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This document gives an overview of the C/C++ +programming interface.</p> + +<h3>1.0 The Core API</h3> + +<p>The interface to the SQLite library consists of three core functions, +one opaque data structure, and some constants used as return values. +The core interface is as follows:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +typedef struct sqlite sqlite; +#define SQLITE_OK 0 /* Successful result */ + +sqlite *sqlite_open(const char *dbname, int mode, char **errmsg); + +void sqlite_close(sqlite *db); + +int sqlite_exec( + sqlite *db, + char *sql, + int (*xCallback)(void*,int,char**,char**), + void *pArg, + char **errmsg +); +</pre></blockquote> + +<p> +The above is all you really need to know in order to use SQLite +in your C or C++ programs. There are other interface functions +available (and described below) but we will begin by describing +the core functions shown above. +</p> + +<a name="sqlite_open"></a> +<h4>1.1 Opening a database</h4> + +<p>Use the <b>sqlite_open</b> function to open an existing SQLite +database or to create a new SQLite database. The first argument +is the database name. The second argument is intended to signal +whether the database is going to be used for reading and writing +or just for reading. But in the current implementation, the +second argument to <b>sqlite_open</b> is ignored. +The third argument is a pointer to a string pointer. +If the third argument is not NULL and an error occurs +while trying to open the database, then an error message will be +written to memory obtained from malloc() and *errmsg will be made +to point to this error message. The calling function is responsible +for freeing the memory when it has finished with it.</p> + +<p>The name of an SQLite database is the name of a file that will +contain the database. If the file does not exist, SQLite attempts +to create and initialize it. If the file is read-only (due to +permission bits or because it is located on read-only media like +a CD-ROM) then SQLite opens the database for reading only. The +entire SQL database is stored in a single file on the disk. But +additional temporary files may be created during the execution of +an SQL command in order to store the database rollback journal or +temporary and intermediate results of a query.</p> + +<p>The return value of the <b>sqlite_open</b> function is a +pointer to an opaque <b>sqlite</b> structure. This pointer will +be the first argument to all subsequent SQLite function calls that +deal with the same database. NULL is returned if the open fails +for any reason.</p> + +<a name="sqlite_close"></a> +<h4>1.2 Closing the database</h4> + +<p>To close an SQLite database, call the <b>sqlite_close</b> +function passing it the sqlite structure pointer that was obtained +from a prior call to <b>sqlite_open</b>. +If a transaction is active when the database is closed, the transaction +is rolled back.</p> + +<a name="sqlite_exec"></a> +<h4>1.3 Executing SQL statements</h4> + +<p>The <b>sqlite_exec</b> function is used to process SQL statements +and queries. This function requires 5 parameters as follows:</p> + +<ol> +<li><p>A pointer to the sqlite structure obtained from a prior call + to <b>sqlite_open</b>.</p></li> +<li><p>A zero-terminated string containing the text of one or more + SQL statements and/or queries to be processed.</p></li> +<li><p>A pointer to a callback function which is invoked once for each + row in the result of a query. This argument may be NULL, in which + case no callbacks will ever be invoked.</p></li> +<li><p>A pointer that is forwarded to become the first argument + to the callback function.</p></li> +<li><p>A pointer to an error string. Error messages are written to space + obtained from malloc() and the error string is made to point to + the malloced space. The calling function is responsible for freeing + this space when it has finished with it. + This argument may be NULL, in which case error messages are not + reported back to the calling function.</p></li> +</ol> + +<p> +The callback function is used to receive the results of a query. A +prototype for the callback function is as follows:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +int Callback(void *pArg, int argc, char **argv, char **columnNames){ + return 0; +} +</pre></blockquote> + +<a name="callback_row_data"></a> +<p>The first argument to the callback is just a copy of the fourth argument +to <b>sqlite_exec</b> This parameter can be used to pass arbitrary +information through to the callback function from client code. +The second argument is the number of columns in the query result. +The third argument is an array of pointers to strings where each string +is a single column of the result for that record. Note that the +callback function reports a NULL value in the database as a NULL pointer, +which is very different from an empty string. If the i-th parameter +is an empty string, we will get:</p> +<blockquote><pre> +argv[i][0] == 0 +</pre></blockquote> +<p>But if the i-th parameter is NULL we will get:</p> +<blockquote><pre> +argv[i] == 0 +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>The names of the columns are contained in first <i>argc</i> +entries of the fourth argument. +If the <a href="pragma.html#pragma_show_datatypes">SHOW_DATATYPES</a> pragma +is on (it is off by default) then +the second <i>argc</i> entries in the 4th argument are the datatypes +for the corresponding columns. +</p> + +<p>If the <a href="pragma.html#pragma_empty_result_callbacks"> +EMPTY_RESULT_CALLBACKS</a> pragma is set to ON and the result of +a query is an empty set, then the callback is invoked once with the +third parameter (argv) set to 0. In other words +<blockquote><pre> +argv == 0 +</pre></blockquote> +The second parameter (argc) +and the fourth parameter (columnNames) are still valid +and can be used to determine the number and names of the result +columns if there had been a result. +The default behavior is not to invoke the callback at all if the +result set is empty.</p> + +<a name="callback_returns_nonzero"></a> +<p>The callback function should normally return 0. If the callback +function returns non-zero, the query is immediately aborted and +<b>sqlite_exec</b> will return SQLITE_ABORT.</p> + +<h4>1.4 Error Codes</h4> + +<p> +The <b>sqlite_exec</b> function normally returns SQLITE_OK. But +if something goes wrong it can return a different value to indicate +the type of error. Here is a complete list of the return codes: +</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +#define SQLITE_OK 0 /* Successful result */ +#define SQLITE_ERROR 1 /* SQL error or missing database */ +#define SQLITE_INTERNAL 2 /* An internal logic error in SQLite */ +#define SQLITE_PERM 3 /* Access permission denied */ +#define SQLITE_ABORT 4 /* Callback routine requested an abort */ +#define SQLITE_BUSY 5 /* The database file is locked */ +#define SQLITE_LOCKED 6 /* A table in the database is locked */ +#define SQLITE_NOMEM 7 /* A malloc() failed */ +#define SQLITE_READONLY 8 /* Attempt to write a readonly database */ +#define SQLITE_INTERRUPT 9 /* Operation terminated by sqlite_interrupt() */ +#define SQLITE_IOERR 10 /* Some kind of disk I/O error occurred */ +#define SQLITE_CORRUPT 11 /* The database disk image is malformed */ +#define SQLITE_NOTFOUND 12 /* (Internal Only) Table or record not found */ +#define SQLITE_FULL 13 /* Insertion failed because database is full */ +#define SQLITE_CANTOPEN 14 /* Unable to open the database file */ +#define SQLITE_PROTOCOL 15 /* Database lock protocol error */ +#define SQLITE_EMPTY 16 /* (Internal Only) Database table is empty */ +#define SQLITE_SCHEMA 17 /* The database schema changed */ +#define SQLITE_TOOBIG 18 /* Too much data for one row of a table */ +#define SQLITE_CONSTRAINT 19 /* Abort due to constraint violation */ +#define SQLITE_MISMATCH 20 /* Data type mismatch */ +#define SQLITE_MISUSE 21 /* Library used incorrectly */ +#define SQLITE_NOLFS 22 /* Uses OS features not supported on host */ +#define SQLITE_AUTH 23 /* Authorization denied */ +#define SQLITE_ROW 100 /* sqlite_step() has another row ready */ +#define SQLITE_DONE 101 /* sqlite_step() has finished executing */ +</pre></blockquote> + +<p> +The meanings of these various return values are as follows: +</p> + +<blockquote> +<dl> +<dt>SQLITE_OK</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if everything worked and there were no errors. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_INTERNAL</dt> +<dd><p>This value indicates that an internal consistency check within +the SQLite library failed. This can only happen if there is a bug in +the SQLite library. If you ever get an SQLITE_INTERNAL reply from +an <b>sqlite_exec</b> call, please report the problem on the SQLite +mailing list. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_ERROR</dt> +<dd><p>This return value indicates that there was an error in the SQL +that was passed into the <b>sqlite_exec</b>. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_PERM</dt> +<dd><p>This return value says that the access permissions on the database +file are such that the file cannot be opened. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_ABORT</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if the callback function returns non-zero. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_BUSY</dt> +<dd><p>This return code indicates that another program or thread has +the database locked. SQLite allows two or more threads to read the +database at the same time, but only one thread can have the database +open for writing at the same time. Locking in SQLite is on the +entire database.</p> +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_LOCKED</dt> +<dd><p>This return code is similar to SQLITE_BUSY in that it indicates +that the database is locked. But the source of the lock is a recursive +call to <b>sqlite_exec</b>. This return can only occur if you attempt +to invoke sqlite_exec from within a callback routine of a query +from a prior invocation of sqlite_exec. Recursive calls to +sqlite_exec are allowed as long as they do +not attempt to write the same table. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_NOMEM</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if a call to <b>malloc</b> fails. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_READONLY</dt> +<dd><p>This return code indicates that an attempt was made to write to +a database file that is opened for reading only. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_INTERRUPT</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if a call to <b>sqlite_interrupt</b> +interrupts a database operation in progress. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_IOERR</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if the operating system informs SQLite +that it is unable to perform some disk I/O operation. This could mean +that there is no more space left on the disk. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_CORRUPT</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if SQLite detects that the database it is +working on has become corrupted. Corruption might occur due to a rogue +process writing to the database file or it might happen due to a +previously undetected logic error in of SQLite. This value is also +returned if a disk I/O error occurs in such a way that SQLite is forced +to leave the database file in a corrupted state. The latter should only +happen due to a hardware or operating system malfunction. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_FULL</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if an insertion failed because there is +no space left on the disk, or the database is too big to hold any +more information. The latter case should only occur for databases +that are larger than 2GB in size. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_CANTOPEN</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if the database file could not be opened +for some reason. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_PROTOCOL</dt> +<dd><p>This value is returned if some other process is messing with +file locks and has violated the file locking protocol that SQLite uses +on its rollback journal files. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_SCHEMA</dt> +<dd><p>When the database first opened, SQLite reads the database schema +into memory and uses that schema to parse new SQL statements. If another +process changes the schema, the command currently being processed will +abort because the virtual machine code generated assumed the old +schema. This is the return code for such cases. Retrying the +command usually will clear the problem. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_TOOBIG</dt> +<dd><p>SQLite will not store more than about 1 megabyte of data in a single +row of a single table. If you attempt to store more than 1 megabyte +in a single row, this is the return code you get. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_CONSTRAINT</dt> +<dd><p>This constant is returned if the SQL statement would have violated +a database constraint. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_MISMATCH</dt> +<dd><p>This error occurs when there is an attempt to insert non-integer +data into a column labeled INTEGER PRIMARY KEY. For most columns, SQLite +ignores the data type and allows any kind of data to be stored. But +an INTEGER PRIMARY KEY column is only allowed to store integer data. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_MISUSE</dt> +<dd><p>This error might occur if one or more of the SQLite API routines +is used incorrectly. Examples of incorrect usage include calling +<b>sqlite_exec</b> after the database has been closed using +<b>sqlite_close</b> or +calling <b>sqlite_exec</b> with the same +database pointer simultaneously from two separate threads. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_NOLFS</dt> +<dd><p>This error means that you have attempts to create or access a file +database file that is larger that 2GB on a legacy Unix machine that +lacks large file support. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_AUTH</dt> +<dd><p>This error indicates that the authorizer callback +has disallowed the SQL you are attempting to execute. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_ROW</dt> +<dd><p>This is one of the return codes from the +<b>sqlite_step</b> routine which is part of the non-callback API. +It indicates that another row of result data is available. +</p></dd> +<dt>SQLITE_DONE</dt> +<dd><p>This is one of the return codes from the +<b>sqlite_step</b> routine which is part of the non-callback API. +It indicates that the SQL statement has been completely executed and +the <b>sqlite_finalize</b> routine is ready to be called. +</p></dd> +</dl> +</blockquote> + +<h3>2.0 Accessing Data Without Using A Callback Function</h3> + +<p> +The <b>sqlite_exec</b> routine described above used to be the only +way to retrieve data from an SQLite database. But many programmers found +it inconvenient to use a callback function to obtain results. So beginning +with SQLite version 2.7.7, a second access interface is available that +does not use callbacks. +</p> + +<p> +The new interface uses three separate functions to replace the single +<b>sqlite_exec</b> function. +</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +typedef struct sqlite_vm sqlite_vm; + +int sqlite_compile( + sqlite *db, /* The open database */ + const char *zSql, /* SQL statement to be compiled */ + const char **pzTail, /* OUT: uncompiled tail of zSql */ + sqlite_vm **ppVm, /* OUT: the virtual machine to execute zSql */ + char **pzErrmsg /* OUT: Error message. */ +); + +int sqlite_step( + sqlite_vm *pVm, /* The virtual machine to execute */ + int *pN, /* OUT: Number of columns in result */ + const char ***pazValue, /* OUT: Column data */ + const char ***pazColName /* OUT: Column names and datatypes */ +); + +int sqlite_finalize( + sqlite_vm *pVm, /* The virtual machine to be finalized */ + char **pzErrMsg /* OUT: Error message */ +); +</pre></blockquote> + +<p> +The strategy is to compile a single SQL statement using +<b>sqlite_compile</b> then invoke <b>sqlite_step</b> multiple times, +once for each row of output, and finally call <b>sqlite_finalize</b> +to clean up after the SQL has finished execution. +</p> + +<h4>2.1 Compiling An SQL Statement Into A Virtual Machine</h4> + +<p> +The <b>sqlite_compile</b> "compiles" a single SQL statement (specified +by the second parameter) and generates a virtual machine that is able +to execute that statement. +As with must interface routines, the first parameter must be a pointer +to an sqlite structure that was obtained from a prior call to +<b>sqlite_open</b>. + +<p> +A pointer to the virtual machine is stored in a pointer which is passed +in as the 4th parameter. +Space to hold the virtual machine is dynamically allocated. To avoid +a memory leak, the calling function must invoke +<b>sqlite_finalize</b> on the virtual machine after it has finished +with it. +The 4th parameter may be set to NULL if an error is encountered during +compilation. +</p> + +<p> +If any errors are encountered during compilation, an error message is +written into memory obtained from <b>malloc</b> and the 5th parameter +is made to point to that memory. If the 5th parameter is NULL, then +no error message is generated. If the 5th parameter is not NULL, then +the calling function should dispose of the memory containing the error +message by calling <b>sqlite_freemem</b>. +</p> + +<p> +If the 2nd parameter actually contains two or more statements of SQL, +only the first statement is compiled. (This is different from the +behavior of <b>sqlite_exec</b> which executes all SQL statements +in its input string.) The 3rd parameter to <b>sqlite_compile</b> +is made to point to the first character beyond the end of the first +statement of SQL in the input. If the 2nd parameter contains only +a single SQL statement, then the 3rd parameter will be made to point +to the '\000' terminator at the end of the 2nd parameter. +</p> + +<p> +On success, <b>sqlite_compile</b> returns SQLITE_OK. +Otherwise and error code is returned. +</p> + +<h4>2.2 Step-By-Step Execution Of An SQL Statement</h4> + +<p> +After a virtual machine has been generated using <b>sqlite_compile</b> +it is executed by one or more calls to <b>sqlite_step</b>. Each +invocation of <b>sqlite_step</b>, except the last one, +returns a single row of the result. +The number of columns in the result is stored in the integer that +the 2nd parameter points to. +The pointer specified by the 3rd parameter is made to point +to an array of pointers to column values. +The pointer in the 4th parameter is made to point to an array +of pointers to column names and datatypes. +The 2nd through 4th parameters to <b>sqlite_step</b> convey the +same information as the 2nd through 4th parameters of the +<b>callback</b> routine when using +the <b>sqlite_exec</b> interface. Except, with <b>sqlite_step</b> +the column datatype information is always included in the in the +4th parameter regardless of whether or not the +<a href="pragma.html#pragma_show_datatypes">SHOW_DATATYPES</a> pragma +is on or off. +</p> + +<p> +Each invocation of <b>sqlite_step</b> returns an integer code that +indicates what happened during that step. This code may be +SQLITE_BUSY, SQLITE_ROW, SQLITE_DONE, SQLITE_ERROR, or +SQLITE_MISUSE. +</p> + +<p> +If the virtual machine is unable to open the database file because +it is locked by another thread or process, <b>sqlite_step</b> +will return SQLITE_BUSY. The calling function should do some other +activity, or sleep, for a short amount of time to give the lock a +chance to clear, then invoke <b>sqlite_step</b> again. This can +be repeated as many times as desired. +</p> + +<p> +Whenever another row of result data is available, +<b>sqlite_step</b> will return SQLITE_ROW. The row data is +stored in an array of pointers to strings and the 2nd parameter +is made to point to this array. +</p> + +<p> +When all processing is complete, <b>sqlite_step</b> will return +either SQLITE_DONE or SQLITE_ERROR. SQLITE_DONE indicates that the +statement completed successfully and SQLITE_ERROR indicates that there +was a run-time error. (The details of the error are obtained from +<b>sqlite_finalize</b>.) It is a misuse of the library to attempt +to call <b>sqlite_step</b> again after it has returned SQLITE_DONE +or SQLITE_ERROR. +</p> + +<p> +When <b>sqlite_step</b> returns SQLITE_DONE or SQLITE_ERROR, +the *pN and *pazColName values are set to the number of columns +in the result set and to the names of the columns, just as they +are for an SQLITE_ROW return. This allows the calling code to +find the number of result columns and the column names and datatypes +even if the result set is empty. The *pazValue parameter is always +set to NULL when the return codes is SQLITE_DONE or SQLITE_ERROR. +If the SQL being executed is a statement that does not +return a result (such as an INSERT or an UPDATE) then *pN will +be set to zero and *pazColName will be set to NULL. +</p> + +<p> +If you abuse the library by trying to call <b>sqlite_step</b> +inappropriately it will attempt return SQLITE_MISUSE. +This can happen if you call sqlite_step() on the same virtual machine +at the same +time from two or more threads or if you call sqlite_step() +again after it returned SQLITE_DONE or SQLITE_ERROR or if you +pass in an invalid virtual machine pointer to sqlite_step(). +You should not depend on the SQLITE_MISUSE return code to indicate +an error. It is possible that a misuse of the interface will go +undetected and result in a program crash. The SQLITE_MISUSE is +intended as a debugging aid only - to help you detect incorrect +usage prior to a mishap. The misuse detection logic is not guaranteed +to work in every case. +</p> + +<h4>2.3 Deleting A Virtual Machine</h4> + +<p> +Every virtual machine that <b>sqlite_compile</b> creates should +eventually be handed to <b>sqlite_finalize</b>. The sqlite_finalize() +procedure deallocates the memory and other resources that the virtual +machine uses. Failure to call sqlite_finalize() will result in +resource leaks in your program. +</p> + +<p> +The <b>sqlite_finalize</b> routine also returns the result code +that indicates success or failure of the SQL operation that the +virtual machine carried out. +The value returned by sqlite_finalize() will be the same as would +have been returned had the same SQL been executed by <b>sqlite_exec</b>. +The error message returned will also be the same. +</p> + +<p> +It is acceptable to call <b>sqlite_finalize</b> on a virtual machine +before <b>sqlite_step</b> has returned SQLITE_DONE. Doing so has +the effect of interrupting the operation in progress. Partially completed +changes will be rolled back and the database will be restored to its +original state (unless an alternative recovery algorithm is selected using +an ON CONFLICT clause in the SQL being executed.) The effect is the +same as if a callback function of <b>sqlite_exec</b> had returned +non-zero. +</p> + +<p> +It is also acceptable to call <b>sqlite_finalize</b> on a virtual machine +that has never been passed to <b>sqlite_step</b> even once. +</p> + +<h3>3.0 The Extended API</h3> + +<p>Only the three core routines described in section 1.0 are required to use +SQLite. But there are many other functions that provide +useful interfaces. These extended routines are as follows: +</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +int sqlite_last_insert_rowid(sqlite*); + +int sqlite_changes(sqlite*); + +int sqlite_get_table( + sqlite*, + char *sql, + char ***result, + int *nrow, + int *ncolumn, + char **errmsg +); + +void sqlite_free_table(char**); + +void sqlite_interrupt(sqlite*); + +int sqlite_complete(const char *sql); + +void sqlite_busy_handler(sqlite*, int (*)(void*,const char*,int), void*); + +void sqlite_busy_timeout(sqlite*, int ms); + +const char sqlite_version[]; + +const char sqlite_encoding[]; + +int sqlite_exec_printf( + sqlite*, + char *sql, + int (*)(void*,int,char**,char**), + void*, + char **errmsg, + ... +); + +int sqlite_exec_vprintf( + sqlite*, + char *sql, + int (*)(void*,int,char**,char**), + void*, + char **errmsg, + va_list +); + +int sqlite_get_table_printf( + sqlite*, + char *sql, + char ***result, + int *nrow, + int *ncolumn, + char **errmsg, + ... +); + +int sqlite_get_table_vprintf( + sqlite*, + char *sql, + char ***result, + int *nrow, + int *ncolumn, + char **errmsg, + va_list +); + +char *sqlite_mprintf(const char *zFormat, ...); + +char *sqlite_vmprintf(const char *zFormat, va_list); + +void sqlite_freemem(char*); + +void sqlite_progress_handler(sqlite*, int, int (*)(void*), void*); + +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>All of the above definitions are included in the "sqlite.h" +header file that comes in the source tree.</p> + +<h4>3.1 The ROWID of the most recent insert</h4> + +<p>Every row of an SQLite table has a unique integer key. If the +table has a column labeled INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, then that column +serves as the key. If there is no INTEGER PRIMARY KEY column then +the key is a unique integer. The key for a row can be accessed in +a SELECT statement or used in a WHERE or ORDER BY clause using any +of the names "ROWID", "OID", or "_ROWID_".</p> + +<p>When you do an insert into a table that does not have an INTEGER PRIMARY +KEY column, or if the table does have an INTEGER PRIMARY KEY but the value +for that column is not specified in the VALUES clause of the insert, then +the key is automatically generated. You can find the value of the key +for the most recent INSERT statement using the +<b>sqlite_last_insert_rowid</b> API function.</p> + +<h4>3.2 The number of rows that changed</h4> + +<p>The <b>sqlite_changes</b> API function returns the number of rows +that have been inserted, deleted, or modified since the database was +last quiescent. A "quiescent" database is one in which there are +no outstanding calls to <b>sqlite_exec</b> and no VMs created by +<b>sqlite_compile</b> that have not been finalized by <b>sqlite_finalize</b>. +In common usage, <b>sqlite_changes</b> returns the number +of rows inserted, deleted, or modified by the most recent <b>sqlite_exec</b> +call or since the most recent <b>sqlite_compile</b>. But if you have +nested calls to <b>sqlite_exec</b> (that is, if the callback routine +of one <b>sqlite_exec</b> invokes another <b>sqlite_exec</b>) or if +you invoke <b>sqlite_compile</b> to create a new VM while there is +still another VM in existence, then +the meaning of the number returned by <b>sqlite_changes</b> is more +complex. +The number reported includes any changes +that were later undone by a ROLLBACK or ABORT. But rows that are +deleted because of a DROP TABLE are <em>not</em> counted.</p> + +<p>SQLite implements the command "<b>DELETE FROM table</b>" (without +a WHERE clause) by dropping the table then recreating it. +This is much faster than deleting the elements of the table individually. +But it also means that the value returned from <b>sqlite_changes</b> +will be zero regardless of the number of elements that were originally +in the table. If an accurate count of the number of elements deleted +is necessary, use "<b>DELETE FROM table WHERE 1</b>" instead.</p> + +<h4>3.3 Querying into memory obtained from malloc()</h4> + +<p>The <b>sqlite_get_table</b> function is a wrapper around +<b>sqlite_exec</b> that collects all the information from successive +callbacks and writes it into memory obtained from malloc(). This +is a convenience function that allows the application to get the +entire result of a database query with a single function call.</p> + +<p>The main result from <b>sqlite_get_table</b> is an array of pointers +to strings. There is one element in this array for each column of +each row in the result. NULL results are represented by a NULL +pointer. In addition to the regular data, there is an added row at the +beginning of the array that contains the name of each column of the +result.</p> + +<p>As an example, consider the following query:</p> + +<blockquote> +SELECT employee_name, login, host FROM users WHERE login LIKE 'd%'; +</blockquote> + +<p>This query will return the name, login and host computer name +for every employee whose login begins with the letter "d". If this +query is submitted to <b>sqlite_get_table</b> the result might +look like this:</p> + +<blockquote> +nrow = 2<br> +ncolumn = 3<br> +result[0] = "employee_name"<br> +result[1] = "login"<br> +result[2] = "host"<br> +result[3] = "dummy"<br> +result[4] = "No such user"<br> +result[5] = 0<br> +result[6] = "D. Richard Hipp"<br> +result[7] = "drh"<br> +result[8] = "zadok" +</blockquote> + +<p>Notice that the "host" value for the "dummy" record is NULL so +the result[] array contains a NULL pointer at that slot.</p> + +<p>If the result set of a query is empty, then by default +<b>sqlite_get_table</b> will set nrow to 0 and leave its +result parameter is set to NULL. But if the EMPTY_RESULT_CALLBACKS +pragma is ON then the result parameter is initialized to the names +of the columns only. For example, consider this query which has +an empty result set:</p> + +<blockquote> +SELECT employee_name, login, host FROM users WHERE employee_name IS NULL; +</blockquote> + +<p> +The default behavior gives this results: +</p> + +<blockquote> +nrow = 0<br> +ncolumn = 0<br> +result = 0<br> +</blockquote> + +<p> +But if the EMPTY_RESULT_CALLBACKS pragma is ON, then the following +is returned: +</p> + +<blockquote> +nrow = 0<br> +ncolumn = 3<br> +result[0] = "employee_name"<br> +result[1] = "login"<br> +result[2] = "host"<br> +</blockquote> + +<p>Memory to hold the information returned by <b>sqlite_get_table</b> +is obtained from malloc(). But the calling function should not try +to free this information directly. Instead, pass the complete table +to <b>sqlite_free_table</b> when the table is no longer needed. +It is safe to call <b>sqlite_free_table</b> with a NULL pointer such +as would be returned if the result set is empty.</p> + +<p>The <b>sqlite_get_table</b> routine returns the same integer +result code as <b>sqlite_exec</b>.</p> + +<h4>3.4 Interrupting an SQLite operation</h4> + +<p>The <b>sqlite_interrupt</b> function can be called from a +different thread or from a signal handler to cause the current database +operation to exit at its first opportunity. When this happens, +the <b>sqlite_exec</b> routine (or the equivalent) that started +the database operation will return SQLITE_INTERRUPT.</p> + +<h4>3.5 Testing for a complete SQL statement</h4> + +<p>The next interface routine to SQLite is a convenience function used +to test whether or not a string forms a complete SQL statement. +If the <b>sqlite_complete</b> function returns true when its input +is a string, then the argument forms a complete SQL statement. +There are no guarantees that the syntax of that statement is correct, +but we at least know the statement is complete. If <b>sqlite_complete</b> +returns false, then more text is required to complete the SQL statement.</p> + +<p>For the purpose of the <b>sqlite_complete</b> function, an SQL +statement is complete if it ends in a semicolon.</p> + +<p>The <b>sqlite</b> command-line utility uses the <b>sqlite_complete</b> +function to know when it needs to call <b>sqlite_exec</b>. After each +line of input is received, <b>sqlite</b> calls <b>sqlite_complete</b> +on all input in its buffer. If <b>sqlite_complete</b> returns true, +then <b>sqlite_exec</b> is called and the input buffer is reset. If +<b>sqlite_complete</b> returns false, then the prompt is changed to +the continuation prompt and another line of text is read and added to +the input buffer.</p> + +<h4>3.6 Library version string</h4> + +<p>The SQLite library exports the string constant named +<b>sqlite_version</b> which contains the version number of the +library. The header file contains a macro SQLITE_VERSION +with the same information. If desired, a program can compare +the SQLITE_VERSION macro against the <b>sqlite_version</b> +string constant to verify that the version number of the +header file and the library match.</p> + +<h4>3.7 Library character encoding</h4> + +<p>By default, SQLite assumes that all data uses a fixed-size +8-bit character (iso8859). But if you give the --enable-utf8 option +to the configure script, then the library assumes UTF-8 variable +sized characters. This makes a difference for the LIKE and GLOB +operators and the LENGTH() and SUBSTR() functions. The static +string <b>sqlite_encoding</b> will be set to either "UTF-8" or +"iso8859" to indicate how the library was compiled. In addition, +the <b>sqlite.h</b> header file will define one of the +macros <b>SQLITE_UTF8</b> or <b>SQLITE_ISO8859</b>, as appropriate.</p> + +<p>Note that the character encoding mechanism used by SQLite cannot +be changed at run-time. This is a compile-time option only. The +<b>sqlite_encoding</b> character string just tells you how the library +was compiled.</p> + +<h4>3.8 Changing the library's response to locked files</h4> + +<p>The <b>sqlite_busy_handler</b> procedure can be used to register +a busy callback with an open SQLite database. The busy callback will +be invoked whenever SQLite tries to access a database that is locked. +The callback will typically do some other useful work, or perhaps sleep, +in order to give the lock a chance to clear. If the callback returns +non-zero, then SQLite tries again to access the database and the cycle +repeats. If the callback returns zero, then SQLite aborts the current +operation and returns SQLITE_BUSY.</p> + +<p>The arguments to <b>sqlite_busy_handler</b> are the opaque +structure returned from <b>sqlite_open</b>, a pointer to the busy +callback function, and a generic pointer that will be passed as +the first argument to the busy callback. When SQLite invokes the +busy callback, it sends it three arguments: the generic pointer +that was passed in as the third argument to <b>sqlite_busy_handler</b>, +the name of the database table or index that the library is trying +to access, and the number of times that the library has attempted to +access the database table or index.</p> + +<p>For the common case where we want the busy callback to sleep, +the SQLite library provides a convenience routine <b>sqlite_busy_timeout</b>. +The first argument to <b>sqlite_busy_timeout</b> is a pointer to +an open SQLite database and the second argument is a number of milliseconds. +After <b>sqlite_busy_timeout</b> has been executed, the SQLite library +will wait for the lock to clear for at least the number of milliseconds +specified before it returns SQLITE_BUSY. Specifying zero milliseconds for +the timeout restores the default behavior.</p> + +<h4>3.9 Using the <tt>_printf()</tt> wrapper functions</h4> + +<p>The four utility functions</p> + +<p> +<ul> +<li><b>sqlite_exec_printf()</b></li> +<li><b>sqlite_exec_vprintf()</b></li> +<li><b>sqlite_get_table_printf()</b></li> +<li><b>sqlite_get_table_vprintf()</b></li> +</ul> +</p> + +<p>implement the same query functionality as <b>sqlite_exec</b> +and <b>sqlite_get_table</b>. But instead of taking a complete +SQL statement as their second argument, the four <b>_printf</b> +routines take a printf-style format string. The SQL statement to +be executed is generated from this format string and from whatever +additional arguments are attached to the end of the function call.</p> + +<p>There are two advantages to using the SQLite printf +functions instead of <b>sprintf</b>. First of all, with the +SQLite printf routines, there is never a danger of overflowing a +static buffer as there is with <b>sprintf</b>. The SQLite +printf routines automatically allocate (and later frees) +as much memory as is +necessary to hold the SQL statements generated.</p> + +<p>The second advantage the SQLite printf routines have over +<b>sprintf</b> are two new formatting options specifically designed +to support string literals in SQL. Within the format string, +the %q formatting option works very much like %s in that it +reads a null-terminated string from the argument list and inserts +it into the result. But %q translates the inserted string by +making two copies of every single-quote (') character in the +substituted string. This has the effect of escaping the end-of-string +meaning of single-quote within a string literal. The %Q formatting +option works similar; it translates the single-quotes like %q and +additionally encloses the resulting string in single-quotes. +If the argument for the %Q formatting options is a NULL pointer, +the resulting string is NULL without single quotes. +</p> + +<p>Consider an example. Suppose you are trying to insert a string +value into a database table where the string value was obtained from +user input. Suppose the string to be inserted is stored in a variable +named zString. The code to do the insertion might look like this:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +sqlite_exec_printf(db, + "INSERT INTO table1 VALUES('%s')", + 0, 0, 0, zString); +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>If the zString variable holds text like "Hello", then this statement +will work just fine. But suppose the user enters a string like +"Hi y'all!". The SQL statement generated reads as follows: + +<blockquote><pre> +INSERT INTO table1 VALUES('Hi y'all') +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>This is not valid SQL because of the apostrophe in the word "y'all". +But if the %q formatting option is used instead of %s, like this:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +sqlite_exec_printf(db, + "INSERT INTO table1 VALUES('%q')", + 0, 0, 0, zString); +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>Then the generated SQL will look like the following:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +INSERT INTO table1 VALUES('Hi y''all') +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>Here the apostrophe has been escaped and the SQL statement is well-formed. +When generating SQL on-the-fly from data that might contain a +single-quote character ('), it is always a good idea to use the +SQLite printf routines and the %q formatting option instead of <b>sprintf</b>. +</p> + +<p>If the %Q formatting option is used instead of %q, like this:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +sqlite_exec_printf(db, + "INSERT INTO table1 VALUES(%Q)", + 0, 0, 0, zString); +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>Then the generated SQL will look like the following:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +INSERT INTO table1 VALUES('Hi y''all') +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>If the value of the zString variable is NULL, the generated SQL +will look like the following:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +INSERT INTO table1 VALUES(NULL) +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>All of the _printf() routines above are built around the following +two functions:</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +char *sqlite_mprintf(const char *zFormat, ...); +char *sqlite_vmprintf(const char *zFormat, va_list); +</pre></blockquote> + +<p>The <b>sqlite_mprintf()</b> routine works like the standard library +<b>sprintf()</b> except that it writes its results into memory obtained +from malloc() and returns a pointer to the malloced buffer. +<b>sqlite_mprintf()</b> also understands the %q and %Q extensions described +above. The <b>sqlite_vmprintf()</b> is a varargs version of the same +routine. The string pointer that these routines return should be freed +by passing it to <b>sqlite_freemem()</b>. +</p> + +<h4>3.10 Performing background jobs during large queries</h3> + +<p>The <b>sqlite_progress_handler()</b> routine can be used to register a +callback routine with an SQLite database to be invoked periodically during long +running calls to <b>sqlite_exec()</b>, <b>sqlite_step()</b> and the various +wrapper functions. +</p> + +<p>The callback is invoked every N virtual machine operations, where N is +supplied as the second argument to <b>sqlite_progress_handler()</b>. The third +and fourth arguments to <b>sqlite_progress_handler()</b> are a pointer to the +routine to be invoked and a void pointer to be passed as the first argument to +it. +</p> + +<p>The time taken to execute each virtual machine operation can vary based on +many factors. A typical value for a 1 GHz PC is between half and three million +per second but may be much higher or lower, depending on the query. As such it +is difficult to schedule background operations based on virtual machine +operations. Instead, it is recommended that a callback be scheduled relatively +frequently (say every 1000 instructions) and external timer routines used to +determine whether or not background jobs need to be run. +</p> + +<a name="cfunc"></a> +<h3>4.0 Adding New SQL Functions</h3> + +<p>Beginning with version 2.4.0, SQLite allows the SQL language to be +extended with new functions implemented as C code. The following interface +is used: +</p> + +<blockquote><pre> +typedef struct sqlite_func sqlite_func; + +int sqlite_create_function( + sqlite *db, + const char *zName, + int nArg, + void (*xFunc)(sqlite_func*,int,const char**), + void *pUserData +); +int sqlite_create_aggregate( + sqlite *db, + const char *zName, + int nArg, + void (*xStep)(sqlite_func*,int,const char**), + void (*xFinalize)(sqlite_func*), + void *pUserData +); + +char *sqlite_set_result_string(sqlite_func*,const char*,int); +void sqlite_set_result_int(sqlite_func*,int); +void sqlite_set_result_double(sqlite_func*,double); +void sqlite_set_result_error(sqlite_func*,const char*,int); + +void *sqlite_user_data(sqlite_func*); +void *sqlite_aggregate_context(sqlite_func*, int nBytes); +int sqlite_aggregate_count(sqlite_func*); +</pre></blockquote> + +<p> +The <b>sqlite_create_function()</b> interface is used to create +regular functions and <b>sqlite_create_aggregate()</b> is used to +create new aggregate functions. In both cases, the <b>db</b> +parameter is an open SQLite database on which the functions should +be registered, <b>zName</b> is the name of the new function, +<b>nArg</b> is the number of arguments, and <b>pUserData</b> is +a pointer which is passed through unchanged to the C implementation +of the function. Both routines return 0 on success and non-zero +if there are any errors. +</p> + +<p> +The length of a function name may not exceed 255 characters. +Any attempt to create a function whose name exceeds 255 characters +in length will result in an error. +</p> + +<p> +For regular functions, the <b>xFunc</b> callback is invoked once +for each function call. The implementation of xFunc should call +one of the <b>sqlite_set_result_...</b> interfaces to return its +result. The <b>sqlite_user_data()</b> routine can be used to +retrieve the <b>pUserData</b> pointer that was passed in when the +function was registered. +</p> + +<p> +For aggregate functions, the <b>xStep</b> callback is invoked once +for each row in the result and then <b>xFinalize</b> is invoked at the +end to compute a final answer. The xStep routine can use the +<b>sqlite_aggregate_context()</b> interface to allocate memory that +will be unique to that particular instance of the SQL function. +This memory will be automatically deleted after xFinalize is called. +The <b>sqlite_aggregate_count()</b> routine can be used to find out +how many rows of data were passed to the aggregate. The xFinalize +callback should invoke one of the <b>sqlite_set_result_...</b> +interfaces to set the final result of the aggregate. +</p> + +<p> +SQLite now implements all of its built-in functions using this +interface. For additional information and examples on how to create +new SQL functions, review the SQLite source code in the file +<b>func.c</b>. +</p> + +<h3>5.0 Multi-Threading And SQLite</h3> + +<p> +If SQLite is compiled with the THREADSAFE preprocessor macro set to 1, +then it is safe to use SQLite from two or more threads of the same process +at the same time. But each thread should have its own <b>sqlite*</b> +pointer returned from <b>sqlite_open</b>. It is never safe for two +or more threads to access the same <b>sqlite*</b> pointer at the same time. +</p> + +<p> +In precompiled SQLite libraries available on the website, the Unix +versions are compiled with THREADSAFE turned off but the Windows +versions are compiled with THREADSAFE turned on. If you need something +different that this you will have to recompile. +</p> + +<p> +Under Unix, an <b>sqlite*</b> pointer should not be carried across a +<b>fork()</b> system call into the child process. The child process +should open its own copy of the database after the <b>fork()</b>. +</p> + +<h3>6.0 Usage Examples</h3> + +<p>For examples of how the SQLite C/C++ interface can be used, +refer to the source code for the <b>sqlite</b> program in the +file <a href="https://sqlite.org/src/file/src/shell.c.in">src/shell.c</a> +of the source tree. +Additional information about sqlite is available at +<a href="cli.html">cli.html</a>. +See also the sources to the Tcl interface for SQLite in +the source file +<a href="https://sqlite.org/src/file/src/tclsqlite.c">src/tclsqlite.c</a>.</p> +<p align="center"><small><i>This page last modified on <a href="https://sqlite.org/docsrc/honeypot" id="mtimelink" data-href="https://sqlite.org/docsrc/finfo/pages/c_interface.in?m=37fc83a59c4d4a606">2020-04-14 16:00:55</a> UTC </small></i></p> + |