source: trunk/src/3rdparty/sqlite/sqliteInt.h

Last change on this file was 205, checked in by rudi, 14 years ago

Added SQLite 2.8.17 sources. This allows to build at least one of the sql drivers / plugins.

File size: 56.1 KB
Line 
1/*
2** 2001 September 15
3**
4** The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of
5** a legal notice, here is a blessing:
6**
7** May you do good and not evil.
8** May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
9** May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
10**
11*************************************************************************
12** Internal interface definitions for SQLite.
13**
14** @(#) $Id: sqliteInt.h,v 1.220.2.2 2005/06/06 15:07:03 drh Exp $
15*/
16#include "config.h"
17#include "sqlite.h"
18#include "hash.h"
19#include "parse.h"
20#include "btree.h"
21#include <stdio.h>
22#include <stdlib.h>
23#include <string.h>
24#include <assert.h>
25
26/*
27** The maximum number of in-memory pages to use for the main database
28** table and for temporary tables.
29*/
30#define MAX_PAGES 2000
31#define TEMP_PAGES 500
32
33/*
34** If the following macro is set to 1, then NULL values are considered
35** distinct for the SELECT DISTINCT statement and for UNION or EXCEPT
36** compound queries. No other SQL database engine (among those tested)
37** works this way except for OCELOT. But the SQL92 spec implies that
38** this is how things should work.
39**
40** If the following macro is set to 0, then NULLs are indistinct for
41** SELECT DISTINCT and for UNION.
42*/
43#define NULL_ALWAYS_DISTINCT 0
44
45/*
46** If the following macro is set to 1, then NULL values are considered
47** distinct when determining whether or not two entries are the same
48** in a UNIQUE index. This is the way PostgreSQL, Oracle, DB2, MySQL,
49** OCELOT, and Firebird all work. The SQL92 spec explicitly says this
50** is the way things are suppose to work.
51**
52** If the following macro is set to 0, the NULLs are indistinct for
53** a UNIQUE index. In this mode, you can only have a single NULL entry
54** for a column declared UNIQUE. This is the way Informix and SQL Server
55** work.
56*/
57#define NULL_DISTINCT_FOR_UNIQUE 1
58
59/*
60** The maximum number of attached databases. This must be at least 2
61** in order to support the main database file (0) and the file used to
62** hold temporary tables (1). And it must be less than 256 because
63** an unsigned character is used to stored the database index.
64*/
65#define MAX_ATTACHED 10
66
67/*
68** The next macro is used to determine where TEMP tables and indices
69** are stored. Possible values:
70**
71** 0 Always use a temporary files
72** 1 Use a file unless overridden by "PRAGMA temp_store"
73** 2 Use memory unless overridden by "PRAGMA temp_store"
74** 3 Always use memory
75*/
76#ifndef TEMP_STORE
77# define TEMP_STORE 1
78#endif
79
80/*
81** When building SQLite for embedded systems where memory is scarce,
82** you can define one or more of the following macros to omit extra
83** features of the library and thus keep the size of the library to
84** a minimum.
85*/
86/* #define SQLITE_OMIT_AUTHORIZATION 1 */
87/* #define SQLITE_OMIT_INMEMORYDB 1 */
88/* #define SQLITE_OMIT_VACUUM 1 */
89/* #define SQLITE_OMIT_DATETIME_FUNCS 1 */
90/* #define SQLITE_OMIT_PROGRESS_CALLBACK 1 */
91
92/*
93** Integers of known sizes. These typedefs might change for architectures
94** where the sizes very. Preprocessor macros are available so that the
95** types can be conveniently redefined at compile-type. Like this:
96**
97** cc '-DUINTPTR_TYPE=long long int' ...
98*/
99#ifndef UINT32_TYPE
100# define UINT32_TYPE unsigned int
101#endif
102#ifndef UINT16_TYPE
103# define UINT16_TYPE unsigned short int
104#endif
105#ifndef INT16_TYPE
106# define INT16_TYPE short int
107#endif
108#ifndef UINT8_TYPE
109# define UINT8_TYPE unsigned char
110#endif
111#ifndef INT8_TYPE
112# define INT8_TYPE signed char
113#endif
114#ifndef INTPTR_TYPE
115# if SQLITE_PTR_SZ==4
116# define INTPTR_TYPE int
117# else
118# define INTPTR_TYPE long long
119# endif
120#endif
121typedef UINT32_TYPE u32; /* 4-byte unsigned integer */
122typedef UINT16_TYPE u16; /* 2-byte unsigned integer */
123typedef INT16_TYPE i16; /* 2-byte signed integer */
124typedef UINT8_TYPE u8; /* 1-byte unsigned integer */
125typedef UINT8_TYPE i8; /* 1-byte signed integer */
126typedef INTPTR_TYPE ptr; /* Big enough to hold a pointer */
127typedef unsigned INTPTR_TYPE uptr; /* Big enough to hold a pointer */
128
129/*
130** Defer sourcing vdbe.h until after the "u8" typedef is defined.
131*/
132#include "vdbe.h"
133
134/*
135** Most C compilers these days recognize "long double", don't they?
136** Just in case we encounter one that does not, we will create a macro
137** for long double so that it can be easily changed to just "double".
138*/
139#ifndef LONGDOUBLE_TYPE
140# define LONGDOUBLE_TYPE long double
141#endif
142
143/*
144** This macro casts a pointer to an integer. Useful for doing
145** pointer arithmetic.
146*/
147#define Addr(X) ((uptr)X)
148
149/*
150** The maximum number of bytes of data that can be put into a single
151** row of a single table. The upper bound on this limit is 16777215
152** bytes (or 16MB-1). We have arbitrarily set the limit to just 1MB
153** here because the overflow page chain is inefficient for really big
154** records and we want to discourage people from thinking that
155** multi-megabyte records are OK. If your needs are different, you can
156** change this define and recompile to increase or decrease the record
157** size.
158**
159** The 16777198 is computed as follows: 238 bytes of payload on the
160** original pages plus 16448 overflow pages each holding 1020 bytes of
161** data.
162*/
163#define MAX_BYTES_PER_ROW 1048576
164/* #define MAX_BYTES_PER_ROW 16777198 */
165
166/*
167** If memory allocation problems are found, recompile with
168**
169** -DMEMORY_DEBUG=1
170**
171** to enable some sanity checking on malloc() and free(). To
172** check for memory leaks, recompile with
173**
174** -DMEMORY_DEBUG=2
175**
176** and a line of text will be written to standard error for
177** each malloc() and free(). This output can be analyzed
178** by an AWK script to determine if there are any leaks.
179*/
180#ifdef MEMORY_DEBUG
181# define sqliteMalloc(X) sqliteMalloc_(X,1,__FILE__,__LINE__)
182# define sqliteMallocRaw(X) sqliteMalloc_(X,0,__FILE__,__LINE__)
183# define sqliteFree(X) sqliteFree_(X,__FILE__,__LINE__)
184# define sqliteRealloc(X,Y) sqliteRealloc_(X,Y,__FILE__,__LINE__)
185# define sqliteStrDup(X) sqliteStrDup_(X,__FILE__,__LINE__)
186# define sqliteStrNDup(X,Y) sqliteStrNDup_(X,Y,__FILE__,__LINE__)
187 void sqliteStrRealloc(char**);
188#else
189# define sqliteRealloc_(X,Y) sqliteRealloc(X,Y)
190# define sqliteStrRealloc(X)
191#endif
192
193/*
194** This variable gets set if malloc() ever fails. After it gets set,
195** the SQLite library shuts down permanently.
196*/
197extern int sqlite_malloc_failed;
198
199/*
200** The following global variables are used for testing and debugging
201** only. They only work if MEMORY_DEBUG is defined.
202*/
203#ifdef MEMORY_DEBUG
204extern int sqlite_nMalloc; /* Number of sqliteMalloc() calls */
205extern int sqlite_nFree; /* Number of sqliteFree() calls */
206extern int sqlite_iMallocFail; /* Fail sqliteMalloc() after this many calls */
207#endif
208
209/*
210** Name of the master database table. The master database table
211** is a special table that holds the names and attributes of all
212** user tables and indices.
213*/
214#define MASTER_NAME "sqlite_master"
215#define TEMP_MASTER_NAME "sqlite_temp_master"
216
217/*
218** The name of the schema table.
219*/
220#define SCHEMA_TABLE(x) (x?TEMP_MASTER_NAME:MASTER_NAME)
221
222/*
223** A convenience macro that returns the number of elements in
224** an array.
225*/
226#define ArraySize(X) (sizeof(X)/sizeof(X[0]))
227
228/*
229** Forward references to structures
230*/
231typedef struct Column Column;
232typedef struct Table Table;
233typedef struct Index Index;
234typedef struct Instruction Instruction;
235typedef struct Expr Expr;
236typedef struct ExprList ExprList;
237typedef struct Parse Parse;
238typedef struct Token Token;
239typedef struct IdList IdList;
240typedef struct SrcList SrcList;
241typedef struct WhereInfo WhereInfo;
242typedef struct WhereLevel WhereLevel;
243typedef struct Select Select;
244typedef struct AggExpr AggExpr;
245typedef struct FuncDef FuncDef;
246typedef struct Trigger Trigger;
247typedef struct TriggerStep TriggerStep;
248typedef struct TriggerStack TriggerStack;
249typedef struct FKey FKey;
250typedef struct Db Db;
251typedef struct AuthContext AuthContext;
252
253/*
254** Each database file to be accessed by the system is an instance
255** of the following structure. There are normally two of these structures
256** in the sqlite.aDb[] array. aDb[0] is the main database file and
257** aDb[1] is the database file used to hold temporary tables. Additional
258** databases may be attached.
259*/
260struct Db {
261 char *zName; /* Name of this database */
262 Btree *pBt; /* The B*Tree structure for this database file */
263 int schema_cookie; /* Database schema version number for this file */
264 Hash tblHash; /* All tables indexed by name */
265 Hash idxHash; /* All (named) indices indexed by name */
266 Hash trigHash; /* All triggers indexed by name */
267 Hash aFKey; /* Foreign keys indexed by to-table */
268 u8 inTrans; /* 0: not writable. 1: Transaction. 2: Checkpoint */
269 u16 flags; /* Flags associated with this database */
270 void *pAux; /* Auxiliary data. Usually NULL */
271 void (*xFreeAux)(void*); /* Routine to free pAux */
272};
273
274/*
275** These macros can be used to test, set, or clear bits in the
276** Db.flags field.
277*/
278#define DbHasProperty(D,I,P) (((D)->aDb[I].flags&(P))==(P))
279#define DbHasAnyProperty(D,I,P) (((D)->aDb[I].flags&(P))!=0)
280#define DbSetProperty(D,I,P) (D)->aDb[I].flags|=(P)
281#define DbClearProperty(D,I,P) (D)->aDb[I].flags&=~(P)
282
283/*
284** Allowed values for the DB.flags field.
285**
286** The DB_Locked flag is set when the first OP_Transaction or OP_Checkpoint
287** opcode is emitted for a database. This prevents multiple occurances
288** of those opcodes for the same database in the same program. Similarly,
289** the DB_Cookie flag is set when the OP_VerifyCookie opcode is emitted,
290** and prevents duplicate OP_VerifyCookies from taking up space and slowing
291** down execution.
292**
293** The DB_SchemaLoaded flag is set after the database schema has been
294** read into internal hash tables.
295**
296** DB_UnresetViews means that one or more views have column names that
297** have been filled out. If the schema changes, these column names might
298** changes and so the view will need to be reset.
299*/
300#define DB_Locked 0x0001 /* OP_Transaction opcode has been emitted */
301#define DB_Cookie 0x0002 /* OP_VerifyCookie opcode has been emiited */
302#define DB_SchemaLoaded 0x0004 /* The schema has been loaded */
303#define DB_UnresetViews 0x0008 /* Some views have defined column names */
304
305
306/*
307** Each database is an instance of the following structure.
308**
309** The sqlite.file_format is initialized by the database file
310** and helps determines how the data in the database file is
311** represented. This field allows newer versions of the library
312** to read and write older databases. The various file formats
313** are as follows:
314**
315** file_format==1 Version 2.1.0.
316** file_format==2 Version 2.2.0. Add support for INTEGER PRIMARY KEY.
317** file_format==3 Version 2.6.0. Fix empty-string index bug.
318** file_format==4 Version 2.7.0. Add support for separate numeric and
319** text datatypes.
320**
321** The sqlite.temp_store determines where temporary database files
322** are stored. If 1, then a file is created to hold those tables. If
323** 2, then they are held in memory. 0 means use the default value in
324** the TEMP_STORE macro.
325**
326** The sqlite.lastRowid records the last insert rowid generated by an
327** insert statement. Inserts on views do not affect its value. Each
328** trigger has its own context, so that lastRowid can be updated inside
329** triggers as usual. The previous value will be restored once the trigger
330** exits. Upon entering a before or instead of trigger, lastRowid is no
331** longer (since after version 2.8.12) reset to -1.
332**
333** The sqlite.nChange does not count changes within triggers and keeps no
334** context. It is reset at start of sqlite_exec.
335** The sqlite.lsChange represents the number of changes made by the last
336** insert, update, or delete statement. It remains constant throughout the
337** length of a statement and is then updated by OP_SetCounts. It keeps a
338** context stack just like lastRowid so that the count of changes
339** within a trigger is not seen outside the trigger. Changes to views do not
340** affect the value of lsChange.
341** The sqlite.csChange keeps track of the number of current changes (since
342** the last statement) and is used to update sqlite_lsChange.
343*/
344struct sqlite {
345 int nDb; /* Number of backends currently in use */
346 Db *aDb; /* All backends */
347 Db aDbStatic[2]; /* Static space for the 2 default backends */
348 int flags; /* Miscellanous flags. See below */
349 u8 file_format; /* What file format version is this database? */
350 u8 safety_level; /* How aggressive at synching data to disk */
351 u8 want_to_close; /* Close after all VDBEs are deallocated */
352 u8 temp_store; /* 1=file, 2=memory, 0=compile-time default */
353 u8 onError; /* Default conflict algorithm */
354 int next_cookie; /* Next value of aDb[0].schema_cookie */
355 int cache_size; /* Number of pages to use in the cache */
356 int nTable; /* Number of tables in the database */
357 void *pBusyArg; /* 1st Argument to the busy callback */
358 int (*xBusyCallback)(void *,const char*,int); /* The busy callback */
359 void *pCommitArg; /* Argument to xCommitCallback() */
360 int (*xCommitCallback)(void*);/* Invoked at every commit. */
361 Hash aFunc; /* All functions that can be in SQL exprs */
362 int lastRowid; /* ROWID of most recent insert (see above) */
363 int priorNewRowid; /* Last randomly generated ROWID */
364 int magic; /* Magic number for detect library misuse */
365 int nChange; /* Number of rows changed (see above) */
366 int lsChange; /* Last statement change count (see above) */
367 int csChange; /* Current statement change count (see above) */
368 struct sqliteInitInfo { /* Information used during initialization */
369 int iDb; /* When back is being initialized */
370 int newTnum; /* Rootpage of table being initialized */
371 u8 busy; /* TRUE if currently initializing */
372 } init;
373 struct Vdbe *pVdbe; /* List of active virtual machines */
374 void (*xTrace)(void*,const char*); /* Trace function */
375 void *pTraceArg; /* Argument to the trace function */
376#ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_AUTHORIZATION
377 int (*xAuth)(void*,int,const char*,const char*,const char*,const char*);
378 /* Access authorization function */
379 void *pAuthArg; /* 1st argument to the access auth function */
380#endif
381#ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_PROGRESS_CALLBACK
382 int (*xProgress)(void *); /* The progress callback */
383 void *pProgressArg; /* Argument to the progress callback */
384 int nProgressOps; /* Number of opcodes for progress callback */
385#endif
386};
387
388/*
389** Possible values for the sqlite.flags and or Db.flags fields.
390**
391** On sqlite.flags, the SQLITE_InTrans value means that we have
392** executed a BEGIN. On Db.flags, SQLITE_InTrans means a statement
393** transaction is active on that particular database file.
394*/
395#define SQLITE_VdbeTrace 0x00000001 /* True to trace VDBE execution */
396#define SQLITE_Initialized 0x00000002 /* True after initialization */
397#define SQLITE_Interrupt 0x00000004 /* Cancel current operation */
398#define SQLITE_InTrans 0x00000008 /* True if in a transaction */
399#define SQLITE_InternChanges 0x00000010 /* Uncommitted Hash table changes */
400#define SQLITE_FullColNames 0x00000020 /* Show full column names on SELECT */
401#define SQLITE_ShortColNames 0x00000040 /* Show short columns names */
402#define SQLITE_CountRows 0x00000080 /* Count rows changed by INSERT, */
403 /* DELETE, or UPDATE and return */
404 /* the count using a callback. */
405#define SQLITE_NullCallback 0x00000100 /* Invoke the callback once if the */
406 /* result set is empty */
407#define SQLITE_ReportTypes 0x00000200 /* Include information on datatypes */
408 /* in 4th argument of callback */
409
410/*
411** Possible values for the sqlite.magic field.
412** The numbers are obtained at random and have no special meaning, other
413** than being distinct from one another.
414*/
415#define SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN 0xa029a697 /* Database is open */
416#define SQLITE_MAGIC_CLOSED 0x9f3c2d33 /* Database is closed */
417#define SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY 0xf03b7906 /* Database currently in use */
418#define SQLITE_MAGIC_ERROR 0xb5357930 /* An SQLITE_MISUSE error occurred */
419
420/*
421** Each SQL function is defined by an instance of the following
422** structure. A pointer to this structure is stored in the sqlite.aFunc
423** hash table. When multiple functions have the same name, the hash table
424** points to a linked list of these structures.
425*/
426struct FuncDef {
427 void (*xFunc)(sqlite_func*,int,const char**); /* Regular function */
428 void (*xStep)(sqlite_func*,int,const char**); /* Aggregate function step */
429 void (*xFinalize)(sqlite_func*); /* Aggregate function finializer */
430 signed char nArg; /* Number of arguments. -1 means unlimited */
431 signed char dataType; /* Arg that determines datatype. -1=NUMERIC, */
432 /* -2=TEXT. -3=SQLITE_ARGS */
433 u8 includeTypes; /* Add datatypes to args of xFunc and xStep */
434 void *pUserData; /* User data parameter */
435 FuncDef *pNext; /* Next function with same name */
436};
437
438/*
439** information about each column of an SQL table is held in an instance
440** of this structure.
441*/
442struct Column {
443 char *zName; /* Name of this column */
444 char *zDflt; /* Default value of this column */
445 char *zType; /* Data type for this column */
446 u8 notNull; /* True if there is a NOT NULL constraint */
447 u8 isPrimKey; /* True if this column is part of the PRIMARY KEY */
448 u8 sortOrder; /* Some combination of SQLITE_SO_... values */
449 u8 dottedName; /* True if zName contains a "." character */
450};
451
452/*
453** The allowed sort orders.
454**
455** The TEXT and NUM values use bits that do not overlap with DESC and ASC.
456** That way the two can be combined into a single number.
457*/
458#define SQLITE_SO_UNK 0 /* Use the default collating type. (SCT_NUM) */
459#define SQLITE_SO_TEXT 2 /* Sort using memcmp() */
460#define SQLITE_SO_NUM 4 /* Sort using sqliteCompare() */
461#define SQLITE_SO_TYPEMASK 6 /* Mask to extract the collating sequence */
462#define SQLITE_SO_ASC 0 /* Sort in ascending order */
463#define SQLITE_SO_DESC 1 /* Sort in descending order */
464#define SQLITE_SO_DIRMASK 1 /* Mask to extract the sort direction */
465
466/*
467** Each SQL table is represented in memory by an instance of the
468** following structure.
469**
470** Table.zName is the name of the table. The case of the original
471** CREATE TABLE statement is stored, but case is not significant for
472** comparisons.
473**
474** Table.nCol is the number of columns in this table. Table.aCol is a
475** pointer to an array of Column structures, one for each column.
476**
477** If the table has an INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, then Table.iPKey is the index of
478** the column that is that key. Otherwise Table.iPKey is negative. Note
479** that the datatype of the PRIMARY KEY must be INTEGER for this field to
480** be set. An INTEGER PRIMARY KEY is used as the rowid for each row of
481** the table. If a table has no INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, then a random rowid
482** is generated for each row of the table. Table.hasPrimKey is true if
483** the table has any PRIMARY KEY, INTEGER or otherwise.
484**
485** Table.tnum is the page number for the root BTree page of the table in the
486** database file. If Table.iDb is the index of the database table backend
487** in sqlite.aDb[]. 0 is for the main database and 1 is for the file that
488** holds temporary tables and indices. If Table.isTransient
489** is true, then the table is stored in a file that is automatically deleted
490** when the VDBE cursor to the table is closed. In this case Table.tnum
491** refers VDBE cursor number that holds the table open, not to the root
492** page number. Transient tables are used to hold the results of a
493** sub-query that appears instead of a real table name in the FROM clause
494** of a SELECT statement.
495*/
496struct Table {
497 char *zName; /* Name of the table */
498 int nCol; /* Number of columns in this table */
499 Column *aCol; /* Information about each column */
500 int iPKey; /* If not less then 0, use aCol[iPKey] as the primary key */
501 Index *pIndex; /* List of SQL indexes on this table. */
502 int tnum; /* Root BTree node for this table (see note above) */
503 Select *pSelect; /* NULL for tables. Points to definition if a view. */
504 u8 readOnly; /* True if this table should not be written by the user */
505 u8 iDb; /* Index into sqlite.aDb[] of the backend for this table */
506 u8 isTransient; /* True if automatically deleted when VDBE finishes */
507 u8 hasPrimKey; /* True if there exists a primary key */
508 u8 keyConf; /* What to do in case of uniqueness conflict on iPKey */
509 Trigger *pTrigger; /* List of SQL triggers on this table */
510 FKey *pFKey; /* Linked list of all foreign keys in this table */
511};
512
513/*
514** Each foreign key constraint is an instance of the following structure.
515**
516** A foreign key is associated with two tables. The "from" table is
517** the table that contains the REFERENCES clause that creates the foreign
518** key. The "to" table is the table that is named in the REFERENCES clause.
519** Consider this example:
520**
521** CREATE TABLE ex1(
522** a INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
523** b INTEGER CONSTRAINT fk1 REFERENCES ex2(x)
524** );
525**
526** For foreign key "fk1", the from-table is "ex1" and the to-table is "ex2".
527**
528** Each REFERENCES clause generates an instance of the following structure
529** which is attached to the from-table. The to-table need not exist when
530** the from-table is created. The existance of the to-table is not checked
531** until an attempt is made to insert data into the from-table.
532**
533** The sqlite.aFKey hash table stores pointers to this structure
534** given the name of a to-table. For each to-table, all foreign keys
535** associated with that table are on a linked list using the FKey.pNextTo
536** field.
537*/
538struct FKey {
539 Table *pFrom; /* The table that constains the REFERENCES clause */
540 FKey *pNextFrom; /* Next foreign key in pFrom */
541 char *zTo; /* Name of table that the key points to */
542 FKey *pNextTo; /* Next foreign key that points to zTo */
543 int nCol; /* Number of columns in this key */
544 struct sColMap { /* Mapping of columns in pFrom to columns in zTo */
545 int iFrom; /* Index of column in pFrom */
546 char *zCol; /* Name of column in zTo. If 0 use PRIMARY KEY */
547 } *aCol; /* One entry for each of nCol column s */
548 u8 isDeferred; /* True if constraint checking is deferred till COMMIT */
549 u8 updateConf; /* How to resolve conflicts that occur on UPDATE */
550 u8 deleteConf; /* How to resolve conflicts that occur on DELETE */
551 u8 insertConf; /* How to resolve conflicts that occur on INSERT */
552};
553
554/*
555** SQLite supports many different ways to resolve a contraint
556** error. ROLLBACK processing means that a constraint violation
557** causes the operation in process to fail and for the current transaction
558** to be rolled back. ABORT processing means the operation in process
559** fails and any prior changes from that one operation are backed out,
560** but the transaction is not rolled back. FAIL processing means that
561** the operation in progress stops and returns an error code. But prior
562** changes due to the same operation are not backed out and no rollback
563** occurs. IGNORE means that the particular row that caused the constraint
564** error is not inserted or updated. Processing continues and no error
565** is returned. REPLACE means that preexisting database rows that caused
566** a UNIQUE constraint violation are removed so that the new insert or
567** update can proceed. Processing continues and no error is reported.
568**
569** RESTRICT, SETNULL, and CASCADE actions apply only to foreign keys.
570** RESTRICT is the same as ABORT for IMMEDIATE foreign keys and the
571** same as ROLLBACK for DEFERRED keys. SETNULL means that the foreign
572** key is set to NULL. CASCADE means that a DELETE or UPDATE of the
573** referenced table row is propagated into the row that holds the
574** foreign key.
575**
576** The following symbolic values are used to record which type
577** of action to take.
578*/
579#define OE_None 0 /* There is no constraint to check */
580#define OE_Rollback 1 /* Fail the operation and rollback the transaction */
581#define OE_Abort 2 /* Back out changes but do no rollback transaction */
582#define OE_Fail 3 /* Stop the operation but leave all prior changes */
583#define OE_Ignore 4 /* Ignore the error. Do not do the INSERT or UPDATE */
584#define OE_Replace 5 /* Delete existing record, then do INSERT or UPDATE */
585
586#define OE_Restrict 6 /* OE_Abort for IMMEDIATE, OE_Rollback for DEFERRED */
587#define OE_SetNull 7 /* Set the foreign key value to NULL */
588#define OE_SetDflt 8 /* Set the foreign key value to its default */
589#define OE_Cascade 9 /* Cascade the changes */
590
591#define OE_Default 99 /* Do whatever the default action is */
592
593/*
594** Each SQL index is represented in memory by an
595** instance of the following structure.
596**
597** The columns of the table that are to be indexed are described
598** by the aiColumn[] field of this structure. For example, suppose
599** we have the following table and index:
600**
601** CREATE TABLE Ex1(c1 int, c2 int, c3 text);
602** CREATE INDEX Ex2 ON Ex1(c3,c1);
603**
604** In the Table structure describing Ex1, nCol==3 because there are
605** three columns in the table. In the Index structure describing
606** Ex2, nColumn==2 since 2 of the 3 columns of Ex1 are indexed.
607** The value of aiColumn is {2, 0}. aiColumn[0]==2 because the
608** first column to be indexed (c3) has an index of 2 in Ex1.aCol[].
609** The second column to be indexed (c1) has an index of 0 in
610** Ex1.aCol[], hence Ex2.aiColumn[1]==0.
611**
612** The Index.onError field determines whether or not the indexed columns
613** must be unique and what to do if they are not. When Index.onError=OE_None,
614** it means this is not a unique index. Otherwise it is a unique index
615** and the value of Index.onError indicate the which conflict resolution
616** algorithm to employ whenever an attempt is made to insert a non-unique
617** element.
618*/
619struct Index {
620 char *zName; /* Name of this index */
621 int nColumn; /* Number of columns in the table used by this index */
622 int *aiColumn; /* Which columns are used by this index. 1st is 0 */
623 Table *pTable; /* The SQL table being indexed */
624 int tnum; /* Page containing root of this index in database file */
625 u8 onError; /* OE_Abort, OE_Ignore, OE_Replace, or OE_None */
626 u8 autoIndex; /* True if is automatically created (ex: by UNIQUE) */
627 u8 iDb; /* Index in sqlite.aDb[] of where this index is stored */
628 Index *pNext; /* The next index associated with the same table */
629};
630
631/*
632** Each token coming out of the lexer is an instance of
633** this structure. Tokens are also used as part of an expression.
634**
635** Note if Token.z==0 then Token.dyn and Token.n are undefined and
636** may contain random values. Do not make any assuptions about Token.dyn
637** and Token.n when Token.z==0.
638*/
639struct Token {
640 const char *z; /* Text of the token. Not NULL-terminated! */
641 unsigned dyn : 1; /* True for malloced memory, false for static */
642 unsigned n : 31; /* Number of characters in this token */
643};
644
645/*
646** Each node of an expression in the parse tree is an instance
647** of this structure.
648**
649** Expr.op is the opcode. The integer parser token codes are reused
650** as opcodes here. For example, the parser defines TK_GE to be an integer
651** code representing the ">=" operator. This same integer code is reused
652** to represent the greater-than-or-equal-to operator in the expression
653** tree.
654**
655** Expr.pRight and Expr.pLeft are subexpressions. Expr.pList is a list
656** of argument if the expression is a function.
657**
658** Expr.token is the operator token for this node. For some expressions
659** that have subexpressions, Expr.token can be the complete text that gave
660** rise to the Expr. In the latter case, the token is marked as being
661** a compound token.
662**
663** An expression of the form ID or ID.ID refers to a column in a table.
664** For such expressions, Expr.op is set to TK_COLUMN and Expr.iTable is
665** the integer cursor number of a VDBE cursor pointing to that table and
666** Expr.iColumn is the column number for the specific column. If the
667** expression is used as a result in an aggregate SELECT, then the
668** value is also stored in the Expr.iAgg column in the aggregate so that
669** it can be accessed after all aggregates are computed.
670**
671** If the expression is a function, the Expr.iTable is an integer code
672** representing which function. If the expression is an unbound variable
673** marker (a question mark character '?' in the original SQL) then the
674** Expr.iTable holds the index number for that variable.
675**
676** The Expr.pSelect field points to a SELECT statement. The SELECT might
677** be the right operand of an IN operator. Or, if a scalar SELECT appears
678** in an expression the opcode is TK_SELECT and Expr.pSelect is the only
679** operand.
680*/
681struct Expr {
682 u8 op; /* Operation performed by this node */
683 u8 dataType; /* Either SQLITE_SO_TEXT or SQLITE_SO_NUM */
684 u8 iDb; /* Database referenced by this expression */
685 u8 flags; /* Various flags. See below */
686 Expr *pLeft, *pRight; /* Left and right subnodes */
687 ExprList *pList; /* A list of expressions used as function arguments
688 ** or in "<expr> IN (<expr-list)" */
689 Token token; /* An operand token */
690 Token span; /* Complete text of the expression */
691 int iTable, iColumn; /* When op==TK_COLUMN, then this expr node means the
692 ** iColumn-th field of the iTable-th table. */
693 int iAgg; /* When op==TK_COLUMN and pParse->useAgg==TRUE, pull
694 ** result from the iAgg-th element of the aggregator */
695 Select *pSelect; /* When the expression is a sub-select. Also the
696 ** right side of "<expr> IN (<select>)" */
697};
698
699/*
700** The following are the meanings of bits in the Expr.flags field.
701*/
702#define EP_FromJoin 0x0001 /* Originated in ON or USING clause of a join */
703
704/*
705** These macros can be used to test, set, or clear bits in the
706** Expr.flags field.
707*/
708#define ExprHasProperty(E,P) (((E)->flags&(P))==(P))
709#define ExprHasAnyProperty(E,P) (((E)->flags&(P))!=0)
710#define ExprSetProperty(E,P) (E)->flags|=(P)
711#define ExprClearProperty(E,P) (E)->flags&=~(P)
712
713/*
714** A list of expressions. Each expression may optionally have a
715** name. An expr/name combination can be used in several ways, such
716** as the list of "expr AS ID" fields following a "SELECT" or in the
717** list of "ID = expr" items in an UPDATE. A list of expressions can
718** also be used as the argument to a function, in which case the a.zName
719** field is not used.
720*/
721struct ExprList {
722 int nExpr; /* Number of expressions on the list */
723 int nAlloc; /* Number of entries allocated below */
724 struct ExprList_item {
725 Expr *pExpr; /* The list of expressions */
726 char *zName; /* Token associated with this expression */
727 u8 sortOrder; /* 1 for DESC or 0 for ASC */
728 u8 isAgg; /* True if this is an aggregate like count(*) */
729 u8 done; /* A flag to indicate when processing is finished */
730 } *a; /* One entry for each expression */
731};
732
733/*
734** An instance of this structure can hold a simple list of identifiers,
735** such as the list "a,b,c" in the following statements:
736**
737** INSERT INTO t(a,b,c) VALUES ...;
738** CREATE INDEX idx ON t(a,b,c);
739** CREATE TRIGGER trig BEFORE UPDATE ON t(a,b,c) ...;
740**
741** The IdList.a.idx field is used when the IdList represents the list of
742** column names after a table name in an INSERT statement. In the statement
743**
744** INSERT INTO t(a,b,c) ...
745**
746** If "a" is the k-th column of table "t", then IdList.a[0].idx==k.
747*/
748struct IdList {
749 int nId; /* Number of identifiers on the list */
750 int nAlloc; /* Number of entries allocated for a[] below */
751 struct IdList_item {
752 char *zName; /* Name of the identifier */
753 int idx; /* Index in some Table.aCol[] of a column named zName */
754 } *a;
755};
756
757/*
758** The following structure describes the FROM clause of a SELECT statement.
759** Each table or subquery in the FROM clause is a separate element of
760** the SrcList.a[] array.
761**
762** With the addition of multiple database support, the following structure
763** can also be used to describe a particular table such as the table that
764** is modified by an INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE statement. In standard SQL,
765** such a table must be a simple name: ID. But in SQLite, the table can
766** now be identified by a database name, a dot, then the table name: ID.ID.
767*/
768struct SrcList {
769 i16 nSrc; /* Number of tables or subqueries in the FROM clause */
770 i16 nAlloc; /* Number of entries allocated in a[] below */
771 struct SrcList_item {
772 char *zDatabase; /* Name of database holding this table */
773 char *zName; /* Name of the table */
774 char *zAlias; /* The "B" part of a "A AS B" phrase. zName is the "A" */
775 Table *pTab; /* An SQL table corresponding to zName */
776 Select *pSelect; /* A SELECT statement used in place of a table name */
777 int jointype; /* Type of join between this table and the next */
778 int iCursor; /* The VDBE cursor number used to access this table */
779 Expr *pOn; /* The ON clause of a join */
780 IdList *pUsing; /* The USING clause of a join */
781 } a[1]; /* One entry for each identifier on the list */
782};
783
784/*
785** Permitted values of the SrcList.a.jointype field
786*/
787#define JT_INNER 0x0001 /* Any kind of inner or cross join */
788#define JT_NATURAL 0x0002 /* True for a "natural" join */
789#define JT_LEFT 0x0004 /* Left outer join */
790#define JT_RIGHT 0x0008 /* Right outer join */
791#define JT_OUTER 0x0010 /* The "OUTER" keyword is present */
792#define JT_ERROR 0x0020 /* unknown or unsupported join type */
793
794/*
795** For each nested loop in a WHERE clause implementation, the WhereInfo
796** structure contains a single instance of this structure. This structure
797** is intended to be private the the where.c module and should not be
798** access or modified by other modules.
799*/
800struct WhereLevel {
801 int iMem; /* Memory cell used by this level */
802 Index *pIdx; /* Index used */
803 int iCur; /* Cursor number used for this index */
804 int score; /* How well this indexed scored */
805 int brk; /* Jump here to break out of the loop */
806 int cont; /* Jump here to continue with the next loop cycle */
807 int op, p1, p2; /* Opcode used to terminate the loop */
808 int iLeftJoin; /* Memory cell used to implement LEFT OUTER JOIN */
809 int top; /* First instruction of interior of the loop */
810 int inOp, inP1, inP2;/* Opcode used to implement an IN operator */
811 int bRev; /* Do the scan in the reverse direction */
812};
813
814/*
815** The WHERE clause processing routine has two halves. The
816** first part does the start of the WHERE loop and the second
817** half does the tail of the WHERE loop. An instance of
818** this structure is returned by the first half and passed
819** into the second half to give some continuity.
820*/
821struct WhereInfo {
822 Parse *pParse;
823 SrcList *pTabList; /* List of tables in the join */
824 int iContinue; /* Jump here to continue with next record */
825 int iBreak; /* Jump here to break out of the loop */
826 int nLevel; /* Number of nested loop */
827 int savedNTab; /* Value of pParse->nTab before WhereBegin() */
828 int peakNTab; /* Value of pParse->nTab after WhereBegin() */
829 WhereLevel a[1]; /* Information about each nest loop in the WHERE */
830};
831
832/*
833** An instance of the following structure contains all information
834** needed to generate code for a single SELECT statement.
835**
836** The zSelect field is used when the Select structure must be persistent.
837** Normally, the expression tree points to tokens in the original input
838** string that encodes the select. But if the Select structure must live
839** longer than its input string (for example when it is used to describe
840** a VIEW) we have to make a copy of the input string so that the nodes
841** of the expression tree will have something to point to. zSelect is used
842** to hold that copy.
843**
844** nLimit is set to -1 if there is no LIMIT clause. nOffset is set to 0.
845** If there is a LIMIT clause, the parser sets nLimit to the value of the
846** limit and nOffset to the value of the offset (or 0 if there is not
847** offset). But later on, nLimit and nOffset become the memory locations
848** in the VDBE that record the limit and offset counters.
849*/
850struct Select {
851 ExprList *pEList; /* The fields of the result */
852 u8 op; /* One of: TK_UNION TK_ALL TK_INTERSECT TK_EXCEPT */
853 u8 isDistinct; /* True if the DISTINCT keyword is present */
854 SrcList *pSrc; /* The FROM clause */
855 Expr *pWhere; /* The WHERE clause */
856 ExprList *pGroupBy; /* The GROUP BY clause */
857 Expr *pHaving; /* The HAVING clause */
858 ExprList *pOrderBy; /* The ORDER BY clause */
859 Select *pPrior; /* Prior select in a compound select statement */
860 int nLimit, nOffset; /* LIMIT and OFFSET values. -1 means not used */
861 int iLimit, iOffset; /* Memory registers holding LIMIT & OFFSET counters */
862 char *zSelect; /* Complete text of the SELECT command */
863};
864
865/*
866** The results of a select can be distributed in several ways.
867*/
868#define SRT_Callback 1 /* Invoke a callback with each row of result */
869#define SRT_Mem 2 /* Store result in a memory cell */
870#define SRT_Set 3 /* Store result as unique keys in a table */
871#define SRT_Union 5 /* Store result as keys in a table */
872#define SRT_Except 6 /* Remove result from a UNION table */
873#define SRT_Table 7 /* Store result as data with a unique key */
874#define SRT_TempTable 8 /* Store result in a trasient table */
875#define SRT_Discard 9 /* Do not save the results anywhere */
876#define SRT_Sorter 10 /* Store results in the sorter */
877#define SRT_Subroutine 11 /* Call a subroutine to handle results */
878
879/*
880** When a SELECT uses aggregate functions (like "count(*)" or "avg(f1)")
881** we have to do some additional analysis of expressions. An instance
882** of the following structure holds information about a single subexpression
883** somewhere in the SELECT statement. An array of these structures holds
884** all the information we need to generate code for aggregate
885** expressions.
886**
887** Note that when analyzing a SELECT containing aggregates, both
888** non-aggregate field variables and aggregate functions are stored
889** in the AggExpr array of the Parser structure.
890**
891** The pExpr field points to an expression that is part of either the
892** field list, the GROUP BY clause, the HAVING clause or the ORDER BY
893** clause. The expression will be freed when those clauses are cleaned
894** up. Do not try to delete the expression attached to AggExpr.pExpr.
895**
896** If AggExpr.pExpr==0, that means the expression is "count(*)".
897*/
898struct AggExpr {
899 int isAgg; /* if TRUE contains an aggregate function */
900 Expr *pExpr; /* The expression */
901 FuncDef *pFunc; /* Information about the aggregate function */
902};
903
904/*
905** An SQL parser context. A copy of this structure is passed through
906** the parser and down into all the parser action routine in order to
907** carry around information that is global to the entire parse.
908*/
909struct Parse {
910 sqlite *db; /* The main database structure */
911 int rc; /* Return code from execution */
912 char *zErrMsg; /* An error message */
913 Token sErrToken; /* The token at which the error occurred */
914 Token sFirstToken; /* The first token parsed */
915 Token sLastToken; /* The last token parsed */
916 const char *zTail; /* All SQL text past the last semicolon parsed */
917 Table *pNewTable; /* A table being constructed by CREATE TABLE */
918 Vdbe *pVdbe; /* An engine for executing database bytecode */
919 u8 colNamesSet; /* TRUE after OP_ColumnName has been issued to pVdbe */
920 u8 explain; /* True if the EXPLAIN flag is found on the query */
921 u8 nameClash; /* A permanent table name clashes with temp table name */
922 u8 useAgg; /* If true, extract field values from the aggregator
923 ** while generating expressions. Normally false */
924 int nErr; /* Number of errors seen */
925 int nTab; /* Number of previously allocated VDBE cursors */
926 int nMem; /* Number of memory cells used so far */
927 int nSet; /* Number of sets used so far */
928 int nAgg; /* Number of aggregate expressions */
929 int nVar; /* Number of '?' variables seen in the SQL so far */
930 AggExpr *aAgg; /* An array of aggregate expressions */
931 const char *zAuthContext; /* The 6th parameter to db->xAuth callbacks */
932 Trigger *pNewTrigger; /* Trigger under construct by a CREATE TRIGGER */
933 TriggerStack *trigStack; /* Trigger actions being coded */
934};
935
936/*
937** An instance of the following structure can be declared on a stack and used
938** to save the Parse.zAuthContext value so that it can be restored later.
939*/
940struct AuthContext {
941 const char *zAuthContext; /* Put saved Parse.zAuthContext here */
942 Parse *pParse; /* The Parse structure */
943};
944
945/*
946** Bitfield flags for P2 value in OP_PutIntKey and OP_Delete
947*/
948#define OPFLAG_NCHANGE 1 /* Set to update db->nChange */
949#define OPFLAG_LASTROWID 2 /* Set to update db->lastRowid */
950#define OPFLAG_CSCHANGE 4 /* Set to update db->csChange */
951
952/*
953 * Each trigger present in the database schema is stored as an instance of
954 * struct Trigger.
955 *
956 * Pointers to instances of struct Trigger are stored in two ways.
957 * 1. In the "trigHash" hash table (part of the sqlite* that represents the
958 * database). This allows Trigger structures to be retrieved by name.
959 * 2. All triggers associated with a single table form a linked list, using the
960 * pNext member of struct Trigger. A pointer to the first element of the
961 * linked list is stored as the "pTrigger" member of the associated
962 * struct Table.
963 *
964 * The "step_list" member points to the first element of a linked list
965 * containing the SQL statements specified as the trigger program.
966 */
967struct Trigger {
968 char *name; /* The name of the trigger */
969 char *table; /* The table or view to which the trigger applies */
970 u8 iDb; /* Database containing this trigger */
971 u8 iTabDb; /* Database containing Trigger.table */
972 u8 op; /* One of TK_DELETE, TK_UPDATE, TK_INSERT */
973 u8 tr_tm; /* One of TK_BEFORE, TK_AFTER */
974 Expr *pWhen; /* The WHEN clause of the expresion (may be NULL) */
975 IdList *pColumns; /* If this is an UPDATE OF <column-list> trigger,
976 the <column-list> is stored here */
977 int foreach; /* One of TK_ROW or TK_STATEMENT */
978 Token nameToken; /* Token containing zName. Use during parsing only */
979
980 TriggerStep *step_list; /* Link list of trigger program steps */
981 Trigger *pNext; /* Next trigger associated with the table */
982};
983
984/*
985 * An instance of struct TriggerStep is used to store a single SQL statement
986 * that is a part of a trigger-program.
987 *
988 * Instances of struct TriggerStep are stored in a singly linked list (linked
989 * using the "pNext" member) referenced by the "step_list" member of the
990 * associated struct Trigger instance. The first element of the linked list is
991 * the first step of the trigger-program.
992 *
993 * The "op" member indicates whether this is a "DELETE", "INSERT", "UPDATE" or
994 * "SELECT" statement. The meanings of the other members is determined by the
995 * value of "op" as follows:
996 *
997 * (op == TK_INSERT)
998 * orconf -> stores the ON CONFLICT algorithm
999 * pSelect -> If this is an INSERT INTO ... SELECT ... statement, then
1000 * this stores a pointer to the SELECT statement. Otherwise NULL.
1001 * target -> A token holding the name of the table to insert into.
1002 * pExprList -> If this is an INSERT INTO ... VALUES ... statement, then
1003 * this stores values to be inserted. Otherwise NULL.
1004 * pIdList -> If this is an INSERT INTO ... (<column-names>) VALUES ...
1005 * statement, then this stores the column-names to be
1006 * inserted into.
1007 *
1008 * (op == TK_DELETE)
1009 * target -> A token holding the name of the table to delete from.
1010 * pWhere -> The WHERE clause of the DELETE statement if one is specified.
1011 * Otherwise NULL.
1012 *
1013 * (op == TK_UPDATE)
1014 * target -> A token holding the name of the table to update rows of.
1015 * pWhere -> The WHERE clause of the UPDATE statement if one is specified.
1016 * Otherwise NULL.
1017 * pExprList -> A list of the columns to update and the expressions to update
1018 * them to. See sqliteUpdate() documentation of "pChanges"
1019 * argument.
1020 *
1021 */
1022struct TriggerStep {
1023 int op; /* One of TK_DELETE, TK_UPDATE, TK_INSERT, TK_SELECT */
1024 int orconf; /* OE_Rollback etc. */
1025 Trigger *pTrig; /* The trigger that this step is a part of */
1026
1027 Select *pSelect; /* Valid for SELECT and sometimes
1028 INSERT steps (when pExprList == 0) */
1029 Token target; /* Valid for DELETE, UPDATE, INSERT steps */
1030 Expr *pWhere; /* Valid for DELETE, UPDATE steps */
1031 ExprList *pExprList; /* Valid for UPDATE statements and sometimes
1032 INSERT steps (when pSelect == 0) */
1033 IdList *pIdList; /* Valid for INSERT statements only */
1034
1035 TriggerStep * pNext; /* Next in the link-list */
1036};
1037
1038/*
1039 * An instance of struct TriggerStack stores information required during code
1040 * generation of a single trigger program. While the trigger program is being
1041 * coded, its associated TriggerStack instance is pointed to by the
1042 * "pTriggerStack" member of the Parse structure.
1043 *
1044 * The pTab member points to the table that triggers are being coded on. The
1045 * newIdx member contains the index of the vdbe cursor that points at the temp
1046 * table that stores the new.* references. If new.* references are not valid
1047 * for the trigger being coded (for example an ON DELETE trigger), then newIdx
1048 * is set to -1. The oldIdx member is analogous to newIdx, for old.* references.
1049 *
1050 * The ON CONFLICT policy to be used for the trigger program steps is stored
1051 * as the orconf member. If this is OE_Default, then the ON CONFLICT clause
1052 * specified for individual triggers steps is used.
1053 *
1054 * struct TriggerStack has a "pNext" member, to allow linked lists to be
1055 * constructed. When coding nested triggers (triggers fired by other triggers)
1056 * each nested trigger stores its parent trigger's TriggerStack as the "pNext"
1057 * pointer. Once the nested trigger has been coded, the pNext value is restored
1058 * to the pTriggerStack member of the Parse stucture and coding of the parent
1059 * trigger continues.
1060 *
1061 * Before a nested trigger is coded, the linked list pointed to by the
1062 * pTriggerStack is scanned to ensure that the trigger is not about to be coded
1063 * recursively. If this condition is detected, the nested trigger is not coded.
1064 */
1065struct TriggerStack {
1066 Table *pTab; /* Table that triggers are currently being coded on */
1067 int newIdx; /* Index of vdbe cursor to "new" temp table */
1068 int oldIdx; /* Index of vdbe cursor to "old" temp table */
1069 int orconf; /* Current orconf policy */
1070 int ignoreJump; /* where to jump to for a RAISE(IGNORE) */
1071 Trigger *pTrigger; /* The trigger currently being coded */
1072 TriggerStack *pNext; /* Next trigger down on the trigger stack */
1073};
1074
1075/*
1076** The following structure contains information used by the sqliteFix...
1077** routines as they walk the parse tree to make database references
1078** explicit.
1079*/
1080typedef struct DbFixer DbFixer;
1081struct DbFixer {
1082 Parse *pParse; /* The parsing context. Error messages written here */
1083 const char *zDb; /* Make sure all objects are contained in this database */
1084 const char *zType; /* Type of the container - used for error messages */
1085 const Token *pName; /* Name of the container - used for error messages */
1086};
1087
1088/*
1089 * This global flag is set for performance testing of triggers. When it is set
1090 * SQLite will perform the overhead of building new and old trigger references
1091 * even when no triggers exist
1092 */
1093extern int always_code_trigger_setup;
1094
1095/*
1096** Internal function prototypes
1097*/
1098int sqliteStrICmp(const char *, const char *);
1099int sqliteStrNICmp(const char *, const char *, int);
1100int sqliteHashNoCase(const char *, int);
1101int sqliteIsNumber(const char*);
1102int sqliteCompare(const char *, const char *);
1103int sqliteSortCompare(const char *, const char *);
1104void sqliteRealToSortable(double r, char *);
1105#ifdef MEMORY_DEBUG
1106 void *sqliteMalloc_(int,int,char*,int);
1107 void sqliteFree_(void*,char*,int);
1108 void *sqliteRealloc_(void*,int,char*,int);
1109 char *sqliteStrDup_(const char*,char*,int);
1110 char *sqliteStrNDup_(const char*, int,char*,int);
1111 void sqliteCheckMemory(void*,int);
1112#else
1113 void *sqliteMalloc(int);
1114 void *sqliteMallocRaw(int);
1115 void sqliteFree(void*);
1116 void *sqliteRealloc(void*,int);
1117 char *sqliteStrDup(const char*);
1118 char *sqliteStrNDup(const char*, int);
1119# define sqliteCheckMemory(a,b)
1120#endif
1121char *sqliteMPrintf(const char*, ...);
1122char *sqliteVMPrintf(const char*, va_list);
1123void sqliteSetString(char **, ...);
1124void sqliteSetNString(char **, ...);
1125void sqliteErrorMsg(Parse*, const char*, ...);
1126void sqliteDequote(char*);
1127int sqliteKeywordCode(const char*, int);
1128int sqliteRunParser(Parse*, const char*, char **);
1129void sqliteExec(Parse*);
1130Expr *sqliteExpr(int, Expr*, Expr*, Token*);
1131void sqliteExprSpan(Expr*,Token*,Token*);
1132Expr *sqliteExprFunction(ExprList*, Token*);
1133void sqliteExprDelete(Expr*);
1134ExprList *sqliteExprListAppend(ExprList*,Expr*,Token*);
1135void sqliteExprListDelete(ExprList*);
1136int sqliteInit(sqlite*, char**);
1137void sqlitePragma(Parse*,Token*,Token*,int);
1138void sqliteResetInternalSchema(sqlite*, int);
1139void sqliteBeginParse(Parse*,int);
1140void sqliteRollbackInternalChanges(sqlite*);
1141void sqliteCommitInternalChanges(sqlite*);
1142Table *sqliteResultSetOfSelect(Parse*,char*,Select*);
1143void sqliteOpenMasterTable(Vdbe *v, int);
1144void sqliteStartTable(Parse*,Token*,Token*,int,int);
1145void sqliteAddColumn(Parse*,Token*);
1146void sqliteAddNotNull(Parse*, int);
1147void sqliteAddPrimaryKey(Parse*, IdList*, int);
1148void sqliteAddColumnType(Parse*,Token*,Token*);
1149void sqliteAddDefaultValue(Parse*,Token*,int);
1150int sqliteCollateType(const char*, int);
1151void sqliteAddCollateType(Parse*, int);
1152void sqliteEndTable(Parse*,Token*,Select*);
1153void sqliteCreateView(Parse*,Token*,Token*,Select*,int);
1154int sqliteViewGetColumnNames(Parse*,Table*);
1155void sqliteDropTable(Parse*, Token*, int);
1156void sqliteDeleteTable(sqlite*, Table*);
1157void sqliteInsert(Parse*, SrcList*, ExprList*, Select*, IdList*, int);
1158IdList *sqliteIdListAppend(IdList*, Token*);
1159int sqliteIdListIndex(IdList*,const char*);
1160SrcList *sqliteSrcListAppend(SrcList*, Token*, Token*);
1161void sqliteSrcListAddAlias(SrcList*, Token*);
1162void sqliteSrcListAssignCursors(Parse*, SrcList*);
1163void sqliteIdListDelete(IdList*);
1164void sqliteSrcListDelete(SrcList*);
1165void sqliteCreateIndex(Parse*,Token*,SrcList*,IdList*,int,Token*,Token*);
1166void sqliteDropIndex(Parse*, SrcList*);
1167void sqliteAddKeyType(Vdbe*, ExprList*);
1168void sqliteAddIdxKeyType(Vdbe*, Index*);
1169int sqliteSelect(Parse*, Select*, int, int, Select*, int, int*);
1170Select *sqliteSelectNew(ExprList*,SrcList*,Expr*,ExprList*,Expr*,ExprList*,
1171 int,int,int);
1172void sqliteSelectDelete(Select*);
1173void sqliteSelectUnbind(Select*);
1174Table *sqliteSrcListLookup(Parse*, SrcList*);
1175int sqliteIsReadOnly(Parse*, Table*, int);
1176void sqliteDeleteFrom(Parse*, SrcList*, Expr*);
1177void sqliteUpdate(Parse*, SrcList*, ExprList*, Expr*, int);
1178WhereInfo *sqliteWhereBegin(Parse*, SrcList*, Expr*, int, ExprList**);
1179void sqliteWhereEnd(WhereInfo*);
1180void sqliteExprCode(Parse*, Expr*);
1181int sqliteExprCodeExprList(Parse*, ExprList*, int);
1182void sqliteExprIfTrue(Parse*, Expr*, int, int);
1183void sqliteExprIfFalse(Parse*, Expr*, int, int);
1184Table *sqliteFindTable(sqlite*,const char*, const char*);
1185Table *sqliteLocateTable(Parse*,const char*, const char*);
1186Index *sqliteFindIndex(sqlite*,const char*, const char*);
1187void sqliteUnlinkAndDeleteIndex(sqlite*,Index*);
1188void sqliteCopy(Parse*, SrcList*, Token*, Token*, int);
1189void sqliteVacuum(Parse*, Token*);
1190int sqliteRunVacuum(char**, sqlite*);
1191int sqliteGlobCompare(const unsigned char*,const unsigned char*);
1192int sqliteLikeCompare(const unsigned char*,const unsigned char*);
1193char *sqliteTableNameFromToken(Token*);
1194int sqliteExprCheck(Parse*, Expr*, int, int*);
1195int sqliteExprType(Expr*);
1196int sqliteExprCompare(Expr*, Expr*);
1197int sqliteFuncId(Token*);
1198int sqliteExprResolveIds(Parse*, SrcList*, ExprList*, Expr*);
1199int sqliteExprAnalyzeAggregates(Parse*, Expr*);
1200Vdbe *sqliteGetVdbe(Parse*);
1201void sqliteRandomness(int, void*);
1202void sqliteRollbackAll(sqlite*);
1203void sqliteCodeVerifySchema(Parse*, int);
1204void sqliteBeginTransaction(Parse*, int);
1205void sqliteCommitTransaction(Parse*);
1206void sqliteRollbackTransaction(Parse*);
1207int sqliteExprIsConstant(Expr*);
1208int sqliteExprIsInteger(Expr*, int*);
1209int sqliteIsRowid(const char*);
1210void sqliteGenerateRowDelete(sqlite*, Vdbe*, Table*, int, int);
1211void sqliteGenerateRowIndexDelete(sqlite*, Vdbe*, Table*, int, char*);
1212void sqliteGenerateConstraintChecks(Parse*,Table*,int,char*,int,int,int,int);
1213void sqliteCompleteInsertion(Parse*, Table*, int, char*, int, int, int);
1214int sqliteOpenTableAndIndices(Parse*, Table*, int);
1215void sqliteBeginWriteOperation(Parse*, int, int);
1216void sqliteEndWriteOperation(Parse*);
1217Expr *sqliteExprDup(Expr*);
1218void sqliteTokenCopy(Token*, Token*);
1219ExprList *sqliteExprListDup(ExprList*);
1220SrcList *sqliteSrcListDup(SrcList*);
1221IdList *sqliteIdListDup(IdList*);
1222Select *sqliteSelectDup(Select*);
1223FuncDef *sqliteFindFunction(sqlite*,const char*,int,int,int);
1224void sqliteRegisterBuiltinFunctions(sqlite*);
1225void sqliteRegisterDateTimeFunctions(sqlite*);
1226int sqliteSafetyOn(sqlite*);
1227int sqliteSafetyOff(sqlite*);
1228int sqliteSafetyCheck(sqlite*);
1229void sqliteChangeCookie(sqlite*, Vdbe*);
1230void sqliteBeginTrigger(Parse*, Token*,int,int,IdList*,SrcList*,int,Expr*,int);
1231void sqliteFinishTrigger(Parse*, TriggerStep*, Token*);
1232void sqliteDropTrigger(Parse*, SrcList*);
1233void sqliteDropTriggerPtr(Parse*, Trigger*, int);
1234int sqliteTriggersExist(Parse* , Trigger* , int , int , int, ExprList*);
1235int sqliteCodeRowTrigger(Parse*, int, ExprList*, int, Table *, int, int,
1236 int, int);
1237void sqliteViewTriggers(Parse*, Table*, Expr*, int, ExprList*);
1238void sqliteDeleteTriggerStep(TriggerStep*);
1239TriggerStep *sqliteTriggerSelectStep(Select*);
1240TriggerStep *sqliteTriggerInsertStep(Token*, IdList*, ExprList*, Select*, int);
1241TriggerStep *sqliteTriggerUpdateStep(Token*, ExprList*, Expr*, int);
1242TriggerStep *sqliteTriggerDeleteStep(Token*, Expr*);
1243void sqliteDeleteTrigger(Trigger*);
1244int sqliteJoinType(Parse*, Token*, Token*, Token*);
1245void sqliteCreateForeignKey(Parse*, IdList*, Token*, IdList*, int);
1246void sqliteDeferForeignKey(Parse*, int);
1247#ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_AUTHORIZATION
1248 void sqliteAuthRead(Parse*,Expr*,SrcList*);
1249 int sqliteAuthCheck(Parse*,int, const char*, const char*, const char*);
1250 void sqliteAuthContextPush(Parse*, AuthContext*, const char*);
1251 void sqliteAuthContextPop(AuthContext*);
1252#else
1253# define sqliteAuthRead(a,b,c)
1254# define sqliteAuthCheck(a,b,c,d,e) SQLITE_OK
1255# define sqliteAuthContextPush(a,b,c)
1256# define sqliteAuthContextPop(a) ((void)(a))
1257#endif
1258void sqliteAttach(Parse*, Token*, Token*, Token*);
1259void sqliteDetach(Parse*, Token*);
1260int sqliteBtreeFactory(const sqlite *db, const char *zFilename,
1261 int mode, int nPg, Btree **ppBtree);
1262int sqliteFixInit(DbFixer*, Parse*, int, const char*, const Token*);
1263int sqliteFixSrcList(DbFixer*, SrcList*);
1264int sqliteFixSelect(DbFixer*, Select*);
1265int sqliteFixExpr(DbFixer*, Expr*);
1266int sqliteFixExprList(DbFixer*, ExprList*);
1267int sqliteFixTriggerStep(DbFixer*, TriggerStep*);
1268double sqliteAtoF(const char *z, const char **);
1269char *sqlite_snprintf(int,char*,const char*,...);
1270int sqliteFitsIn32Bits(const char *);
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