1 /* 2 ** 2003 September 6 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 ** This file contains code used for creating, destroying, and populating 13 ** a VDBE (or an "sqlite3_stmt" as it is known to the outside world.) Prior 14 ** to version 2.8.7, all this code was combined into the vdbe.c source file. 15 ** But that file was getting too big so this subroutines were split out. 16 */ 17 #include "sqliteInt.h" 18 #include "vdbeInt.h" 19 20 21 22 /* 23 ** When debugging the code generator in a symbolic debugger, one can 24 ** set the sqlite3VdbeAddopTrace to 1 and all opcodes will be printed 25 ** as they are added to the instruction stream. 26 */ 27 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 28 int sqlite3VdbeAddopTrace = 0; 29 #endif 30 31 32 /* 33 ** Create a new virtual database engine. 34 */ 35 Vdbe *sqlite3VdbeCreate(sqlite3 *db){ 36 Vdbe *p; 37 p = sqlite3DbMallocZero(db, sizeof(Vdbe) ); 38 if( p==0 ) return 0; 39 p->db = db; 40 if( db->pVdbe ){ 41 db->pVdbe->pPrev = p; 42 } 43 p->pNext = db->pVdbe; 44 p->pPrev = 0; 45 db->pVdbe = p; 46 p->magic = VDBE_MAGIC_INIT; 47 return p; 48 } 49 50 /* 51 ** Remember the SQL string for a prepared statement. 52 */ 53 void sqlite3VdbeSetSql(Vdbe *p, const char *z, int n, int isPrepareV2){ 54 assert( isPrepareV2==1 || isPrepareV2==0 ); 55 if( p==0 ) return; 56 #ifdef SQLITE_OMIT_TRACE 57 if( !isPrepareV2 ) return; 58 #endif 59 assert( p->zSql==0 ); 60 p->zSql = sqlite3DbStrNDup(p->db, z, n); 61 p->isPrepareV2 = (u8)isPrepareV2; 62 } 63 64 /* 65 ** Return the SQL associated with a prepared statement 66 */ 67 const char *sqlite3_sql(sqlite3_stmt *pStmt){ 68 Vdbe *p = (Vdbe *)pStmt; 69 return (p && p->isPrepareV2) ? p->zSql : 0; 70 } 71 72 /* 73 ** Swap all content between two VDBE structures. 74 */ 75 void sqlite3VdbeSwap(Vdbe *pA, Vdbe *pB){ 76 Vdbe tmp, *pTmp; 77 char *zTmp; 78 tmp = *pA; 79 *pA = *pB; 80 *pB = tmp; 81 pTmp = pA->pNext; 82 pA->pNext = pB->pNext; 83 pB->pNext = pTmp; 84 pTmp = pA->pPrev; 85 pA->pPrev = pB->pPrev; 86 pB->pPrev = pTmp; 87 zTmp = pA->zSql; 88 pA->zSql = pB->zSql; 89 pB->zSql = zTmp; 90 pB->isPrepareV2 = pA->isPrepareV2; 91 } 92 93 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 94 /* 95 ** Turn tracing on or off 96 */ 97 void sqlite3VdbeTrace(Vdbe *p, FILE *trace){ 98 p->trace = trace; 99 } 100 #endif 101 102 /* 103 ** Resize the Vdbe.aOp array so that it is at least one op larger than 104 ** it was. 105 ** 106 ** If an out-of-memory error occurs while resizing the array, return 107 ** SQLITE_NOMEM. In this case Vdbe.aOp and Vdbe.nOpAlloc remain 108 ** unchanged (this is so that any opcodes already allocated can be 109 ** correctly deallocated along with the rest of the Vdbe). 110 */ 111 static int growOpArray(Vdbe *p){ 112 VdbeOp *pNew; 113 int nNew = (p->nOpAlloc ? p->nOpAlloc*2 : (int)(1024/sizeof(Op))); 114 pNew = sqlite3DbRealloc(p->db, p->aOp, nNew*sizeof(Op)); 115 if( pNew ){ 116 p->nOpAlloc = sqlite3DbMallocSize(p->db, pNew)/sizeof(Op); 117 p->aOp = pNew; 118 } 119 return (pNew ? SQLITE_OK : SQLITE_NOMEM); 120 } 121 122 /* 123 ** Add a new instruction to the list of instructions current in the 124 ** VDBE. Return the address of the new instruction. 125 ** 126 ** Parameters: 127 ** 128 ** p Pointer to the VDBE 129 ** 130 ** op The opcode for this instruction 131 ** 132 ** p1, p2, p3 Operands 133 ** 134 ** Use the sqlite3VdbeResolveLabel() function to fix an address and 135 ** the sqlite3VdbeChangeP4() function to change the value of the P4 136 ** operand. 137 */ 138 int sqlite3VdbeAddOp3(Vdbe *p, int op, int p1, int p2, int p3){ 139 int i; 140 VdbeOp *pOp; 141 142 i = p->nOp; 143 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_INIT ); 144 assert( op>0 && op<0xff ); 145 if( p->nOpAlloc<=i ){ 146 if( growOpArray(p) ){ 147 return 1; 148 } 149 } 150 p->nOp++; 151 pOp = &p->aOp[i]; 152 pOp->opcode = (u8)op; 153 pOp->p5 = 0; 154 pOp->p1 = p1; 155 pOp->p2 = p2; 156 pOp->p3 = p3; 157 pOp->p4.p = 0; 158 pOp->p4type = P4_NOTUSED; 159 p->expired = 0; 160 if( op==OP_ParseSchema ){ 161 /* Any program that uses the OP_ParseSchema opcode needs to lock 162 ** all btrees. */ 163 int j; 164 for(j=0; j<p->db->nDb; j++) sqlite3VdbeUsesBtree(p, j); 165 } 166 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 167 pOp->zComment = 0; 168 if( sqlite3VdbeAddopTrace ) sqlite3VdbePrintOp(0, i, &p->aOp[i]); 169 #endif 170 #ifdef VDBE_PROFILE 171 pOp->cycles = 0; 172 pOp->cnt = 0; 173 #endif 174 return i; 175 } 176 int sqlite3VdbeAddOp0(Vdbe *p, int op){ 177 return sqlite3VdbeAddOp3(p, op, 0, 0, 0); 178 } 179 int sqlite3VdbeAddOp1(Vdbe *p, int op, int p1){ 180 return sqlite3VdbeAddOp3(p, op, p1, 0, 0); 181 } 182 int sqlite3VdbeAddOp2(Vdbe *p, int op, int p1, int p2){ 183 return sqlite3VdbeAddOp3(p, op, p1, p2, 0); 184 } 185 186 187 /* 188 ** Add an opcode that includes the p4 value as a pointer. 189 */ 190 int sqlite3VdbeAddOp4( 191 Vdbe *p, /* Add the opcode to this VM */ 192 int op, /* The new opcode */ 193 int p1, /* The P1 operand */ 194 int p2, /* The P2 operand */ 195 int p3, /* The P3 operand */ 196 const char *zP4, /* The P4 operand */ 197 int p4type /* P4 operand type */ 198 ){ 199 int addr = sqlite3VdbeAddOp3(p, op, p1, p2, p3); 200 sqlite3VdbeChangeP4(p, addr, zP4, p4type); 201 return addr; 202 } 203 204 /* 205 ** Add an opcode that includes the p4 value as an integer. 206 */ 207 int sqlite3VdbeAddOp4Int( 208 Vdbe *p, /* Add the opcode to this VM */ 209 int op, /* The new opcode */ 210 int p1, /* The P1 operand */ 211 int p2, /* The P2 operand */ 212 int p3, /* The P3 operand */ 213 int p4 /* The P4 operand as an integer */ 214 ){ 215 int addr = sqlite3VdbeAddOp3(p, op, p1, p2, p3); 216 sqlite3VdbeChangeP4(p, addr, SQLITE_INT_TO_PTR(p4), P4_INT32); 217 return addr; 218 } 219 220 /* 221 ** Create a new symbolic label for an instruction that has yet to be 222 ** coded. The symbolic label is really just a negative number. The 223 ** label can be used as the P2 value of an operation. Later, when 224 ** the label is resolved to a specific address, the VDBE will scan 225 ** through its operation list and change all values of P2 which match 226 ** the label into the resolved address. 227 ** 228 ** The VDBE knows that a P2 value is a label because labels are 229 ** always negative and P2 values are suppose to be non-negative. 230 ** Hence, a negative P2 value is a label that has yet to be resolved. 231 ** 232 ** Zero is returned if a malloc() fails. 233 */ 234 int sqlite3VdbeMakeLabel(Vdbe *p){ 235 int i; 236 i = p->nLabel++; 237 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_INIT ); 238 if( i>=p->nLabelAlloc ){ 239 int n = p->nLabelAlloc*2 + 5; 240 p->aLabel = sqlite3DbReallocOrFree(p->db, p->aLabel, 241 n*sizeof(p->aLabel[0])); 242 p->nLabelAlloc = sqlite3DbMallocSize(p->db, p->aLabel)/sizeof(p->aLabel[0]); 243 } 244 if( p->aLabel ){ 245 p->aLabel[i] = -1; 246 } 247 return -1-i; 248 } 249 250 /* 251 ** Resolve label "x" to be the address of the next instruction to 252 ** be inserted. The parameter "x" must have been obtained from 253 ** a prior call to sqlite3VdbeMakeLabel(). 254 */ 255 void sqlite3VdbeResolveLabel(Vdbe *p, int x){ 256 int j = -1-x; 257 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_INIT ); 258 assert( j>=0 && j<p->nLabel ); 259 if( p->aLabel ){ 260 p->aLabel[j] = p->nOp; 261 } 262 } 263 264 /* 265 ** Mark the VDBE as one that can only be run one time. 266 */ 267 void sqlite3VdbeRunOnlyOnce(Vdbe *p){ 268 p->runOnlyOnce = 1; 269 } 270 271 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG /* sqlite3AssertMayAbort() logic */ 272 273 /* 274 ** The following type and function are used to iterate through all opcodes 275 ** in a Vdbe main program and each of the sub-programs (triggers) it may 276 ** invoke directly or indirectly. It should be used as follows: 277 ** 278 ** Op *pOp; 279 ** VdbeOpIter sIter; 280 ** 281 ** memset(&sIter, 0, sizeof(sIter)); 282 ** sIter.v = v; // v is of type Vdbe* 283 ** while( (pOp = opIterNext(&sIter)) ){ 284 ** // Do something with pOp 285 ** } 286 ** sqlite3DbFree(v->db, sIter.apSub); 287 ** 288 */ 289 typedef struct VdbeOpIter VdbeOpIter; 290 struct VdbeOpIter { 291 Vdbe *v; /* Vdbe to iterate through the opcodes of */ 292 SubProgram **apSub; /* Array of subprograms */ 293 int nSub; /* Number of entries in apSub */ 294 int iAddr; /* Address of next instruction to return */ 295 int iSub; /* 0 = main program, 1 = first sub-program etc. */ 296 }; 297 static Op *opIterNext(VdbeOpIter *p){ 298 Vdbe *v = p->v; 299 Op *pRet = 0; 300 Op *aOp; 301 int nOp; 302 303 if( p->iSub<=p->nSub ){ 304 305 if( p->iSub==0 ){ 306 aOp = v->aOp; 307 nOp = v->nOp; 308 }else{ 309 aOp = p->apSub[p->iSub-1]->aOp; 310 nOp = p->apSub[p->iSub-1]->nOp; 311 } 312 assert( p->iAddr<nOp ); 313 314 pRet = &aOp[p->iAddr]; 315 p->iAddr++; 316 if( p->iAddr==nOp ){ 317 p->iSub++; 318 p->iAddr = 0; 319 } 320 321 if( pRet->p4type==P4_SUBPROGRAM ){ 322 int nByte = (p->nSub+1)*sizeof(SubProgram*); 323 int j; 324 for(j=0; j<p->nSub; j++){ 325 if( p->apSub[j]==pRet->p4.pProgram ) break; 326 } 327 if( j==p->nSub ){ 328 p->apSub = sqlite3DbReallocOrFree(v->db, p->apSub, nByte); 329 if( !p->apSub ){ 330 pRet = 0; 331 }else{ 332 p->apSub[p->nSub++] = pRet->p4.pProgram; 333 } 334 } 335 } 336 } 337 338 return pRet; 339 } 340 341 /* 342 ** Check if the program stored in the VM associated with pParse may 343 ** throw an ABORT exception (causing the statement, but not entire transaction 344 ** to be rolled back). This condition is true if the main program or any 345 ** sub-programs contains any of the following: 346 ** 347 ** * OP_Halt with P1=SQLITE_CONSTRAINT and P2=OE_Abort. 348 ** * OP_HaltIfNull with P1=SQLITE_CONSTRAINT and P2=OE_Abort. 349 ** * OP_Destroy 350 ** * OP_VUpdate 351 ** * OP_VRename 352 ** * OP_FkCounter with P2==0 (immediate foreign key constraint) 353 ** 354 ** Then check that the value of Parse.mayAbort is true if an 355 ** ABORT may be thrown, or false otherwise. Return true if it does 356 ** match, or false otherwise. This function is intended to be used as 357 ** part of an assert statement in the compiler. Similar to: 358 ** 359 ** assert( sqlite3VdbeAssertMayAbort(pParse->pVdbe, pParse->mayAbort) ); 360 */ 361 int sqlite3VdbeAssertMayAbort(Vdbe *v, int mayAbort){ 362 int hasAbort = 0; 363 Op *pOp; 364 VdbeOpIter sIter; 365 memset(&sIter, 0, sizeof(sIter)); 366 sIter.v = v; 367 368 while( (pOp = opIterNext(&sIter))!=0 ){ 369 int opcode = pOp->opcode; 370 if( opcode==OP_Destroy || opcode==OP_VUpdate || opcode==OP_VRename 371 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_FOREIGN_KEY 372 || (opcode==OP_FkCounter && pOp->p1==0 && pOp->p2==1) 373 #endif 374 || ((opcode==OP_Halt || opcode==OP_HaltIfNull) 375 && (pOp->p1==SQLITE_CONSTRAINT && pOp->p2==OE_Abort)) 376 ){ 377 hasAbort = 1; 378 break; 379 } 380 } 381 sqlite3DbFree(v->db, sIter.apSub); 382 383 /* Return true if hasAbort==mayAbort. Or if a malloc failure occured. 384 ** If malloc failed, then the while() loop above may not have iterated 385 ** through all opcodes and hasAbort may be set incorrectly. Return 386 ** true for this case to prevent the assert() in the callers frame 387 ** from failing. */ 388 return ( v->db->mallocFailed || hasAbort==mayAbort ); 389 } 390 #endif /* SQLITE_DEBUG - the sqlite3AssertMayAbort() function */ 391 392 /* 393 ** Loop through the program looking for P2 values that are negative 394 ** on jump instructions. Each such value is a label. Resolve the 395 ** label by setting the P2 value to its correct non-zero value. 396 ** 397 ** This routine is called once after all opcodes have been inserted. 398 ** 399 ** Variable *pMaxFuncArgs is set to the maximum value of any P2 argument 400 ** to an OP_Function, OP_AggStep or OP_VFilter opcode. This is used by 401 ** sqlite3VdbeMakeReady() to size the Vdbe.apArg[] array. 402 ** 403 ** The Op.opflags field is set on all opcodes. 404 */ 405 static void resolveP2Values(Vdbe *p, int *pMaxFuncArgs){ 406 int i; 407 int nMaxArgs = *pMaxFuncArgs; 408 Op *pOp; 409 int *aLabel = p->aLabel; 410 p->readOnly = 1; 411 for(pOp=p->aOp, i=p->nOp-1; i>=0; i--, pOp++){ 412 u8 opcode = pOp->opcode; 413 414 pOp->opflags = sqlite3OpcodeProperty[opcode]; 415 if( opcode==OP_Function || opcode==OP_AggStep ){ 416 if( pOp->p5>nMaxArgs ) nMaxArgs = pOp->p5; 417 }else if( (opcode==OP_Transaction && pOp->p2!=0) || opcode==OP_Vacuum ){ 418 p->readOnly = 0; 419 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_VIRTUALTABLE 420 }else if( opcode==OP_VUpdate ){ 421 if( pOp->p2>nMaxArgs ) nMaxArgs = pOp->p2; 422 }else if( opcode==OP_VFilter ){ 423 int n; 424 assert( p->nOp - i >= 3 ); 425 assert( pOp[-1].opcode==OP_Integer ); 426 n = pOp[-1].p1; 427 if( n>nMaxArgs ) nMaxArgs = n; 428 #endif 429 } 430 431 if( (pOp->opflags & OPFLG_JUMP)!=0 && pOp->p2<0 ){ 432 assert( -1-pOp->p2<p->nLabel ); 433 pOp->p2 = aLabel[-1-pOp->p2]; 434 } 435 } 436 sqlite3DbFree(p->db, p->aLabel); 437 p->aLabel = 0; 438 439 *pMaxFuncArgs = nMaxArgs; 440 } 441 442 /* 443 ** Return the address of the next instruction to be inserted. 444 */ 445 int sqlite3VdbeCurrentAddr(Vdbe *p){ 446 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_INIT ); 447 return p->nOp; 448 } 449 450 /* 451 ** This function returns a pointer to the array of opcodes associated with 452 ** the Vdbe passed as the first argument. It is the callers responsibility 453 ** to arrange for the returned array to be eventually freed using the 454 ** vdbeFreeOpArray() function. 455 ** 456 ** Before returning, *pnOp is set to the number of entries in the returned 457 ** array. Also, *pnMaxArg is set to the larger of its current value and 458 ** the number of entries in the Vdbe.apArg[] array required to execute the 459 ** returned program. 460 */ 461 VdbeOp *sqlite3VdbeTakeOpArray(Vdbe *p, int *pnOp, int *pnMaxArg){ 462 VdbeOp *aOp = p->aOp; 463 assert( aOp && !p->db->mallocFailed ); 464 465 /* Check that sqlite3VdbeUsesBtree() was not called on this VM */ 466 assert( p->btreeMask==0 ); 467 468 resolveP2Values(p, pnMaxArg); 469 *pnOp = p->nOp; 470 p->aOp = 0; 471 return aOp; 472 } 473 474 /* 475 ** Add a whole list of operations to the operation stack. Return the 476 ** address of the first operation added. 477 */ 478 int sqlite3VdbeAddOpList(Vdbe *p, int nOp, VdbeOpList const *aOp){ 479 int addr; 480 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_INIT ); 481 if( p->nOp + nOp > p->nOpAlloc && growOpArray(p) ){ 482 return 0; 483 } 484 addr = p->nOp; 485 if( ALWAYS(nOp>0) ){ 486 int i; 487 VdbeOpList const *pIn = aOp; 488 for(i=0; i<nOp; i++, pIn++){ 489 int p2 = pIn->p2; 490 VdbeOp *pOut = &p->aOp[i+addr]; 491 pOut->opcode = pIn->opcode; 492 pOut->p1 = pIn->p1; 493 if( p2<0 && (sqlite3OpcodeProperty[pOut->opcode] & OPFLG_JUMP)!=0 ){ 494 pOut->p2 = addr + ADDR(p2); 495 }else{ 496 pOut->p2 = p2; 497 } 498 pOut->p3 = pIn->p3; 499 pOut->p4type = P4_NOTUSED; 500 pOut->p4.p = 0; 501 pOut->p5 = 0; 502 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 503 pOut->zComment = 0; 504 if( sqlite3VdbeAddopTrace ){ 505 sqlite3VdbePrintOp(0, i+addr, &p->aOp[i+addr]); 506 } 507 #endif 508 } 509 p->nOp += nOp; 510 } 511 return addr; 512 } 513 514 /* 515 ** Change the value of the P1 operand for a specific instruction. 516 ** This routine is useful when a large program is loaded from a 517 ** static array using sqlite3VdbeAddOpList but we want to make a 518 ** few minor changes to the program. 519 */ 520 void sqlite3VdbeChangeP1(Vdbe *p, int addr, int val){ 521 assert( p!=0 ); 522 assert( addr>=0 ); 523 if( p->nOp>addr ){ 524 p->aOp[addr].p1 = val; 525 } 526 } 527 528 /* 529 ** Change the value of the P2 operand for a specific instruction. 530 ** This routine is useful for setting a jump destination. 531 */ 532 void sqlite3VdbeChangeP2(Vdbe *p, int addr, int val){ 533 assert( p!=0 ); 534 assert( addr>=0 ); 535 if( p->nOp>addr ){ 536 p->aOp[addr].p2 = val; 537 } 538 } 539 540 /* 541 ** Change the value of the P3 operand for a specific instruction. 542 */ 543 void sqlite3VdbeChangeP3(Vdbe *p, int addr, int val){ 544 assert( p!=0 ); 545 assert( addr>=0 ); 546 if( p->nOp>addr ){ 547 p->aOp[addr].p3 = val; 548 } 549 } 550 551 /* 552 ** Change the value of the P5 operand for the most recently 553 ** added operation. 554 */ 555 void sqlite3VdbeChangeP5(Vdbe *p, u8 val){ 556 assert( p!=0 ); 557 if( p->aOp ){ 558 assert( p->nOp>0 ); 559 p->aOp[p->nOp-1].p5 = val; 560 } 561 } 562 563 /* 564 ** Change the P2 operand of instruction addr so that it points to 565 ** the address of the next instruction to be coded. 566 */ 567 void sqlite3VdbeJumpHere(Vdbe *p, int addr){ 568 assert( addr>=0 ); 569 sqlite3VdbeChangeP2(p, addr, p->nOp); 570 } 571 572 573 /* 574 ** If the input FuncDef structure is ephemeral, then free it. If 575 ** the FuncDef is not ephermal, then do nothing. 576 */ 577 static void freeEphemeralFunction(sqlite3 *db, FuncDef *pDef){ 578 if( ALWAYS(pDef) && (pDef->flags & SQLITE_FUNC_EPHEM)!=0 ){ 579 sqlite3DbFree(db, pDef); 580 } 581 } 582 583 static void vdbeFreeOpArray(sqlite3 *, Op *, int); 584 585 /* 586 ** Delete a P4 value if necessary. 587 */ 588 static void freeP4(sqlite3 *db, int p4type, void *p4){ 589 if( p4 ){ 590 assert( db ); 591 switch( p4type ){ 592 case P4_REAL: 593 case P4_INT64: 594 case P4_DYNAMIC: 595 case P4_KEYINFO: 596 case P4_INTARRAY: 597 case P4_KEYINFO_HANDOFF: { 598 sqlite3DbFree(db, p4); 599 break; 600 } 601 case P4_MPRINTF: { 602 if( db->pnBytesFreed==0 ) sqlite3_free(p4); 603 break; 604 } 605 case P4_VDBEFUNC: { 606 VdbeFunc *pVdbeFunc = (VdbeFunc *)p4; 607 freeEphemeralFunction(db, pVdbeFunc->pFunc); 608 if( db->pnBytesFreed==0 ) sqlite3VdbeDeleteAuxData(pVdbeFunc, 0); 609 sqlite3DbFree(db, pVdbeFunc); 610 break; 611 } 612 case P4_FUNCDEF: { 613 freeEphemeralFunction(db, (FuncDef*)p4); 614 break; 615 } 616 case P4_MEM: { 617 if( db->pnBytesFreed==0 ){ 618 sqlite3ValueFree((sqlite3_value*)p4); 619 }else{ 620 Mem *p = (Mem*)p4; 621 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->zMalloc); 622 sqlite3DbFree(db, p); 623 } 624 break; 625 } 626 case P4_VTAB : { 627 if( db->pnBytesFreed==0 ) sqlite3VtabUnlock((VTable *)p4); 628 break; 629 } 630 } 631 } 632 } 633 634 /* 635 ** Free the space allocated for aOp and any p4 values allocated for the 636 ** opcodes contained within. If aOp is not NULL it is assumed to contain 637 ** nOp entries. 638 */ 639 static void vdbeFreeOpArray(sqlite3 *db, Op *aOp, int nOp){ 640 if( aOp ){ 641 Op *pOp; 642 for(pOp=aOp; pOp<&aOp[nOp]; pOp++){ 643 freeP4(db, pOp->p4type, pOp->p4.p); 644 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 645 sqlite3DbFree(db, pOp->zComment); 646 #endif 647 } 648 } 649 sqlite3DbFree(db, aOp); 650 } 651 652 /* 653 ** Link the SubProgram object passed as the second argument into the linked 654 ** list at Vdbe.pSubProgram. This list is used to delete all sub-program 655 ** objects when the VM is no longer required. 656 */ 657 void sqlite3VdbeLinkSubProgram(Vdbe *pVdbe, SubProgram *p){ 658 p->pNext = pVdbe->pProgram; 659 pVdbe->pProgram = p; 660 } 661 662 /* 663 ** Change N opcodes starting at addr to No-ops. 664 */ 665 void sqlite3VdbeChangeToNoop(Vdbe *p, int addr, int N){ 666 if( p->aOp ){ 667 VdbeOp *pOp = &p->aOp[addr]; 668 sqlite3 *db = p->db; 669 while( N-- ){ 670 freeP4(db, pOp->p4type, pOp->p4.p); 671 memset(pOp, 0, sizeof(pOp[0])); 672 pOp->opcode = OP_Noop; 673 pOp++; 674 } 675 } 676 } 677 678 /* 679 ** Change the value of the P4 operand for a specific instruction. 680 ** This routine is useful when a large program is loaded from a 681 ** static array using sqlite3VdbeAddOpList but we want to make a 682 ** few minor changes to the program. 683 ** 684 ** If n>=0 then the P4 operand is dynamic, meaning that a copy of 685 ** the string is made into memory obtained from sqlite3_malloc(). 686 ** A value of n==0 means copy bytes of zP4 up to and including the 687 ** first null byte. If n>0 then copy n+1 bytes of zP4. 688 ** 689 ** If n==P4_KEYINFO it means that zP4 is a pointer to a KeyInfo structure. 690 ** A copy is made of the KeyInfo structure into memory obtained from 691 ** sqlite3_malloc, to be freed when the Vdbe is finalized. 692 ** n==P4_KEYINFO_HANDOFF indicates that zP4 points to a KeyInfo structure 693 ** stored in memory that the caller has obtained from sqlite3_malloc. The 694 ** caller should not free the allocation, it will be freed when the Vdbe is 695 ** finalized. 696 ** 697 ** Other values of n (P4_STATIC, P4_COLLSEQ etc.) indicate that zP4 points 698 ** to a string or structure that is guaranteed to exist for the lifetime of 699 ** the Vdbe. In these cases we can just copy the pointer. 700 ** 701 ** If addr<0 then change P4 on the most recently inserted instruction. 702 */ 703 void sqlite3VdbeChangeP4(Vdbe *p, int addr, const char *zP4, int n){ 704 Op *pOp; 705 sqlite3 *db; 706 assert( p!=0 ); 707 db = p->db; 708 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_INIT ); 709 if( p->aOp==0 || db->mallocFailed ){ 710 if ( n!=P4_KEYINFO && n!=P4_VTAB ) { 711 freeP4(db, n, (void*)*(char**)&zP4); 712 } 713 return; 714 } 715 assert( p->nOp>0 ); 716 assert( addr<p->nOp ); 717 if( addr<0 ){ 718 addr = p->nOp - 1; 719 } 720 pOp = &p->aOp[addr]; 721 freeP4(db, pOp->p4type, pOp->p4.p); 722 pOp->p4.p = 0; 723 if( n==P4_INT32 ){ 724 /* Note: this cast is safe, because the origin data point was an int 725 ** that was cast to a (const char *). */ 726 pOp->p4.i = SQLITE_PTR_TO_INT(zP4); 727 pOp->p4type = P4_INT32; 728 }else if( zP4==0 ){ 729 pOp->p4.p = 0; 730 pOp->p4type = P4_NOTUSED; 731 }else if( n==P4_KEYINFO ){ 732 KeyInfo *pKeyInfo; 733 int nField, nByte; 734 735 nField = ((KeyInfo*)zP4)->nField; 736 nByte = sizeof(*pKeyInfo) + (nField-1)*sizeof(pKeyInfo->aColl[0]) + nField; 737 pKeyInfo = sqlite3DbMallocRaw(0, nByte); 738 pOp->p4.pKeyInfo = pKeyInfo; 739 if( pKeyInfo ){ 740 u8 *aSortOrder; 741 memcpy((char*)pKeyInfo, zP4, nByte - nField); 742 aSortOrder = pKeyInfo->aSortOrder; 743 if( aSortOrder ){ 744 pKeyInfo->aSortOrder = (unsigned char*)&pKeyInfo->aColl[nField]; 745 memcpy(pKeyInfo->aSortOrder, aSortOrder, nField); 746 } 747 pOp->p4type = P4_KEYINFO; 748 }else{ 749 p->db->mallocFailed = 1; 750 pOp->p4type = P4_NOTUSED; 751 } 752 }else if( n==P4_KEYINFO_HANDOFF ){ 753 pOp->p4.p = (void*)zP4; 754 pOp->p4type = P4_KEYINFO; 755 }else if( n==P4_VTAB ){ 756 pOp->p4.p = (void*)zP4; 757 pOp->p4type = P4_VTAB; 758 sqlite3VtabLock((VTable *)zP4); 759 assert( ((VTable *)zP4)->db==p->db ); 760 }else if( n<0 ){ 761 pOp->p4.p = (void*)zP4; 762 pOp->p4type = (signed char)n; 763 }else{ 764 if( n==0 ) n = sqlite3Strlen30(zP4); 765 pOp->p4.z = sqlite3DbStrNDup(p->db, zP4, n); 766 pOp->p4type = P4_DYNAMIC; 767 } 768 } 769 770 #ifndef NDEBUG 771 /* 772 ** Change the comment on the the most recently coded instruction. Or 773 ** insert a No-op and add the comment to that new instruction. This 774 ** makes the code easier to read during debugging. None of this happens 775 ** in a production build. 776 */ 777 void sqlite3VdbeComment(Vdbe *p, const char *zFormat, ...){ 778 va_list ap; 779 if( !p ) return; 780 assert( p->nOp>0 || p->aOp==0 ); 781 assert( p->aOp==0 || p->aOp[p->nOp-1].zComment==0 || p->db->mallocFailed ); 782 if( p->nOp ){ 783 char **pz = &p->aOp[p->nOp-1].zComment; 784 va_start(ap, zFormat); 785 sqlite3DbFree(p->db, *pz); 786 *pz = sqlite3VMPrintf(p->db, zFormat, ap); 787 va_end(ap); 788 } 789 } 790 void sqlite3VdbeNoopComment(Vdbe *p, const char *zFormat, ...){ 791 va_list ap; 792 if( !p ) return; 793 sqlite3VdbeAddOp0(p, OP_Noop); 794 assert( p->nOp>0 || p->aOp==0 ); 795 assert( p->aOp==0 || p->aOp[p->nOp-1].zComment==0 || p->db->mallocFailed ); 796 if( p->nOp ){ 797 char **pz = &p->aOp[p->nOp-1].zComment; 798 va_start(ap, zFormat); 799 sqlite3DbFree(p->db, *pz); 800 *pz = sqlite3VMPrintf(p->db, zFormat, ap); 801 va_end(ap); 802 } 803 } 804 #endif /* NDEBUG */ 805 806 /* 807 ** Return the opcode for a given address. If the address is -1, then 808 ** return the most recently inserted opcode. 809 ** 810 ** If a memory allocation error has occurred prior to the calling of this 811 ** routine, then a pointer to a dummy VdbeOp will be returned. That opcode 812 ** is readable but not writable, though it is cast to a writable value. 813 ** The return of a dummy opcode allows the call to continue functioning 814 ** after a OOM fault without having to check to see if the return from 815 ** this routine is a valid pointer. But because the dummy.opcode is 0, 816 ** dummy will never be written to. This is verified by code inspection and 817 ** by running with Valgrind. 818 ** 819 ** About the #ifdef SQLITE_OMIT_TRACE: Normally, this routine is never called 820 ** unless p->nOp>0. This is because in the absense of SQLITE_OMIT_TRACE, 821 ** an OP_Trace instruction is always inserted by sqlite3VdbeGet() as soon as 822 ** a new VDBE is created. So we are free to set addr to p->nOp-1 without 823 ** having to double-check to make sure that the result is non-negative. But 824 ** if SQLITE_OMIT_TRACE is defined, the OP_Trace is omitted and we do need to 825 ** check the value of p->nOp-1 before continuing. 826 */ 827 VdbeOp *sqlite3VdbeGetOp(Vdbe *p, int addr){ 828 /* C89 specifies that the constant "dummy" will be initialized to all 829 ** zeros, which is correct. MSVC generates a warning, nevertheless. */ 830 static const VdbeOp dummy; /* Ignore the MSVC warning about no initializer */ 831 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_INIT ); 832 if( addr<0 ){ 833 #ifdef SQLITE_OMIT_TRACE 834 if( p->nOp==0 ) return (VdbeOp*)&dummy; 835 #endif 836 addr = p->nOp - 1; 837 } 838 assert( (addr>=0 && addr<p->nOp) || p->db->mallocFailed ); 839 if( p->db->mallocFailed ){ 840 return (VdbeOp*)&dummy; 841 }else{ 842 return &p->aOp[addr]; 843 } 844 } 845 846 #if !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_EXPLAIN) || !defined(NDEBUG) \ 847 || defined(VDBE_PROFILE) || defined(SQLITE_DEBUG) 848 /* 849 ** Compute a string that describes the P4 parameter for an opcode. 850 ** Use zTemp for any required temporary buffer space. 851 */ 852 static char *displayP4(Op *pOp, char *zTemp, int nTemp){ 853 char *zP4 = zTemp; 854 assert( nTemp>=20 ); 855 switch( pOp->p4type ){ 856 case P4_KEYINFO_STATIC: 857 case P4_KEYINFO: { 858 int i, j; 859 KeyInfo *pKeyInfo = pOp->p4.pKeyInfo; 860 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "keyinfo(%d", pKeyInfo->nField); 861 i = sqlite3Strlen30(zTemp); 862 for(j=0; j<pKeyInfo->nField; j++){ 863 CollSeq *pColl = pKeyInfo->aColl[j]; 864 if( pColl ){ 865 int n = sqlite3Strlen30(pColl->zName); 866 if( i+n>nTemp-6 ){ 867 memcpy(&zTemp[i],",...",4); 868 break; 869 } 870 zTemp[i++] = ','; 871 if( pKeyInfo->aSortOrder && pKeyInfo->aSortOrder[j] ){ 872 zTemp[i++] = '-'; 873 } 874 memcpy(&zTemp[i], pColl->zName,n+1); 875 i += n; 876 }else if( i+4<nTemp-6 ){ 877 memcpy(&zTemp[i],",nil",4); 878 i += 4; 879 } 880 } 881 zTemp[i++] = ')'; 882 zTemp[i] = 0; 883 assert( i<nTemp ); 884 break; 885 } 886 case P4_COLLSEQ: { 887 CollSeq *pColl = pOp->p4.pColl; 888 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "collseq(%.20s)", pColl->zName); 889 break; 890 } 891 case P4_FUNCDEF: { 892 FuncDef *pDef = pOp->p4.pFunc; 893 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "%s(%d)", pDef->zName, pDef->nArg); 894 break; 895 } 896 case P4_INT64: { 897 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "%lld", *pOp->p4.pI64); 898 break; 899 } 900 case P4_INT32: { 901 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "%d", pOp->p4.i); 902 break; 903 } 904 case P4_REAL: { 905 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "%.16g", *pOp->p4.pReal); 906 break; 907 } 908 case P4_MEM: { 909 Mem *pMem = pOp->p4.pMem; 910 assert( (pMem->flags & MEM_Null)==0 ); 911 if( pMem->flags & MEM_Str ){ 912 zP4 = pMem->z; 913 }else if( pMem->flags & MEM_Int ){ 914 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "%lld", pMem->u.i); 915 }else if( pMem->flags & MEM_Real ){ 916 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "%.16g", pMem->r); 917 }else{ 918 assert( pMem->flags & MEM_Blob ); 919 zP4 = "(blob)"; 920 } 921 break; 922 } 923 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_VIRTUALTABLE 924 case P4_VTAB: { 925 sqlite3_vtab *pVtab = pOp->p4.pVtab->pVtab; 926 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "vtab:%p:%p", pVtab, pVtab->pModule); 927 break; 928 } 929 #endif 930 case P4_INTARRAY: { 931 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "intarray"); 932 break; 933 } 934 case P4_SUBPROGRAM: { 935 sqlite3_snprintf(nTemp, zTemp, "program"); 936 break; 937 } 938 default: { 939 zP4 = pOp->p4.z; 940 if( zP4==0 ){ 941 zP4 = zTemp; 942 zTemp[0] = 0; 943 } 944 } 945 } 946 assert( zP4!=0 ); 947 return zP4; 948 } 949 #endif 950 951 /* 952 ** Declare to the Vdbe that the BTree object at db->aDb[i] is used. 953 ** 954 ** The prepared statements need to know in advance the complete set of 955 ** attached databases that they will be using. A mask of these databases 956 ** is maintained in p->btreeMask and is used for locking and other purposes. 957 */ 958 void sqlite3VdbeUsesBtree(Vdbe *p, int i){ 959 assert( i>=0 && i<p->db->nDb && i<(int)sizeof(yDbMask)*8 ); 960 assert( i<(int)sizeof(p->btreeMask)*8 ); 961 p->btreeMask |= ((yDbMask)1)<<i; 962 if( i!=1 && sqlite3BtreeSharable(p->db->aDb[i].pBt) ){ 963 p->lockMask |= ((yDbMask)1)<<i; 964 } 965 } 966 967 #if !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_SHARED_CACHE) && SQLITE_THREADSAFE>0 968 /* 969 ** If SQLite is compiled to support shared-cache mode and to be threadsafe, 970 ** this routine obtains the mutex associated with each BtShared structure 971 ** that may be accessed by the VM passed as an argument. In doing so it also 972 ** sets the BtShared.db member of each of the BtShared structures, ensuring 973 ** that the correct busy-handler callback is invoked if required. 974 ** 975 ** If SQLite is not threadsafe but does support shared-cache mode, then 976 ** sqlite3BtreeEnter() is invoked to set the BtShared.db variables 977 ** of all of BtShared structures accessible via the database handle 978 ** associated with the VM. 979 ** 980 ** If SQLite is not threadsafe and does not support shared-cache mode, this 981 ** function is a no-op. 982 ** 983 ** The p->btreeMask field is a bitmask of all btrees that the prepared 984 ** statement p will ever use. Let N be the number of bits in p->btreeMask 985 ** corresponding to btrees that use shared cache. Then the runtime of 986 ** this routine is N*N. But as N is rarely more than 1, this should not 987 ** be a problem. 988 */ 989 void sqlite3VdbeEnter(Vdbe *p){ 990 int i; 991 yDbMask mask; 992 sqlite3 *db; 993 Db *aDb; 994 int nDb; 995 if( p->lockMask==0 ) return; /* The common case */ 996 db = p->db; 997 aDb = db->aDb; 998 nDb = db->nDb; 999 for(i=0, mask=1; i<nDb; i++, mask += mask){ 1000 if( i!=1 && (mask & p->lockMask)!=0 && ALWAYS(aDb[i].pBt!=0) ){ 1001 sqlite3BtreeEnter(aDb[i].pBt); 1002 } 1003 } 1004 } 1005 #endif 1006 1007 #if !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_SHARED_CACHE) && SQLITE_THREADSAFE>0 1008 /* 1009 ** Unlock all of the btrees previously locked by a call to sqlite3VdbeEnter(). 1010 */ 1011 void sqlite3VdbeLeave(Vdbe *p){ 1012 int i; 1013 yDbMask mask; 1014 sqlite3 *db; 1015 Db *aDb; 1016 int nDb; 1017 if( p->lockMask==0 ) return; /* The common case */ 1018 db = p->db; 1019 aDb = db->aDb; 1020 nDb = db->nDb; 1021 for(i=0, mask=1; i<nDb; i++, mask += mask){ 1022 if( i!=1 && (mask & p->lockMask)!=0 && ALWAYS(aDb[i].pBt!=0) ){ 1023 sqlite3BtreeLeave(aDb[i].pBt); 1024 } 1025 } 1026 } 1027 #endif 1028 1029 #if defined(VDBE_PROFILE) || defined(SQLITE_DEBUG) 1030 /* 1031 ** Print a single opcode. This routine is used for debugging only. 1032 */ 1033 void sqlite3VdbePrintOp(FILE *pOut, int pc, Op *pOp){ 1034 char *zP4; 1035 char zPtr[50]; 1036 static const char *zFormat1 = "%4d %-13s %4d %4d %4d %-4s %.2X %s\n"; 1037 if( pOut==0 ) pOut = stdout; 1038 zP4 = displayP4(pOp, zPtr, sizeof(zPtr)); 1039 fprintf(pOut, zFormat1, pc, 1040 sqlite3OpcodeName(pOp->opcode), pOp->p1, pOp->p2, pOp->p3, zP4, pOp->p5, 1041 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 1042 pOp->zComment ? pOp->zComment : "" 1043 #else 1044 "" 1045 #endif 1046 ); 1047 fflush(pOut); 1048 } 1049 #endif 1050 1051 /* 1052 ** Release an array of N Mem elements 1053 */ 1054 static void releaseMemArray(Mem *p, int N){ 1055 if( p && N ){ 1056 Mem *pEnd; 1057 sqlite3 *db = p->db; 1058 u8 malloc_failed = db->mallocFailed; 1059 if( db->pnBytesFreed ){ 1060 for(pEnd=&p[N]; p<pEnd; p++){ 1061 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->zMalloc); 1062 } 1063 return; 1064 } 1065 for(pEnd=&p[N]; p<pEnd; p++){ 1066 assert( (&p[1])==pEnd || p[0].db==p[1].db ); 1067 1068 /* This block is really an inlined version of sqlite3VdbeMemRelease() 1069 ** that takes advantage of the fact that the memory cell value is 1070 ** being set to NULL after releasing any dynamic resources. 1071 ** 1072 ** The justification for duplicating code is that according to 1073 ** callgrind, this causes a certain test case to hit the CPU 4.7 1074 ** percent less (x86 linux, gcc version 4.1.2, -O6) than if 1075 ** sqlite3MemRelease() were called from here. With -O2, this jumps 1076 ** to 6.6 percent. The test case is inserting 1000 rows into a table 1077 ** with no indexes using a single prepared INSERT statement, bind() 1078 ** and reset(). Inserts are grouped into a transaction. 1079 */ 1080 if( p->flags&(MEM_Agg|MEM_Dyn|MEM_Frame|MEM_RowSet) ){ 1081 sqlite3VdbeMemRelease(p); 1082 }else if( p->zMalloc ){ 1083 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->zMalloc); 1084 p->zMalloc = 0; 1085 } 1086 1087 p->flags = MEM_Null; 1088 } 1089 db->mallocFailed = malloc_failed; 1090 } 1091 } 1092 1093 /* 1094 ** Delete a VdbeFrame object and its contents. VdbeFrame objects are 1095 ** allocated by the OP_Program opcode in sqlite3VdbeExec(). 1096 */ 1097 void sqlite3VdbeFrameDelete(VdbeFrame *p){ 1098 int i; 1099 Mem *aMem = VdbeFrameMem(p); 1100 VdbeCursor **apCsr = (VdbeCursor **)&aMem[p->nChildMem]; 1101 for(i=0; i<p->nChildCsr; i++){ 1102 sqlite3VdbeFreeCursor(p->v, apCsr[i]); 1103 } 1104 releaseMemArray(aMem, p->nChildMem); 1105 sqlite3DbFree(p->v->db, p); 1106 } 1107 1108 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_EXPLAIN 1109 /* 1110 ** Give a listing of the program in the virtual machine. 1111 ** 1112 ** The interface is the same as sqlite3VdbeExec(). But instead of 1113 ** running the code, it invokes the callback once for each instruction. 1114 ** This feature is used to implement "EXPLAIN". 1115 ** 1116 ** When p->explain==1, each instruction is listed. When 1117 ** p->explain==2, only OP_Explain instructions are listed and these 1118 ** are shown in a different format. p->explain==2 is used to implement 1119 ** EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN. 1120 ** 1121 ** When p->explain==1, first the main program is listed, then each of 1122 ** the trigger subprograms are listed one by one. 1123 */ 1124 int sqlite3VdbeList( 1125 Vdbe *p /* The VDBE */ 1126 ){ 1127 int nRow; /* Stop when row count reaches this */ 1128 int nSub = 0; /* Number of sub-vdbes seen so far */ 1129 SubProgram **apSub = 0; /* Array of sub-vdbes */ 1130 Mem *pSub = 0; /* Memory cell hold array of subprogs */ 1131 sqlite3 *db = p->db; /* The database connection */ 1132 int i; /* Loop counter */ 1133 int rc = SQLITE_OK; /* Return code */ 1134 Mem *pMem = p->pResultSet = &p->aMem[1]; /* First Mem of result set */ 1135 1136 assert( p->explain ); 1137 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_RUN ); 1138 assert( p->rc==SQLITE_OK || p->rc==SQLITE_BUSY || p->rc==SQLITE_NOMEM ); 1139 1140 /* Even though this opcode does not use dynamic strings for 1141 ** the result, result columns may become dynamic if the user calls 1142 ** sqlite3_column_text16(), causing a translation to UTF-16 encoding. 1143 */ 1144 releaseMemArray(pMem, 8); 1145 1146 if( p->rc==SQLITE_NOMEM ){ 1147 /* This happens if a malloc() inside a call to sqlite3_column_text() or 1148 ** sqlite3_column_text16() failed. */ 1149 db->mallocFailed = 1; 1150 return SQLITE_ERROR; 1151 } 1152 1153 /* When the number of output rows reaches nRow, that means the 1154 ** listing has finished and sqlite3_step() should return SQLITE_DONE. 1155 ** nRow is the sum of the number of rows in the main program, plus 1156 ** the sum of the number of rows in all trigger subprograms encountered 1157 ** so far. The nRow value will increase as new trigger subprograms are 1158 ** encountered, but p->pc will eventually catch up to nRow. 1159 */ 1160 nRow = p->nOp; 1161 if( p->explain==1 ){ 1162 /* The first 8 memory cells are used for the result set. So we will 1163 ** commandeer the 9th cell to use as storage for an array of pointers 1164 ** to trigger subprograms. The VDBE is guaranteed to have at least 9 1165 ** cells. */ 1166 assert( p->nMem>9 ); 1167 pSub = &p->aMem[9]; 1168 if( pSub->flags&MEM_Blob ){ 1169 /* On the first call to sqlite3_step(), pSub will hold a NULL. It is 1170 ** initialized to a BLOB by the P4_SUBPROGRAM processing logic below */ 1171 nSub = pSub->n/sizeof(Vdbe*); 1172 apSub = (SubProgram **)pSub->z; 1173 } 1174 for(i=0; i<nSub; i++){ 1175 nRow += apSub[i]->nOp; 1176 } 1177 } 1178 1179 do{ 1180 i = p->pc++; 1181 }while( i<nRow && p->explain==2 && p->aOp[i].opcode!=OP_Explain ); 1182 if( i>=nRow ){ 1183 p->rc = SQLITE_OK; 1184 rc = SQLITE_DONE; 1185 }else if( db->u1.isInterrupted ){ 1186 p->rc = SQLITE_INTERRUPT; 1187 rc = SQLITE_ERROR; 1188 sqlite3SetString(&p->zErrMsg, db, "%s", sqlite3ErrStr(p->rc)); 1189 }else{ 1190 char *z; 1191 Op *pOp; 1192 if( i<p->nOp ){ 1193 /* The output line number is small enough that we are still in the 1194 ** main program. */ 1195 pOp = &p->aOp[i]; 1196 }else{ 1197 /* We are currently listing subprograms. Figure out which one and 1198 ** pick up the appropriate opcode. */ 1199 int j; 1200 i -= p->nOp; 1201 for(j=0; i>=apSub[j]->nOp; j++){ 1202 i -= apSub[j]->nOp; 1203 } 1204 pOp = &apSub[j]->aOp[i]; 1205 } 1206 if( p->explain==1 ){ 1207 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 1208 pMem->type = SQLITE_INTEGER; 1209 pMem->u.i = i; /* Program counter */ 1210 pMem++; 1211 1212 pMem->flags = MEM_Static|MEM_Str|MEM_Term; 1213 pMem->z = (char*)sqlite3OpcodeName(pOp->opcode); /* Opcode */ 1214 assert( pMem->z!=0 ); 1215 pMem->n = sqlite3Strlen30(pMem->z); 1216 pMem->type = SQLITE_TEXT; 1217 pMem->enc = SQLITE_UTF8; 1218 pMem++; 1219 1220 /* When an OP_Program opcode is encounter (the only opcode that has 1221 ** a P4_SUBPROGRAM argument), expand the size of the array of subprograms 1222 ** kept in p->aMem[9].z to hold the new program - assuming this subprogram 1223 ** has not already been seen. 1224 */ 1225 if( pOp->p4type==P4_SUBPROGRAM ){ 1226 int nByte = (nSub+1)*sizeof(SubProgram*); 1227 int j; 1228 for(j=0; j<nSub; j++){ 1229 if( apSub[j]==pOp->p4.pProgram ) break; 1230 } 1231 if( j==nSub && SQLITE_OK==sqlite3VdbeMemGrow(pSub, nByte, 1) ){ 1232 apSub = (SubProgram **)pSub->z; 1233 apSub[nSub++] = pOp->p4.pProgram; 1234 pSub->flags |= MEM_Blob; 1235 pSub->n = nSub*sizeof(SubProgram*); 1236 } 1237 } 1238 } 1239 1240 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 1241 pMem->u.i = pOp->p1; /* P1 */ 1242 pMem->type = SQLITE_INTEGER; 1243 pMem++; 1244 1245 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 1246 pMem->u.i = pOp->p2; /* P2 */ 1247 pMem->type = SQLITE_INTEGER; 1248 pMem++; 1249 1250 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 1251 pMem->u.i = pOp->p3; /* P3 */ 1252 pMem->type = SQLITE_INTEGER; 1253 pMem++; 1254 1255 if( sqlite3VdbeMemGrow(pMem, 32, 0) ){ /* P4 */ 1256 assert( p->db->mallocFailed ); 1257 return SQLITE_ERROR; 1258 } 1259 pMem->flags = MEM_Dyn|MEM_Str|MEM_Term; 1260 z = displayP4(pOp, pMem->z, 32); 1261 if( z!=pMem->z ){ 1262 sqlite3VdbeMemSetStr(pMem, z, -1, SQLITE_UTF8, 0); 1263 }else{ 1264 assert( pMem->z!=0 ); 1265 pMem->n = sqlite3Strlen30(pMem->z); 1266 pMem->enc = SQLITE_UTF8; 1267 } 1268 pMem->type = SQLITE_TEXT; 1269 pMem++; 1270 1271 if( p->explain==1 ){ 1272 if( sqlite3VdbeMemGrow(pMem, 4, 0) ){ 1273 assert( p->db->mallocFailed ); 1274 return SQLITE_ERROR; 1275 } 1276 pMem->flags = MEM_Dyn|MEM_Str|MEM_Term; 1277 pMem->n = 2; 1278 sqlite3_snprintf(3, pMem->z, "%.2x", pOp->p5); /* P5 */ 1279 pMem->type = SQLITE_TEXT; 1280 pMem->enc = SQLITE_UTF8; 1281 pMem++; 1282 1283 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 1284 if( pOp->zComment ){ 1285 pMem->flags = MEM_Str|MEM_Term; 1286 pMem->z = pOp->zComment; 1287 pMem->n = sqlite3Strlen30(pMem->z); 1288 pMem->enc = SQLITE_UTF8; 1289 pMem->type = SQLITE_TEXT; 1290 }else 1291 #endif 1292 { 1293 pMem->flags = MEM_Null; /* Comment */ 1294 pMem->type = SQLITE_NULL; 1295 } 1296 } 1297 1298 p->nResColumn = 8 - 4*(p->explain-1); 1299 p->rc = SQLITE_OK; 1300 rc = SQLITE_ROW; 1301 } 1302 return rc; 1303 } 1304 #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_EXPLAIN */ 1305 1306 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 1307 /* 1308 ** Print the SQL that was used to generate a VDBE program. 1309 */ 1310 void sqlite3VdbePrintSql(Vdbe *p){ 1311 int nOp = p->nOp; 1312 VdbeOp *pOp; 1313 if( nOp<1 ) return; 1314 pOp = &p->aOp[0]; 1315 if( pOp->opcode==OP_Trace && pOp->p4.z!=0 ){ 1316 const char *z = pOp->p4.z; 1317 while( sqlite3Isspace(*z) ) z++; 1318 printf("SQL: [%s]\n", z); 1319 } 1320 } 1321 #endif 1322 1323 #if !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_TRACE) && defined(SQLITE_ENABLE_IOTRACE) 1324 /* 1325 ** Print an IOTRACE message showing SQL content. 1326 */ 1327 void sqlite3VdbeIOTraceSql(Vdbe *p){ 1328 int nOp = p->nOp; 1329 VdbeOp *pOp; 1330 if( sqlite3IoTrace==0 ) return; 1331 if( nOp<1 ) return; 1332 pOp = &p->aOp[0]; 1333 if( pOp->opcode==OP_Trace && pOp->p4.z!=0 ){ 1334 int i, j; 1335 char z[1000]; 1336 sqlite3_snprintf(sizeof(z), z, "%s", pOp->p4.z); 1337 for(i=0; sqlite3Isspace(z[i]); i++){} 1338 for(j=0; z[i]; i++){ 1339 if( sqlite3Isspace(z[i]) ){ 1340 if( z[i-1]!=' ' ){ 1341 z[j++] = ' '; 1342 } 1343 }else{ 1344 z[j++] = z[i]; 1345 } 1346 } 1347 z[j] = 0; 1348 sqlite3IoTrace("SQL %s\n", z); 1349 } 1350 } 1351 #endif /* !SQLITE_OMIT_TRACE && SQLITE_ENABLE_IOTRACE */ 1352 1353 /* 1354 ** Allocate space from a fixed size buffer and return a pointer to 1355 ** that space. If insufficient space is available, return NULL. 1356 ** 1357 ** The pBuf parameter is the initial value of a pointer which will 1358 ** receive the new memory. pBuf is normally NULL. If pBuf is not 1359 ** NULL, it means that memory space has already been allocated and that 1360 ** this routine should not allocate any new memory. When pBuf is not 1361 ** NULL simply return pBuf. Only allocate new memory space when pBuf 1362 ** is NULL. 1363 ** 1364 ** nByte is the number of bytes of space needed. 1365 ** 1366 ** *ppFrom points to available space and pEnd points to the end of the 1367 ** available space. When space is allocated, *ppFrom is advanced past 1368 ** the end of the allocated space. 1369 ** 1370 ** *pnByte is a counter of the number of bytes of space that have failed 1371 ** to allocate. If there is insufficient space in *ppFrom to satisfy the 1372 ** request, then increment *pnByte by the amount of the request. 1373 */ 1374 static void *allocSpace( 1375 void *pBuf, /* Where return pointer will be stored */ 1376 int nByte, /* Number of bytes to allocate */ 1377 u8 **ppFrom, /* IN/OUT: Allocate from *ppFrom */ 1378 u8 *pEnd, /* Pointer to 1 byte past the end of *ppFrom buffer */ 1379 int *pnByte /* If allocation cannot be made, increment *pnByte */ 1380 ){ 1381 assert( EIGHT_BYTE_ALIGNMENT(*ppFrom) ); 1382 if( pBuf ) return pBuf; 1383 nByte = ROUND8(nByte); 1384 if( &(*ppFrom)[nByte] <= pEnd ){ 1385 pBuf = (void*)*ppFrom; 1386 *ppFrom += nByte; 1387 }else{ 1388 *pnByte += nByte; 1389 } 1390 return pBuf; 1391 } 1392 1393 /* 1394 ** Prepare a virtual machine for execution. This involves things such 1395 ** as allocating stack space and initializing the program counter. 1396 ** After the VDBE has be prepped, it can be executed by one or more 1397 ** calls to sqlite3VdbeExec(). 1398 ** 1399 ** This is the only way to move a VDBE from VDBE_MAGIC_INIT to 1400 ** VDBE_MAGIC_RUN. 1401 ** 1402 ** This function may be called more than once on a single virtual machine. 1403 ** The first call is made while compiling the SQL statement. Subsequent 1404 ** calls are made as part of the process of resetting a statement to be 1405 ** re-executed (from a call to sqlite3_reset()). The nVar, nMem, nCursor 1406 ** and isExplain parameters are only passed correct values the first time 1407 ** the function is called. On subsequent calls, from sqlite3_reset(), nVar 1408 ** is passed -1 and nMem, nCursor and isExplain are all passed zero. 1409 */ 1410 void sqlite3VdbeMakeReady( 1411 Vdbe *p, /* The VDBE */ 1412 int nVar, /* Number of '?' see in the SQL statement */ 1413 int nMem, /* Number of memory cells to allocate */ 1414 int nCursor, /* Number of cursors to allocate */ 1415 int nArg, /* Maximum number of args in SubPrograms */ 1416 int isExplain, /* True if the EXPLAIN keywords is present */ 1417 int usesStmtJournal /* True to set Vdbe.usesStmtJournal */ 1418 ){ 1419 int n; 1420 sqlite3 *db = p->db; 1421 1422 assert( p!=0 ); 1423 assert( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_INIT ); 1424 1425 /* There should be at least one opcode. 1426 */ 1427 assert( p->nOp>0 ); 1428 1429 /* Set the magic to VDBE_MAGIC_RUN sooner rather than later. */ 1430 p->magic = VDBE_MAGIC_RUN; 1431 1432 /* For each cursor required, also allocate a memory cell. Memory 1433 ** cells (nMem+1-nCursor)..nMem, inclusive, will never be used by 1434 ** the vdbe program. Instead they are used to allocate space for 1435 ** VdbeCursor/BtCursor structures. The blob of memory associated with 1436 ** cursor 0 is stored in memory cell nMem. Memory cell (nMem-1) 1437 ** stores the blob of memory associated with cursor 1, etc. 1438 ** 1439 ** See also: allocateCursor(). 1440 */ 1441 nMem += nCursor; 1442 1443 /* Allocate space for memory registers, SQL variables, VDBE cursors and 1444 ** an array to marshal SQL function arguments in. This is only done the 1445 ** first time this function is called for a given VDBE, not when it is 1446 ** being called from sqlite3_reset() to reset the virtual machine. 1447 */ 1448 if( nVar>=0 && ALWAYS(db->mallocFailed==0) ){ 1449 u8 *zCsr = (u8 *)&p->aOp[p->nOp]; /* Memory avaliable for alloation */ 1450 u8 *zEnd = (u8 *)&p->aOp[p->nOpAlloc]; /* First byte past available mem */ 1451 int nByte; /* How much extra memory needed */ 1452 1453 resolveP2Values(p, &nArg); 1454 p->usesStmtJournal = (u8)usesStmtJournal; 1455 if( isExplain && nMem<10 ){ 1456 nMem = 10; 1457 } 1458 memset(zCsr, 0, zEnd-zCsr); 1459 zCsr += (zCsr - (u8*)0)&7; 1460 assert( EIGHT_BYTE_ALIGNMENT(zCsr) ); 1461 1462 /* Memory for registers, parameters, cursor, etc, is allocated in two 1463 ** passes. On the first pass, we try to reuse unused space at the 1464 ** end of the opcode array. If we are unable to satisfy all memory 1465 ** requirements by reusing the opcode array tail, then the second 1466 ** pass will fill in the rest using a fresh allocation. 1467 ** 1468 ** This two-pass approach that reuses as much memory as possible from 1469 ** the leftover space at the end of the opcode array can significantly 1470 ** reduce the amount of memory held by a prepared statement. 1471 */ 1472 do { 1473 nByte = 0; 1474 p->aMem = allocSpace(p->aMem, nMem*sizeof(Mem), &zCsr, zEnd, &nByte); 1475 p->aVar = allocSpace(p->aVar, nVar*sizeof(Mem), &zCsr, zEnd, &nByte); 1476 p->apArg = allocSpace(p->apArg, nArg*sizeof(Mem*), &zCsr, zEnd, &nByte); 1477 p->azVar = allocSpace(p->azVar, nVar*sizeof(char*), &zCsr, zEnd, &nByte); 1478 p->apCsr = allocSpace(p->apCsr, nCursor*sizeof(VdbeCursor*), 1479 &zCsr, zEnd, &nByte); 1480 if( nByte ){ 1481 p->pFree = sqlite3DbMallocZero(db, nByte); 1482 } 1483 zCsr = p->pFree; 1484 zEnd = &zCsr[nByte]; 1485 }while( nByte && !db->mallocFailed ); 1486 1487 p->nCursor = (u16)nCursor; 1488 if( p->aVar ){ 1489 p->nVar = (ynVar)nVar; 1490 for(n=0; n<nVar; n++){ 1491 p->aVar[n].flags = MEM_Null; 1492 p->aVar[n].db = db; 1493 } 1494 } 1495 if( p->aMem ){ 1496 p->aMem--; /* aMem[] goes from 1..nMem */ 1497 p->nMem = nMem; /* not from 0..nMem-1 */ 1498 for(n=1; n<=nMem; n++){ 1499 p->aMem[n].flags = MEM_Null; 1500 p->aMem[n].db = db; 1501 } 1502 } 1503 } 1504 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 1505 for(n=1; n<p->nMem; n++){ 1506 assert( p->aMem[n].db==db ); 1507 } 1508 #endif 1509 1510 p->pc = -1; 1511 p->rc = SQLITE_OK; 1512 p->errorAction = OE_Abort; 1513 p->explain |= isExplain; 1514 p->magic = VDBE_MAGIC_RUN; 1515 p->nChange = 0; 1516 p->cacheCtr = 1; 1517 p->minWriteFileFormat = 255; 1518 p->iStatement = 0; 1519 p->nFkConstraint = 0; 1520 #ifdef VDBE_PROFILE 1521 { 1522 int i; 1523 for(i=0; i<p->nOp; i++){ 1524 p->aOp[i].cnt = 0; 1525 p->aOp[i].cycles = 0; 1526 } 1527 } 1528 #endif 1529 } 1530 1531 /* 1532 ** Close a VDBE cursor and release all the resources that cursor 1533 ** happens to hold. 1534 */ 1535 void sqlite3VdbeFreeCursor(Vdbe *p, VdbeCursor *pCx){ 1536 if( pCx==0 ){ 1537 return; 1538 } 1539 if( pCx->pBt ){ 1540 sqlite3BtreeClose(pCx->pBt); 1541 /* The pCx->pCursor will be close automatically, if it exists, by 1542 ** the call above. */ 1543 }else if( pCx->pCursor ){ 1544 sqlite3BtreeCloseCursor(pCx->pCursor); 1545 } 1546 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_VIRTUALTABLE 1547 if( pCx->pVtabCursor ){ 1548 sqlite3_vtab_cursor *pVtabCursor = pCx->pVtabCursor; 1549 const sqlite3_module *pModule = pCx->pModule; 1550 p->inVtabMethod = 1; 1551 pModule->xClose(pVtabCursor); 1552 p->inVtabMethod = 0; 1553 } 1554 #endif 1555 } 1556 1557 /* 1558 ** Copy the values stored in the VdbeFrame structure to its Vdbe. This 1559 ** is used, for example, when a trigger sub-program is halted to restore 1560 ** control to the main program. 1561 */ 1562 int sqlite3VdbeFrameRestore(VdbeFrame *pFrame){ 1563 Vdbe *v = pFrame->v; 1564 v->aOp = pFrame->aOp; 1565 v->nOp = pFrame->nOp; 1566 v->aMem = pFrame->aMem; 1567 v->nMem = pFrame->nMem; 1568 v->apCsr = pFrame->apCsr; 1569 v->nCursor = pFrame->nCursor; 1570 v->db->lastRowid = pFrame->lastRowid; 1571 v->nChange = pFrame->nChange; 1572 return pFrame->pc; 1573 } 1574 1575 /* 1576 ** Close all cursors. 1577 ** 1578 ** Also release any dynamic memory held by the VM in the Vdbe.aMem memory 1579 ** cell array. This is necessary as the memory cell array may contain 1580 ** pointers to VdbeFrame objects, which may in turn contain pointers to 1581 ** open cursors. 1582 */ 1583 static void closeAllCursors(Vdbe *p){ 1584 if( p->pFrame ){ 1585 VdbeFrame *pFrame; 1586 for(pFrame=p->pFrame; pFrame->pParent; pFrame=pFrame->pParent); 1587 sqlite3VdbeFrameRestore(pFrame); 1588 } 1589 p->pFrame = 0; 1590 p->nFrame = 0; 1591 1592 if( p->apCsr ){ 1593 int i; 1594 for(i=0; i<p->nCursor; i++){ 1595 VdbeCursor *pC = p->apCsr[i]; 1596 if( pC ){ 1597 sqlite3VdbeFreeCursor(p, pC); 1598 p->apCsr[i] = 0; 1599 } 1600 } 1601 } 1602 if( p->aMem ){ 1603 releaseMemArray(&p->aMem[1], p->nMem); 1604 } 1605 while( p->pDelFrame ){ 1606 VdbeFrame *pDel = p->pDelFrame; 1607 p->pDelFrame = pDel->pParent; 1608 sqlite3VdbeFrameDelete(pDel); 1609 } 1610 } 1611 1612 /* 1613 ** Clean up the VM after execution. 1614 ** 1615 ** This routine will automatically close any cursors, lists, and/or 1616 ** sorters that were left open. It also deletes the values of 1617 ** variables in the aVar[] array. 1618 */ 1619 static void Cleanup(Vdbe *p){ 1620 sqlite3 *db = p->db; 1621 1622 #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG 1623 /* Execute assert() statements to ensure that the Vdbe.apCsr[] and 1624 ** Vdbe.aMem[] arrays have already been cleaned up. */ 1625 int i; 1626 for(i=0; i<p->nCursor; i++) assert( p->apCsr==0 || p->apCsr[i]==0 ); 1627 for(i=1; i<=p->nMem; i++) assert( p->aMem==0 || p->aMem[i].flags==MEM_Null ); 1628 #endif 1629 1630 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->zErrMsg); 1631 p->zErrMsg = 0; 1632 p->pResultSet = 0; 1633 } 1634 1635 /* 1636 ** Set the number of result columns that will be returned by this SQL 1637 ** statement. This is now set at compile time, rather than during 1638 ** execution of the vdbe program so that sqlite3_column_count() can 1639 ** be called on an SQL statement before sqlite3_step(). 1640 */ 1641 void sqlite3VdbeSetNumCols(Vdbe *p, int nResColumn){ 1642 Mem *pColName; 1643 int n; 1644 sqlite3 *db = p->db; 1645 1646 releaseMemArray(p->aColName, p->nResColumn*COLNAME_N); 1647 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->aColName); 1648 n = nResColumn*COLNAME_N; 1649 p->nResColumn = (u16)nResColumn; 1650 p->aColName = pColName = (Mem*)sqlite3DbMallocZero(db, sizeof(Mem)*n ); 1651 if( p->aColName==0 ) return; 1652 while( n-- > 0 ){ 1653 pColName->flags = MEM_Null; 1654 pColName->db = p->db; 1655 pColName++; 1656 } 1657 } 1658 1659 /* 1660 ** Set the name of the idx'th column to be returned by the SQL statement. 1661 ** zName must be a pointer to a nul terminated string. 1662 ** 1663 ** This call must be made after a call to sqlite3VdbeSetNumCols(). 1664 ** 1665 ** The final parameter, xDel, must be one of SQLITE_DYNAMIC, SQLITE_STATIC 1666 ** or SQLITE_TRANSIENT. If it is SQLITE_DYNAMIC, then the buffer pointed 1667 ** to by zName will be freed by sqlite3DbFree() when the vdbe is destroyed. 1668 */ 1669 int sqlite3VdbeSetColName( 1670 Vdbe *p, /* Vdbe being configured */ 1671 int idx, /* Index of column zName applies to */ 1672 int var, /* One of the COLNAME_* constants */ 1673 const char *zName, /* Pointer to buffer containing name */ 1674 void (*xDel)(void*) /* Memory management strategy for zName */ 1675 ){ 1676 int rc; 1677 Mem *pColName; 1678 assert( idx<p->nResColumn ); 1679 assert( var<COLNAME_N ); 1680 if( p->db->mallocFailed ){ 1681 assert( !zName || xDel!=SQLITE_DYNAMIC ); 1682 return SQLITE_NOMEM; 1683 } 1684 assert( p->aColName!=0 ); 1685 pColName = &(p->aColName[idx+var*p->nResColumn]); 1686 rc = sqlite3VdbeMemSetStr(pColName, zName, -1, SQLITE_UTF8, xDel); 1687 assert( rc!=0 || !zName || (pColName->flags&MEM_Term)!=0 ); 1688 return rc; 1689 } 1690 1691 /* 1692 ** A read or write transaction may or may not be active on database handle 1693 ** db. If a transaction is active, commit it. If there is a 1694 ** write-transaction spanning more than one database file, this routine 1695 ** takes care of the master journal trickery. 1696 */ 1697 static int vdbeCommit(sqlite3 *db, Vdbe *p){ 1698 int i; 1699 int nTrans = 0; /* Number of databases with an active write-transaction */ 1700 int rc = SQLITE_OK; 1701 int needXcommit = 0; 1702 1703 #ifdef SQLITE_OMIT_VIRTUALTABLE 1704 /* With this option, sqlite3VtabSync() is defined to be simply 1705 ** SQLITE_OK so p is not used. 1706 */ 1707 UNUSED_PARAMETER(p); 1708 #endif 1709 1710 /* Before doing anything else, call the xSync() callback for any 1711 ** virtual module tables written in this transaction. This has to 1712 ** be done before determining whether a master journal file is 1713 ** required, as an xSync() callback may add an attached database 1714 ** to the transaction. 1715 */ 1716 rc = sqlite3VtabSync(db, &p->zErrMsg); 1717 1718 /* This loop determines (a) if the commit hook should be invoked and 1719 ** (b) how many database files have open write transactions, not 1720 ** including the temp database. (b) is important because if more than 1721 ** one database file has an open write transaction, a master journal 1722 ** file is required for an atomic commit. 1723 */ 1724 for(i=0; rc==SQLITE_OK && i<db->nDb; i++){ 1725 Btree *pBt = db->aDb[i].pBt; 1726 if( sqlite3BtreeIsInTrans(pBt) ){ 1727 needXcommit = 1; 1728 if( i!=1 ) nTrans++; 1729 rc = sqlite3PagerExclusiveLock(sqlite3BtreePager(pBt)); 1730 } 1731 } 1732 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ 1733 return rc; 1734 } 1735 1736 /* If there are any write-transactions at all, invoke the commit hook */ 1737 if( needXcommit && db->xCommitCallback ){ 1738 rc = db->xCommitCallback(db->pCommitArg); 1739 if( rc ){ 1740 return SQLITE_CONSTRAINT; 1741 } 1742 } 1743 1744 /* The simple case - no more than one database file (not counting the 1745 ** TEMP database) has a transaction active. There is no need for the 1746 ** master-journal. 1747 ** 1748 ** If the return value of sqlite3BtreeGetFilename() is a zero length 1749 ** string, it means the main database is :memory: or a temp file. In 1750 ** that case we do not support atomic multi-file commits, so use the 1751 ** simple case then too. 1752 */ 1753 if( 0==sqlite3Strlen30(sqlite3BtreeGetFilename(db->aDb[0].pBt)) 1754 || nTrans<=1 1755 ){ 1756 for(i=0; rc==SQLITE_OK && i<db->nDb; i++){ 1757 Btree *pBt = db->aDb[i].pBt; 1758 if( pBt ){ 1759 rc = sqlite3BtreeCommitPhaseOne(pBt, 0); 1760 } 1761 } 1762 1763 /* Do the commit only if all databases successfully complete phase 1. 1764 ** If one of the BtreeCommitPhaseOne() calls fails, this indicates an 1765 ** IO error while deleting or truncating a journal file. It is unlikely, 1766 ** but could happen. In this case abandon processing and return the error. 1767 */ 1768 for(i=0; rc==SQLITE_OK && i<db->nDb; i++){ 1769 Btree *pBt = db->aDb[i].pBt; 1770 if( pBt ){ 1771 rc = sqlite3BtreeCommitPhaseTwo(pBt, 0); 1772 } 1773 } 1774 if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){ 1775 sqlite3VtabCommit(db); 1776 } 1777 } 1778 1779 /* The complex case - There is a multi-file write-transaction active. 1780 ** This requires a master journal file to ensure the transaction is 1781 ** committed atomicly. 1782 */ 1783 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_DISKIO 1784 else{ 1785 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs = db->pVfs; 1786 int needSync = 0; 1787 char *zMaster = 0; /* File-name for the master journal */ 1788 char const *zMainFile = sqlite3BtreeGetFilename(db->aDb[0].pBt); 1789 sqlite3_file *pMaster = 0; 1790 i64 offset = 0; 1791 int res; 1792 1793 /* Select a master journal file name */ 1794 do { 1795 u32 iRandom; 1796 sqlite3DbFree(db, zMaster); 1797 sqlite3_randomness(sizeof(iRandom), &iRandom); 1798 zMaster = sqlite3MPrintf(db, "%s-mj%08X", zMainFile, iRandom&0x7fffffff); 1799 if( !zMaster ){ 1800 return SQLITE_NOMEM; 1801 } 1802 rc = sqlite3OsAccess(pVfs, zMaster, SQLITE_ACCESS_EXISTS, &res); 1803 }while( rc==SQLITE_OK && res ); 1804 if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){ 1805 /* Open the master journal. */ 1806 rc = sqlite3OsOpenMalloc(pVfs, zMaster, &pMaster, 1807 SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE|SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE| 1808 SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE|SQLITE_OPEN_MASTER_JOURNAL, 0 1809 ); 1810 } 1811 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ 1812 sqlite3DbFree(db, zMaster); 1813 return rc; 1814 } 1815 1816 /* Write the name of each database file in the transaction into the new 1817 ** master journal file. If an error occurs at this point close 1818 ** and delete the master journal file. All the individual journal files 1819 ** still have 'null' as the master journal pointer, so they will roll 1820 ** back independently if a failure occurs. 1821 */ 1822 for(i=0; i<db->nDb; i++){ 1823 Btree *pBt = db->aDb[i].pBt; 1824 if( sqlite3BtreeIsInTrans(pBt) ){ 1825 char const *zFile = sqlite3BtreeGetJournalname(pBt); 1826 if( zFile==0 ){ 1827 continue; /* Ignore TEMP and :memory: databases */ 1828 } 1829 assert( zFile[0]!=0 ); 1830 if( !needSync && !sqlite3BtreeSyncDisabled(pBt) ){ 1831 needSync = 1; 1832 } 1833 rc = sqlite3OsWrite(pMaster, zFile, sqlite3Strlen30(zFile)+1, offset); 1834 offset += sqlite3Strlen30(zFile)+1; 1835 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ 1836 sqlite3OsCloseFree(pMaster); 1837 sqlite3OsDelete(pVfs, zMaster, 0); 1838 sqlite3DbFree(db, zMaster); 1839 return rc; 1840 } 1841 } 1842 } 1843 1844 /* Sync the master journal file. If the IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL device 1845 ** flag is set this is not required. 1846 */ 1847 if( needSync 1848 && 0==(sqlite3OsDeviceCharacteristics(pMaster)&SQLITE_IOCAP_SEQUENTIAL) 1849 && SQLITE_OK!=(rc = sqlite3OsSync(pMaster, SQLITE_SYNC_NORMAL)) 1850 ){ 1851 sqlite3OsCloseFree(pMaster); 1852 sqlite3OsDelete(pVfs, zMaster, 0); 1853 sqlite3DbFree(db, zMaster); 1854 return rc; 1855 } 1856 1857 /* Sync all the db files involved in the transaction. The same call 1858 ** sets the master journal pointer in each individual journal. If 1859 ** an error occurs here, do not delete the master journal file. 1860 ** 1861 ** If the error occurs during the first call to 1862 ** sqlite3BtreeCommitPhaseOne(), then there is a chance that the 1863 ** master journal file will be orphaned. But we cannot delete it, 1864 ** in case the master journal file name was written into the journal 1865 ** file before the failure occurred. 1866 */ 1867 for(i=0; rc==SQLITE_OK && i<db->nDb; i++){ 1868 Btree *pBt = db->aDb[i].pBt; 1869 if( pBt ){ 1870 rc = sqlite3BtreeCommitPhaseOne(pBt, zMaster); 1871 } 1872 } 1873 sqlite3OsCloseFree(pMaster); 1874 assert( rc!=SQLITE_BUSY ); 1875 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ 1876 sqlite3DbFree(db, zMaster); 1877 return rc; 1878 } 1879 1880 /* Delete the master journal file. This commits the transaction. After 1881 ** doing this the directory is synced again before any individual 1882 ** transaction files are deleted. 1883 */ 1884 rc = sqlite3OsDelete(pVfs, zMaster, 1); 1885 sqlite3DbFree(db, zMaster); 1886 zMaster = 0; 1887 if( rc ){ 1888 return rc; 1889 } 1890 1891 /* All files and directories have already been synced, so the following 1892 ** calls to sqlite3BtreeCommitPhaseTwo() are only closing files and 1893 ** deleting or truncating journals. If something goes wrong while 1894 ** this is happening we don't really care. The integrity of the 1895 ** transaction is already guaranteed, but some stray 'cold' journals 1896 ** may be lying around. Returning an error code won't help matters. 1897 */ 1898 disable_simulated_io_errors(); 1899 sqlite3BeginBenignMalloc(); 1900 for(i=0; i<db->nDb; i++){ 1901 Btree *pBt = db->aDb[i].pBt; 1902 if( pBt ){ 1903 sqlite3BtreeCommitPhaseTwo(pBt, 1); 1904 } 1905 } 1906 sqlite3EndBenignMalloc(); 1907 enable_simulated_io_errors(); 1908 1909 sqlite3VtabCommit(db); 1910 } 1911 #endif 1912 1913 return rc; 1914 } 1915 1916 /* 1917 ** This routine checks that the sqlite3.activeVdbeCnt count variable 1918 ** matches the number of vdbe's in the list sqlite3.pVdbe that are 1919 ** currently active. An assertion fails if the two counts do not match. 1920 ** This is an internal self-check only - it is not an essential processing 1921 ** step. 1922 ** 1923 ** This is a no-op if NDEBUG is defined. 1924 */ 1925 #ifndef NDEBUG 1926 static void checkActiveVdbeCnt(sqlite3 *db){ 1927 Vdbe *p; 1928 int cnt = 0; 1929 int nWrite = 0; 1930 p = db->pVdbe; 1931 while( p ){ 1932 if( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_RUN && p->pc>=0 ){ 1933 cnt++; 1934 if( p->readOnly==0 ) nWrite++; 1935 } 1936 p = p->pNext; 1937 } 1938 assert( cnt==db->activeVdbeCnt ); 1939 assert( nWrite==db->writeVdbeCnt ); 1940 } 1941 #else 1942 #define checkActiveVdbeCnt(x) 1943 #endif 1944 1945 /* 1946 ** For every Btree that in database connection db which 1947 ** has been modified, "trip" or invalidate each cursor in 1948 ** that Btree might have been modified so that the cursor 1949 ** can never be used again. This happens when a rollback 1950 *** occurs. We have to trip all the other cursors, even 1951 ** cursor from other VMs in different database connections, 1952 ** so that none of them try to use the data at which they 1953 ** were pointing and which now may have been changed due 1954 ** to the rollback. 1955 ** 1956 ** Remember that a rollback can delete tables complete and 1957 ** reorder rootpages. So it is not sufficient just to save 1958 ** the state of the cursor. We have to invalidate the cursor 1959 ** so that it is never used again. 1960 */ 1961 static void invalidateCursorsOnModifiedBtrees(sqlite3 *db){ 1962 int i; 1963 for(i=0; i<db->nDb; i++){ 1964 Btree *p = db->aDb[i].pBt; 1965 if( p && sqlite3BtreeIsInTrans(p) ){ 1966 sqlite3BtreeTripAllCursors(p, SQLITE_ABORT); 1967 } 1968 } 1969 } 1970 1971 /* 1972 ** If the Vdbe passed as the first argument opened a statement-transaction, 1973 ** close it now. Argument eOp must be either SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK or 1974 ** SAVEPOINT_RELEASE. If it is SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK, then the statement 1975 ** transaction is rolled back. If eOp is SAVEPOINT_RELEASE, then the 1976 ** statement transaction is commtted. 1977 ** 1978 ** If an IO error occurs, an SQLITE_IOERR_XXX error code is returned. 1979 ** Otherwise SQLITE_OK. 1980 */ 1981 int sqlite3VdbeCloseStatement(Vdbe *p, int eOp){ 1982 sqlite3 *const db = p->db; 1983 int rc = SQLITE_OK; 1984 1985 /* If p->iStatement is greater than zero, then this Vdbe opened a 1986 ** statement transaction that should be closed here. The only exception 1987 ** is that an IO error may have occured, causing an emergency rollback. 1988 ** In this case (db->nStatement==0), and there is nothing to do. 1989 */ 1990 if( db->nStatement && p->iStatement ){ 1991 int i; 1992 const int iSavepoint = p->iStatement-1; 1993 1994 assert( eOp==SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK || eOp==SAVEPOINT_RELEASE); 1995 assert( db->nStatement>0 ); 1996 assert( p->iStatement==(db->nStatement+db->nSavepoint) ); 1997 1998 for(i=0; i<db->nDb; i++){ 1999 int rc2 = SQLITE_OK; 2000 Btree *pBt = db->aDb[i].pBt; 2001 if( pBt ){ 2002 if( eOp==SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK ){ 2003 rc2 = sqlite3BtreeSavepoint(pBt, SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK, iSavepoint); 2004 } 2005 if( rc2==SQLITE_OK ){ 2006 rc2 = sqlite3BtreeSavepoint(pBt, SAVEPOINT_RELEASE, iSavepoint); 2007 } 2008 if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){ 2009 rc = rc2; 2010 } 2011 } 2012 } 2013 db->nStatement--; 2014 p->iStatement = 0; 2015 2016 /* If the statement transaction is being rolled back, also restore the 2017 ** database handles deferred constraint counter to the value it had when 2018 ** the statement transaction was opened. */ 2019 if( eOp==SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK ){ 2020 db->nDeferredCons = p->nStmtDefCons; 2021 } 2022 } 2023 return rc; 2024 } 2025 2026 /* 2027 ** This function is called when a transaction opened by the database 2028 ** handle associated with the VM passed as an argument is about to be 2029 ** committed. If there are outstanding deferred foreign key constraint 2030 ** violations, return SQLITE_ERROR. Otherwise, SQLITE_OK. 2031 ** 2032 ** If there are outstanding FK violations and this function returns 2033 ** SQLITE_ERROR, set the result of the VM to SQLITE_CONSTRAINT and write 2034 ** an error message to it. Then return SQLITE_ERROR. 2035 */ 2036 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_FOREIGN_KEY 2037 int sqlite3VdbeCheckFk(Vdbe *p, int deferred){ 2038 sqlite3 *db = p->db; 2039 if( (deferred && db->nDeferredCons>0) || (!deferred && p->nFkConstraint>0) ){ 2040 p->rc = SQLITE_CONSTRAINT; 2041 p->errorAction = OE_Abort; 2042 sqlite3SetString(&p->zErrMsg, db, "foreign key constraint failed"); 2043 return SQLITE_ERROR; 2044 } 2045 return SQLITE_OK; 2046 } 2047 #endif 2048 2049 /* 2050 ** This routine is called the when a VDBE tries to halt. If the VDBE 2051 ** has made changes and is in autocommit mode, then commit those 2052 ** changes. If a rollback is needed, then do the rollback. 2053 ** 2054 ** This routine is the only way to move the state of a VM from 2055 ** SQLITE_MAGIC_RUN to SQLITE_MAGIC_HALT. It is harmless to 2056 ** call this on a VM that is in the SQLITE_MAGIC_HALT state. 2057 ** 2058 ** Return an error code. If the commit could not complete because of 2059 ** lock contention, return SQLITE_BUSY. If SQLITE_BUSY is returned, it 2060 ** means the close did not happen and needs to be repeated. 2061 */ 2062 int sqlite3VdbeHalt(Vdbe *p){ 2063 int rc; /* Used to store transient return codes */ 2064 sqlite3 *db = p->db; 2065 2066 /* This function contains the logic that determines if a statement or 2067 ** transaction will be committed or rolled back as a result of the 2068 ** execution of this virtual machine. 2069 ** 2070 ** If any of the following errors occur: 2071 ** 2072 ** SQLITE_NOMEM 2073 ** SQLITE_IOERR 2074 ** SQLITE_FULL 2075 ** SQLITE_INTERRUPT 2076 ** 2077 ** Then the internal cache might have been left in an inconsistent 2078 ** state. We need to rollback the statement transaction, if there is 2079 ** one, or the complete transaction if there is no statement transaction. 2080 */ 2081 2082 if( p->db->mallocFailed ){ 2083 p->rc = SQLITE_NOMEM; 2084 } 2085 closeAllCursors(p); 2086 if( p->magic!=VDBE_MAGIC_RUN ){ 2087 return SQLITE_OK; 2088 } 2089 checkActiveVdbeCnt(db); 2090 2091 /* No commit or rollback needed if the program never started */ 2092 if( p->pc>=0 ){ 2093 int mrc; /* Primary error code from p->rc */ 2094 int eStatementOp = 0; 2095 int isSpecialError; /* Set to true if a 'special' error */ 2096 2097 /* Lock all btrees used by the statement */ 2098 sqlite3VdbeEnter(p); 2099 2100 /* Check for one of the special errors */ 2101 mrc = p->rc & 0xff; 2102 assert( p->rc!=SQLITE_IOERR_BLOCKED ); /* This error no longer exists */ 2103 isSpecialError = mrc==SQLITE_NOMEM || mrc==SQLITE_IOERR 2104 || mrc==SQLITE_INTERRUPT || mrc==SQLITE_FULL; 2105 if( isSpecialError ){ 2106 /* If the query was read-only and the error code is SQLITE_INTERRUPT, 2107 ** no rollback is necessary. Otherwise, at least a savepoint 2108 ** transaction must be rolled back to restore the database to a 2109 ** consistent state. 2110 ** 2111 ** Even if the statement is read-only, it is important to perform 2112 ** a statement or transaction rollback operation. If the error 2113 ** occured while writing to the journal, sub-journal or database 2114 ** file as part of an effort to free up cache space (see function 2115 ** pagerStress() in pager.c), the rollback is required to restore 2116 ** the pager to a consistent state. 2117 */ 2118 if( !p->readOnly || mrc!=SQLITE_INTERRUPT ){ 2119 if( (mrc==SQLITE_NOMEM || mrc==SQLITE_FULL) && p->usesStmtJournal ){ 2120 eStatementOp = SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK; 2121 }else{ 2122 /* We are forced to roll back the active transaction. Before doing 2123 ** so, abort any other statements this handle currently has active. 2124 */ 2125 invalidateCursorsOnModifiedBtrees(db); 2126 sqlite3RollbackAll(db); 2127 sqlite3CloseSavepoints(db); 2128 db->autoCommit = 1; 2129 } 2130 } 2131 } 2132 2133 /* Check for immediate foreign key violations. */ 2134 if( p->rc==SQLITE_OK ){ 2135 sqlite3VdbeCheckFk(p, 0); 2136 } 2137 2138 /* If the auto-commit flag is set and this is the only active writer 2139 ** VM, then we do either a commit or rollback of the current transaction. 2140 ** 2141 ** Note: This block also runs if one of the special errors handled 2142 ** above has occurred. 2143 */ 2144 if( !sqlite3VtabInSync(db) 2145 && db->autoCommit 2146 && db->writeVdbeCnt==(p->readOnly==0) 2147 ){ 2148 if( p->rc==SQLITE_OK || (p->errorAction==OE_Fail && !isSpecialError) ){ 2149 rc = sqlite3VdbeCheckFk(p, 1); 2150 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ 2151 if( NEVER(p->readOnly) ){ 2152 sqlite3VdbeLeave(p); 2153 return SQLITE_ERROR; 2154 } 2155 rc = SQLITE_CONSTRAINT; 2156 }else{ 2157 /* The auto-commit flag is true, the vdbe program was successful 2158 ** or hit an 'OR FAIL' constraint and there are no deferred foreign 2159 ** key constraints to hold up the transaction. This means a commit 2160 ** is required. */ 2161 rc = vdbeCommit(db, p); 2162 } 2163 if( rc==SQLITE_BUSY && p->readOnly ){ 2164 sqlite3VdbeLeave(p); 2165 return SQLITE_BUSY; 2166 }else if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ 2167 p->rc = rc; 2168 sqlite3RollbackAll(db); 2169 }else{ 2170 db->nDeferredCons = 0; 2171 sqlite3CommitInternalChanges(db); 2172 } 2173 }else{ 2174 sqlite3RollbackAll(db); 2175 } 2176 db->nStatement = 0; 2177 }else if( eStatementOp==0 ){ 2178 if( p->rc==SQLITE_OK || p->errorAction==OE_Fail ){ 2179 eStatementOp = SAVEPOINT_RELEASE; 2180 }else if( p->errorAction==OE_Abort ){ 2181 eStatementOp = SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK; 2182 }else{ 2183 invalidateCursorsOnModifiedBtrees(db); 2184 sqlite3RollbackAll(db); 2185 sqlite3CloseSavepoints(db); 2186 db->autoCommit = 1; 2187 } 2188 } 2189 2190 /* If eStatementOp is non-zero, then a statement transaction needs to 2191 ** be committed or rolled back. Call sqlite3VdbeCloseStatement() to 2192 ** do so. If this operation returns an error, and the current statement 2193 ** error code is SQLITE_OK or SQLITE_CONSTRAINT, then promote the 2194 ** current statement error code. 2195 ** 2196 ** Note that sqlite3VdbeCloseStatement() can only fail if eStatementOp 2197 ** is SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK. But if p->rc==SQLITE_OK then eStatementOp 2198 ** must be SAVEPOINT_RELEASE. Hence the NEVER(p->rc==SQLITE_OK) in 2199 ** the following code. 2200 */ 2201 if( eStatementOp ){ 2202 rc = sqlite3VdbeCloseStatement(p, eStatementOp); 2203 if( rc ){ 2204 assert( eStatementOp==SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK ); 2205 if( NEVER(p->rc==SQLITE_OK) || p->rc==SQLITE_CONSTRAINT ){ 2206 p->rc = rc; 2207 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->zErrMsg); 2208 p->zErrMsg = 0; 2209 } 2210 invalidateCursorsOnModifiedBtrees(db); 2211 sqlite3RollbackAll(db); 2212 sqlite3CloseSavepoints(db); 2213 db->autoCommit = 1; 2214 } 2215 } 2216 2217 /* If this was an INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE and no statement transaction 2218 ** has been rolled back, update the database connection change-counter. 2219 */ 2220 if( p->changeCntOn ){ 2221 if( eStatementOp!=SAVEPOINT_ROLLBACK ){ 2222 sqlite3VdbeSetChanges(db, p->nChange); 2223 }else{ 2224 sqlite3VdbeSetChanges(db, 0); 2225 } 2226 p->nChange = 0; 2227 } 2228 2229 /* Rollback or commit any schema changes that occurred. */ 2230 if( p->rc!=SQLITE_OK && db->flags&SQLITE_InternChanges ){ 2231 sqlite3ResetInternalSchema(db, -1); 2232 db->flags = (db->flags | SQLITE_InternChanges); 2233 } 2234 2235 /* Release the locks */ 2236 sqlite3VdbeLeave(p); 2237 } 2238 2239 /* We have successfully halted and closed the VM. Record this fact. */ 2240 if( p->pc>=0 ){ 2241 db->activeVdbeCnt--; 2242 if( !p->readOnly ){ 2243 db->writeVdbeCnt--; 2244 } 2245 assert( db->activeVdbeCnt>=db->writeVdbeCnt ); 2246 } 2247 p->magic = VDBE_MAGIC_HALT; 2248 checkActiveVdbeCnt(db); 2249 if( p->db->mallocFailed ){ 2250 p->rc = SQLITE_NOMEM; 2251 } 2252 2253 /* If the auto-commit flag is set to true, then any locks that were held 2254 ** by connection db have now been released. Call sqlite3ConnectionUnlocked() 2255 ** to invoke any required unlock-notify callbacks. 2256 */ 2257 if( db->autoCommit ){ 2258 sqlite3ConnectionUnlocked(db); 2259 } 2260 2261 assert( db->activeVdbeCnt>0 || db->autoCommit==0 || db->nStatement==0 ); 2262 return (p->rc==SQLITE_BUSY ? SQLITE_BUSY : SQLITE_OK); 2263 } 2264 2265 2266 /* 2267 ** Each VDBE holds the result of the most recent sqlite3_step() call 2268 ** in p->rc. This routine sets that result back to SQLITE_OK. 2269 */ 2270 void sqlite3VdbeResetStepResult(Vdbe *p){ 2271 p->rc = SQLITE_OK; 2272 } 2273 2274 /* 2275 ** Clean up a VDBE after execution but do not delete the VDBE just yet. 2276 ** Write any error messages into *pzErrMsg. Return the result code. 2277 ** 2278 ** After this routine is run, the VDBE should be ready to be executed 2279 ** again. 2280 ** 2281 ** To look at it another way, this routine resets the state of the 2282 ** virtual machine from VDBE_MAGIC_RUN or VDBE_MAGIC_HALT back to 2283 ** VDBE_MAGIC_INIT. 2284 */ 2285 int sqlite3VdbeReset(Vdbe *p){ 2286 sqlite3 *db; 2287 db = p->db; 2288 2289 /* If the VM did not run to completion or if it encountered an 2290 ** error, then it might not have been halted properly. So halt 2291 ** it now. 2292 */ 2293 sqlite3VdbeHalt(p); 2294 2295 /* If the VDBE has be run even partially, then transfer the error code 2296 ** and error message from the VDBE into the main database structure. But 2297 ** if the VDBE has just been set to run but has not actually executed any 2298 ** instructions yet, leave the main database error information unchanged. 2299 */ 2300 if( p->pc>=0 ){ 2301 if( p->zErrMsg ){ 2302 sqlite3BeginBenignMalloc(); 2303 sqlite3ValueSetStr(db->pErr,-1,p->zErrMsg,SQLITE_UTF8,SQLITE_TRANSIENT); 2304 sqlite3EndBenignMalloc(); 2305 db->errCode = p->rc; 2306 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->zErrMsg); 2307 p->zErrMsg = 0; 2308 }else if( p->rc ){ 2309 sqlite3Error(db, p->rc, 0); 2310 }else{ 2311 sqlite3Error(db, SQLITE_OK, 0); 2312 } 2313 if( p->runOnlyOnce ) p->expired = 1; 2314 }else if( p->rc && p->expired ){ 2315 /* The expired flag was set on the VDBE before the first call 2316 ** to sqlite3_step(). For consistency (since sqlite3_step() was 2317 ** called), set the database error in this case as well. 2318 */ 2319 sqlite3Error(db, p->rc, 0); 2320 sqlite3ValueSetStr(db->pErr, -1, p->zErrMsg, SQLITE_UTF8, SQLITE_TRANSIENT); 2321 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->zErrMsg); 2322 p->zErrMsg = 0; 2323 } 2324 2325 /* Reclaim all memory used by the VDBE 2326 */ 2327 Cleanup(p); 2328 2329 /* Save profiling information from this VDBE run. 2330 */ 2331 #ifdef VDBE_PROFILE 2332 { 2333 FILE *out = fopen("vdbe_profile.out", "a"); 2334 if( out ){ 2335 int i; 2336 fprintf(out, "---- "); 2337 for(i=0; i<p->nOp; i++){ 2338 fprintf(out, "%02x", p->aOp[i].opcode); 2339 } 2340 fprintf(out, "\n"); 2341 for(i=0; i<p->nOp; i++){ 2342 fprintf(out, "%6d %10lld %8lld ", 2343 p->aOp[i].cnt, 2344 p->aOp[i].cycles, 2345 p->aOp[i].cnt>0 ? p->aOp[i].cycles/p->aOp[i].cnt : 0 2346 ); 2347 sqlite3VdbePrintOp(out, i, &p->aOp[i]); 2348 } 2349 fclose(out); 2350 } 2351 } 2352 #endif 2353 p->magic = VDBE_MAGIC_INIT; 2354 return p->rc & db->errMask; 2355 } 2356 2357 /* 2358 ** Clean up and delete a VDBE after execution. Return an integer which is 2359 ** the result code. Write any error message text into *pzErrMsg. 2360 */ 2361 int sqlite3VdbeFinalize(Vdbe *p){ 2362 int rc = SQLITE_OK; 2363 if( p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_RUN || p->magic==VDBE_MAGIC_HALT ){ 2364 rc = sqlite3VdbeReset(p); 2365 assert( (rc & p->db->errMask)==rc ); 2366 } 2367 sqlite3VdbeDelete(p); 2368 return rc; 2369 } 2370 2371 /* 2372 ** Call the destructor for each auxdata entry in pVdbeFunc for which 2373 ** the corresponding bit in mask is clear. Auxdata entries beyond 31 2374 ** are always destroyed. To destroy all auxdata entries, call this 2375 ** routine with mask==0. 2376 */ 2377 void sqlite3VdbeDeleteAuxData(VdbeFunc *pVdbeFunc, int mask){ 2378 int i; 2379 for(i=0; i<pVdbeFunc->nAux; i++){ 2380 struct AuxData *pAux = &pVdbeFunc->apAux[i]; 2381 if( (i>31 || !(mask&(((u32)1)<<i))) && pAux->pAux ){ 2382 if( pAux->xDelete ){ 2383 pAux->xDelete(pAux->pAux); 2384 } 2385 pAux->pAux = 0; 2386 } 2387 } 2388 } 2389 2390 /* 2391 ** Free all memory associated with the Vdbe passed as the second argument. 2392 ** The difference between this function and sqlite3VdbeDelete() is that 2393 ** VdbeDelete() also unlinks the Vdbe from the list of VMs associated with 2394 ** the database connection. 2395 */ 2396 void sqlite3VdbeDeleteObject(sqlite3 *db, Vdbe *p){ 2397 SubProgram *pSub, *pNext; 2398 assert( p->db==0 || p->db==db ); 2399 releaseMemArray(p->aVar, p->nVar); 2400 releaseMemArray(p->aColName, p->nResColumn*COLNAME_N); 2401 for(pSub=p->pProgram; pSub; pSub=pNext){ 2402 pNext = pSub->pNext; 2403 vdbeFreeOpArray(db, pSub->aOp, pSub->nOp); 2404 sqlite3DbFree(db, pSub); 2405 } 2406 vdbeFreeOpArray(db, p->aOp, p->nOp); 2407 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->aLabel); 2408 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->aColName); 2409 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->zSql); 2410 sqlite3DbFree(db, p->pFree); 2411 sqlite3DbFree(db, p); 2412 } 2413 2414 /* 2415 ** Delete an entire VDBE. 2416 */ 2417 void sqlite3VdbeDelete(Vdbe *p){ 2418 sqlite3 *db; 2419 2420 if( NEVER(p==0) ) return; 2421 db = p->db; 2422 if( p->pPrev ){ 2423 p->pPrev->pNext = p->pNext; 2424 }else{ 2425 assert( db->pVdbe==p ); 2426 db->pVdbe = p->pNext; 2427 } 2428 if( p->pNext ){ 2429 p->pNext->pPrev = p->pPrev; 2430 } 2431 p->magic = VDBE_MAGIC_DEAD; 2432 p->db = 0; 2433 sqlite3VdbeDeleteObject(db, p); 2434 } 2435 2436 /* 2437 ** Make sure the cursor p is ready to read or write the row to which it 2438 ** was last positioned. Return an error code if an OOM fault or I/O error 2439 ** prevents us from positioning the cursor to its correct position. 2440 ** 2441 ** If a MoveTo operation is pending on the given cursor, then do that 2442 ** MoveTo now. If no move is pending, check to see if the row has been 2443 ** deleted out from under the cursor and if it has, mark the row as 2444 ** a NULL row. 2445 ** 2446 ** If the cursor is already pointing to the correct row and that row has 2447 ** not been deleted out from under the cursor, then this routine is a no-op. 2448 */ 2449 int sqlite3VdbeCursorMoveto(VdbeCursor *p){ 2450 if( p->deferredMoveto ){ 2451 int res, rc; 2452 #ifdef SQLITE_TEST 2453 extern int sqlite3_search_count; 2454 #endif 2455 assert( p->isTable ); 2456 rc = sqlite3BtreeMovetoUnpacked(p->pCursor, 0, p->movetoTarget, 0, &res); 2457 if( rc ) return rc; 2458 p->lastRowid = p->movetoTarget; 2459 if( res!=0 ) return SQLITE_CORRUPT_BKPT; 2460 p->rowidIsValid = 1; 2461 #ifdef SQLITE_TEST 2462 sqlite3_search_count++; 2463 #endif 2464 p->deferredMoveto = 0; 2465 p->cacheStatus = CACHE_STALE; 2466 }else if( ALWAYS(p->pCursor) ){ 2467 int hasMoved; 2468 int rc = sqlite3BtreeCursorHasMoved(p->pCursor, &hasMoved); 2469 if( rc ) return rc; 2470 if( hasMoved ){ 2471 p->cacheStatus = CACHE_STALE; 2472 p->nullRow = 1; 2473 } 2474 } 2475 return SQLITE_OK; 2476 } 2477 2478 /* 2479 ** The following functions: 2480 ** 2481 ** sqlite3VdbeSerialType() 2482 ** sqlite3VdbeSerialTypeLen() 2483 ** sqlite3VdbeSerialLen() 2484 ** sqlite3VdbeSerialPut() 2485 ** sqlite3VdbeSerialGet() 2486 ** 2487 ** encapsulate the code that serializes values for storage in SQLite 2488 ** data and index records. Each serialized value consists of a 2489 ** 'serial-type' and a blob of data. The serial type is an 8-byte unsigned 2490 ** integer, stored as a varint. 2491 ** 2492 ** In an SQLite index record, the serial type is stored directly before 2493 ** the blob of data that it corresponds to. In a table record, all serial 2494 ** types are stored at the start of the record, and the blobs of data at 2495 ** the end. Hence these functions allow the caller to handle the 2496 ** serial-type and data blob seperately. 2497 ** 2498 ** The following table describes the various storage classes for data: 2499 ** 2500 ** serial type bytes of data type 2501 ** -------------- --------------- --------------- 2502 ** 0 0 NULL 2503 ** 1 1 signed integer 2504 ** 2 2 signed integer 2505 ** 3 3 signed integer 2506 ** 4 4 signed integer 2507 ** 5 6 signed integer 2508 ** 6 8 signed integer 2509 ** 7 8 IEEE float 2510 ** 8 0 Integer constant 0 2511 ** 9 0 Integer constant 1 2512 ** 10,11 reserved for expansion 2513 ** N>=12 and even (N-12)/2 BLOB 2514 ** N>=13 and odd (N-13)/2 text 2515 ** 2516 ** The 8 and 9 types were added in 3.3.0, file format 4. Prior versions 2517 ** of SQLite will not understand those serial types. 2518 */ 2519 2520 /* 2521 ** Return the serial-type for the value stored in pMem. 2522 */ 2523 u32 sqlite3VdbeSerialType(Mem *pMem, int file_format){ 2524 int flags = pMem->flags; 2525 int n; 2526 2527 if( flags&MEM_Null ){ 2528 return 0; 2529 } 2530 if( flags&MEM_Int ){ 2531 /* Figure out whether to use 1, 2, 4, 6 or 8 bytes. */ 2532 # define MAX_6BYTE ((((i64)0x00008000)<<32)-1) 2533 i64 i = pMem->u.i; 2534 u64 u; 2535 if( file_format>=4 && (i&1)==i ){ 2536 return 8+(u32)i; 2537 } 2538 if( i<0 ){ 2539 if( i<(-MAX_6BYTE) ) return 6; 2540 /* Previous test prevents: u = -(-9223372036854775808) */ 2541 u = -i; 2542 }else{ 2543 u = i; 2544 } 2545 if( u<=127 ) return 1; 2546 if( u<=32767 ) return 2; 2547 if( u<=8388607 ) return 3; 2548 if( u<=2147483647 ) return 4; 2549 if( u<=MAX_6BYTE ) return 5; 2550 return 6; 2551 } 2552 if( flags&MEM_Real ){ 2553 return 7; 2554 } 2555 assert( pMem->db->mallocFailed || flags&(MEM_Str|MEM_Blob) ); 2556 n = pMem->n; 2557 if( flags & MEM_Zero ){ 2558 n += pMem->u.nZero; 2559 } 2560 assert( n>=0 ); 2561 return ((n*2) + 12 + ((flags&MEM_Str)!=0)); 2562 } 2563 2564 /* 2565 ** Return the length of the data corresponding to the supplied serial-type. 2566 */ 2567 u32 sqlite3VdbeSerialTypeLen(u32 serial_type){ 2568 if( serial_type>=12 ){ 2569 return (serial_type-12)/2; 2570 }else{ 2571 static const u8 aSize[] = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 8, 0, 0, 0, 0 }; 2572 return aSize[serial_type]; 2573 } 2574 } 2575 2576 /* 2577 ** If we are on an architecture with mixed-endian floating 2578 ** points (ex: ARM7) then swap the lower 4 bytes with the 2579 ** upper 4 bytes. Return the result. 2580 ** 2581 ** For most architectures, this is a no-op. 2582 ** 2583 ** (later): It is reported to me that the mixed-endian problem 2584 ** on ARM7 is an issue with GCC, not with the ARM7 chip. It seems 2585 ** that early versions of GCC stored the two words of a 64-bit 2586 ** float in the wrong order. And that error has been propagated 2587 ** ever since. The blame is not necessarily with GCC, though. 2588 ** GCC might have just copying the problem from a prior compiler. 2589 ** I am also told that newer versions of GCC that follow a different 2590 ** ABI get the byte order right. 2591 ** 2592 ** Developers using SQLite on an ARM7 should compile and run their 2593 ** application using -DSQLITE_DEBUG=1 at least once. With DEBUG 2594 ** enabled, some asserts below will ensure that the byte order of 2595 ** floating point values is correct. 2596 ** 2597 ** (2007-08-30) Frank van Vugt has studied this problem closely 2598 ** and has send his findings to the SQLite developers. Frank 2599 ** writes that some Linux kernels offer floating point hardware 2600 ** emulation that uses only 32-bit mantissas instead of a full 2601 ** 48-bits as required by the IEEE standard. (This is the 2602 ** CONFIG_FPE_FASTFPE option.) On such systems, floating point 2603 ** byte swapping becomes very complicated. To avoid problems, 2604 ** the necessary byte swapping is carried out using a 64-bit integer 2605 ** rather than a 64-bit float. Frank assures us that the code here 2606 ** works for him. We, the developers, have no way to independently 2607 ** verify this, but Frank seems to know what he is talking about 2608 ** so we trust him. 2609 */ 2610 #ifdef SQLITE_MIXED_ENDIAN_64BIT_FLOAT 2611 static u64 floatSwap(u64 in){ 2612 union { 2613 u64 r; 2614 u32 i[2]; 2615 } u; 2616 u32 t; 2617 2618 u.r = in; 2619 t = u.i[0]; 2620 u.i[0] = u.i[1]; 2621 u.i[1] = t; 2622 return u.r; 2623 } 2624 # define swapMixedEndianFloat(X) X = floatSwap(X) 2625 #else 2626 # define swapMixedEndianFloat(X) 2627 #endif 2628 2629 /* 2630 ** Write the serialized data blob for the value stored in pMem into 2631 ** buf. It is assumed that the caller has allocated sufficient space. 2632 ** Return the number of bytes written. 2633 ** 2634 ** nBuf is the amount of space left in buf[]. nBuf must always be 2635 ** large enough to hold the entire field. Except, if the field is 2636 ** a blob with a zero-filled tail, then buf[] might be just the right 2637 ** size to hold everything except for the zero-filled tail. If buf[] 2638 ** is only big enough to hold the non-zero prefix, then only write that 2639 ** prefix into buf[]. But if buf[] is large enough to hold both the 2640 ** prefix and the tail then write the prefix and set the tail to all 2641 ** zeros. 2642 ** 2643 ** Return the number of bytes actually written into buf[]. The number 2644 ** of bytes in the zero-filled tail is included in the return value only 2645 ** if those bytes were zeroed in buf[]. 2646 */ 2647 u32 sqlite3VdbeSerialPut(u8 *buf, int nBuf, Mem *pMem, int file_format){ 2648 u32 serial_type = sqlite3VdbeSerialType(pMem, file_format); 2649 u32 len; 2650 2651 /* Integer and Real */ 2652 if( serial_type<=7 && serial_type>0 ){ 2653 u64 v; 2654 u32 i; 2655 if( serial_type==7 ){ 2656 assert( sizeof(v)==sizeof(pMem->r) ); 2657 memcpy(&v, &pMem->r, sizeof(v)); 2658 swapMixedEndianFloat(v); 2659 }else{ 2660 v = pMem->u.i; 2661 } 2662 len = i = sqlite3VdbeSerialTypeLen(serial_type); 2663 assert( len<=(u32)nBuf ); 2664 while( i-- ){ 2665 buf[i] = (u8)(v&0xFF); 2666 v >>= 8; 2667 } 2668 return len; 2669 } 2670 2671 /* String or blob */ 2672 if( serial_type>=12 ){ 2673 assert( pMem->n + ((pMem->flags & MEM_Zero)?pMem->u.nZero:0) 2674 == (int)sqlite3VdbeSerialTypeLen(serial_type) ); 2675 assert( pMem->n<=nBuf ); 2676 len = pMem->n; 2677 memcpy(buf, pMem->z, len); 2678 if( pMem->flags & MEM_Zero ){ 2679 len += pMem->u.nZero; 2680 assert( nBuf>=0 ); 2681 if( len > (u32)nBuf ){ 2682 len = (u32)nBuf; 2683 } 2684 memset(&buf[pMem->n], 0, len-pMem->n); 2685 } 2686 return len; 2687 } 2688 2689 /* NULL or constants 0 or 1 */ 2690 return 0; 2691 } 2692 2693 /* 2694 ** Deserialize the data blob pointed to by buf as serial type serial_type 2695 ** and store the result in pMem. Return the number of bytes read. 2696 */ 2697 u32 sqlite3VdbeSerialGet( 2698 const unsigned char *buf, /* Buffer to deserialize from */ 2699 u32 serial_type, /* Serial type to deserialize */ 2700 Mem *pMem /* Memory cell to write value into */ 2701 ){ 2702 switch( serial_type ){ 2703 case 10: /* Reserved for future use */ 2704 case 11: /* Reserved for future use */ 2705 case 0: { /* NULL */ 2706 pMem->flags = MEM_Null; 2707 break; 2708 } 2709 case 1: { /* 1-byte signed integer */ 2710 pMem->u.i = (signed char)buf[0]; 2711 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 2712 return 1; 2713 } 2714 case 2: { /* 2-byte signed integer */ 2715 pMem->u.i = (((signed char)buf[0])<<8) | buf[1]; 2716 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 2717 return 2; 2718 } 2719 case 3: { /* 3-byte signed integer */ 2720 pMem->u.i = (((signed char)buf[0])<<16) | (buf[1]<<8) | buf[2]; 2721 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 2722 return 3; 2723 } 2724 case 4: { /* 4-byte signed integer */ 2725 pMem->u.i = (buf[0]<<24) | (buf[1]<<16) | (buf[2]<<8) | buf[3]; 2726 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 2727 return 4; 2728 } 2729 case 5: { /* 6-byte signed integer */ 2730 u64 x = (((signed char)buf[0])<<8) | buf[1]; 2731 u32 y = (buf[2]<<24) | (buf[3]<<16) | (buf[4]<<8) | buf[5]; 2732 x = (x<<32) | y; 2733 pMem->u.i = *(i64*)&x; 2734 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 2735 return 6; 2736 } 2737 case 6: /* 8-byte signed integer */ 2738 case 7: { /* IEEE floating point */ 2739 u64 x; 2740 u32 y; 2741 #if !defined(NDEBUG) && !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_FLOATING_POINT) 2742 /* Verify that integers and floating point values use the same 2743 ** byte order. Or, that if SQLITE_MIXED_ENDIAN_64BIT_FLOAT is 2744 ** defined that 64-bit floating point values really are mixed 2745 ** endian. 2746 */ 2747 static const u64 t1 = ((u64)0x3ff00000)<<32; 2748 static const double r1 = 1.0; 2749 u64 t2 = t1; 2750 swapMixedEndianFloat(t2); 2751 assert( sizeof(r1)==sizeof(t2) && memcmp(&r1, &t2, sizeof(r1))==0 ); 2752 #endif 2753 2754 x = (buf[0]<<24) | (buf[1]<<16) | (buf[2]<<8) | buf[3]; 2755 y = (buf[4]<<24) | (buf[5]<<16) | (buf[6]<<8) | buf[7]; 2756 x = (x<<32) | y; 2757 if( serial_type==6 ){ 2758 pMem->u.i = *(i64*)&x; 2759 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 2760 }else{ 2761 assert( sizeof(x)==8 && sizeof(pMem->r)==8 ); 2762 swapMixedEndianFloat(x); 2763 memcpy(&pMem->r, &x, sizeof(x)); 2764 pMem->flags = sqlite3IsNaN(pMem->r) ? MEM_Null : MEM_Real; 2765 } 2766 return 8; 2767 } 2768 case 8: /* Integer 0 */ 2769 case 9: { /* Integer 1 */ 2770 pMem->u.i = serial_type-8; 2771 pMem->flags = MEM_Int; 2772 return 0; 2773 } 2774 default: { 2775 u32 len = (serial_type-12)/2; 2776 pMem->z = (char *)buf; 2777 pMem->n = len; 2778 pMem->xDel = 0; 2779 if( serial_type&0x01 ){ 2780 pMem->flags = MEM_Str | MEM_Ephem; 2781 }else{ 2782 pMem->flags = MEM_Blob | MEM_Ephem; 2783 } 2784 return len; 2785 } 2786 } 2787 return 0; 2788 } 2789 2790 2791 /* 2792 ** Given the nKey-byte encoding of a record in pKey[], parse the 2793 ** record into a UnpackedRecord structure. Return a pointer to 2794 ** that structure. 2795 ** 2796 ** The calling function might provide szSpace bytes of memory 2797 ** space at pSpace. This space can be used to hold the returned 2798 ** VDbeParsedRecord structure if it is large enough. If it is 2799 ** not big enough, space is obtained from sqlite3_malloc(). 2800 ** 2801 ** The returned structure should be closed by a call to 2802 ** sqlite3VdbeDeleteUnpackedRecord(). 2803 */ 2804 UnpackedRecord *sqlite3VdbeRecordUnpack( 2805 KeyInfo *pKeyInfo, /* Information about the record format */ 2806 int nKey, /* Size of the binary record */ 2807 const void *pKey, /* The binary record */ 2808 char *pSpace, /* Unaligned space available to hold the object */ 2809 int szSpace /* Size of pSpace[] in bytes */ 2810 ){ 2811 const unsigned char *aKey = (const unsigned char *)pKey; 2812 UnpackedRecord *p; /* The unpacked record that we will return */ 2813 int nByte; /* Memory space needed to hold p, in bytes */ 2814 int d; 2815 u32 idx; 2816 u16 u; /* Unsigned loop counter */ 2817 u32 szHdr; 2818 Mem *pMem; 2819 int nOff; /* Increase pSpace by this much to 8-byte align it */ 2820 2821 /* 2822 ** We want to shift the pointer pSpace up such that it is 8-byte aligned. 2823 ** Thus, we need to calculate a value, nOff, between 0 and 7, to shift 2824 ** it by. If pSpace is already 8-byte aligned, nOff should be zero. 2825 */ 2826 nOff = (8 - (SQLITE_PTR_TO_INT(pSpace) & 7)) & 7; 2827 pSpace += nOff; 2828 szSpace -= nOff; 2829 nByte = ROUND8(sizeof(UnpackedRecord)) + sizeof(Mem)*(pKeyInfo->nField+1); 2830 if( nByte>szSpace ){ 2831 p = sqlite3DbMallocRaw(pKeyInfo->db, nByte); 2832 if( p==0 ) return 0; 2833 p->flags = UNPACKED_NEED_FREE | UNPACKED_NEED_DESTROY; 2834 }else{ 2835 p = (UnpackedRecord*)pSpace; 2836 p->flags = UNPACKED_NEED_DESTROY; 2837 } 2838 p->pKeyInfo = pKeyInfo; 2839 p->nField = pKeyInfo->nField + 1; 2840 p->aMem = pMem = (Mem*)&((char*)p)[ROUND8(sizeof(UnpackedRecord))]; 2841 assert( EIGHT_BYTE_ALIGNMENT(pMem) ); 2842 idx = getVarint32(aKey, szHdr); 2843 d = szHdr; 2844 u = 0; 2845 while( idx<szHdr && u<p->nField && d<=nKey ){ 2846 u32 serial_type; 2847 2848 idx += getVarint32(&aKey[idx], serial_type); 2849 pMem->enc = pKeyInfo->enc; 2850 pMem->db = pKeyInfo->db; 2851 pMem->flags = 0; 2852 pMem->zMalloc = 0; 2853 d += sqlite3VdbeSerialGet(&aKey[d], serial_type, pMem); 2854 pMem++; 2855 u++; 2856 } 2857 assert( u<=pKeyInfo->nField + 1 ); 2858 p->nField = u; 2859 return (void*)p; 2860 } 2861 2862 /* 2863 ** This routine destroys a UnpackedRecord object. 2864 */ 2865 void sqlite3VdbeDeleteUnpackedRecord(UnpackedRecord *p){ 2866 int i; 2867 Mem *pMem; 2868 2869 assert( p!=0 ); 2870 assert( p->flags & UNPACKED_NEED_DESTROY ); 2871 for(i=0, pMem=p->aMem; i<p->nField; i++, pMem++){ 2872 /* The unpacked record is always constructed by the 2873 ** sqlite3VdbeUnpackRecord() function above, which makes all 2874 ** strings and blobs static. And none of the elements are 2875 ** ever transformed, so there is never anything to delete. 2876 */ 2877 if( NEVER(pMem->zMalloc) ) sqlite3VdbeMemRelease(pMem); 2878 } 2879 if( p->flags & UNPACKED_NEED_FREE ){ 2880 sqlite3DbFree(p->pKeyInfo->db, p); 2881 } 2882 } 2883 2884 /* 2885 ** This function compares the two table rows or index records 2886 ** specified by {nKey1, pKey1} and pPKey2. It returns a negative, zero 2887 ** or positive integer if key1 is less than, equal to or 2888 ** greater than key2. The {nKey1, pKey1} key must be a blob 2889 ** created by th OP_MakeRecord opcode of the VDBE. The pPKey2 2890 ** key must be a parsed key such as obtained from 2891 ** sqlite3VdbeParseRecord. 2892 ** 2893 ** Key1 and Key2 do not have to contain the same number of fields. 2894 ** The key with fewer fields is usually compares less than the 2895 ** longer key. However if the UNPACKED_INCRKEY flags in pPKey2 is set 2896 ** and the common prefixes are equal, then key1 is less than key2. 2897 ** Or if the UNPACKED_MATCH_PREFIX flag is set and the prefixes are 2898 ** equal, then the keys are considered to be equal and 2899 ** the parts beyond the common prefix are ignored. 2900 ** 2901 ** If the UNPACKED_IGNORE_ROWID flag is set, then the last byte of 2902 ** the header of pKey1 is ignored. It is assumed that pKey1 is 2903 ** an index key, and thus ends with a rowid value. The last byte 2904 ** of the header will therefore be the serial type of the rowid: 2905 ** one of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, or 9 - the integer serial types. 2906 ** The serial type of the final rowid will always be a single byte. 2907 ** By ignoring this last byte of the header, we force the comparison 2908 ** to ignore the rowid at the end of key1. 2909 */ 2910 int sqlite3VdbeRecordCompare( 2911 int nKey1, const void *pKey1, /* Left key */ 2912 UnpackedRecord *pPKey2 /* Right key */ 2913 ){ 2914 int d1; /* Offset into aKey[] of next data element */ 2915 u32 idx1; /* Offset into aKey[] of next header element */ 2916 u32 szHdr1; /* Number of bytes in header */ 2917 int i = 0; 2918 int nField; 2919 int rc = 0; 2920 const unsigned char *aKey1 = (const unsigned char *)pKey1; 2921 KeyInfo *pKeyInfo; 2922 Mem mem1; 2923 2924 pKeyInfo = pPKey2->pKeyInfo; 2925 mem1.enc = pKeyInfo->enc; 2926 mem1.db = pKeyInfo->db; 2927 /* mem1.flags = 0; // Will be initialized by sqlite3VdbeSerialGet() */ 2928 VVA_ONLY( mem1.zMalloc = 0; ) /* Only needed by assert() statements */ 2929 2930 /* Compilers may complain that mem1.u.i is potentially uninitialized. 2931 ** We could initialize it, as shown here, to silence those complaints. 2932 ** But in fact, mem1.u.i will never actually be used initialized, and doing 2933 ** the unnecessary initialization has a measurable negative performance 2934 ** impact, since this routine is a very high runner. And so, we choose 2935 ** to ignore the compiler warnings and leave this variable uninitialized. 2936 */ 2937 /* mem1.u.i = 0; // not needed, here to silence compiler warning */ 2938 2939 idx1 = getVarint32(aKey1, szHdr1); 2940 d1 = szHdr1; 2941 if( pPKey2->flags & UNPACKED_IGNORE_ROWID ){ 2942 szHdr1--; 2943 } 2944 nField = pKeyInfo->nField; 2945 while( idx1<szHdr1 && i<pPKey2->nField ){ 2946 u32 serial_type1; 2947 2948 /* Read the serial types for the next element in each key. */ 2949 idx1 += getVarint32( aKey1+idx1, serial_type1 ); 2950 if( d1>=nKey1 && sqlite3VdbeSerialTypeLen(serial_type1)>0 ) break; 2951 2952 /* Extract the values to be compared. 2953 */ 2954 d1 += sqlite3VdbeSerialGet(&aKey1[d1], serial_type1, &mem1); 2955 2956 /* Do the comparison 2957 */ 2958 rc = sqlite3MemCompare(&mem1, &pPKey2->aMem[i], 2959 i<nField ? pKeyInfo->aColl[i] : 0); 2960 if( rc!=0 ){ 2961 assert( mem1.zMalloc==0 ); /* See comment below */ 2962 2963 /* Invert the result if we are using DESC sort order. */ 2964 if( pKeyInfo->aSortOrder && i<nField && pKeyInfo->aSortOrder[i] ){ 2965 rc = -rc; 2966 } 2967 2968 /* If the PREFIX_SEARCH flag is set and all fields except the final 2969 ** rowid field were equal, then clear the PREFIX_SEARCH flag and set 2970 ** pPKey2->rowid to the value of the rowid field in (pKey1, nKey1). 2971 ** This is used by the OP_IsUnique opcode. 2972 */ 2973 if( (pPKey2->flags & UNPACKED_PREFIX_SEARCH) && i==(pPKey2->nField-1) ){ 2974 assert( idx1==szHdr1 && rc ); 2975 assert( mem1.flags & MEM_Int ); 2976 pPKey2->flags &= ~UNPACKED_PREFIX_SEARCH; 2977 pPKey2->rowid = mem1.u.i; 2978 } 2979 2980 return rc; 2981 } 2982 i++; 2983 } 2984 2985 /* No memory allocation is ever used on mem1. Prove this using 2986 ** the following assert(). If the assert() fails, it indicates a 2987 ** memory leak and a need to call sqlite3VdbeMemRelease(&mem1). 2988 */ 2989 assert( mem1.zMalloc==0 ); 2990 2991 /* rc==0 here means that one of the keys ran out of fields and 2992 ** all the fields up to that point were equal. If the UNPACKED_INCRKEY 2993 ** flag is set, then break the tie by treating key2 as larger. 2994 ** If the UPACKED_PREFIX_MATCH flag is set, then keys with common prefixes 2995 ** are considered to be equal. Otherwise, the longer key is the 2996 ** larger. As it happens, the pPKey2 will always be the longer 2997 ** if there is a difference. 2998 */ 2999 assert( rc==0 ); 3000 if( pPKey2->flags & UNPACKED_INCRKEY ){ 3001 rc = -1; 3002 }else if( pPKey2->flags & UNPACKED_PREFIX_MATCH ){ 3003 /* Leave rc==0 */ 3004 }else if( idx1<szHdr1 ){ 3005 rc = 1; 3006 } 3007 return rc; 3008 } 3009 3010 3011 /* 3012 ** pCur points at an index entry created using the OP_MakeRecord opcode. 3013 ** Read the rowid (the last field in the record) and store it in *rowid. 3014 ** Return SQLITE_OK if everything works, or an error code otherwise. 3015 ** 3016 ** pCur might be pointing to text obtained from a corrupt database file. 3017 ** So the content cannot be trusted. Do appropriate checks on the content. 3018 */ 3019 int sqlite3VdbeIdxRowid(sqlite3 *db, BtCursor *pCur, i64 *rowid){ 3020 i64 nCellKey = 0; 3021 int rc; 3022 u32 szHdr; /* Size of the header */ 3023 u32 typeRowid; /* Serial type of the rowid */ 3024 u32 lenRowid; /* Size of the rowid */ 3025 Mem m, v; 3026 3027 UNUSED_PARAMETER(db); 3028 3029 /* Get the size of the index entry. Only indices entries of less 3030 ** than 2GiB are support - anything large must be database corruption. 3031 ** Any corruption is detected in sqlite3BtreeParseCellPtr(), though, so 3032 ** this code can safely assume that nCellKey is 32-bits 3033 */ 3034 assert( sqlite3BtreeCursorIsValid(pCur) ); 3035 rc = sqlite3BtreeKeySize(pCur, &nCellKey); 3036 assert( rc==SQLITE_OK ); /* pCur is always valid so KeySize cannot fail */ 3037 assert( (nCellKey & SQLITE_MAX_U32)==(u64)nCellKey ); 3038 3039 /* Read in the complete content of the index entry */ 3040 memset(&m, 0, sizeof(m)); 3041 rc = sqlite3VdbeMemFromBtree(pCur, 0, (int)nCellKey, 1, &m); 3042 if( rc ){ 3043 return rc; 3044 } 3045 3046 /* The index entry must begin with a header size */ 3047 (void)getVarint32((u8*)m.z, szHdr); 3048 testcase( szHdr==3 ); 3049 testcase( szHdr==m.n ); 3050 if( unlikely(szHdr<3 || (int)szHdr>m.n) ){ 3051 goto idx_rowid_corruption; 3052 } 3053 3054 /* The last field of the index should be an integer - the ROWID. 3055 ** Verify that the last entry really is an integer. */ 3056 (void)getVarint32((u8*)&m.z[szHdr-1], typeRowid); 3057 testcase( typeRowid==1 ); 3058 testcase( typeRowid==2 ); 3059 testcase( typeRowid==3 ); 3060 testcase( typeRowid==4 ); 3061 testcase( typeRowid==5 ); 3062 testcase( typeRowid==6 ); 3063 testcase( typeRowid==8 ); 3064 testcase( typeRowid==9 ); 3065 if( unlikely(typeRowid<1 || typeRowid>9 || typeRowid==7) ){ 3066 goto idx_rowid_corruption; 3067 } 3068 lenRowid = sqlite3VdbeSerialTypeLen(typeRowid); 3069 testcase( (u32)m.n==szHdr+lenRowid ); 3070 if( unlikely((u32)m.n<szHdr+lenRowid) ){ 3071 goto idx_rowid_corruption; 3072 } 3073 3074 /* Fetch the integer off the end of the index record */ 3075 sqlite3VdbeSerialGet((u8*)&m.z[m.n-lenRowid], typeRowid, &v); 3076 *rowid = v.u.i; 3077 sqlite3VdbeMemRelease(&m); 3078 return SQLITE_OK; 3079 3080 /* Jump here if database corruption is detected after m has been 3081 ** allocated. Free the m object and return SQLITE_CORRUPT. */ 3082 idx_rowid_corruption: 3083 testcase( m.zMalloc!=0 ); 3084 sqlite3VdbeMemRelease(&m); 3085 return SQLITE_CORRUPT_BKPT; 3086 } 3087 3088 /* 3089 ** Compare the key of the index entry that cursor pC is pointing to against 3090 ** the key string in pUnpacked. Write into *pRes a number 3091 ** that is negative, zero, or positive if pC is less than, equal to, 3092 ** or greater than pUnpacked. Return SQLITE_OK on success. 3093 ** 3094 ** pUnpacked is either created without a rowid or is truncated so that it 3095 ** omits the rowid at the end. The rowid at the end of the index entry 3096 ** is ignored as well. Hence, this routine only compares the prefixes 3097 ** of the keys prior to the final rowid, not the entire key. 3098 */ 3099 int sqlite3VdbeIdxKeyCompare( 3100 VdbeCursor *pC, /* The cursor to compare against */ 3101 UnpackedRecord *pUnpacked, /* Unpacked version of key to compare against */ 3102 int *res /* Write the comparison result here */ 3103 ){ 3104 i64 nCellKey = 0; 3105 int rc; 3106 BtCursor *pCur = pC->pCursor; 3107 Mem m; 3108 3109 assert( sqlite3BtreeCursorIsValid(pCur) ); 3110 rc = sqlite3BtreeKeySize(pCur, &nCellKey); 3111 assert( rc==SQLITE_OK ); /* pCur is always valid so KeySize cannot fail */ 3112 /* nCellKey will always be between 0 and 0xffffffff because of the say 3113 ** that btreeParseCellPtr() and sqlite3GetVarint32() are implemented */ 3114 if( nCellKey<=0 || nCellKey>0x7fffffff ){ 3115 *res = 0; 3116 return SQLITE_CORRUPT_BKPT; 3117 } 3118 memset(&m, 0, sizeof(m)); 3119 rc = sqlite3VdbeMemFromBtree(pC->pCursor, 0, (int)nCellKey, 1, &m); 3120 if( rc ){ 3121 return rc; 3122 } 3123 assert( pUnpacked->flags & UNPACKED_IGNORE_ROWID ); 3124 *res = sqlite3VdbeRecordCompare(m.n, m.z, pUnpacked); 3125 sqlite3VdbeMemRelease(&m); 3126 return SQLITE_OK; 3127 } 3128 3129 /* 3130 ** This routine sets the value to be returned by subsequent calls to 3131 ** sqlite3_changes() on the database handle 'db'. 3132 */ 3133 void sqlite3VdbeSetChanges(sqlite3 *db, int nChange){ 3134 assert( sqlite3_mutex_held(db->mutex) ); 3135 db->nChange = nChange; 3136 db->nTotalChange += nChange; 3137 } 3138 3139 /* 3140 ** Set a flag in the vdbe to update the change counter when it is finalised 3141 ** or reset. 3142 */ 3143 void sqlite3VdbeCountChanges(Vdbe *v){ 3144 v->changeCntOn = 1; 3145 } 3146 3147 /* 3148 ** Mark every prepared statement associated with a database connection 3149 ** as expired. 3150 ** 3151 ** An expired statement means that recompilation of the statement is 3152 ** recommend. Statements expire when things happen that make their 3153 ** programs obsolete. Removing user-defined functions or collating 3154 ** sequences, or changing an authorization function are the types of 3155 ** things that make prepared statements obsolete. 3156 */ 3157 void sqlite3ExpirePreparedStatements(sqlite3 *db){ 3158 Vdbe *p; 3159 for(p = db->pVdbe; p; p=p->pNext){ 3160 p->expired = 1; 3161 } 3162 } 3163 3164 /* 3165 ** Return the database associated with the Vdbe. 3166 */ 3167 sqlite3 *sqlite3VdbeDb(Vdbe *v){ 3168 return v->db; 3169 } 3170 3171 /* 3172 ** Return a pointer to an sqlite3_value structure containing the value bound 3173 ** parameter iVar of VM v. Except, if the value is an SQL NULL, return 3174 ** 0 instead. Unless it is NULL, apply affinity aff (one of the SQLITE_AFF_* 3175 ** constants) to the value before returning it. 3176 ** 3177 ** The returned value must be freed by the caller using sqlite3ValueFree(). 3178 */ 3179 sqlite3_value *sqlite3VdbeGetValue(Vdbe *v, int iVar, u8 aff){ 3180 assert( iVar>0 ); 3181 if( v ){ 3182 Mem *pMem = &v->aVar[iVar-1]; 3183 if( 0==(pMem->flags & MEM_Null) ){ 3184 sqlite3_value *pRet = sqlite3ValueNew(v->db); 3185 if( pRet ){ 3186 sqlite3VdbeMemCopy((Mem *)pRet, pMem); 3187 sqlite3ValueApplyAffinity(pRet, aff, SQLITE_UTF8); 3188 sqlite3VdbeMemStoreType((Mem *)pRet); 3189 } 3190 return pRet; 3191 } 3192 } 3193 return 0; 3194 } 3195 3196 /* 3197 ** Configure SQL variable iVar so that binding a new value to it signals 3198 ** to sqlite3_reoptimize() that re-preparing the statement may result 3199 ** in a better query plan. 3200 */ 3201 void sqlite3VdbeSetVarmask(Vdbe *v, int iVar){ 3202 assert( iVar>0 ); 3203 if( iVar>32 ){ 3204 v->expmask = 0xffffffff; 3205 }else{ 3206 v->expmask |= ((u32)1 << (iVar-1)); 3207 } 3208 } 3209