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      1 // Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
      2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
      3 // found in the LICENSE file.
      4 
      5 #ifndef SQL_CONNECTION_H_
      6 #define SQL_CONNECTION_H_
      7 
      8 #include <map>
      9 #include <set>
     10 #include <string>
     11 #include <vector>
     12 
     13 #include "base/basictypes.h"
     14 #include "base/callback.h"
     15 #include "base/compiler_specific.h"
     16 #include "base/memory/ref_counted.h"
     17 #include "base/memory/scoped_ptr.h"
     18 #include "base/threading/thread_restrictions.h"
     19 #include "base/time/time.h"
     20 #include "sql/sql_export.h"
     21 
     22 struct sqlite3;
     23 struct sqlite3_stmt;
     24 
     25 namespace base {
     26 class FilePath;
     27 }
     28 
     29 namespace sql {
     30 
     31 class Recovery;
     32 class Statement;
     33 
     34 // Uniquely identifies a statement. There are two modes of operation:
     35 //
     36 // - In the most common mode, you will use the source file and line number to
     37 //   identify your statement. This is a convienient way to get uniqueness for
     38 //   a statement that is only used in one place. Use the SQL_FROM_HERE macro
     39 //   to generate a StatementID.
     40 //
     41 // - In the "custom" mode you may use the statement from different places or
     42 //   need to manage it yourself for whatever reason. In this case, you should
     43 //   make up your own unique name and pass it to the StatementID. This name
     44 //   must be a static string, since this object only deals with pointers and
     45 //   assumes the underlying string doesn't change or get deleted.
     46 //
     47 // This object is copyable and assignable using the compiler-generated
     48 // operator= and copy constructor.
     49 class StatementID {
     50  public:
     51   // Creates a uniquely named statement with the given file ane line number.
     52   // Normally you will use SQL_FROM_HERE instead of calling yourself.
     53   StatementID(const char* file, int line)
     54       : number_(line),
     55         str_(file) {
     56   }
     57 
     58   // Creates a uniquely named statement with the given user-defined name.
     59   explicit StatementID(const char* unique_name)
     60       : number_(-1),
     61         str_(unique_name) {
     62   }
     63 
     64   // This constructor is unimplemented and will generate a linker error if
     65   // called. It is intended to try to catch people dynamically generating
     66   // a statement name that will be deallocated and will cause a crash later.
     67   // All strings must be static and unchanging!
     68   explicit StatementID(const std::string& dont_ever_do_this);
     69 
     70   // We need this to insert into our map.
     71   bool operator<(const StatementID& other) const;
     72 
     73  private:
     74   int number_;
     75   const char* str_;
     76 };
     77 
     78 #define SQL_FROM_HERE sql::StatementID(__FILE__, __LINE__)
     79 
     80 class Connection;
     81 
     82 class SQL_EXPORT Connection {
     83  private:
     84   class StatementRef;  // Forward declaration, see real one below.
     85 
     86  public:
     87   // The database is opened by calling Open[InMemory](). Any uncommitted
     88   // transactions will be rolled back when this object is deleted.
     89   Connection();
     90   ~Connection();
     91 
     92   // Pre-init configuration ----------------------------------------------------
     93 
     94   // Sets the page size that will be used when creating a new database. This
     95   // must be called before Init(), and will only have an effect on new
     96   // databases.
     97   //
     98   // From sqlite.org: "The page size must be a power of two greater than or
     99   // equal to 512 and less than or equal to SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE. The maximum
    100   // value for SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE is 32768."
    101   void set_page_size(int page_size) { page_size_ = page_size; }
    102 
    103   // Sets the number of pages that will be cached in memory by sqlite. The
    104   // total cache size in bytes will be page_size * cache_size. This must be
    105   // called before Open() to have an effect.
    106   void set_cache_size(int cache_size) { cache_size_ = cache_size; }
    107 
    108   // Call to put the database in exclusive locking mode. There is no "back to
    109   // normal" flag because of some additional requirements sqlite puts on this
    110   // transaction (requires another access to the DB) and because we don't
    111   // actually need it.
    112   //
    113   // Exclusive mode means that the database is not unlocked at the end of each
    114   // transaction, which means there may be less time spent initializing the
    115   // next transaction because it doesn't have to re-aquire locks.
    116   //
    117   // This must be called before Open() to have an effect.
    118   void set_exclusive_locking() { exclusive_locking_ = true; }
    119 
    120   // Call to cause Open() to restrict access permissions of the
    121   // database file to only the owner.
    122   // TODO(shess): Currently only supported on OS_POSIX, is a noop on
    123   // other platforms.
    124   void set_restrict_to_user() { restrict_to_user_ = true; }
    125 
    126   // Set an error-handling callback.  On errors, the error number (and
    127   // statement, if available) will be passed to the callback.
    128   //
    129   // If no callback is set, the default action is to crash in debug
    130   // mode or return failure in release mode.
    131   typedef base::Callback<void(int, Statement*)> ErrorCallback;
    132   void set_error_callback(const ErrorCallback& callback) {
    133     error_callback_ = callback;
    134   }
    135   bool has_error_callback() const {
    136     return !error_callback_.is_null();
    137   }
    138   void reset_error_callback() {
    139     error_callback_.Reset();
    140   }
    141 
    142   // Set this tag to enable additional connection-type histogramming
    143   // for SQLite error codes and database version numbers.
    144   void set_histogram_tag(const std::string& tag) {
    145     histogram_tag_ = tag;
    146   }
    147 
    148   // Record a sparse UMA histogram sample under
    149   // |name|+"."+|histogram_tag_|.  If |histogram_tag_| is empty, no
    150   // histogram is recorded.
    151   void AddTaggedHistogram(const std::string& name, size_t sample) const;
    152 
    153   // Run "PRAGMA integrity_check" and post each line of
    154   // results into |messages|.  Returns the success of running the
    155   // statement - per the SQLite documentation, if no errors are found the
    156   // call should succeed, and a single value "ok" should be in messages.
    157   bool FullIntegrityCheck(std::vector<std::string>* messages);
    158 
    159   // Runs "PRAGMA quick_check" and, unlike the FullIntegrityCheck method,
    160   // interprets the results returning true if the the statement executes
    161   // without error and results in a single "ok" value.
    162   bool QuickIntegrityCheck() WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
    163 
    164   // Initialization ------------------------------------------------------------
    165 
    166   // Initializes the SQL connection for the given file, returning true if the
    167   // file could be opened. You can call this or OpenInMemory.
    168   bool Open(const base::FilePath& path) WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
    169 
    170   // Initializes the SQL connection for a temporary in-memory database. There
    171   // will be no associated file on disk, and the initial database will be
    172   // empty. You can call this or Open.
    173   bool OpenInMemory() WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
    174 
    175   // Create a temporary on-disk database.  The database will be
    176   // deleted after close.  This kind of database is similar to
    177   // OpenInMemory() for small databases, but can page to disk if the
    178   // database becomes large.
    179   bool OpenTemporary() WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
    180 
    181   // Returns true if the database has been successfully opened.
    182   bool is_open() const { return !!db_; }
    183 
    184   // Closes the database. This is automatically performed on destruction for
    185   // you, but this allows you to close the database early. You must not call
    186   // any other functions after closing it. It is permissable to call Close on
    187   // an uninitialized or already-closed database.
    188   void Close();
    189 
    190   // Reads the first <cache-size>*<page-size> bytes of the file to prime the
    191   // filesystem cache.  This can be more efficient than faulting pages
    192   // individually.  Since this involves blocking I/O, it should only be used if
    193   // the caller will immediately read a substantial amount of data from the
    194   // database.
    195   //
    196   // TODO(shess): Design a set of histograms or an experiment to inform this
    197   // decision.  Preloading should almost always improve later performance
    198   // numbers for this database simply because it pulls operations forward, but
    199   // if the data isn't actually used soon then preloading just slows down
    200   // everything else.
    201   void Preload();
    202 
    203   // Try to trim the cache memory used by the database.  If |aggressively| is
    204   // true, this function will try to free all of the cache memory it can. If
    205   // |aggressively| is false, this function will try to cut cache memory
    206   // usage by half.
    207   void TrimMemory(bool aggressively);
    208 
    209   // Raze the database to the ground.  This approximates creating a
    210   // fresh database from scratch, within the constraints of SQLite's
    211   // locking protocol (locks and open handles can make doing this with
    212   // filesystem operations problematic).  Returns true if the database
    213   // was razed.
    214   //
    215   // false is returned if the database is locked by some other
    216   // process.  RazeWithTimeout() may be used if appropriate.
    217   //
    218   // NOTE(shess): Raze() will DCHECK in the following situations:
    219   // - database is not open.
    220   // - the connection has a transaction open.
    221   // - a SQLite issue occurs which is structural in nature (like the
    222   //   statements used are broken).
    223   // Since Raze() is expected to be called in unexpected situations,
    224   // these all return false, since it is unlikely that the caller
    225   // could fix them.
    226   //
    227   // The database's page size is taken from |page_size_|.  The
    228   // existing database's |auto_vacuum| setting is lost (the
    229   // possibility of corruption makes it unreliable to pull it from the
    230   // existing database).  To re-enable on the empty database requires
    231   // running "PRAGMA auto_vacuum = 1;" then "VACUUM".
    232   //
    233   // NOTE(shess): For Android, SQLITE_DEFAULT_AUTOVACUUM is set to 1,
    234   // so Raze() sets auto_vacuum to 1.
    235   //
    236   // TODO(shess): Raze() needs a connection so cannot clear SQLITE_NOTADB.
    237   // TODO(shess): Bake auto_vacuum into Connection's API so it can
    238   // just pick up the default.
    239   bool Raze();
    240   bool RazeWithTimout(base::TimeDelta timeout);
    241 
    242   // Breaks all outstanding transactions (as initiated by
    243   // BeginTransaction()), closes the SQLite database, and poisons the
    244   // object so that all future operations against the Connection (or
    245   // its Statements) fail safely, without side effects.
    246   //
    247   // This is intended as an alternative to Close() in error callbacks.
    248   // Close() should still be called at some point.
    249   void Poison();
    250 
    251   // Raze() the database and Poison() the handle.  Returns the return
    252   // value from Raze().
    253   // TODO(shess): Rename to RazeAndPoison().
    254   bool RazeAndClose();
    255 
    256   // Delete the underlying database files associated with |path|.
    257   // This should be used on a database which has no existing
    258   // connections.  If any other connections are open to the same
    259   // database, this could cause odd results or corruption (for
    260   // instance if a hot journal is deleted but the associated database
    261   // is not).
    262   //
    263   // Returns true if the database file and associated journals no
    264   // longer exist, false otherwise.  If the database has never
    265   // existed, this will return true.
    266   static bool Delete(const base::FilePath& path);
    267 
    268   // Transactions --------------------------------------------------------------
    269 
    270   // Transaction management. We maintain a virtual transaction stack to emulate
    271   // nested transactions since sqlite can't do nested transactions. The
    272   // limitation is you can't roll back a sub transaction: if any transaction
    273   // fails, all transactions open will also be rolled back. Any nested
    274   // transactions after one has rolled back will return fail for Begin(). If
    275   // Begin() fails, you must not call Commit or Rollback().
    276   //
    277   // Normally you should use sql::Transaction to manage a transaction, which
    278   // will scope it to a C++ context.
    279   bool BeginTransaction();
    280   void RollbackTransaction();
    281   bool CommitTransaction();
    282 
    283   // Rollback all outstanding transactions.  Use with care, there may
    284   // be scoped transactions on the stack.
    285   void RollbackAllTransactions();
    286 
    287   // Returns the current transaction nesting, which will be 0 if there are
    288   // no open transactions.
    289   int transaction_nesting() const { return transaction_nesting_; }
    290 
    291   // Attached databases---------------------------------------------------------
    292 
    293   // SQLite supports attaching multiple database files to a single
    294   // handle.  Attach the database in |other_db_path| to the current
    295   // handle under |attachment_point|.  |attachment_point| should only
    296   // contain characters from [a-zA-Z0-9_].
    297   //
    298   // Note that calling attach or detach with an open transaction is an
    299   // error.
    300   bool AttachDatabase(const base::FilePath& other_db_path,
    301                       const char* attachment_point);
    302   bool DetachDatabase(const char* attachment_point);
    303 
    304   // Statements ----------------------------------------------------------------
    305 
    306   // Executes the given SQL string, returning true on success. This is
    307   // normally used for simple, 1-off statements that don't take any bound
    308   // parameters and don't return any data (e.g. CREATE TABLE).
    309   //
    310   // This will DCHECK if the |sql| contains errors.
    311   //
    312   // Do not use ignore_result() to ignore all errors.  Use
    313   // ExecuteAndReturnErrorCode() and ignore only specific errors.
    314   bool Execute(const char* sql) WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
    315 
    316   // Like Execute(), but returns the error code given by SQLite.
    317   int ExecuteAndReturnErrorCode(const char* sql) WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
    318 
    319   // Returns true if we have a statement with the given identifier already
    320   // cached. This is normally not necessary to call, but can be useful if the
    321   // caller has to dynamically build up SQL to avoid doing so if it's already
    322   // cached.
    323   bool HasCachedStatement(const StatementID& id) const;
    324 
    325   // Returns a statement for the given SQL using the statement cache. It can
    326   // take a nontrivial amount of work to parse and compile a statement, so
    327   // keeping commonly-used ones around for future use is important for
    328   // performance.
    329   //
    330   // If the |sql| has an error, an invalid, inert StatementRef is returned (and
    331   // the code will crash in debug). The caller must deal with this eventuality,
    332   // either by checking validity of the |sql| before calling, by correctly
    333   // handling the return of an inert statement, or both.
    334   //
    335   // The StatementID and the SQL must always correspond to one-another. The
    336   // ID is the lookup into the cache, so crazy things will happen if you use
    337   // different SQL with the same ID.
    338   //
    339   // You will normally use the SQL_FROM_HERE macro to generate a statement
    340   // ID associated with the current line of code. This gives uniqueness without
    341   // you having to manage unique names. See StatementID above for more.
    342   //
    343   // Example:
    344   //   sql::Statement stmt(connection_.GetCachedStatement(
    345   //       SQL_FROM_HERE, "SELECT * FROM foo"));
    346   //   if (!stmt)
    347   //     return false;  // Error creating statement.
    348   scoped_refptr<StatementRef> GetCachedStatement(const StatementID& id,
    349                                                  const char* sql);
    350 
    351   // Used to check a |sql| statement for syntactic validity. If the statement is
    352   // valid SQL, returns true.
    353   bool IsSQLValid(const char* sql);
    354 
    355   // Returns a non-cached statement for the given SQL. Use this for SQL that
    356   // is only executed once or only rarely (there is overhead associated with
    357   // keeping a statement cached).
    358   //
    359   // See GetCachedStatement above for examples and error information.
    360   scoped_refptr<StatementRef> GetUniqueStatement(const char* sql);
    361 
    362   // Info querying -------------------------------------------------------------
    363 
    364   // Returns true if the given table exists.
    365   bool DoesTableExist(const char* table_name) const;
    366 
    367   // Returns true if the given index exists.
    368   bool DoesIndexExist(const char* index_name) const;
    369 
    370   // Returns true if a column with the given name exists in the given table.
    371   bool DoesColumnExist(const char* table_name, const char* column_name) const;
    372 
    373   // Returns sqlite's internal ID for the last inserted row. Valid only
    374   // immediately after an insert.
    375   int64 GetLastInsertRowId() const;
    376 
    377   // Returns sqlite's count of the number of rows modified by the last
    378   // statement executed. Will be 0 if no statement has executed or the database
    379   // is closed.
    380   int GetLastChangeCount() const;
    381 
    382   // Errors --------------------------------------------------------------------
    383 
    384   // Returns the error code associated with the last sqlite operation.
    385   int GetErrorCode() const;
    386 
    387   // Returns the errno associated with GetErrorCode().  See
    388   // SQLITE_LAST_ERRNO in SQLite documentation.
    389   int GetLastErrno() const;
    390 
    391   // Returns a pointer to a statically allocated string associated with the
    392   // last sqlite operation.
    393   const char* GetErrorMessage() const;
    394 
    395   // Return a reproducible representation of the schema equivalent to
    396   // running the following statement at a sqlite3 command-line:
    397   //   SELECT type, name, tbl_name, sql FROM sqlite_master ORDER BY 1, 2, 3, 4;
    398   std::string GetSchema() const;
    399 
    400   // Clients which provide an error_callback don't see the
    401   // error-handling at the end of OnSqliteError().  Expose to allow
    402   // those clients to work appropriately with ScopedErrorIgnorer in
    403   // tests.
    404   static bool ShouldIgnoreSqliteError(int error);
    405 
    406  private:
    407   // For recovery module.
    408   friend class Recovery;
    409 
    410   // Allow test-support code to set/reset error ignorer.
    411   friend class ScopedErrorIgnorer;
    412 
    413   // Statement accesses StatementRef which we don't want to expose to everybody
    414   // (they should go through Statement).
    415   friend class Statement;
    416 
    417   // Internal initialize function used by both Init and InitInMemory. The file
    418   // name is always 8 bits since we want to use the 8-bit version of
    419   // sqlite3_open. The string can also be sqlite's special ":memory:" string.
    420   //
    421   // |retry_flag| controls retrying the open if the error callback
    422   // addressed errors using RazeAndClose().
    423   enum Retry {
    424     NO_RETRY = 0,
    425     RETRY_ON_POISON
    426   };
    427   bool OpenInternal(const std::string& file_name, Retry retry_flag);
    428 
    429   // Internal close function used by Close() and RazeAndClose().
    430   // |forced| indicates that orderly-shutdown checks should not apply.
    431   void CloseInternal(bool forced);
    432 
    433   // Check whether the current thread is allowed to make IO calls, but only
    434   // if database wasn't open in memory. Function is inlined to be a no-op in
    435   // official build.
    436   void AssertIOAllowed() {
    437     if (!in_memory_)
    438       base::ThreadRestrictions::AssertIOAllowed();
    439   }
    440 
    441   // Internal helper for DoesTableExist and DoesIndexExist.
    442   bool DoesTableOrIndexExist(const char* name, const char* type) const;
    443 
    444   // Accessors for global error-ignorer, for injecting behavior during tests.
    445   // See test/scoped_error_ignorer.h.
    446   typedef base::Callback<bool(int)> ErrorIgnorerCallback;
    447   static ErrorIgnorerCallback* current_ignorer_cb_;
    448   static void SetErrorIgnorer(ErrorIgnorerCallback* ignorer);
    449   static void ResetErrorIgnorer();
    450 
    451   // A StatementRef is a refcounted wrapper around a sqlite statement pointer.
    452   // Refcounting allows us to give these statements out to sql::Statement
    453   // objects while also optionally maintaining a cache of compiled statements
    454   // by just keeping a refptr to these objects.
    455   //
    456   // A statement ref can be valid, in which case it can be used, or invalid to
    457   // indicate that the statement hasn't been created yet, has an error, or has
    458   // been destroyed.
    459   //
    460   // The Connection may revoke a StatementRef in some error cases, so callers
    461   // should always check validity before using.
    462   class SQL_EXPORT StatementRef : public base::RefCounted<StatementRef> {
    463    public:
    464     // |connection| is the sql::Connection instance associated with
    465     // the statement, and is used for tracking outstanding statements
    466     // and for error handling.  Set to NULL for invalid or untracked
    467     // refs.  |stmt| is the actual statement, and should only be NULL
    468     // to create an invalid ref.  |was_valid| indicates whether the
    469     // statement should be considered valid for diagnistic purposes.
    470     // |was_valid| can be true for NULL |stmt| if the connection has
    471     // been forcibly closed by an error handler.
    472     StatementRef(Connection* connection, sqlite3_stmt* stmt, bool was_valid);
    473 
    474     // When true, the statement can be used.
    475     bool is_valid() const { return !!stmt_; }
    476 
    477     // When true, the statement is either currently valid, or was
    478     // previously valid but the connection was forcibly closed.  Used
    479     // for diagnostic checks.
    480     bool was_valid() const { return was_valid_; }
    481 
    482     // If we've not been linked to a connection, this will be NULL.
    483     // TODO(shess): connection_ can be NULL in case of GetUntrackedStatement(),
    484     // which prevents Statement::OnError() from forwarding errors.
    485     Connection* connection() const { return connection_; }
    486 
    487     // Returns the sqlite statement if any. If the statement is not active,
    488     // this will return NULL.
    489     sqlite3_stmt* stmt() const { return stmt_; }
    490 
    491     // Destroys the compiled statement and marks it NULL. The statement will
    492     // no longer be active.  |forced| is used to indicate if orderly-shutdown
    493     // checks should apply (see Connection::RazeAndClose()).
    494     void Close(bool forced);
    495 
    496     // Check whether the current thread is allowed to make IO calls, but only
    497     // if database wasn't open in memory.
    498     void AssertIOAllowed() { if (connection_) connection_->AssertIOAllowed(); }
    499 
    500    private:
    501     friend class base::RefCounted<StatementRef>;
    502 
    503     ~StatementRef();
    504 
    505     Connection* connection_;
    506     sqlite3_stmt* stmt_;
    507     bool was_valid_;
    508 
    509     DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(StatementRef);
    510   };
    511   friend class StatementRef;
    512 
    513   // Executes a rollback statement, ignoring all transaction state. Used
    514   // internally in the transaction management code.
    515   void DoRollback();
    516 
    517   // Called by a StatementRef when it's being created or destroyed. See
    518   // open_statements_ below.
    519   void StatementRefCreated(StatementRef* ref);
    520   void StatementRefDeleted(StatementRef* ref);
    521 
    522   // Called when a sqlite function returns an error, which is passed
    523   // as |err|.  The return value is the error code to be reflected
    524   // back to client code.  |stmt| is non-NULL if the error relates to
    525   // an sql::Statement instance.  |sql| is non-NULL if the error
    526   // relates to non-statement sql code (Execute, for instance).  Both
    527   // can be NULL, but both should never be set.
    528   // NOTE(shess): Originally, the return value was intended to allow
    529   // error handlers to transparently convert errors into success.
    530   // Unfortunately, transactions are not generally restartable, so
    531   // this did not work out.
    532   int OnSqliteError(int err, Statement* stmt, const char* sql);
    533 
    534   // Like |Execute()|, but retries if the database is locked.
    535   bool ExecuteWithTimeout(const char* sql, base::TimeDelta ms_timeout)
    536       WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
    537 
    538   // Internal helper for const functions.  Like GetUniqueStatement(),
    539   // except the statement is not entered into open_statements_,
    540   // allowing this function to be const.  Open statements can block
    541   // closing the database, so only use in cases where the last ref is
    542   // released before close could be called (which should always be the
    543   // case for const functions).
    544   scoped_refptr<StatementRef> GetUntrackedStatement(const char* sql) const;
    545 
    546   bool IntegrityCheckHelper(
    547       const char* pragma_sql,
    548       std::vector<std::string>* messages) WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;
    549 
    550   // The actual sqlite database. Will be NULL before Init has been called or if
    551   // Init resulted in an error.
    552   sqlite3* db_;
    553 
    554   // Parameters we'll configure in sqlite before doing anything else. Zero means
    555   // use the default value.
    556   int page_size_;
    557   int cache_size_;
    558   bool exclusive_locking_;
    559   bool restrict_to_user_;
    560 
    561   // All cached statements. Keeping a reference to these statements means that
    562   // they'll remain active.
    563   typedef std::map<StatementID, scoped_refptr<StatementRef> >
    564       CachedStatementMap;
    565   CachedStatementMap statement_cache_;
    566 
    567   // A list of all StatementRefs we've given out. Each ref must register with
    568   // us when it's created or destroyed. This allows us to potentially close
    569   // any open statements when we encounter an error.
    570   typedef std::set<StatementRef*> StatementRefSet;
    571   StatementRefSet open_statements_;
    572 
    573   // Number of currently-nested transactions.
    574   int transaction_nesting_;
    575 
    576   // True if any of the currently nested transactions have been rolled back.
    577   // When we get to the outermost transaction, this will determine if we do
    578   // a rollback instead of a commit.
    579   bool needs_rollback_;
    580 
    581   // True if database is open with OpenInMemory(), False if database is open
    582   // with Open().
    583   bool in_memory_;
    584 
    585   // |true| if the connection was closed using RazeAndClose().  Used
    586   // to enable diagnostics to distinguish calls to never-opened
    587   // databases (incorrect use of the API) from calls to once-valid
    588   // databases.
    589   bool poisoned_;
    590 
    591   ErrorCallback error_callback_;
    592 
    593   // Tag for auxiliary histograms.
    594   std::string histogram_tag_;
    595 
    596   DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(Connection);
    597 };
    598 
    599 }  // namespace sql
    600 
    601 #endif  // SQL_CONNECTION_H_
    602