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Issue 3108030: Move bundled copy of sqlite one level deeper to better separate it... (Closed) Base URL: svn://svn.chromium.org/chrome/trunk/src/
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1 /*
2 ** 2004 April 6
3 **
4 ** The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of
5 ** a legal notice, here is a blessing:
6 **
7 ** May you do good and not evil.
8 ** May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
9 ** May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
10 **
11 *************************************************************************
12 ** $Id: btreeInt.h,v 1.52 2009/07/15 17:25:46 drh Exp $
13 **
14 ** This file implements a external (disk-based) database using BTrees.
15 ** For a detailed discussion of BTrees, refer to
16 **
17 ** Donald E. Knuth, THE ART OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING, Volume 3:
18 ** "Sorting And Searching", pages 473-480. Addison-Wesley
19 ** Publishing Company, Reading, Massachusetts.
20 **
21 ** The basic idea is that each page of the file contains N database
22 ** entries and N+1 pointers to subpages.
23 **
24 ** ----------------------------------------------------------------
25 ** | Ptr(0) | Key(0) | Ptr(1) | Key(1) | ... | Key(N-1) | Ptr(N) |
26 ** ----------------------------------------------------------------
27 **
28 ** All of the keys on the page that Ptr(0) points to have values less
29 ** than Key(0). All of the keys on page Ptr(1) and its subpages have
30 ** values greater than Key(0) and less than Key(1). All of the keys
31 ** on Ptr(N) and its subpages have values greater than Key(N-1). And
32 ** so forth.
33 **
34 ** Finding a particular key requires reading O(log(M)) pages from the
35 ** disk where M is the number of entries in the tree.
36 **
37 ** In this implementation, a single file can hold one or more separate
38 ** BTrees. Each BTree is identified by the index of its root page. The
39 ** key and data for any entry are combined to form the "payload". A
40 ** fixed amount of payload can be carried directly on the database
41 ** page. If the payload is larger than the preset amount then surplus
42 ** bytes are stored on overflow pages. The payload for an entry
43 ** and the preceding pointer are combined to form a "Cell". Each
44 ** page has a small header which contains the Ptr(N) pointer and other
45 ** information such as the size of key and data.
46 **
47 ** FORMAT DETAILS
48 **
49 ** The file is divided into pages. The first page is called page 1,
50 ** the second is page 2, and so forth. A page number of zero indicates
51 ** "no such page". The page size can be anything between 512 and 65536.
52 ** Each page can be either a btree page, a freelist page or an overflow
53 ** page.
54 **
55 ** The first page is always a btree page. The first 100 bytes of the first
56 ** page contain a special header (the "file header") that describes the file.
57 ** The format of the file header is as follows:
58 **
59 ** OFFSET SIZE DESCRIPTION
60 ** 0 16 Header string: "SQLite format 3\000"
61 ** 16 2 Page size in bytes.
62 ** 18 1 File format write version
63 ** 19 1 File format read version
64 ** 20 1 Bytes of unused space at the end of each page
65 ** 21 1 Max embedded payload fraction
66 ** 22 1 Min embedded payload fraction
67 ** 23 1 Min leaf payload fraction
68 ** 24 4 File change counter
69 ** 28 4 Reserved for future use
70 ** 32 4 First freelist page
71 ** 36 4 Number of freelist pages in the file
72 ** 40 60 15 4-byte meta values passed to higher layers
73 **
74 ** 40 4 Schema cookie
75 ** 44 4 File format of schema layer
76 ** 48 4 Size of page cache
77 ** 52 4 Largest root-page (auto/incr_vacuum)
78 ** 56 4 1=UTF-8 2=UTF16le 3=UTF16be
79 ** 60 4 User version
80 ** 64 4 Incremental vacuum mode
81 ** 68 4 unused
82 ** 72 4 unused
83 ** 76 4 unused
84 **
85 ** All of the integer values are big-endian (most significant byte first).
86 **
87 ** The file change counter is incremented when the database is changed
88 ** This counter allows other processes to know when the file has changed
89 ** and thus when they need to flush their cache.
90 **
91 ** The max embedded payload fraction is the amount of the total usable
92 ** space in a page that can be consumed by a single cell for standard
93 ** B-tree (non-LEAFDATA) tables. A value of 255 means 100%. The default
94 ** is to limit the maximum cell size so that at least 4 cells will fit
95 ** on one page. Thus the default max embedded payload fraction is 64.
96 **
97 ** If the payload for a cell is larger than the max payload, then extra
98 ** payload is spilled to overflow pages. Once an overflow page is allocated,
99 ** as many bytes as possible are moved into the overflow pages without letting
100 ** the cell size drop below the min embedded payload fraction.
101 **
102 ** The min leaf payload fraction is like the min embedded payload fraction
103 ** except that it applies to leaf nodes in a LEAFDATA tree. The maximum
104 ** payload fraction for a LEAFDATA tree is always 100% (or 255) and it
105 ** not specified in the header.
106 **
107 ** Each btree pages is divided into three sections: The header, the
108 ** cell pointer array, and the cell content area. Page 1 also has a 100-byte
109 ** file header that occurs before the page header.
110 **
111 ** |----------------|
112 ** | file header | 100 bytes. Page 1 only.
113 ** |----------------|
114 ** | page header | 8 bytes for leaves. 12 bytes for interior nodes
115 ** |----------------|
116 ** | cell pointer | | 2 bytes per cell. Sorted order.
117 ** | array | | Grows downward
118 ** | | v
119 ** |----------------|
120 ** | unallocated |
121 ** | space |
122 ** |----------------| ^ Grows upwards
123 ** | cell content | | Arbitrary order interspersed with freeblocks.
124 ** | area | | and free space fragments.
125 ** |----------------|
126 **
127 ** The page headers looks like this:
128 **
129 ** OFFSET SIZE DESCRIPTION
130 ** 0 1 Flags. 1: intkey, 2: zerodata, 4: leafdata, 8: leaf
131 ** 1 2 byte offset to the first freeblock
132 ** 3 2 number of cells on this page
133 ** 5 2 first byte of the cell content area
134 ** 7 1 number of fragmented free bytes
135 ** 8 4 Right child (the Ptr(N) value). Omitted on leaves.
136 **
137 ** The flags define the format of this btree page. The leaf flag means that
138 ** this page has no children. The zerodata flag means that this page carries
139 ** only keys and no data. The intkey flag means that the key is a integer
140 ** which is stored in the key size entry of the cell header rather than in
141 ** the payload area.
142 **
143 ** The cell pointer array begins on the first byte after the page header.
144 ** The cell pointer array contains zero or more 2-byte numbers which are
145 ** offsets from the beginning of the page to the cell content in the cell
146 ** content area. The cell pointers occur in sorted order. The system strives
147 ** to keep free space after the last cell pointer so that new cells can
148 ** be easily added without having to defragment the page.
149 **
150 ** Cell content is stored at the very end of the page and grows toward the
151 ** beginning of the page.
152 **
153 ** Unused space within the cell content area is collected into a linked list of
154 ** freeblocks. Each freeblock is at least 4 bytes in size. The byte offset
155 ** to the first freeblock is given in the header. Freeblocks occur in
156 ** increasing order. Because a freeblock must be at least 4 bytes in size,
157 ** any group of 3 or fewer unused bytes in the cell content area cannot
158 ** exist on the freeblock chain. A group of 3 or fewer free bytes is called
159 ** a fragment. The total number of bytes in all fragments is recorded.
160 ** in the page header at offset 7.
161 **
162 ** SIZE DESCRIPTION
163 ** 2 Byte offset of the next freeblock
164 ** 2 Bytes in this freeblock
165 **
166 ** Cells are of variable length. Cells are stored in the cell content area at
167 ** the end of the page. Pointers to the cells are in the cell pointer array
168 ** that immediately follows the page header. Cells is not necessarily
169 ** contiguous or in order, but cell pointers are contiguous and in order.
170 **
171 ** Cell content makes use of variable length integers. A variable
172 ** length integer is 1 to 9 bytes where the lower 7 bits of each
173 ** byte are used. The integer consists of all bytes that have bit 8 set and
174 ** the first byte with bit 8 clear. The most significant byte of the integer
175 ** appears first. A variable-length integer may not be more than 9 bytes long.
176 ** As a special case, all 8 bytes of the 9th byte are used as data. This
177 ** allows a 64-bit integer to be encoded in 9 bytes.
178 **
179 ** 0x00 becomes 0x00000000
180 ** 0x7f becomes 0x0000007f
181 ** 0x81 0x00 becomes 0x00000080
182 ** 0x82 0x00 becomes 0x00000100
183 ** 0x80 0x7f becomes 0x0000007f
184 ** 0x8a 0x91 0xd1 0xac 0x78 becomes 0x12345678
185 ** 0x81 0x81 0x81 0x81 0x01 becomes 0x10204081
186 **
187 ** Variable length integers are used for rowids and to hold the number of
188 ** bytes of key and data in a btree cell.
189 **
190 ** The content of a cell looks like this:
191 **
192 ** SIZE DESCRIPTION
193 ** 4 Page number of the left child. Omitted if leaf flag is set.
194 ** var Number of bytes of data. Omitted if the zerodata flag is set.
195 ** var Number of bytes of key. Or the key itself if intkey flag is set.
196 ** * Payload
197 ** 4 First page of the overflow chain. Omitted if no overflow
198 **
199 ** Overflow pages form a linked list. Each page except the last is completely
200 ** filled with data (pagesize - 4 bytes). The last page can have as little
201 ** as 1 byte of data.
202 **
203 ** SIZE DESCRIPTION
204 ** 4 Page number of next overflow page
205 ** * Data
206 **
207 ** Freelist pages come in two subtypes: trunk pages and leaf pages. The
208 ** file header points to the first in a linked list of trunk page. Each trunk
209 ** page points to multiple leaf pages. The content of a leaf page is
210 ** unspecified. A trunk page looks like this:
211 **
212 ** SIZE DESCRIPTION
213 ** 4 Page number of next trunk page
214 ** 4 Number of leaf pointers on this page
215 ** * zero or more pages numbers of leaves
216 */
217 #include "sqliteInt.h"
218
219
220 /* The following value is the maximum cell size assuming a maximum page
221 ** size give above.
222 */
223 #define MX_CELL_SIZE(pBt) (pBt->pageSize-8)
224
225 /* The maximum number of cells on a single page of the database. This
226 ** assumes a minimum cell size of 6 bytes (4 bytes for the cell itself
227 ** plus 2 bytes for the index to the cell in the page header). Such
228 ** small cells will be rare, but they are possible.
229 */
230 #define MX_CELL(pBt) ((pBt->pageSize-8)/6)
231
232 /* Forward declarations */
233 typedef struct MemPage MemPage;
234 typedef struct BtLock BtLock;
235
236 /*
237 ** This is a magic string that appears at the beginning of every
238 ** SQLite database in order to identify the file as a real database.
239 **
240 ** You can change this value at compile-time by specifying a
241 ** -DSQLITE_FILE_HEADER="..." on the compiler command-line. The
242 ** header must be exactly 16 bytes including the zero-terminator so
243 ** the string itself should be 15 characters long. If you change
244 ** the header, then your custom library will not be able to read
245 ** databases generated by the standard tools and the standard tools
246 ** will not be able to read databases created by your custom library.
247 */
248 #ifndef SQLITE_FILE_HEADER /* 123456789 123456 */
249 # define SQLITE_FILE_HEADER "SQLite format 3"
250 #endif
251
252 /*
253 ** Page type flags. An ORed combination of these flags appear as the
254 ** first byte of on-disk image of every BTree page.
255 */
256 #define PTF_INTKEY 0x01
257 #define PTF_ZERODATA 0x02
258 #define PTF_LEAFDATA 0x04
259 #define PTF_LEAF 0x08
260
261 /*
262 ** As each page of the file is loaded into memory, an instance of the following
263 ** structure is appended and initialized to zero. This structure stores
264 ** information about the page that is decoded from the raw file page.
265 **
266 ** The pParent field points back to the parent page. This allows us to
267 ** walk up the BTree from any leaf to the root. Care must be taken to
268 ** unref() the parent page pointer when this page is no longer referenced.
269 ** The pageDestructor() routine handles that chore.
270 **
271 ** Access to all fields of this structure is controlled by the mutex
272 ** stored in MemPage.pBt->mutex.
273 */
274 struct MemPage {
275 u8 isInit; /* True if previously initialized. MUST BE FIRST! */
276 u8 nOverflow; /* Number of overflow cell bodies in aCell[] */
277 u8 intKey; /* True if intkey flag is set */
278 u8 leaf; /* True if leaf flag is set */
279 u8 hasData; /* True if this page stores data */
280 u8 hdrOffset; /* 100 for page 1. 0 otherwise */
281 u8 childPtrSize; /* 0 if leaf==1. 4 if leaf==0 */
282 u16 maxLocal; /* Copy of BtShared.maxLocal or BtShared.maxLeaf */
283 u16 minLocal; /* Copy of BtShared.minLocal or BtShared.minLeaf */
284 u16 cellOffset; /* Index in aData of first cell pointer */
285 u16 nFree; /* Number of free bytes on the page */
286 u16 nCell; /* Number of cells on this page, local and ovfl */
287 u16 maskPage; /* Mask for page offset */
288 struct _OvflCell { /* Cells that will not fit on aData[] */
289 u8 *pCell; /* Pointers to the body of the overflow cell */
290 u16 idx; /* Insert this cell before idx-th non-overflow cell */
291 } aOvfl[5];
292 BtShared *pBt; /* Pointer to BtShared that this page is part of */
293 u8 *aData; /* Pointer to disk image of the page data */
294 DbPage *pDbPage; /* Pager page handle */
295 Pgno pgno; /* Page number for this page */
296 };
297
298 /*
299 ** The in-memory image of a disk page has the auxiliary information appended
300 ** to the end. EXTRA_SIZE is the number of bytes of space needed to hold
301 ** that extra information.
302 */
303 #define EXTRA_SIZE sizeof(MemPage)
304
305 /*
306 ** A linked list of the following structures is stored at BtShared.pLock.
307 ** Locks are added (or upgraded from READ_LOCK to WRITE_LOCK) when a cursor
308 ** is opened on the table with root page BtShared.iTable. Locks are removed
309 ** from this list when a transaction is committed or rolled back, or when
310 ** a btree handle is closed.
311 */
312 struct BtLock {
313 Btree *pBtree; /* Btree handle holding this lock */
314 Pgno iTable; /* Root page of table */
315 u8 eLock; /* READ_LOCK or WRITE_LOCK */
316 BtLock *pNext; /* Next in BtShared.pLock list */
317 };
318
319 /* Candidate values for BtLock.eLock */
320 #define READ_LOCK 1
321 #define WRITE_LOCK 2
322
323 /* A Btree handle
324 **
325 ** A database connection contains a pointer to an instance of
326 ** this object for every database file that it has open. This structure
327 ** is opaque to the database connection. The database connection cannot
328 ** see the internals of this structure and only deals with pointers to
329 ** this structure.
330 **
331 ** For some database files, the same underlying database cache might be
332 ** shared between multiple connections. In that case, each contection
333 ** has it own pointer to this object. But each instance of this object
334 ** points to the same BtShared object. The database cache and the
335 ** schema associated with the database file are all contained within
336 ** the BtShared object.
337 **
338 ** All fields in this structure are accessed under sqlite3.mutex.
339 ** The pBt pointer itself may not be changed while there exists cursors
340 ** in the referenced BtShared that point back to this Btree since those
341 ** cursors have to do go through this Btree to find their BtShared and
342 ** they often do so without holding sqlite3.mutex.
343 */
344 struct Btree {
345 sqlite3 *db; /* The database connection holding this btree */
346 BtShared *pBt; /* Sharable content of this btree */
347 u8 inTrans; /* TRANS_NONE, TRANS_READ or TRANS_WRITE */
348 u8 sharable; /* True if we can share pBt with another db */
349 u8 locked; /* True if db currently has pBt locked */
350 int wantToLock; /* Number of nested calls to sqlite3BtreeEnter() */
351 int nBackup; /* Number of backup operations reading this btree */
352 Btree *pNext; /* List of other sharable Btrees from the same db */
353 Btree *pPrev; /* Back pointer of the same list */
354 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_SHARED_CACHE
355 BtLock lock; /* Object used to lock page 1 */
356 #endif
357 };
358
359 /*
360 ** Btree.inTrans may take one of the following values.
361 **
362 ** If the shared-data extension is enabled, there may be multiple users
363 ** of the Btree structure. At most one of these may open a write transaction,
364 ** but any number may have active read transactions.
365 */
366 #define TRANS_NONE 0
367 #define TRANS_READ 1
368 #define TRANS_WRITE 2
369
370 /*
371 ** An instance of this object represents a single database file.
372 **
373 ** A single database file can be in use as the same time by two
374 ** or more database connections. When two or more connections are
375 ** sharing the same database file, each connection has it own
376 ** private Btree object for the file and each of those Btrees points
377 ** to this one BtShared object. BtShared.nRef is the number of
378 ** connections currently sharing this database file.
379 **
380 ** Fields in this structure are accessed under the BtShared.mutex
381 ** mutex, except for nRef and pNext which are accessed under the
382 ** global SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MASTER mutex. The pPager field
383 ** may not be modified once it is initially set as long as nRef>0.
384 ** The pSchema field may be set once under BtShared.mutex and
385 ** thereafter is unchanged as long as nRef>0.
386 **
387 ** isPending:
388 **
389 ** If a BtShared client fails to obtain a write-lock on a database
390 ** table (because there exists one or more read-locks on the table),
391 ** the shared-cache enters 'pending-lock' state and isPending is
392 ** set to true.
393 **
394 ** The shared-cache leaves the 'pending lock' state when either of
395 ** the following occur:
396 **
397 ** 1) The current writer (BtShared.pWriter) concludes its transaction, OR
398 ** 2) The number of locks held by other connections drops to zero.
399 **
400 ** while in the 'pending-lock' state, no connection may start a new
401 ** transaction.
402 **
403 ** This feature is included to help prevent writer-starvation.
404 */
405 struct BtShared {
406 Pager *pPager; /* The page cache */
407 sqlite3 *db; /* Database connection currently using this Btree */
408 BtCursor *pCursor; /* A list of all open cursors */
409 MemPage *pPage1; /* First page of the database */
410 u8 readOnly; /* True if the underlying file is readonly */
411 u8 pageSizeFixed; /* True if the page size can no longer be changed */
412 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOVACUUM
413 u8 autoVacuum; /* True if auto-vacuum is enabled */
414 u8 incrVacuum; /* True if incr-vacuum is enabled */
415 #endif
416 u16 pageSize; /* Total number of bytes on a page */
417 u16 usableSize; /* Number of usable bytes on each page */
418 u16 maxLocal; /* Maximum local payload in non-LEAFDATA tables */
419 u16 minLocal; /* Minimum local payload in non-LEAFDATA tables */
420 u16 maxLeaf; /* Maximum local payload in a LEAFDATA table */
421 u16 minLeaf; /* Minimum local payload in a LEAFDATA table */
422 u8 inTransaction; /* Transaction state */
423 int nTransaction; /* Number of open transactions (read + write) */
424 void *pSchema; /* Pointer to space allocated by sqlite3BtreeSchema() */
425 void (*xFreeSchema)(void*); /* Destructor for BtShared.pSchema */
426 sqlite3_mutex *mutex; /* Non-recursive mutex required to access this struct */
427 Bitvec *pHasContent; /* Set of pages moved to free-list this transaction */
428 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_SHARED_CACHE
429 int nRef; /* Number of references to this structure */
430 BtShared *pNext; /* Next on a list of sharable BtShared structs */
431 BtLock *pLock; /* List of locks held on this shared-btree struct */
432 Btree *pWriter; /* Btree with currently open write transaction */
433 u8 isExclusive; /* True if pWriter has an EXCLUSIVE lock on the db */
434 u8 isPending; /* If waiting for read-locks to clear */
435 #endif
436 u8 *pTmpSpace; /* BtShared.pageSize bytes of space for tmp use */
437 };
438
439 /*
440 ** An instance of the following structure is used to hold information
441 ** about a cell. The parseCellPtr() function fills in this structure
442 ** based on information extract from the raw disk page.
443 */
444 typedef struct CellInfo CellInfo;
445 struct CellInfo {
446 u8 *pCell; /* Pointer to the start of cell content */
447 i64 nKey; /* The key for INTKEY tables, or number of bytes in key */
448 u32 nData; /* Number of bytes of data */
449 u32 nPayload; /* Total amount of payload */
450 u16 nHeader; /* Size of the cell content header in bytes */
451 u16 nLocal; /* Amount of payload held locally */
452 u16 iOverflow; /* Offset to overflow page number. Zero if no overflow */
453 u16 nSize; /* Size of the cell content on the main b-tree page */
454 };
455
456 /*
457 ** Maximum depth of an SQLite B-Tree structure. Any B-Tree deeper than
458 ** this will be declared corrupt. This value is calculated based on a
459 ** maximum database size of 2^31 pages a minimum fanout of 2 for a
460 ** root-node and 3 for all other internal nodes.
461 **
462 ** If a tree that appears to be taller than this is encountered, it is
463 ** assumed that the database is corrupt.
464 */
465 #define BTCURSOR_MAX_DEPTH 20
466
467 /*
468 ** A cursor is a pointer to a particular entry within a particular
469 ** b-tree within a database file.
470 **
471 ** The entry is identified by its MemPage and the index in
472 ** MemPage.aCell[] of the entry.
473 **
474 ** When a single database file can shared by two more database connections,
475 ** but cursors cannot be shared. Each cursor is associated with a
476 ** particular database connection identified BtCursor.pBtree.db.
477 **
478 ** Fields in this structure are accessed under the BtShared.mutex
479 ** found at self->pBt->mutex.
480 */
481 struct BtCursor {
482 Btree *pBtree; /* The Btree to which this cursor belongs */
483 BtShared *pBt; /* The BtShared this cursor points to */
484 BtCursor *pNext, *pPrev; /* Forms a linked list of all cursors */
485 struct KeyInfo *pKeyInfo; /* Argument passed to comparison function */
486 Pgno pgnoRoot; /* The root page of this tree */
487 sqlite3_int64 cachedRowid; /* Next rowid cache. 0 means not valid */
488 CellInfo info; /* A parse of the cell we are pointing at */
489 u8 wrFlag; /* True if writable */
490 u8 atLast; /* Cursor pointing to the last entry */
491 u8 validNKey; /* True if info.nKey is valid */
492 u8 eState; /* One of the CURSOR_XXX constants (see below) */
493 void *pKey; /* Saved key that was cursor's last known position */
494 i64 nKey; /* Size of pKey, or last integer key */
495 int skipNext; /* Prev() is noop if negative. Next() is noop if positive */
496 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_INCRBLOB
497 u8 isIncrblobHandle; /* True if this cursor is an incr. io handle */
498 Pgno *aOverflow; /* Cache of overflow page locations */
499 #endif
500 i16 iPage; /* Index of current page in apPage */
501 MemPage *apPage[BTCURSOR_MAX_DEPTH]; /* Pages from root to current page */
502 u16 aiIdx[BTCURSOR_MAX_DEPTH]; /* Current index in apPage[i] */
503 };
504
505 /*
506 ** Potential values for BtCursor.eState.
507 **
508 ** CURSOR_VALID:
509 ** Cursor points to a valid entry. getPayload() etc. may be called.
510 **
511 ** CURSOR_INVALID:
512 ** Cursor does not point to a valid entry. This can happen (for example)
513 ** because the table is empty or because BtreeCursorFirst() has not been
514 ** called.
515 **
516 ** CURSOR_REQUIRESEEK:
517 ** The table that this cursor was opened on still exists, but has been
518 ** modified since the cursor was last used. The cursor position is saved
519 ** in variables BtCursor.pKey and BtCursor.nKey. When a cursor is in
520 ** this state, restoreCursorPosition() can be called to attempt to
521 ** seek the cursor to the saved position.
522 **
523 ** CURSOR_FAULT:
524 ** A unrecoverable error (an I/O error or a malloc failure) has occurred
525 ** on a different connection that shares the BtShared cache with this
526 ** cursor. The error has left the cache in an inconsistent state.
527 ** Do nothing else with this cursor. Any attempt to use the cursor
528 ** should return the error code stored in BtCursor.skip
529 */
530 #define CURSOR_INVALID 0
531 #define CURSOR_VALID 1
532 #define CURSOR_REQUIRESEEK 2
533 #define CURSOR_FAULT 3
534
535 /*
536 ** The database page the PENDING_BYTE occupies. This page is never used.
537 */
538 # define PENDING_BYTE_PAGE(pBt) PAGER_MJ_PGNO(pBt)
539
540 /*
541 ** These macros define the location of the pointer-map entry for a
542 ** database page. The first argument to each is the number of usable
543 ** bytes on each page of the database (often 1024). The second is the
544 ** page number to look up in the pointer map.
545 **
546 ** PTRMAP_PAGENO returns the database page number of the pointer-map
547 ** page that stores the required pointer. PTRMAP_PTROFFSET returns
548 ** the offset of the requested map entry.
549 **
550 ** If the pgno argument passed to PTRMAP_PAGENO is a pointer-map page,
551 ** then pgno is returned. So (pgno==PTRMAP_PAGENO(pgsz, pgno)) can be
552 ** used to test if pgno is a pointer-map page. PTRMAP_ISPAGE implements
553 ** this test.
554 */
555 #define PTRMAP_PAGENO(pBt, pgno) ptrmapPageno(pBt, pgno)
556 #define PTRMAP_PTROFFSET(pgptrmap, pgno) (5*(pgno-pgptrmap-1))
557 #define PTRMAP_ISPAGE(pBt, pgno) (PTRMAP_PAGENO((pBt),(pgno))==(pgno))
558
559 /*
560 ** The pointer map is a lookup table that identifies the parent page for
561 ** each child page in the database file. The parent page is the page that
562 ** contains a pointer to the child. Every page in the database contains
563 ** 0 or 1 parent pages. (In this context 'database page' refers
564 ** to any page that is not part of the pointer map itself.) Each pointer map
565 ** entry consists of a single byte 'type' and a 4 byte parent page number.
566 ** The PTRMAP_XXX identifiers below are the valid types.
567 **
568 ** The purpose of the pointer map is to facility moving pages from one
569 ** position in the file to another as part of autovacuum. When a page
570 ** is moved, the pointer in its parent must be updated to point to the
571 ** new location. The pointer map is used to locate the parent page quickly.
572 **
573 ** PTRMAP_ROOTPAGE: The database page is a root-page. The page-number is not
574 ** used in this case.
575 **
576 ** PTRMAP_FREEPAGE: The database page is an unused (free) page. The page-number
577 ** is not used in this case.
578 **
579 ** PTRMAP_OVERFLOW1: The database page is the first page in a list of
580 ** overflow pages. The page number identifies the page that
581 ** contains the cell with a pointer to this overflow page.
582 **
583 ** PTRMAP_OVERFLOW2: The database page is the second or later page in a list of
584 ** overflow pages. The page-number identifies the previous
585 ** page in the overflow page list.
586 **
587 ** PTRMAP_BTREE: The database page is a non-root btree page. The page number
588 ** identifies the parent page in the btree.
589 */
590 #define PTRMAP_ROOTPAGE 1
591 #define PTRMAP_FREEPAGE 2
592 #define PTRMAP_OVERFLOW1 3
593 #define PTRMAP_OVERFLOW2 4
594 #define PTRMAP_BTREE 5
595
596 /* A bunch of assert() statements to check the transaction state variables
597 ** of handle p (type Btree*) are internally consistent.
598 */
599 #define btreeIntegrity(p) \
600 assert( p->pBt->inTransaction!=TRANS_NONE || p->pBt->nTransaction==0 ); \
601 assert( p->pBt->inTransaction>=p->inTrans );
602
603
604 /*
605 ** The ISAUTOVACUUM macro is used within balance_nonroot() to determine
606 ** if the database supports auto-vacuum or not. Because it is used
607 ** within an expression that is an argument to another macro
608 ** (sqliteMallocRaw), it is not possible to use conditional compilation.
609 ** So, this macro is defined instead.
610 */
611 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOVACUUM
612 #define ISAUTOVACUUM (pBt->autoVacuum)
613 #else
614 #define ISAUTOVACUUM 0
615 #endif
616
617
618 /*
619 ** This structure is passed around through all the sanity checking routines
620 ** in order to keep track of some global state information.
621 */
622 typedef struct IntegrityCk IntegrityCk;
623 struct IntegrityCk {
624 BtShared *pBt; /* The tree being checked out */
625 Pager *pPager; /* The associated pager. Also accessible by pBt->pPager */
626 Pgno nPage; /* Number of pages in the database */
627 int *anRef; /* Number of times each page is referenced */
628 int mxErr; /* Stop accumulating errors when this reaches zero */
629 int nErr; /* Number of messages written to zErrMsg so far */
630 int mallocFailed; /* A memory allocation error has occurred */
631 StrAccum errMsg; /* Accumulate the error message text here */
632 };
633
634 /*
635 ** Read or write a two- and four-byte big-endian integer values.
636 */
637 #define get2byte(x) ((x)[0]<<8 | (x)[1])
638 #define put2byte(p,v) ((p)[0] = (u8)((v)>>8), (p)[1] = (u8)(v))
639 #define get4byte sqlite3Get4byte
640 #define put4byte sqlite3Put4byte
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