- NAME
- OVERVIEW
- DOWNLOAD
- INSTALLATION
- EXAMPLES
- VERIFICATION TESTS
- REFERENCE
- SQLite3 functions
- sqlite.complete
- sqlite.lversion
- sqlite.open
- sqlite.open_memory
- sqlite.open_ptr
- sqlite.backup_init
- sqlite.temp_directory
- sqlite.version
- Database methods
- db@@busy_handler
- db@@busy_timeout
- db@@changes
- db@@close
- db@@close_vm
- db@@get_ptr
- db@@commit_hook
- db@@create_aggregate
- db@@create_collation
- db@@create_function
- db@@errcode
- db@@errmsg
- db@@exec
- db@@interrupt
- db@@db_filename
- db@@isopen
- db@@last_insert_rowid
- db@@load_extension
- db@@nrows
- db@@prepare
- db@@progress_handler
- db@@rollback_hook
- db@@rows
- db@@total_changes
- db@@trace
- db@@update_hook
- db@@urows
- Methods for prepared statements
- stmt@@bind
- stmt@@bind_blob
- stmt@@bind_names
- stmt@@bind_parameter_count
- stmt@@bind_parameter_name
- stmt@@bind_values
- stmt@@columns
- stmt@@finalize
- stmt@@get_name
- stmt@@get_named_types
- stmt@@get_named_values
- stmt@@get_names
- stmt@@get_type
- stmt@@get_types
- stmt@@get_unames
- stmt@@get_utypes
- stmt@@get_uvalues
- stmt@@get_value
- stmt@@get_values
- stmt@@isopen
- stmt@@last_insert_rowid
- stmt@@nrows
- stmt@@reset
- stmt@@rows
- stmt@@step
- stmt@@urows
- Methods for callback contexts
- context@@aggregate_count
- context@@get_aggregate_data
- context@@set_aggregate_data
- context@@result
- context@@result_null
- context@@result_number
- context@@result_int
- context@@result_text
- context@@result_blob
- context@@result_error
- context@@user_data
- Methods for Online Backup
- Numerical error and result codes
- VERSION
- CREDITS
- LICENSE
NAME
SQLite - an Agena wrapper for the
SQLite3 library. The wrapper has been written by Tiago Dionizio and
Doug Currie and ported from LuaSQLite3 for Lua 5.1 to
5.3, Copyright (C) 2002-2016 Tiago Dionizio, Doug Currie;
MIT-licenced. The Agena port features some few additional safeguards to
prevent segmentation faults in case previously executed SQL statementsfailed or could not be executed at all.
OVERVIEW
SQLite is a thin wrapper around the public domain SQLite3 database engine.
The module sqlite links SQLite3 statically.
The SQLite3 amalgamation source code is included in the source code
distribution. This can simplify deployment, but might
result in more than one copy of the SQLite library if other parts
of the code also include it. See
http://www.sqlite.org/howtocorrupt.html
for an explanation on why it would be a bad idea.
The module supports the creation and manipulation of SQLite3 databases. After an
> import sqlite
the exported functions are called
with prefix sqlite.
However, most sqlite3 functions are
called via an object-oriented interface to either database or SQL
statement objects; see below for details. For some examples, check the
file `SQLite.agn` in the `doc` folder of your Agena installation.
This documentation does not attempt to describe how SQLite3 itself works, it just describes the Agenaa binding and the available functions. For more information about the SQL features supported by SQLite3 and details about the syntax of SQL statements and queries, please see the SQLite3 documentation http://www.sqlite.org/. Using some of the advanced features (how to use callbacks, for instance) will require some familiarity with the SQLite3 API.
EXAMPLES
The distribution contains an examples directory. The unit tests also show some example use.
VERIFICATION TESTS
The distribution contains a tests directory with some
units tests using an enhanced version of Michael Roth's lunit
called lunitx. Some of the tests were also derived from
Michael's lua-sqlite3 module, and more unit tests
added by Doug Currie. Get lunitx using Luarocks.
The distribution also contains some functional tests by Tiago.
This version of sqlite was tested with SQLite 3.50.3.
REFERENCE
SQLite3 functions
sqlite.complete
sqlite.complete(sql)
Returns true if the string sql comprises one or more
complete SQL
statements and false otherwise.
sqlite.open
sqlite.open(filename)
Opens (or creates if it does not exist) an SQLite database with name
filename and returns its handle as userdata (the returned
object should be used for all further method calls in connection with
this specific database, see Database
methods). Example:
myDB := sqlite.open('MyDatabase.sqlite3') # open
# do some database calls...
mydb@@close() # close
In case of an error, the function returns nil, an error code and an error message.
Since 0.9.4, there is a second optional flags argument to sqlite.open.
sqlite.open(filename, flags)
See sqlite3_open_v2 for an explanation of these flags and options.
Example:
local db := sqlite.open('foo.db', sqlite.OPEN_READWRITE + sqlite.OPEN_CREATE + sqlite.OPEN_SHAREDCACHE)
The default value for flags is sqlite.OPEN_READWRITE + sqlite.OPEN_CREATE.
sqlite.open_memory
sqlite.open_memory()
Opens an SQLite database in memory and returns its handle as userdata. In case of an error, the function returns nil, an error code and an error message. (In-memory databases are volatile as they are never stored on disk.)
sqlite.open_ptr
sqlite.open_ptr(db_ptr)
Opens the SQLite database corresponding to the light userdata db_ptr
and returns its handle as userdata. Use db@@get_ptr
to get a db_ptr for an open database.
sqlite.backup_init
sqlite.backup_init(target_db, target_name, source_db, source_name)
Starts an SQLite Online Backup from source_db to target_db
and returns its handle as userdata. The source_db and target_db
are
open databases; they may be in-memory or file-based databases. The target_name
and
source_name are "main" for the main database, "temp" for
the temporary database, or the name specified after the AS keyword in
an ATTACH statement for an attached database.
The source and target databases must be different, or else the init
call will fail with an error. A call to sqlite.backup_init
will fail, returning NULL, if there is already a read or read-write
transaction open on the target database.
If an error occurs within sqlite.backup_init, then
NULL is returned, and an error code and error message are stored in target_db.
The error code and message for the failed call can be retrieved using
the db@@errcode, or db@@errmsg.
sqlite.temp_directory
sqlite.temp_directory([temp])
Sets or queries the directory used by SQLite for temporary files. If
string temp is a directory name or nil, the temporary
directory is set accordingly and the old value is returned. If temp
is missing, the function simply returns the current temporary directory.
sqlite.version
sqlite.version()
Returns a string with SQLite version information, in the form 'x.y[.z[.p]]'.
sqlite.lversion
sqlite.lversion()
Returns a string with lsqlite3 library version information, in the form 'x.y[.z]'.
Database methods
After opening a database with sqlite.open()
or sqlite.open_memory()
the returned database object should be used for all further method
calls
in connection with that database. An open database object supports the
following methods.
db@@busy_handler
db@@busy_handler([func [, udata]])
Sets or removes a busy handler for a database. func is
either a Lua
function that implements the busy handler or nil to remove a previously
set handler. This function returns nothing.
The handler function is called with two parameters: udata
and the number of (re-)tries for a pending transaction. It should
return nil, false or 0 if the transaction is to be aborted. All other
values will result in another attempt to perform the transaction. (See
the SQLite
documentation for important hints about writing busy handlers.)
db@@busy_timeout
db@@busy_timeout(t)
Sets a busy handler that waits for t milliseconds if a
transaction cannot proceed. Calling this function will remove any busy
handler set by db@@busy_handler();
calling it with an argument less than or equal to 0 will turn off all
busy handlers.
db@@changes
db@@changes()
This function returns the number of database rows that were changed
(or
inserted or deleted) by the most recent SQL statement. Only changes
that
are directly specified by INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements are
counted. Auxiliary changes caused by triggers are not counted. Use db@@total_changes() to find
the total number of changes.
db@@close
db@@close()
Closes a database. All SQL statements prepared using db@@prepare() should
have been finalized before this function is called. The function
returns sqlite.OK on success or else a numerical error code (see
the list of
Numerical error and result
codes).
db@@close_vm
db@@close_vm(temponly)
Finalizes all statements that have not been explicitly finalized. If
temponly is true, only internal, temporary statements are
finalized.
This function returns nothing.
db@@get_ptr
db@@get_ptr()
Returns a lightuserdata corresponding to the open db.
Use with sqlite.open_ptr
to pass a database connection
between threads. (When using lsqlite3 in a multithreaded environment,
each thread has a separate Lua environment; full userdata structures
can't be passed from one thread to another, but this is possible with
lightuserdata.)
db@@commit_hook
db@@commit_hook(func, udata)
This function installs a commit_hook callback handler. func
is a Lua function that is invoked by SQLite3 whenever a transaction is
commited. This callback receives one argument: the udata
argument used when the callback was installed. If func
returns false
or nil the COMMIT is allowed to prodeed, otherwise the
COMMIT is converted to a ROLLBACK.
See: db@@rollback_hook and db:update_hook
db@@create_aggregate
db@@create_aggregate(name, nargs, step, final [, userdata])
This function creates an aggregate callback function. Aggregates
perform
an operation over all rows in a query. name is a string
with the name of the aggregate function as given in an SQL statement; nargs
is the number of arguments this call will provide. step
is the actual Lua function that gets called once for every row; it
should accept a function context (see Methods for callback contexts)
plus the same number of
parameters as given in nargs. final is a
function that is called once after all rows have been processed; it
receives one argument, the
function context. If provided, userdata can be any Lua
value and would be returned
by the context@@user_data() method.
The function context can be used inside the two callback functions to communicate with sqlite. Here is a simple example:
db@@exec('
CREATE TABLE numbers(num1, num2);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(1, 11);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(2, 22);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(3, 33);
')
local num_sum := 0
local procedure oneRow(context,num) is # add one column in all rows
num_sum +:= num
end
local procedure afterLast(context) is # return sum after last row has been processed
context@@result_number(num_sum)
num_sum := 0
end
db@@create_aggregate("do_the_sums",1,oneRow,afterLast)
for sum in db@@urows('SELECT do_the_sums(num1) FROM numbers') do print("Sum of col 1:", sum) end
for sum in db@@urows('SELECT do_the_sums(num2) FROM numbers') do print("Sum of col 2:", sum) end
This prints:
Sum of col 1: 6
Sum of col 2: 66
db@@create_collation
db@@create_collation(name,func)
This creates a collation callback. A collation callback is used to
establish a collation order, mostly for string comparisons and sorting
purposes. name is a string with the name of the collation
to be created;
func is a function that accepts two string arguments,
compares them and returns 0 if both strings are identical, -1 if the
first argument is
lower in the collation order than the second and 1 if the first
argument
is higher in the collation order than the second. A simple example:
local procedure collate(s1, s2) is
s1 := s1@@lower()
s2 := s2@@lower()
if s1 = s2 then return 0
elif s1 < s2 then return -1
else return 1 end
end
db@@exec('
CREATE TABLE test(id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,content COLLATE CINSENS);
INSERT INTO test VALUES(NULL, 'hello world');
INSERT INTO test VALUES(NULL, 'Buenos dias');
INSERT INTO test VALUES(NULL, 'HELLO WORLD');
')
db@@create_collation('CINSENS', collate)
for row in db@@nrows('SELECT * FROM test') do print(row.id, row.content) end
db@@create_function
db@@create_function(name,nargs,func[,userdata])
This function creates a callback function. Callback function are
called
by SQLite3 once for every row in a query. name is a
string with the name of the callback function as given in an SQL
statement; nargs is the number of arguments this call
will provide. func is the actual Lua
function that gets called once for every row; it should accept a
function context (see Methods
for callback contexts) plus the same
number of parameters as given in nargs. If provided, userdata
can be any Lua value and would be returned
by the context@@user_data() method. Here is an example:
db@@exec'CREATE TABLE test(col1, col2, col3)'
db@@exec'INSERT INTO test VALUES(1, 2, 4)'
db@@exec'INSERT INTO test VALUES(2, 4, 9)'
db@@exec'INSERT INTO test VALUES(3, 6, 16)'
db@@create_function('sum_cols', 3, function(ctx, a, b, c)
ctx@@result_number(a + b + c)
end))
for col1, col2, col3, sum in db@@urows('SELECT *, sum_cols(col1, col2, col3) FROM test') do
printf('%2i+%2i+%2i=%2i\n', col1, col2, col3, sum)
end
db@@load_extension
db@@load_extension([name,[entrypoint]])
When a name is provided, loads an SQLite extension
library from the named file into this database connection. The optional
entrypoint is the library initialization function name; if
not supplied, SQLite tries various default entrypoint names. Returns true
when successful, or false and an error string otherwise.
When called with no arguments, disables the load_extension() SQL
function, which is enabled as a side effect of calling db@@load_extension
with a name.
db@@errcode
db@@errcode()
db@@error_code()
Returns the numerical result code (or extended result code) for the most recent failed call associated with database db. See Numerical error and result codes for details.
db@@errmsg
db@@errmsg()
db@@error_message()
Returns a string that contains an error message for the most recent failed call associated with database db.
db@@exec
db@@exec(sql[,func[,udata]])
db@@execute(sql[,func[,udata]])
Compiles and executes the SQL statement(s) given in string sql.
The
statements are simply executed one after the other and not stored. The
function returns sqlite.OK on success or else a
numerical error code
(see Numerical error and
result codes).
If one or more of the SQL statements are queries, then the callback
function specified in func is invoked once for each row
of the query
result (if func is nil, no callback is invoked). The
callback receives
four arguments: udata (the third parameter of the db@@exec()
call), the number of columns in the row, a table with the column values
and another table with the column names. The callback function should
return 0. If the callback returns a non-zero value then the query is
aborted, all subsequent SQL statements are skipped and db@@exec()
returns sqlite.ABORT. Here is a simple example:
sql := '
CREATE TABLE numbers(num1, num2, str);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(1, 11, "ABC");
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(2, 22, "DEF");
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(3, 33, "UVW");
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(4, 44, "XYZ");
SELECT * FROM numbers;
'
procedure showrow(udata, cols, values, names) is
assume(udata = 'test_udata')
print('exec:')
for i to cols do print('', names[i], values[i]) end
return 0
end
db@@exec(sql, showrow, 'test_udata')
db@@interrupt
db@@interrupt()
This function causes any pending database operation to abort and return at the next opportunity. This function returns nothing.
db@@db_filename
db@@db_filename(name)
This function returns the filename associated with database name
of connection db. The name may be "main"
for the main database file, or the name specified after the AS keyword
in an ATTACH statement for an attached database. If there is no
attached database name on the database connection db,
then no value is returned; if database name is a
temporary or in-memory database, then an empty string is returned.
db@@isopen
db@@isopen()
Returns true if database db is open, false otherwise.
db@@last_insert_rowid
db@@last_insert_rowid()
This function returns the rowid of the most recent INSERT into the database. If no inserts have ever occurred, 0 is returned. (Each row in an SQLite table has a unique 64-bit signed integer key called the 'rowid'. This id is always available as an undeclared column named ROWID, OID, or _ROWID_. If the table has a column of type INTEGER PRIMARY KEY then that column is another alias for the rowid.)
If an INSERT occurs within a trigger, then the rowid of the inserted row is returned as long as the trigger is running. Once the trigger terminates, the value returned reverts to the last value inserted before the trigger fired.
db@@nrows
db@@nrows(sql)
Creates an iterator that returns the successive rows selected by the
SQL
statement given in string sql. Each call to the iterator
returns a table in which the named fields correspond to the columns in
the database.
Here is an example:
db@@exec('
CREATE TABLE numbers(num1, num2);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(1, 11);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(2, 22);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(3, 33);
')
for a in db@@nrows('SELECT * FROM numbers') do print(a) end
This script prints:
num2: 11
num1: 1
num2: 22
num1: 2
num2: 33
num1: 3
db@@prepare
db@@prepare(sql)
This function compiles the SQL statement in string sql
into an internal
representation and returns this as userdata. The returned object should
be used for all further method calls in connection with this specific
SQL statement (see Methods
for prepared statements).
db@@progress_handler
db@@progress_handler(n, func, udata)
This function installs a callback function func that
is invoked
periodically during long-running calls to db@@exec()
or stmt@@step(). The
progress callback is invoked once for every n internal
operations, where n is the first argument to this
function. udata is passed to the progress callback
function each time it is invoked. If a call to db@@exec()
or stmt@@step() results in fewer than n
operations being executed, then the progress callback is never invoked.
Only a single progress callback function may be registered for each
opened database and a call to this function will overwrite any
previously set callback function. To remove the progress callback
altogether, pass nil as the second argument.
If the progress callback returns a result other than 0, then the
current
query is immediately terminated, any database changes are rolled back
and the containing db@@exec() or stmt@@step()
call returns sqlite.INTERRUPT. This feature can be used to cancel
long-running
queries.
db@@rollback_hook
db@@rollback_hook(func, udata)
This function installs a rollback_hook callback handler. func
is a Lua function that is invoked by SQLite3 whenever a transaction is
rolled back. This callback receives one argument: the udata
argument used when the callback was installed.
See: db@@commit_hook and db@@update_hook
db@@rows
db@@rows(sql)
Creates an iterator that returns the successive rows selected by the
SQL
statement given in string sql. Each call to the iterator
returns a table
in which the numerical indices 1 to n correspond to the selected
columns
1 to n in the database. Here is an example:
db@@exec('
CREATE TABLE numbers(num1, num2);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(1, 11);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(2, 22);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(3, 33);
')
for a in db@@rows('SELECT * FROM numbers') do print(a) end
This script prints:
1: 1
2: 11
1: 2
2: 22
1: 3
2: 33
db@@total_changes
db@@total_changes()
This function returns the number of database rows that have been
modified by INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE statements since the database was
opened. This includes UPDATE, INSERT and DELETE statements executed as
part of trigger programs. All changes are counted as soon as the
statement that produces them is completed by calling either stmt@@reset() or stmt@@finalize().
db@@trace
db@@trace(func, udata)
This function installs a trace callback handler. func
is a Lua
function that is called by SQLite3 just before the evaluation of an SQL
statement. This callback receives two arguments: the first is the udata
argument used when the callback was installed; the second is a string
with the SQL statement about to be executed.
db@@update_hook
db@@update_hook(func, udata)
This function installs an update_hook Data Change Notification
Callback handler. func is a Lua function that is invoked
by SQLite3 whenever a row is updated, inserted or deleted. This
callback receives five arguments: the first is the udata
argument used when the callback was installed; the second is an integer
indicating the operation that caused the callback to be invoked (one of sqlite.UPDATE, sqlite.INSERT, or sqlite.DELETE). The
third and fourth arguments are the database and table name containing
the affected row. The final callback parameter is the rowid of the row.
In the case of an update, this is the rowid after the update takes
place.
See: db@@commit_hook and db@@rollback_hook
db@@urows
db@@urows(sql)
Creates an iterator that returns the successive rows selected by the
SQL
statement given in string sql. Each call to the iterator
returns the
values that correspond to the columns in the currently selected row.
Here is an example:
db@@exec('
CREATE TABLE numbers(num1, num2);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(1, 11);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(2, 22);
INSERT INTO numbers VALUES(3, 33);
')
for num1,num2 in db@@urows('SELECT * FROM numbers') do print(num1, num2) end
This script prints:
1 11
2 22
3 33
Methods for prepared statements
After creating a prepared statement with db@@prepare()
the returned statement object should be used for all further calls in
connection with that statement. Statement objects support the following
methods.
stmt@@bind
stmt@@bind(n[,value])
Binds value to statement parameter n. If the type of
value is string it is bound as text. If the type of value is number,
then with Lua prior to 5.3 it is bound as a double, with Lua 5.3 it is
bound as an integer or double
depending on its subtype using lua_isinteger. If value
is a
boolean then it is bound as 0 for false or 1 for true.
If value is nil or missing, any previous binding is
removed. The function
returns sqlite.OK on success or else a numerical error
code (see
Numerical error and result
codes).
stmt@@bind_blob
stmt@@bind_blob(n,blob)
Binds string blob (which can be a binary string) as a
blob to statement parameter n. The function returns sqlite.OK
on success or else a numerical error code (see Numerical error and result
codes).
stmt@@bind_names
stmt@@bind_names(nametable)
Binds the values in nametable to statement parameters.
If the statement parameters are named (i.e., of the form ":AAA" or
"$AAA") then this function looks for appropriately named fields in nametable;
if the statement parameters are
not named, it looks for numerical fields 1 to the number of statement
parameters. The function returns sqlite.OK on success or
else a
numerical error code (see Numerical
error and result codes).
stmt@@bind_parameter_count
stmt@@bind_parameter_count()
Returns the largest statement parameter index in prepared statement stmt.
When the statement parameters are of the forms ":AAA" or "?", then they
are assigned sequentially increasing numbers beginning with one, so the
value returned is the number of parameters. However if the same
statement parameter name is used multiple times, each occurrence is
given the same number, so the value returned is the number of unique
statement parameter names.
If statement parameters of the form "?NNN" are used (where NNN is an integer) then there might be gaps in the numbering and the value returned by this interface is the index of the statement parameter with the largest index value.
stmt@@bind_parameter_name
stmt@@bind_parameter_name(n)
Returns the name of the n-th parameter in prepared
statement stmt. Statement parameters of the form ":AAA"
or "@AAA" or "$VVV" have a name which is the string ":AAA" or "@AAA" or
"$VVV". In other words, the initial ":" or "$" or "@" is included as
part of the name. Parameters of the form "?" or "?NNN" have no name.
The first bound parameter has an index of 1.
If the value n is out of range or if the n-th
parameter is
nameless, then nil is returned. The function returns sqlite.OK
on
success or else a numerical error code (see
Numerical error and result
codes)
stmt@@bind_values
stmt@@bind_values(value1,value2,...,valueN)
Binds the given values to statement parameters. The function returns sqlite.OK on success or else a numerical error code (see
Numerical error and result
codes).
stmt@@columns
stmt@@columns()
Returns the number of columns in the result set returned by statement stmt or 0 if the statement does not return data (for example an UPDATE).
stmt@@finalize
stmt@@finalize()
This function frees prepared statement stmt. If the statement was
executed successfully, or not executed at all, then sqlite.OK
is
returned. If execution of the statement failed then an error code is
returned.
stmt@@get_name
stmt@@get_name(n)
Returns the name of column n in the result set of
statement stmt. (The
left-most column is number 0.)
stmt@@get_named_types
stmt@@get_named_types()
Returns a table with the names and types of all columns in the result set of statement stmt.
stmt@@get_named_values
stmt@@get_named_values()
This function returns a table with names and values of all columns in the current result row of a query.
stmt@@get_names
stmt@@get_names()
This function returns an array with the names of all columns in the result set returned by statement stmt.
stmt@@get_type
stmt@@get_type(n)
Returns the type of column n in the result set of
statement stmt. (The
left-most column is number 0.)
stmt@@get_types
stmt@@get_types()
This function returns an array with the types of all columns in the result set returned by statement stmt.
stmt@@get_unames
stmt@@get_unames()
This function returns a list with the names of all columns in the result set returned by statement stmt.
stmt@@get_utypes
stmt@@get_utypes()
This function returns a list with the types of all columns in the result set returned by statement stmt.
stmt@@get_uvalues
stmt@@get_uvalues()
This function returns a list with the values of all columns in the current result row of a query.
stmt@@get_value
stmt@@get_value(n)
Returns the value of column n in the result set of
statement stmt. (The
left-most column is number 0.)
stmt@@get_values
stmt@@get_values()
This function returns an array with the values of all columns in the result set returned by statement stmt.
stmt@@isopen
stmt@@isopen()
Returns true if stmt has not yet been finalized, false otherwise.
stmt@@nrows
stmt@@nrows()
Returns an function that iterates over the names and values of the
result set of statement stmt. Each iteration returns a
table with the
names and values for the current row.
This is the prepared statement equivalent of db@@nrows().
stmt@@reset
stmt@@reset()
This function resets SQL statement stmt, so that it is
ready to be
re-executed. Any statement variables that had values bound to them
using
the stmt@@bind*() functions retain their values.
stmt@@rows
stmt@@rows()
Returns an function that iterates over the values of the result set
of
statement stmt. Each iteration returns an array with the values for the
current row.
This is the prepared statement equivalent of db@@rows().
stmt@@step
stmt@@step()
This function must be called to evaluate the (next iteration of the) prepared statement stmt. It will return one of the following values:
-
sqlite.BUSY: the engine was unable to acquire the locks needed. If the statement is a COMMIT or occurs outside of an explicit transaction, then you can retry the statement. If the statement is not a COMMIT and occurs within a explicit transaction then you should rollback the transaction before continuing. -
sqlite.DONE: the statement has finished executing successfully.stmt@@step()should not be called again on this statement without first callingstmt@@reset()to reset the virtual machine back to the initial state. -
sqlite.ROW: this is returned each time a new row of data is ready for processing by the caller. The values may be accessed using the column access functions.stmt@@step()can be called again to retrieve the next row of data. -
sqlite.ERROR: a run-time error (such as a constraint violation) has occurred.stmt@@step()should not be called again. More information may be found by callingdb@@errmsg(). A more specific error code (can be obtained by callingstmt@@reset(). -
sqlite.MISUSE: the function was called inappropriately, perhaps because the statement has already been finalized or a previous call tostmt@@step()has returnedsqlite.ERRORorsqlite.DONE.
stmt@@urows
stmt@@urows()
Returns an function that iterates over the values of the result set
of
statement stmt. Each iteration returns the values for the current row.
This is the prepared statement equivalent of db@@urows().
stmt@@last_insert_rowid
stmt@@last_insert_rowid()
This function returns the rowid of the most recent INSERT into the
database corresponding to this statement. See db@@last_insert_rowid().
Methods for callback contexts
A callback context is available as a parameter inside the callback
functions db@@create_aggregate()
and db@@create_function().
It can be used
to get further information about the state of a query.
context@@aggregate_count
context@@aggregate_count()
Returns the number of calls to the aggregate step function.
context@@get_aggregate_data
context@@get_aggregate_data()
Returns the user-definable data field for callback funtions.
context@@set_aggregate_data
context@@set_aggregate_data(udata)
Set the user-definable data field for callback funtions to udata.
context@@result
context@@result(res)
This function sets the result of a callback function to res. The type of the result depends on the type of res and is either a number or a string or nil. All other values will raise an error message.
context@@result_null
context@@result_null()
This function sets the result of a callback function to nil. It returns nothing.
context@@result_number
context@@result_number(number)
context@@result_double(number)
This function sets the result of a callback function to the value
number. It returns nothing.
context@@result_int
context@@result_int(number)
This function sets the result of a callback function to the integer
value in number. It returns nothing.
context@@result_text
context@@result_text(str)
This function sets the result of a callback function to the string
in
str. It returns nothing.
context@@result_blob
context@@result_blob(blob)
This function sets the result of a callback function to the binary
string in blob. It returns nothing.
context@@result_error
context@@result_error(err)
This function sets the result of a callback function to the error
value
in err. It returns nothing.
context@@user_data
context@@user_data()
Returns the userdata parameter given in the call to install the
callback
function (see db@@create_aggregate()
and db@@create_function()
for details).
Methods for Online Backup
A backup userdata is created using backup = sqlite.backup_init(...).
It is then used to step the backup, or inquire about its progress.
backup@@step
backup@@step(nPages)
Returns the status of the backup after stepping nPages.
It is called one or more times to transfer the data between the two
databases.
backup@@step(nPages) will copy up to nPages
pages between the source and destination databases specified by backup
userdata. If nPages is negative, all remaining source
pages are copied.
If backup@@step(nPages) successfully copies nPages
pages and there are still more pages to be copied, then the function
returns sqlite.OK. If backup@@step(nPages)
successfully finishes copying all pages from source to destination,
then it returns sqlite.DONE. If an error occurs during
the step, then an error code is returned. such as sqlite.READONLY, sqlite.NOMEM, sqlite.BUSY, sqlite.LOCKED,
or an sqlite.IOERR_XXX extended error code.
backup@@remaining
backup@@remaining()
Returns the number of pages still to be backed up at the conclusion of the most recent step.
backup@@pagecount
backup@@pagecount()
Returns the total number of pages in the source database at the conclusion of the most recent step.
backup@@finish
backup@@finish()
When backup@@step(nPages) has returned sqlite.DONE,
or when the application wishes to abandon the backup operation, the
application should destroy the backup by calling backup@@finish().
This releases all resources associated with the backup. If backup@@step(nPages)
has not yet returned sqlite.DONE, then any active
write-transaction on the destination database is rolled back. After the
call, the backup userdata corresponds to a completed backup, and should
not be used.
The value returned by backup@@finish() is sqlite.OK
if no errors occurred, regardless or whether or not the backup
completed. If an out-of-memory condition or IO error occurred during
any prior step on the same backup, then backup@@finish()
returns the corresponding error code.
A return of sqlite.BUSY or sqlite.LOCKED
from backup@@step(nPages) is not a permanent error and
does not affect the return value of backup@@finish().
Numerical error and result codes
The following constants are defined by module sqlite3:
OK: 0 ERROR: 1 INTERNAL: 2 PERM: 3 ABORT: 4
BUSY: 5 LOCKED: 6 NOMEM: 7 READONLY: 8 INTERRUPT: 9
IOERR: 10 CORRUPT: 11 NOTFOUND: 12 FULL: 13 CANTOPEN: 14
PROTOCOL: 15 EMPTY: 16 SCHEMA: 17 TOOBIG: 18 CONSTRAINT: 19
MISMATCH: 20 MISUSE: 21 NOLFS: 22 AUTH: 23 FORMAT: 24
RANGE: 25 NOTAdb: 26 NOTICE: 27 WARNING: 28 ROW: 100
DONE: 101
plus the Authorizer Action Codes:
CREATE_INDEX: 1 CREATE_TABLE: 2 CREATE_TEMP_INDEX: 3 CREATE_TEMP_TABLE: 4
CREATE_TEMP_TRIGGER: 5 CREATE_TEMP_VIEW: 6 CREATE_TRIGGER: 7 CREATE_VIEW: 8
DELETE: 9 DROP_INDEX: 10 DROP_TABLE: 11 DROP_TEMP_INDEX: 12
DROP_TEMP_TABLE: 13 DROP_TEMP_TRIGGER: 14 DROP_TEMP_VIEW: 15 DROP_TRIGGER: 16
DROP_VIEW: 17 INSERT: 18 PRAGMA: 19 READ: 20
SELECT: 21 TRANSACTION: 22 UPDATE: 23 ATTACH: 24
DETACH: 25 ALTER_TABLE: 26 REINDEX: 27 ANALYZE: 28
CREATE_VTABLE: 29 DROP_VTABLE: 30 FUNCTION: 31 SAVEPOINT: 32
and the Open Flags:
OPEN_READONLY OPEN_READWRITE OPEN_CREATE OPEN_URI
OPEN_MEMORY OPEN_NOMUTEX OPEN_FULLMUTEX OPEN_SHAREDCACHE
OPEN_PRIVATECACHE
For details about their exact meaning please see the SQLite3 documentation http://www.sqlite.org/.
VERSION
This is lsqlite3 version "0.9.4", also tagged as fsl_9x.
CREDITS
lsqlite3 was developed by Tiago Dionizio and Doug
Currie with contributions from Thomas Lauer, Michael Roth, and Wolfgang
Oertl.
This documentation is based on the "(very) preliminary" documents for the Idle-SQLite3 database module. Thanks to Thomas Lauer for making it available.
LICENSE
/************************************************************************
* lsqlite3 *
* Copyright (C) 2002-2016 Tiago Dionizio, Doug Currie *
* All rights reserved. *
* Author : Tiago Dionizio <tiago.dionizio@ist.utl.pt> *
* Author : Doug Currie <doug.currie@alum.mit.edu> *
* Library : lsqlite3 - an SQLite 3 database binding for Lua 5 *
* *
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining *
* a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the *
* "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including *
* without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, *
* distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to *
* permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to *
* the following conditions: *
* *
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be *
* included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. *
* *
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, *
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF *
* MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.*
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY *
* CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, *
* TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE *
* SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. *
************************************************************************/