Carray() is a table-valued function with a single column (named "value") and zero or more rows. The "value" of each row in the carray() is taken from a C-language array supplied by the application via parameter binding. In this way, the carray() function provides a convenient mechanism to bind C-language arrays to SQL queries.
The carray() function is not compiled into SQLite by default. It is available as a loadable extension in the ext/misc/carray.c source file.
The carray() function was first added to SQLite in version 3.14 (2016-08-08). The sqlite3_carray_bind() interface and the single-argument variant of carray() was added in SQLite version 3.34.0 (2020-12-01). The ability to bind an array of struct iovec objects that are interpreted as BLOBs was added in SQLite version 3.41.0 (2023-02-21).
The carray() function takes one, two, or three arguments.
For the two- and three-argument versions of carray(), the first argument is a pointer to an array. Since pointer values cannot be specified directly in SQL, the first argument must be a parameter that is bound to a pointer value using the sqlite3_bind_pointer() interface using a pointer-type of "carray". The second argument is the number of elements in the array. The optional third argument is a string that determines the datatype of the elements in the C-language array. Allowed values for the third argument are:
The default datatype is 'int32'.
The 'struct iovec' type used for BLOB data is a standard Posix data structure, normally declared using "#include <sys/uio.h>". The format is:
struct iovec { void *iov_base; /* Starting address */ size_t iov_len; /* Number of bytes to transfer */ };
The single-argument form of carray() requires a special C-language interface named "sqlite3_carray_bind()" in order to attach values:
int sqlite3_carray_bind( sqlite3_stmt *pStmt, /* Statement containing the CARRAY */ int idx, /* Parameter number for CARRAY argument */ void *aData, /* Data array */ int nData, /* Number of entries in the array */ int mFlags, /* Datatype flag */ void (*xDestroy)(void*) /* Destructor for aData */ );
The mFlags parameter to sqlite3_carray_bind() must be one of:
#define CARRAY_INT32 0 #define CARRAY_INT64 1 #define CARRAY_DOUBLE 2 #define CARRAY_TEXT 3 #define CARRAY_BLOB 4
Higher order bits of the mFlags parameter must all be zero for now, though they may be used in future enhancements. The definitions for the constants that specify the datatype and a prototype for the sqlite3_carray_bind() function are both available in the auxiliary header file ext/misc/carray.h.
The xDestroy argument to sqlite3_carray_bind() routine is a pointer to a function that frees the input array. SQLite will invoke this function after it has finished with the data. The xDestroy argument may optionally be one of the following constants defined in "sqlite3.h":
SQLITE_STATIC → This means that the application that invokes sqlite3_carray_bind() maintains ownership of the data array and that the application promises SQLite that it will not change or deallocate the data until after the prepared statement is finialized.
SQLITE_TRANSIENT → This special value instructs SQLite to make its own private copy of the data before the sqlite3_carray_bind() interface returns.
The carray() function can be used in the FROM clause of a query. For example, to query two entries from the OBJ table using rowids taken from a C-language array at address $PTR.
SELECT obj.* FROM obj, carray($PTR, 10) AS x WHERE obj.rowid=x.value;
This query gives the same result:
SELECT * FROM obj WHERE rowid IN carray($PTR, 10);
This page last modified on 2023-02-17 13:24:09 UTC