncate)(sqlite3_pcache*, unsigned iLimit);
628290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void (*xDestroy)(sqlite3_pcache*);
628390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  void (*xShrink)(sqlite3_pcache*);
628490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown};
628590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
628690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
628790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** This is the obsolete pcache_methods object that has now been replaced
628890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** by sqlite3_pcache_methods2.  This object is not used by SQLite.  It is
628990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** retained in the header file for backwards compatibility only.
6290de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6291de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_pcache_methods sqlite3_pcache_methods;
6292de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_pcache_methods {
6293de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pArg;
6294de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xInit)(void*);
6295de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xShutdown)(void*);
6296de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3_pcache *(*xCreate)(int szPage, int bPurgeable);
6297de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xCachesize)(sqlite3_pcache*, int nCachesize);
6298de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xPagecount)(sqlite3_pcache*);
6299de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *(*xFetch)(sqlite3_pcache*, unsigned key, int createFlag);
6300de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xUnpin)(sqlite3_pcache*, void*, int discard);
6301de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xRekey)(sqlite3_pcache*, void*, unsigned oldKey, unsigned newKey);
6302de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xTruncate)(sqlite3_pcache*, unsigned iLimit);
6303de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xDestroy)(sqlite3_pcache*);
6304de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
6305de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
630690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
6307de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6308de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Online Backup Object
6309de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6310de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_backup object records state information about an ongoing
6311de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** online backup operation.  ^The sqlite3_backup object is created by
6312de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a call to [sqlite3_backup_init()] and is destroyed by a call to
6313de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_backup_finish()].
6314de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6315de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See Also: [Using the SQLite Online Backup API]
6316de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6317de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_backup sqlite3_backup;
6318de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6319de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6320de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Online Backup API.
6321de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6322de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The backup API copies the content of one database into another.
6323de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** It is useful either for creating backups of databases or
6324de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for copying in-memory databases to or from persistent files.
6325de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6326de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See Also: [Using the SQLite Online Backup API]
6327de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
632890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^SQLite holds a write transaction open on the destination database file
632990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** for the duration of the backup operation.
633090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^The source database is read-locked only while it is being read;
633190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** it is not locked continuously for the entire backup operation.
633290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ^Thus, the backup may be performed on a live source database without
633390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** preventing other database connections from
6334de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** reading or writing to the source database while the backup is underway.
6335de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6336de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(To perform a backup operation:
6337de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   <ol>
6338de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     <li><b>sqlite3_backup_init()</b> is called once to initialize the
6339de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**         backup,
6340de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     <li><b>sqlite3_backup_step()</b> is called one or more times to transfer
6341de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**         the data between the two databases, and finally
6342de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**     <li><b>sqlite3_backup_finish()</b> is called to release all resources
6343de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**         associated with the backup operation.
6344de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   </ol>)^
6345de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** There should be exactly one call to sqlite3_backup_finish() for each
6346de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** successful call to sqlite3_backup_init().
6347de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
634890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[sqlite3_backup_init()]] <b>sqlite3_backup_init()</b>
6349de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6350de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The D and N arguments to sqlite3_backup_init(D,N,S,M) are the
6351de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection] associated with the destination database
6352de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the database name, respectively.
6353de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The database name is "main" for the main database, "temp" for the
6354de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** temporary database, or the name specified after the AS keyword in
6355de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an [ATTACH] statement for an attached database.
6356de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The S and M arguments passed to
6357de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_init(D,N,S,M) identify the [database connection]
6358de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and database name of the source database, respectively.
6359de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The source and destination [database connections] (parameters S and D)
636090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** must be different or else sqlite3_backup_init(D,N,S,M) will fail with
6361de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an error.
6362de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6363de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If an error occurs within sqlite3_backup_init(D,N,S,M), then NULL is
636490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** returned and an error code and error message are stored in the
6365de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** destination [database connection] D.
6366de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The error code and message for the failed call to sqlite3_backup_init()
6367de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** can be retrieved using the [sqlite3_errcode()], [sqlite3_errmsg()], and/or
6368de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_errmsg16()] functions.
6369de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A successful call to sqlite3_backup_init() returns a pointer to an
6370de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_backup] object.
6371de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_backup] object may be used with the sqlite3_backup_step() and
6372de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_finish() functions to perform the specified backup
6373de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** operation.
6374de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
637590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[sqlite3_backup_step()]] <b>sqlite3_backup_step()</b>
6376de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6377de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Function sqlite3_backup_step(B,N) will copy up to N pages between
6378de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the source and destination databases specified by [sqlite3_backup] object B.
6379de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If N is negative, all remaining source pages are copied.
6380de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If sqlite3_backup_step(B,N) successfully copies N pages and there
638190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** are still more pages to be copied, then the function returns [SQLITE_OK].
6382de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If sqlite3_backup_step(B,N) successfully finishes copying all pages
6383de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from source to destination, then it returns [SQLITE_DONE].
6384de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If an error occurs while running sqlite3_backup_step(B,N),
6385de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then an [error code] is returned. ^As well as [SQLITE_OK] and
6386de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_DONE], a call to sqlite3_backup_step() may return [SQLITE_READONLY],
6387de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_NOMEM], [SQLITE_BUSY], [SQLITE_LOCKED], or an
6388de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_IOERR_ACCESS | SQLITE_IOERR_XXX] extended error code.
6389de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6390de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(The sqlite3_backup_step() might return [SQLITE_READONLY] if
6391de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <ol>
6392de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> the destination database was opened read-only, or
6393de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <li> the destination database is using write-ahead-log journaling
6394de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the destination and source page sizes differ, or
639590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <li> the destination database is an in-memory database and the
6396de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** destination and source page sizes differ.
6397de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** </ol>)^
6398de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6399de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If sqlite3_backup_step() cannot obtain a required file-system lock, then
6400de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [sqlite3_busy_handler | busy-handler function]
6401de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is invoked (if one is specified). ^If the
6402de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** busy-handler returns non-zero before the lock is available, then
6403de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_BUSY] is returned to the caller. ^In this case the call to
6404de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_step() can be retried later. ^If the source
6405de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection]
6406de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is being used to write to the source database when sqlite3_backup_step()
6407de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is called, then [SQLITE_LOCKED] is returned immediately. ^Again, in this
6408de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** case the call to sqlite3_backup_step() can be retried later on. ^(If
6409de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_IOERR_ACCESS | SQLITE_IOERR_XXX], [SQLITE_NOMEM], or
6410de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_READONLY] is returned, then
6411de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** there is no point in retrying the call to sqlite3_backup_step(). These
6412de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** errors are considered fatal.)^  The application must accept
6413de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that the backup operation has failed and pass the backup operation handle
6414de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to the sqlite3_backup_finish() to release associated resources.
6415de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6416de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first call to sqlite3_backup_step() obtains an exclusive lock
6417de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on the destination file. ^The exclusive lock is not released until either
6418de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_finish() is called or the backup operation is complete
6419de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and sqlite3_backup_step() returns [SQLITE_DONE].  ^Every call to
6420de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_step() obtains a [shared lock] on the source database that
6421de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** lasts for the duration of the sqlite3_backup_step() call.
6422de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Because the source database is not locked between calls to
6423de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_step(), the source database may be modified mid-way
6424de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** through the backup process.  ^If the source database is modified by an
6425de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** external process or via a database connection other than the one being
6426de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** used by the backup operation, then the backup will be automatically
6427de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** restarted by the next call to sqlite3_backup_step(). ^If the source
6428de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database is modified by the using the same database connection as is used
6429de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by the backup operation, then the backup database is automatically
6430de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** updated at the same time.
6431de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
643290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[sqlite3_backup_finish()]] <b>sqlite3_backup_finish()</b>
6433de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6434de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When sqlite3_backup_step() has returned [SQLITE_DONE], or when the
6435de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** application wishes to abandon the backup operation, the application
6436de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** should destroy the [sqlite3_backup] by passing it to sqlite3_backup_finish().
6437de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The sqlite3_backup_finish() interfaces releases all
6438de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** resources associated with the [sqlite3_backup] object.
6439de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If sqlite3_backup_step() has not yet returned [SQLITE_DONE], then any
6440de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** active write-transaction on the destination database is rolled back.
6441de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [sqlite3_backup] object is invalid
6442de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and may not be used following a call to sqlite3_backup_finish().
6443de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6444de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The value returned by sqlite3_backup_finish is [SQLITE_OK] if no
6445de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_step() errors occurred, regardless or whether or not
6446de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_step() completed.
6447de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If an out-of-memory condition or IO error occurred during any prior
6448de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_step() call on the same [sqlite3_backup] object, then
6449de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_finish() returns the corresponding [error code].
6450de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6451de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^A return of [SQLITE_BUSY] or [SQLITE_LOCKED] from sqlite3_backup_step()
6452de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not a permanent error and does not affect the return value of
6453de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_finish().
6454de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
645590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [[sqlite3_backup__remaining()]] [[sqlite3_backup_pagecount()]]
645690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <b>sqlite3_backup_remaining() and sqlite3_backup_pagecount()</b>
6457de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6458de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Each call to sqlite3_backup_step() sets two values inside
6459de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the [sqlite3_backup] object: the number of pages still to be backed
6460de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** up and the total number of pages in the source database file.
6461de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_backup_remaining() and sqlite3_backup_pagecount() interfaces
6462de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** retrieve these two values, respectively.
6463de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6464de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The values returned by these functions are only updated by
6465de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_step(). ^If the source database is modified during a backup
6466de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** operation, then the values are not updated to account for any extra
6467de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** pages that need to be updated or the size of the source database file
6468de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** changing.
6469de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6470de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <b>Concurrent Usage of Database Handles</b>
6471de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6472de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The source [database connection] may be used by the application for other
6473de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** purposes while a backup operation is underway or being initialized.
6474de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If SQLite is compiled and configured to support threadsafe database
6475de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connections, then the source database connection may be used concurrently
6476de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from within other threads.
6477de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6478de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** However, the application must guarantee that the destination
6479de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [database connection] is not passed to any other API (by any thread) after
6480de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_init() is called and before the corresponding call to
6481de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_backup_finish().  SQLite does not currently check to see
6482de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** if the application incorrectly accesses the destination [database connection]
6483de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and so no error code is reported, but the operations may malfunction
6484de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** nevertheless.  Use of the destination database connection while a
6485de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** backup is in progress might also also cause a mutex deadlock.
6486de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6487de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If running in [shared cache mode], the application must
6488de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** guarantee that the shared cache used by the destination database
6489de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is not accessed while the backup is running. In practice this means
6490de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that the application must guarantee that the disk file being
6491de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** backed up to is not accessed by any connection within the process,
6492de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** not just the specific connection that was passed to sqlite3_backup_init().
6493de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6494de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The [sqlite3_backup] object itself is partially threadsafe. Multiple
6495de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** threads may safely make multiple concurrent calls to sqlite3_backup_step().
6496de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** However, the sqlite3_backup_remaining() and sqlite3_backup_pagecount()
6497de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** APIs are not strictly speaking threadsafe. If they are invoked at the
6498de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** same time as another thread is invoking sqlite3_backup_step() it is
6499de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** possible that they return invalid values.
6500de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6501de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API sqlite3_backup *sqlite3_backup_init(
6502de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *pDest,                        /* Destination database handle */
6503de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zDestName,                 /* Destination database name */
6504de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *pSource,                      /* Source database handle */
6505de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zSourceName                /* Source database name */
6506de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
6507de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_backup_step(sqlite3_backup *p, int nPage);
6508de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_backup_finish(sqlite3_backup *p);
6509de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_backup_remaining(sqlite3_backup *p);
6510de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_backup_pagecount(sqlite3_backup *p);
6511de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6512de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6513de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Unlock Notification
6514de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6515de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^When running in shared-cache mode, a database operation may fail with
6516de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an [SQLITE_LOCKED] error if the required locks on the shared-cache or
6517de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** individual tables within the shared-cache cannot be obtained. See
6518de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLite Shared-Cache Mode] for a description of shared-cache locking.
6519de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This API may be used to register a callback that SQLite will invoke
6520de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when the connection currently holding the required lock relinquishes it.
6521de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^This API is only available if the library was compiled with the
6522de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [SQLITE_ENABLE_UNLOCK_NOTIFY] C-preprocessor symbol defined.
6523de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6524de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** See Also: [Using the SQLite Unlock Notification Feature].
6525de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6526de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Shared-cache locks are released when a database connection concludes
6527de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** its current transaction, either by committing it or rolling it back.
6528de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6529de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^When a connection (known as the blocked connection) fails to obtain a
6530de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** shared-cache lock and SQLITE_LOCKED is returned to the caller, the
6531de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** identity of the database connection (the blocking connection) that
6532de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** has locked the required resource is stored internally. ^After an
6533de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** application receives an SQLITE_LOCKED error, it may call the
6534de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_unlock_notify() method with the blocked connection handle as
6535de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the first argument to register for a callback that will be invoked
6536de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** when the blocking connections current transaction is concluded. ^The
6537de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback is invoked from within the [sqlite3_step] or [sqlite3_close]
6538de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** call that concludes the blocking connections transaction.
6539de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6540de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(If sqlite3_unlock_notify() is called in a multi-threaded application,
6541de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** there is a chance that the blocking connection will have already
6542de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** concluded its transaction by the time sqlite3_unlock_notify() is invoked.
6543de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** If this happens, then the specified callback is invoked immediately,
6544de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from within the call to sqlite3_unlock_notify().)^
6545de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6546de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If the blocked connection is attempting to obtain a write-lock on a
6547de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** shared-cache table, and more than one other connection currently holds
6548de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a read-lock on the same table, then SQLite arbitrarily selects one of
6549de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the other connections to use as the blocking connection.
6550de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6551de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^(There may be at most one unlock-notify callback registered by a
6552de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** blocked connection. If sqlite3_unlock_notify() is called when the
6553de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** blocked connection already has a registered unlock-notify callback,
6554de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** then the new callback replaces the old.)^ ^If sqlite3_unlock_notify() is
6555de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** called with a NULL pointer as its second argument, then any existing
6556de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** unlock-notify callback is canceled. ^The blocked connections
6557de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** unlock-notify callback may also be canceled by closing the blocked
6558de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connection using [sqlite3_close()].
6559de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6560de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The unlock-notify callback is not reentrant. If an application invokes
6561de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** any sqlite3_xxx API functions from within an unlock-notify callback, a
6562de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** crash or deadlock may be the result.
6563de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6564de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Unless deadlock is detected (see below), sqlite3_unlock_notify() always
6565de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returns SQLITE_OK.
6566de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6567de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <b>Callback Invocation Details</b>
6568de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6569de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When an unlock-notify callback is registered, the application provides a
6570de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** single void* pointer that is passed to the callback when it is invoked.
6571de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** However, the signature of the callback function allows SQLite to pass
6572de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** it an array of void* context pointers. The first argument passed to
6573de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** an unlock-notify callback is a pointer to an array of void* pointers,
6574de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** and the second is the number of entries in the array.
6575de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6576de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When a blocking connections transaction is concluded, there may be
6577de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** more than one blocked connection that has registered for an unlock-notify
6578de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback. ^If two or more such blocked connections have specified the
6579de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** same callback function, then instead of invoking the callback function
6580de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** multiple times, it is invoked once with the set of void* context pointers
6581de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** specified by the blocked connections bundled together into an array.
6582de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** This gives the application an opportunity to prioritize any actions
6583de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** related to the set of unblocked database connections.
6584de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6585de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <b>Deadlock Detection</b>
6586de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6587de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Assuming that after registering for an unlock-notify callback a
6588de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** database waits for the callback to be issued before taking any further
6589de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** action (a reasonable assumption), then using this API may cause the
6590de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** application to deadlock. For example, if connection X is waiting for
6591de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connection Y's transaction to be concluded, and similarly connection
6592de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Y is waiting on connection X's transaction, then neither connection
6593de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will proceed and the system may remain deadlocked indefinitely.
6594de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6595de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** To avoid this scenario, the sqlite3_unlock_notify() performs deadlock
6596de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** detection. ^If a given call to sqlite3_unlock_notify() would put the
6597de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** system in a deadlocked state, then SQLITE_LOCKED is returned and no
6598de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** unlock-notify callback is registered. The system is said to be in
6599de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a deadlocked state if connection A has registered for an unlock-notify
6600de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback on the conclusion of connection B's transaction, and connection
6601de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** B has itself registered for an unlock-notify callback when connection
6602de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A's transaction is concluded. ^Indirect deadlock is also detected, so
6603de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the system is also considered to be deadlocked if connection B has
6604de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** registered for an unlock-notify callback on the conclusion of connection
6605de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** C's transaction, where connection C is waiting on connection A. ^Any
6606de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** number of levels of indirection are allowed.
6607de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6608de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** <b>The "DROP TABLE" Exception</b>
6609de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6610de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** When a call to [sqlite3_step()] returns SQLITE_LOCKED, it is almost
6611de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** always appropriate to call sqlite3_unlock_notify(). There is however,
6612de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** one exception. When executing a "DROP TABLE" or "DROP INDEX" statement,
6613de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite checks if there are any currently executing SELECT statements
6614de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that belong to the same connection. If there are, SQLITE_LOCKED is
6615de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** returned. In this case there is no "blocking connection", so invoking
6616de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** sqlite3_unlock_notify() results in the unlock-notify callback being
6617de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** invoked immediately. If the application then re-attempts the "DROP TABLE"
6618de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** or "DROP INDEX" query, an infinite loop might be the result.
6619de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6620de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** One way around this problem is to check the extended error code returned
6621de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** by an sqlite3_step() call. ^(If there is a blocking connection, then the
6622de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** extended error code is set to SQLITE_LOCKED_SHAREDCACHE. Otherwise, in
6623de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the special "DROP TABLE/INDEX" case, the extended error code is just
6624de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLITE_LOCKED.)^
6625de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6626de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_unlock_notify(
6627de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *pBlocked,                          /* Waiting connection */
6628de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xNotify)(void **apArg, int nArg),    /* Callback function to invoke */
6629de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pNotifyArg                            /* Argument to pass to xNotify */
6630de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
6631de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6632de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6633de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6634de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: String Comparison
6635de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6636c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** ^The [sqlite3_stricmp()] and [sqlite3_strnicmp()] APIs allow applications
6637c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** and extensions to compare the contents of two buffers containing UTF-8
6638c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** strings in a case-independent fashion, using the same definition of "case
6639c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff Brown** independence" that SQLite uses internally when comparing identifiers.
6640de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6641c82acac4e67711e8d9289b572d334298aeb5d806Jeff BrownSQLITE_API int sqlite3_stricmp(const char *, const char *);
6642de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_strnicmp(const char *, const char *, int);
6643de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6644de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6645de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Error Logging Interface
6646de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6647de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_log()] interface writes a message into the error log
6648de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** established by the [SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG] option to [sqlite3_config()].
6649de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^If logging is enabled, the zFormat string and subsequent arguments are
6650de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** used with [sqlite3_snprintf()] to generate the final output string.
6651de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6652de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The sqlite3_log() interface is intended for use by extensions such as
6653de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** virtual tables, collating functions, and SQL functions.  While there is
6654de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** nothing to prevent an application from calling sqlite3_log(), doing so
6655de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is considered bad form.
6656de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6657de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The zFormat string must not be NULL.
6658de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6659de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** To avoid deadlocks and other threading problems, the sqlite3_log() routine
6660de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will not use dynamically allocated memory.  The log message is stored in
6661de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a fixed-length buffer on the stack.  If the log message is longer than
6662de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a few hundred characters, it will be truncated to the length of the
6663de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** buffer.
6664de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6665de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void sqlite3_log(int iErrCode, const char *zFormat, ...);
6666de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6667de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6668de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Write-Ahead Log Commit Hook
6669de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6670de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_wal_hook()] function is used to register a callback that
6671de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** will be invoked each time a database connection commits data to a
6672de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [write-ahead log] (i.e. whenever a transaction is committed in
6673de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [journal_mode | journal_mode=WAL mode]).
6674de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6675de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The callback is invoked by SQLite after the commit has taken place and
6676de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** the associated write-lock on the database released, so the implementation
6677de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** may read, write or [checkpoint] the database as required.
6678de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6679de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The first parameter passed to the callback function when it is invoked
6680de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is a copy of the third parameter passed to sqlite3_wal_hook() when
6681de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** registering the callback. ^The second is a copy of the database handle.
6682de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The third parameter is the name of the database that was written to -
6683de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** either "main" or the name of an [ATTACH]-ed database. ^The fourth parameter
6684de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is the number of pages currently in the write-ahead log file,
6685de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** including those that were just committed.
6686de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6687de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The callback function should normally return [SQLITE_OK].  ^If an error
6688de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** code is returned, that error will propagate back up through the
6689de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** SQLite code base to cause the statement that provoked the callback
6690de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to report an error, though the commit will have still occurred. If the
6691de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** callback returns [SQLITE_ROW] or [SQLITE_DONE], or if it returns a value
6692de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** that does not correspond to any valid SQLite error code, the results
6693de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** are undefined.
6694de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6695de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A single database handle may have at most a single write-ahead log callback
6696de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** registered at one time. ^Calling [sqlite3_wal_hook()] replaces any
6697de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** previously registered write-ahead log callback. ^Note that the
6698de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint()] interface and the
6699de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [wal_autocheckpoint pragma] both invoke [sqlite3_wal_hook()] and will
6700de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** those overwrite any prior [sqlite3_wal_hook()] settings.
6701de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6702de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API void *sqlite3_wal_hook(
6703de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3*,
6704de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int(*)(void *,sqlite3*,const char*,int),
6705de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void*
6706de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
6707de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6708de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6709de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Configure an auto-checkpoint
6710de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6711de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint(D,N)] is a wrapper around
6712de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [sqlite3_wal_hook()] that causes any database on [database connection] D
6713de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** to automatically [checkpoint]
6714de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** after committing a transaction if there are N or
6715de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** more frames in the [write-ahead log] file.  ^Passing zero or
6716de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a negative value as the nFrame parameter disables automatic
6717de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** checkpoints entirely.
6718de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6719de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The callback registered by this function replaces any existing callback
6720de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** registered using [sqlite3_wal_hook()].  ^Likewise, registering a callback
6721de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** using [sqlite3_wal_hook()] disables the automatic checkpoint mechanism
6722de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** configured by this function.
6723de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6724de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [wal_autocheckpoint pragma] can be used to invoke this interface
6725de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from SQL.
6726de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6727de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^Every new [database connection] defaults to having the auto-checkpoint
672890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** enabled with a threshold of 1000 or [SQLITE_DEFAULT_WAL_AUTOCHECKPOINT]
672990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** pages.  The use of this interface
6730de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** is only necessary if the default setting is found to be suboptimal
6731de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** for a particular application.
6732de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6733de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint(sqlite3 *db, int N);
6734de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6735de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6736de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** CAPI3REF: Checkpoint a database
6737de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6738de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(D,X)] interface causes database named X
6739de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** on [database connection] D to be [checkpointed].  ^If X is NULL or an
6740de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** empty string, then a checkpoint is run on all databases of
6741de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** connection D.  ^If the database connection D is not in
6742de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [WAL | write-ahead log mode] then this interface is a harmless no-op.
6743de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6744de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** ^The [wal_checkpoint pragma] can be used to invoke this interface
6745de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** from SQL.  ^The [sqlite3_wal_autocheckpoint()] interface and the
6746de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** [wal_autocheckpoint pragma] can be used to cause this interface to be
6747de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** run whenever the WAL reaches a certain size threshold.
674890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
674990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** See also: [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2()]
6750de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6751de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(sqlite3 *db, const char *zDb);
6752de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6753de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
675490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Checkpoint a database
675590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
675690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Run a checkpoint operation on WAL database zDb attached to database
675790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** handle db. The specific operation is determined by the value of the
675890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** eMode parameter:
675990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
676090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dl>
676190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dt>SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE<dd>
676290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   Checkpoint as many frames as possible without waiting for any database
676390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   readers or writers to finish. Sync the db file if all frames in the log
676490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   are checkpointed. This mode is the same as calling
676590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   sqlite3_wal_checkpoint(). The busy-handler callback is never invoked.
676690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
676790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dt>SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_FULL<dd>
676890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   This mode blocks (calls the busy-handler callback) until there is no
676990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   database writer and all readers are reading from the most recent database
677090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   snapshot. It then checkpoints all frames in the log file and syncs the
677190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   database file. This call blocks database writers while it is running,
677290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   but not database readers.
677390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
677490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dt>SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_RESTART<dd>
677590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   This mode works the same way as SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_FULL, except after
677690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   checkpointing the log file it blocks (calls the busy-handler callback)
677790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   until all readers are reading from the database file only. This ensures
677890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   that the next client to write to the database file restarts the log file
677990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   from the beginning. This call blocks database writers while it is running,
678090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**   but not database readers.
678190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** </dl>
678290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
678390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If pnLog is not NULL, then *pnLog is set to the total number of frames in
678490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the log file before returning. If pnCkpt is not NULL, then *pnCkpt is set to
678590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the total number of checkpointed frames (including any that were already
678690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** checkpointed when this function is called). *pnLog and *pnCkpt may be
678790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** populated even if sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2() returns other than SQLITE_OK.
678890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If no values are available because of an error, they are both set to -1
678990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** before returning to communicate this to the caller.
679090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
679190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** All calls obtain an exclusive "checkpoint" lock on the database file. If
679290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** any other process is running a checkpoint operation at the same time, the
679390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** lock cannot be obtained and SQLITE_BUSY is returned. Even if there is a
679490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** busy-handler configured, it will not be invoked in this case.
679590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
679690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** The SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_FULL and RESTART modes also obtain the exclusive
679790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** "writer" lock on the database file. If the writer lock cannot be obtained
679890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** immediately, and a busy-handler is configured, it is invoked and the writer
679990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** lock retried until either the busy-handler returns 0 or the lock is
680090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** successfully obtained. The busy-handler is also invoked while waiting for
680190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** database readers as described above. If the busy-handler returns 0 before
680290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** the writer lock is obtained or while waiting for database readers, the
680390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** checkpoint operation proceeds from that point in the same way as
680490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE - checkpointing as many frames as possible
680590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** without blocking any further. SQLITE_BUSY is returned in this case.
680690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
680790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If parameter zDb is NULL or points to a zero length string, then the
680890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** specified operation is attempted on all WAL databases. In this case the
680990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** values written to output parameters *pnLog and *pnCkpt are undefined. If
681090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** an SQLITE_BUSY error is encountered when processing one or more of the
681190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** attached WAL databases, the operation is still attempted on any remaining
681290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** attached databases and SQLITE_BUSY is returned to the caller. If any other
681390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** error occurs while processing an attached database, processing is abandoned
681490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** and the error code returned to the caller immediately. If no error
681590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** (SQLITE_BUSY or otherwise) is encountered while processing the attached
681690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** databases, SQLITE_OK is returned.
681790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
681890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If database zDb is the name of an attached database that is not in WAL
681990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** mode, SQLITE_OK is returned and both *pnLog and *pnCkpt set to -1. If
682090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** zDb is not NULL (or a zero length string) and is not the name of any
682190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** attached database, SQLITE_ERROR is returned to the caller.
682290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
682390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API int sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2(
682490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  sqlite3 *db,                    /* Database handle */
682590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  const char *zDb,                /* Name of attached database (or NULL) */
682690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int eMode,                      /* SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_* value */
682790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int *pnLog,                     /* OUT: Size of WAL log in frames */
682890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown  int *pnCkpt                     /* OUT: Total number of frames checkpointed */
682990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown);
683090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
683190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
683290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Checkpoint operation parameters
683390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
683490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** These constants can be used as the 3rd parameter to
683590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2()].  See the [sqlite3_wal_checkpoint_v2()]
683690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** documentation for additional information about the meaning and use of
683790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** each of these values.
683890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
683990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_PASSIVE 0
684090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_FULL    1
684190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_CHECKPOINT_RESTART 2
684290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
684390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
684490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Virtual Table Interface Configuration
684590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
684690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** This function may be called by either the [xConnect] or [xCreate] method
684790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** of a [virtual table] implementation to configure
684890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** various facets of the virtual table interface.
684990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
685090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If this interface is invoked outside the context of an xConnect or
685190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** xCreate virtual table method then the behavior is undefined.
685290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
685390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** At present, there is only one option that may be configured using
685490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** this function. (See [SQLITE_VTAB_CONSTRAINT_SUPPORT].)  Further options
685590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** may be added in the future.
685690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
685790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API int sqlite3_vtab_config(sqlite3*, int op, ...);
685890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
685990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
686090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Virtual Table Configuration Options
686190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
686290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** These macros define the various options to the
686390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_vtab_config()] interface that [virtual table] implementations
686490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** can use to customize and optimize their behavior.
686590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
686690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dl>
686790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dt>SQLITE_VTAB_CONSTRAINT_SUPPORT
686890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** <dd>Calls of the form
686990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_vtab_config](db,SQLITE_VTAB_CONSTRAINT_SUPPORT,X) are supported,
687090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** where X is an integer.  If X is zero, then the [virtual table] whose
687190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [xCreate] or [xConnect] method invoked [sqlite3_vtab_config()] does not
687290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** support constraints.  In this configuration (which is the default) if
687390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** a call to the [xUpdate] method returns [SQLITE_CONSTRAINT], then the entire
687490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** statement is rolled back as if [ON CONFLICT | OR ABORT] had been
687590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** specified as part of the users SQL statement, regardless of the actual
687690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** ON CONFLICT mode specified.
687790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
687890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If X is non-zero, then the virtual table implementation guarantees
687990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** that if [xUpdate] returns [SQLITE_CONSTRAINT], it will do so before
688090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** any modifications to internal or persistent data structures have been made.
688190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If the [ON CONFLICT] mode is ABORT, FAIL, IGNORE or ROLLBACK, SQLite
688290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is able to roll back a statement or database transaction, and abandon
688390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** or continue processing the current SQL statement as appropriate.
688490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** If the ON CONFLICT mode is REPLACE and the [xUpdate] method returns
688590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_CONSTRAINT], SQLite handles this as if the ON CONFLICT mode
688690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** had been ABORT.
688790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
688890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Virtual table implementations that are required to handle OR REPLACE
688990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** must do so within the [xUpdate] method. If a call to the
689090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] function indicates that the current ON
689190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CONFLICT policy is REPLACE, the virtual table implementation should
689290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** silently replace the appropriate rows within the xUpdate callback and
689390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** return SQLITE_OK. Or, if this is not possible, it may return
689490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** SQLITE_CONSTRAINT, in which case SQLite falls back to OR ABORT
689590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** constraint handling.
689690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** </dl>
689790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
689890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_VTAB_CONSTRAINT_SUPPORT 1
689990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
690090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
690190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Determine The Virtual Table Conflict Policy
690290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
690390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** This function may only be called from within a call to the [xUpdate] method
690490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** of a [virtual table] implementation for an INSERT or UPDATE operation. ^The
690590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** value returned is one of [SQLITE_ROLLBACK], [SQLITE_IGNORE], [SQLITE_FAIL],
690690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_ABORT], or [SQLITE_REPLACE], according to the [ON CONFLICT] mode
690790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** of the SQL statement that triggered the call to the [xUpdate] method of the
690890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [virtual table].
690990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
691090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff BrownSQLITE_API int sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict(sqlite3 *);
691190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
691290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
691390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** CAPI3REF: Conflict resolution modes
691490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
691590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** These constants are returned by [sqlite3_vtab_on_conflict()] to
691690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** inform a [virtual table] implementation what the [ON CONFLICT] mode
691790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** is for the SQL statement being evaluated.
691890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown**
691990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** Note that the [SQLITE_IGNORE] constant is also used as a potential
692090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** return value from the [sqlite3_set_authorizer()] callback and that
692190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown** [SQLITE_ABORT] is also a [result code].
692290ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown*/
692390ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_ROLLBACK 1
692490ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/* #define SQLITE_IGNORE 2 // Also used by sqlite3_authorizer() callback */
692590ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_FAIL     3
692690ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/* #define SQLITE_ABORT 4  // Also an error code */
692790ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown#define SQLITE_REPLACE  5
692890ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
692990ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
693090ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown
693190ed05d921d6ed7f12012d9786d53f57fafee51aJeff Brown/*
6932de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Undo the hack that converts floating point types to integer for
6933de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** builds on processors without floating point support.
6934de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6935de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef SQLITE_OMIT_FLOATING_POINT
6936de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori# undef double
6937de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
6938de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6939de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef __cplusplus
6940de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori}  /* End of the 'extern "C"' block */
6941de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
6942de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
6943de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6944de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6945de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** 2010 August 30
6946de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6947de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** The author disclaims copyright to this source code.  In place of
6948de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** a legal notice, here is a blessing:
6949de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6950de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**    May you do good and not evil.
6951de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**    May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
6952de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**    May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
6953de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6954de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*************************************************************************
6955de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6956de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6957de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifndef _SQLITE3RTREE_H_
6958de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#define _SQLITE3RTREE_H_
6959de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6960de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6961de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef __cplusplus
6962de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noriextern "C" {
6963de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
6964de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6965de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noritypedef struct sqlite3_rtree_geometry sqlite3_rtree_geometry;
6966de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6967de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6968de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** Register a geometry callback named zGeom that can be used as part of an
6969de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** R-Tree geometry query as follows:
6970de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**
6971de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori**   SELECT ... FROM <rtree> WHERE <rtree col> MATCH $zGeom(... params ...)
6972de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6973de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu NoriSQLITE_API int sqlite3_rtree_geometry_callback(
6974de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  sqlite3 *db,
6975de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  const char *zGeom,
6976de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int (*xGeom)(sqlite3_rtree_geometry *, int nCoord, double *aCoord, int *pRes),
6977de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pContext
6978de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori);
6979de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6980de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6981de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori/*
6982de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** A pointer to a structure of the following type is passed as the first
6983de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori** argument to callbacks registered using rtree_geometry_callback().
6984de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori*/
6985de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Noristruct sqlite3_rtree_geometry {
6986de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pContext;                 /* Copy of pContext passed to s_r_g_c() */
6987de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  int nParam;                     /* Size of array aParam[] */
6988de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  double *aParam;                 /* Parameters passed to SQL geom function */
6989de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void *pUser;                    /* Callback implementation user data */
6990de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori  void (*xDelUser)(void *);       /* Called by SQLite to clean up pUser */
6991de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori};
6992de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6993de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6994de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#ifdef __cplusplus
6995de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori}  /* end of the 'extern "C"' block */
6996de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif
6997de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
6998de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori#endif  /* ifndef _SQLITE3RTREE_H_ */
6999de2b3240539802d409a25760d5cec9d4ebfd6686Vasu Nori
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