sqlite3 1.5.0.rc1-aarch64-linux

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  1. checksums.yaml +7 -0
  2. data/.gemtest +0 -0
  3. data/API_CHANGES.md +49 -0
  4. data/CHANGELOG.md +419 -0
  5. data/CONTRIBUTING.md +24 -0
  6. data/ChangeLog.cvs +88 -0
  7. data/Gemfile +3 -0
  8. data/LICENSE +27 -0
  9. data/LICENSE-DEPENDENCIES +20 -0
  10. data/README.md +233 -0
  11. data/ext/sqlite3/aggregator.c +273 -0
  12. data/ext/sqlite3/aggregator.h +12 -0
  13. data/ext/sqlite3/backup.c +168 -0
  14. data/ext/sqlite3/backup.h +15 -0
  15. data/ext/sqlite3/database.c +853 -0
  16. data/ext/sqlite3/database.h +17 -0
  17. data/ext/sqlite3/exception.c +98 -0
  18. data/ext/sqlite3/exception.h +8 -0
  19. data/ext/sqlite3/extconf.rb +159 -0
  20. data/ext/sqlite3/sqlite3.c +163 -0
  21. data/ext/sqlite3/sqlite3_ruby.h +45 -0
  22. data/ext/sqlite3/statement.c +442 -0
  23. data/ext/sqlite3/statement.h +16 -0
  24. data/faq/faq.md +431 -0
  25. data/faq/faq.rb +145 -0
  26. data/faq/faq.yml +426 -0
  27. data/lib/sqlite3/2.6/sqlite3_native.so +0 -0
  28. data/lib/sqlite3/2.7/sqlite3_native.so +0 -0
  29. data/lib/sqlite3/3.0/sqlite3_native.so +0 -0
  30. data/lib/sqlite3/3.1/sqlite3_native.so +0 -0
  31. data/lib/sqlite3/constants.rb +50 -0
  32. data/lib/sqlite3/database.rb +741 -0
  33. data/lib/sqlite3/errors.rb +35 -0
  34. data/lib/sqlite3/pragmas.rb +595 -0
  35. data/lib/sqlite3/resultset.rb +187 -0
  36. data/lib/sqlite3/statement.rb +145 -0
  37. data/lib/sqlite3/translator.rb +118 -0
  38. data/lib/sqlite3/value.rb +57 -0
  39. data/lib/sqlite3/version.rb +25 -0
  40. data/lib/sqlite3.rb +15 -0
  41. data/test/helper.rb +27 -0
  42. data/test/test_backup.rb +33 -0
  43. data/test/test_collation.rb +82 -0
  44. data/test/test_database.rb +538 -0
  45. data/test/test_database_flags.rb +95 -0
  46. data/test/test_database_readonly.rb +36 -0
  47. data/test/test_database_readwrite.rb +41 -0
  48. data/test/test_deprecated.rb +44 -0
  49. data/test/test_encoding.rb +155 -0
  50. data/test/test_integration.rb +507 -0
  51. data/test/test_integration_aggregate.rb +336 -0
  52. data/test/test_integration_open_close.rb +30 -0
  53. data/test/test_integration_pending.rb +115 -0
  54. data/test/test_integration_resultset.rb +142 -0
  55. data/test/test_integration_statement.rb +194 -0
  56. data/test/test_result_set.rb +37 -0
  57. data/test/test_sqlite3.rb +25 -0
  58. data/test/test_statement.rb +263 -0
  59. data/test/test_statement_execute.rb +35 -0
  60. metadata +190 -0
data/faq/faq.yml ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,426 @@
1
+ ---
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+ - "How do I do a database query?":
3
+ - "I just want an array of the rows...": >-
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+
5
+ Use the Database#execute method. If you don't give it a block, it will
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+ return an array of all the rows:
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ require 'sqlite3'
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+
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+ db = SQLite3::Database.new( "test.db" )
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+ rows = db.execute( "select * from test" )
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+ </pre>
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+
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+ - "I'd like to use a block to iterate through the rows...": >-
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+
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+ Use the Database#execute method. If you give it a block, each row of the
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+ result will be yielded to the block:
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ require 'sqlite3'
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+
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+ db = SQLite3::Database.new( "test.db" )
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+ db.execute( "select * from test" ) do |row|
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+ ...
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+ end
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+ </pre>
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+
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+ - "I need to get the column names as well as the rows...": >-
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+
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+ Use the Database#execute2 method. This works just like Database#execute;
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+ if you don't give it a block, it returns an array of rows; otherwise, it
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+ will yield each row to the block. _However_, the first row returned is
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+ always an array of the column names from the query:
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ require 'sqlite3'
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+
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+ db = SQLite3::Database.new( "test.db" )
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+ columns, *rows = db.execute2( "select * from test" )
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+
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+ # or use a block:
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+
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+ columns = nil
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+ db.execute2( "select * from test" ) do |row|
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+ if columns.nil?
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+ columns = row
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+ else
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+ # process row
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+ end
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+ end
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+ </pre>
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+
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+ - "I just want the first row of the result set...": >-
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+
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+ Easy. Just call Database#get_first_row:
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ row = db.get_first_row( "select * from table" )
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+ </pre>
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+
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+
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+ This also supports bind variables, just like Database#execute
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+ and friends.
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+
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+ - "I just want the first value of the first row of the result set...": >-
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+
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+ Also easy. Just call Database#get_first_value:
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ count = db.get_first_value( "select count(*) from table" )
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+ </pre>
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+
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+
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+ This also supports bind variables, just like Database#execute
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+ and friends.
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+
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+ - "How do I prepare a statement for repeated execution?": >-
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+ If the same statement is going to be executed repeatedly, you can speed
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+ things up a bit by _preparing_ the statement. You do this via the
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+ Database#prepare method. It returns a Statement object, and you can
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+ then invoke #execute on that to get the ResultSet:
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ stmt = db.prepare( "select * from person" )
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+
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+ 1000.times do
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+ stmt.execute do |result|
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+ ...
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ stmt.close
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+
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+ # or, use a block
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+
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+ db.prepare( "select * from person" ) do |stmt|
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+ 1000.times do
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+ stmt.execute do |result|
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+ ...
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+ end
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+ end
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+ end
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+ </pre>
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+
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+
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+ This is made more useful by the ability to bind variables to placeholders
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+ via the Statement#bind_param and Statement#bind_params methods. (See the
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+ next FAQ for details.)
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+
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+ - "How do I use placeholders in an SQL statement?": >-
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+ Placeholders in an SQL statement take any of the following formats:
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+
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+
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+ * @?@
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+
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+ * @?_nnn_@
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+
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+ * @:_word_@
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+
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+
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+ Where _n_ is an integer, and _word_ is an alpha-numeric identifier (or
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+ number). When the placeholder is associated with a number, that number
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+ identifies the index of the bind variable to replace it with. When it
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+ is an identifier, it identifies the name of the corresponding bind
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+ variable. (In the instance of the first format--a single question
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+ mark--the placeholder is assigned a number one greater than the last
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+ index used, or 1 if it is the first.)
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+
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+
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+ For example, here is a query using these placeholder formats:
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ select *
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+ from table
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+ where ( c = ?2 or c = ? )
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+ and d = :name
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+ and e = :1
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+ </pre>
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+
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+
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+ This defines 5 different placeholders: 1, 2, 3, and "name".
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+
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+
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+ You replace these placeholders by _binding_ them to values. This can be
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+ accomplished in a variety of ways.
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+
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+
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+ The Database#execute, and Database#execute2 methods all accept additional
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+ arguments following the SQL statement. These arguments are assumed to be
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+ bind parameters, and they are bound (positionally) to their corresponding
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+ placeholders:
160
+
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+
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+ <pre>
163
+ db.execute( "select * from table where a = ? and b = ?",
164
+ "hello",
165
+ "world" )
166
+ </pre>
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+
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+
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+ The above would replace the first question mark with 'hello' and the
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+ second with 'world'. If the placeholders have an explicit index given, they
171
+ will be replaced with the bind parameter at that index (1-based).
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+
173
+
174
+ If a Hash is given as a bind parameter, then its key/value pairs are bound
175
+ to the placeholders. This is how you bind by name:
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+
177
+
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+ <pre>
179
+ db.execute( "select * from table where a = :name and b = :value",
180
+ "name" => "bob",
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+ "value" => "priceless" )
182
+ </pre>
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+
184
+
185
+ You can also bind explicitly using the Statement object itself. Just pass
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+ additional parameters to the Statement#execute statement:
187
+
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+
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+ <pre>
190
+ db.prepare( "select * from table where a = :name and b = ?" ) do |stmt|
191
+ stmt.execute "value", "name" => "bob"
192
+ end
193
+ </pre>
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+
195
+
196
+ Or do a Database#prepare to get the Statement, and then use either
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+ Statement#bind_param or Statement#bind_params:
198
+
199
+
200
+ <pre>
201
+ stmt = db.prepare( "select * from table where a = :name and b = ?" )
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+
203
+ stmt.bind_param( "name", "bob" )
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+ stmt.bind_param( 1, "value" )
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+
206
+ # or
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+
208
+ stmt.bind_params( "value", "name" => "bob" )
209
+ </pre>
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+
211
+ - "How do I discover metadata about a query?": >-
212
+
213
+ If you ever want to know the names or types of the columns in a result
214
+ set, you can do it in several ways.
215
+
216
+
217
+ The first way is to ask the row object itself. Each row will have a
218
+ property "fields" that returns an array of the column names. The row
219
+ will also have a property "types" that returns an array of the column
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+ types:
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+
222
+
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+ <pre>
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+ rows = db.execute( "select * from table" )
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+ p rows[0].fields
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+ p rows[0].types
227
+ </pre>
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+
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+
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+ Obviously, this approach requires you to execute a statement that actually
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+ returns data. If you don't know if the statement will return any rows, but
232
+ you still need the metadata, you can use Database#query and ask the
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+ ResultSet object itself:
234
+
235
+
236
+ <pre>
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+ db.query( "select * from table" ) do |result|
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+ p result.columns
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+ p result.types
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+ ...
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+ end
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+ </pre>
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+
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+
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+ Lastly, you can use Database#prepare and ask the Statement object what
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+ the metadata are:
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ stmt = db.prepare( "select * from table" )
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+ p stmt.columns
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+ p stmt.types
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+ </pre>
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+
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+ - "I'd like the rows to be indexible by column name.": >-
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+ By default, each row from a query is returned as an Array of values. This
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+ means that you can only obtain values by their index. Sometimes, however,
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+ you would like to obtain values by their column name.
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+
260
+
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+ The first way to do this is to set the Database property "results_as_hash"
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+ to true. If you do this, then all rows will be returned as Hash objects,
263
+ with the column names as the keys. (In this case, the "fields" property
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+ is unavailable on the row, although the "types" property remains.)
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+
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+
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+ <pre>
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+ db.results_as_hash = true
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+ db.execute( "select * from table" ) do |row|
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+ p row['column1']
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+ p row['column2']
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+ end
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+ </pre>
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+
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+
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+ The other way is to use Ara Howard's
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+ "ArrayFields":http://rubyforge.org/projects/arrayfields
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+ module. Just require "arrayfields", and all of your rows will be indexable
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+ by column name, even though they are still arrays!
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+
281
+
282
+ <pre>
283
+ require 'arrayfields'
284
+
285
+ ...
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+ db.execute( "select * from table" ) do |row|
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+ p row[0] == row['column1']
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+ p row[1] == row['column2']
289
+ end
290
+ </pre>
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+
292
+ - "I'd like the values from a query to be the correct types, instead of String.": >-
293
+ You can turn on "type translation" by setting Database#type_translation to
294
+ true:
295
+
296
+
297
+ <pre>
298
+ db.type_translation = true
299
+ db.execute( "select * from table" ) do |row|
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+ p row
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+ end
302
+ </pre>
303
+
304
+
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+ By doing this, each return value for each row will be translated to its
306
+ correct type, based on its declared column type.
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+
308
+
309
+ You can even declare your own translation routines, if (for example) you are
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+ using an SQL type that is not handled by default:
311
+
312
+
313
+ <pre>
314
+ # assume "objects" table has the following schema:
315
+ # create table objects (
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+ # name varchar2(20),
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+ # thing object
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+ # )
319
+
320
+ db.type_translation = true
321
+ db.translator.add_translator( "object" ) do |type, value|
322
+ db.decode( value )
323
+ end
324
+
325
+ h = { :one=>:two, "three"=>"four", 5=>6 }
326
+ dump = db.encode( h )
327
+
328
+ db.execute( "insert into objects values ( ?, ? )", "bob", dump )
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+
330
+ obj = db.get_first_value( "select thing from objects where name='bob'" )
331
+ p obj == h
332
+ </pre>
333
+
334
+ - "How do I insert binary data into the database?": >-
335
+ Use blobs. Blobs are new features of SQLite3. You have to use bind
336
+ variables to make it work:
337
+
338
+
339
+ <pre>
340
+ db.execute( "insert into foo ( ?, ? )",
341
+ SQLite3::Blob.new( "\0\1\2\3\4\5" ),
342
+ SQLite3::Blob.new( "a\0b\0c\0d ) )
343
+ </pre>
344
+
345
+
346
+ The blob values must be indicated explicitly by binding each parameter to
347
+ a value of type SQLite3::Blob.
348
+
349
+ - "How do I do a DDL (insert, update, delete) statement?": >-
350
+ You can actually do inserts, updates, and deletes in exactly the same way
351
+ as selects, but in general the Database#execute method will be most
352
+ convenient:
353
+
354
+
355
+ <pre>
356
+ db.execute( "insert into table values ( ?, ? )", *bind_vars )
357
+ </pre>
358
+
359
+ - "How do I execute multiple statements in a single string?": >-
360
+ The standard query methods (Database#execute, Database#execute2,
361
+ Database#query, and Statement#execute) will only execute the first
362
+ statement in the string that is given to them. Thus, if you have a
363
+ string with multiple SQL statements, each separated by a string,
364
+ you can't use those methods to execute them all at once.
365
+
366
+
367
+ Instead, use Database#execute_batch:
368
+
369
+
370
+ <pre>
371
+ sql = <<SQL
372
+ create table the_table (
373
+ a varchar2(30),
374
+ b varchar2(30)
375
+ );
376
+
377
+ insert into the_table values ( 'one', 'two' );
378
+ insert into the_table values ( 'three', 'four' );
379
+ insert into the_table values ( 'five', 'six' );
380
+ SQL
381
+
382
+ db.execute_batch( sql )
383
+ </pre>
384
+
385
+
386
+ Unlike the other query methods, Database#execute_batch accepts no
387
+ block. It will also only ever return +nil+. Thus, it is really only
388
+ suitable for batch processing of DDL statements.
389
+
390
+ - "How do I begin/end a transaction?":
391
+ Use Database#transaction to start a transaction. If you give it a block,
392
+ the block will be automatically committed at the end of the block,
393
+ unless an exception was raised, in which case the transaction will be
394
+ rolled back. (Never explicitly call Database#commit or Database#rollback
395
+ inside of a transaction block--you'll get errors when the block
396
+ terminates!)
397
+
398
+
399
+ <pre>
400
+ database.transaction do |db|
401
+ db.execute( "insert into table values ( 'a', 'b', 'c' )" )
402
+ ...
403
+ end
404
+ </pre>
405
+
406
+
407
+ Alternatively, if you don't give a block to Database#transaction, the
408
+ transaction remains open until you explicitly call Database#commit or
409
+ Database#rollback.
410
+
411
+
412
+ <pre>
413
+ db.transaction
414
+ db.execute( "insert into table values ( 'a', 'b', 'c' )" )
415
+ db.commit
416
+ </pre>
417
+
418
+
419
+ Note that SQLite does not allow nested transactions, so you'll get errors
420
+ if you try to open a new transaction while one is already active. Use
421
+ Database#transaction_active? to determine whether a transaction is
422
+ active or not.
423
+
424
+ #- "How do I discover metadata about a table/index?":
425
+ #
426
+ #- "How do I do tweak database settings?":
Binary file
Binary file
Binary file
Binary file
@@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
1
+ module SQLite3 ; module Constants
2
+
3
+ module TextRep
4
+ UTF8 = 1
5
+ UTF16LE = 2
6
+ UTF16BE = 3
7
+ UTF16 = 4
8
+ ANY = 5
9
+ DETERMINISTIC = 0x800
10
+ end
11
+
12
+ module ColumnType
13
+ INTEGER = 1
14
+ FLOAT = 2
15
+ TEXT = 3
16
+ BLOB = 4
17
+ NULL = 5
18
+ end
19
+
20
+ module ErrorCode
21
+ OK = 0 # Successful result
22
+ ERROR = 1 # SQL error or missing database
23
+ INTERNAL = 2 # An internal logic error in SQLite
24
+ PERM = 3 # Access permission denied
25
+ ABORT = 4 # Callback routine requested an abort
26
+ BUSY = 5 # The database file is locked
27
+ LOCKED = 6 # A table in the database is locked
28
+ NOMEM = 7 # A malloc() failed
29
+ READONLY = 8 # Attempt to write a readonly database
30
+ INTERRUPT = 9 # Operation terminated by sqlite_interrupt()
31
+ IOERR = 10 # Some kind of disk I/O error occurred
32
+ CORRUPT = 11 # The database disk image is malformed
33
+ NOTFOUND = 12 # (Internal Only) Table or record not found
34
+ FULL = 13 # Insertion failed because database is full
35
+ CANTOPEN = 14 # Unable to open the database file
36
+ PROTOCOL = 15 # Database lock protocol error
37
+ EMPTY = 16 # (Internal Only) Database table is empty
38
+ SCHEMA = 17 # The database schema changed
39
+ TOOBIG = 18 # Too much data for one row of a table
40
+ CONSTRAINT = 19 # Abort due to constraint violation
41
+ MISMATCH = 20 # Data type mismatch
42
+ MISUSE = 21 # Library used incorrectly
43
+ NOLFS = 22 # Uses OS features not supported on host
44
+ AUTH = 23 # Authorization denied
45
+
46
+ ROW = 100 # sqlite_step() has another row ready
47
+ DONE = 101 # sqlite_step() has finished executing
48
+ end
49
+
50
+ end ; end