statement.h revision 1e9bf3e0803691d0a228da41fc608347b6db4340
1// Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
2// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
3// found in the LICENSE file.
4
5#ifndef SQL_STATEMENT_H_
6#define SQL_STATEMENT_H_
7
8#include <string>
9#include <vector>
10
11#include "base/basictypes.h"
12#include "base/memory/ref_counted.h"
13#include "base/strings/string16.h"
14#include "sql/connection.h"
15#include "sql/sql_export.h"
16
17namespace sql {
18
19// Possible return values from ColumnType in a statement. These should match
20// the values in sqlite3.h.
21enum ColType {
22  COLUMN_TYPE_INTEGER = 1,
23  COLUMN_TYPE_FLOAT = 2,
24  COLUMN_TYPE_TEXT = 3,
25  COLUMN_TYPE_BLOB = 4,
26  COLUMN_TYPE_NULL = 5,
27};
28
29// Normal usage:
30//   sql::Statement s(connection_.GetUniqueStatement(...));
31//   s.BindInt(0, a);
32//   if (s.Step())
33//     return s.ColumnString(0);
34//
35//   If there are errors getting the statement, the statement will be inert; no
36//   mutating or database-access methods will work. If you need to check for
37//   validity, use:
38//   if (!s.is_valid())
39//     return false;
40//
41// Step() and Run() just return true to signal success. If you want to handle
42// specific errors such as database corruption, install an error handler in
43// in the connection object using set_error_delegate().
44class SQL_EXPORT Statement {
45 public:
46  // Creates an uninitialized statement. The statement will be invalid until
47  // you initialize it via Assign.
48  Statement();
49
50  explicit Statement(scoped_refptr<Connection::StatementRef> ref);
51  ~Statement();
52
53  // Initializes this object with the given statement, which may or may not
54  // be valid. Use is_valid() to check if it's OK.
55  void Assign(scoped_refptr<Connection::StatementRef> ref);
56
57  // Resets the statement to an uninitialized state corrosponding to
58  // the default constructor, releasing the StatementRef.
59  void Clear();
60
61  // Returns true if the statement can be executed. All functions can still
62  // be used if the statement is invalid, but they will return failure or some
63  // default value. This is because the statement can become invalid in the
64  // middle of executing a command if there is a serious error and the database
65  // has to be reset.
66  bool is_valid() const { return ref_->is_valid(); }
67
68  // Running -------------------------------------------------------------------
69
70  // Executes the statement, returning true on success. This is like Step but
71  // for when there is no output, like an INSERT statement.
72  bool Run();
73
74  // Executes the statement, returning true if there is a row of data returned.
75  // You can keep calling Step() until it returns false to iterate through all
76  // the rows in your result set.
77  //
78  // When Step returns false, the result is either that there is no more data
79  // or there is an error. This makes it most convenient for loop usage. If you
80  // need to disambiguate these cases, use Succeeded().
81  //
82  // Typical example:
83  //   while (s.Step()) {
84  //     ...
85  //   }
86  //   return s.Succeeded();
87  bool Step();
88
89  // Resets the statement to its initial condition. This includes any current
90  // result row, and also the bound variables if the |clear_bound_vars| is true.
91  void Reset(bool clear_bound_vars);
92
93  // Returns true if the last executed thing in this statement succeeded. If
94  // there was no last executed thing or the statement is invalid, this will
95  // return false.
96  bool Succeeded() const;
97
98  // Binding -------------------------------------------------------------------
99
100  // These all take a 0-based argument index and return true on success. You
101  // may not always care about the return value (they'll DCHECK if they fail).
102  // The main thing you may want to check is when binding large blobs or
103  // strings there may be out of memory.
104  bool BindNull(int col);
105  bool BindBool(int col, bool val);
106  bool BindInt(int col, int val);
107  bool BindInt64(int col, int64 val);
108  bool BindDouble(int col, double val);
109  bool BindCString(int col, const char* val);
110  bool BindString(int col, const std::string& val);
111  bool BindString16(int col, const string16& value);
112  bool BindBlob(int col, const void* value, int value_len);
113
114  // Retrieving ----------------------------------------------------------------
115
116  // Returns the number of output columns in the result.
117  int ColumnCount() const;
118
119  // Returns the type associated with the given column.
120  //
121  // Watch out: the type may be undefined if you've done something to cause a
122  // "type conversion." This means requesting the value of a column of a type
123  // where that type is not the native type. For safety, call ColumnType only
124  // on a column before getting the value out in any way.
125  ColType ColumnType(int col) const;
126  ColType DeclaredColumnType(int col) const;
127
128  // These all take a 0-based argument index.
129  bool ColumnBool(int col) const;
130  int ColumnInt(int col) const;
131  int64 ColumnInt64(int col) const;
132  double ColumnDouble(int col) const;
133  std::string ColumnString(int col) const;
134  string16 ColumnString16(int col) const;
135
136  // When reading a blob, you can get a raw pointer to the underlying data,
137  // along with the length, or you can just ask us to copy the blob into a
138  // vector. Danger! ColumnBlob may return NULL if there is no data!
139  int ColumnByteLength(int col) const;
140  const void* ColumnBlob(int col) const;
141  bool ColumnBlobAsString(int col, std::string* blob);
142  bool ColumnBlobAsString16(int col, string16* val) const;
143  bool ColumnBlobAsVector(int col, std::vector<char>* val) const;
144  bool ColumnBlobAsVector(int col, std::vector<unsigned char>* val) const;
145
146  // Diagnostics --------------------------------------------------------------
147
148  // Returns the original text of sql statement. Do not keep a pointer to it.
149  const char* GetSQLStatement();
150
151 private:
152  // This is intended to check for serious errors and report them to the
153  // connection object. It takes a sqlite error code, and returns the same
154  // code. Currently this function just updates the succeeded flag, but will be
155  // enhanced in the future to do the notification.
156  int CheckError(int err);
157
158  // Contraction for checking an error code against SQLITE_OK. Does not set the
159  // succeeded flag.
160  bool CheckOk(int err) const;
161
162  // Should be called by all mutating methods to check that the statement is
163  // valid. Returns true if the statement is valid. DCHECKS and returns false
164  // if it is not.
165  // The reason for this is to handle two specific cases in which a Statement
166  // may be invalid. The first case is that the programmer made an SQL error.
167  // Those cases need to be DCHECKed so that we are guaranteed to find them
168  // before release. The second case is that the computer has an error (probably
169  // out of disk space) which is prohibiting the correct operation of the
170  // database. Our testing apparatus should not exhibit this defect, but release
171  // situations may. Therefore, the code is handling disjoint situations in
172  // release and test. In test, we're ensuring correct SQL. In release, we're
173  // ensuring that contracts are honored in error edge cases.
174  bool CheckValid() const;
175
176  // The actual sqlite statement. This may be unique to us, or it may be cached
177  // by the connection, which is why it's refcounted. This pointer is
178  // guaranteed non-NULL.
179  scoped_refptr<Connection::StatementRef> ref_;
180
181  // Set after Step() or Run() are called, reset by Reset().  Used to
182  // prevent accidental calls to API functions which would not work
183  // correctly after stepping has started.
184  bool stepped_;
185
186  // See Succeeded() for what this holds.
187  bool succeeded_;
188
189  DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Statement);
190};
191
192}  // namespace sql
193
194#endif  // SQL_STATEMENT_H_
195