1 /*
2 ** 2010 April 7
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 **
13 ** An example of a simple VFS implementation that omits complex features
14 ** often not required or not possible on embedded platforms. Also includes
15 ** code to buffer writes to the journal file, which can be a significant
16 ** performance improvement on some embedded platforms.
17 **
18 */
19
20 /*
21 ** OVERVIEW
22 **
23 ** The code in this file implements a minimal SQLite VFS that can be
24 ** used on Linux and other posix-like operating systems. The following
25 ** system calls are used:
26 **
27 ** File-system: access(), unlink(), getcwd()
28 ** File IO: open(), read(), write(), fsync(), close(), fstat()
29 ** Other: sleep(), usleep(), time()
30 **
31 ** The following VFS features are omitted:
32 **
33 ** 1. File locking. The user must ensure that there is at most one
34 ** connection to each database when using this VFS. Multiple
35 ** connections to a single shared-cache count as a single connection
36 ** for the purposes of the previous statement.
37 **
38 ** 2. The loading of dynamic extensions (shared libraries).
39 **
40 ** 3. Temporary files. The user must configure SQLite to use in-memory
41 ** temp files when using this VFS. The easiest way to do this is to
42 ** compile with:
43 **
44 ** -DSQLITE_TEMP_STORE=3
45 **
46 ** 4. File truncation. As of version 3.6.24, SQLite may run without
47 ** a working xTruncate() call, providing the user does not configure
48 ** SQLite to use "journal_mode=truncate", or use both
49 ** "journal_mode=persist" and ATTACHed databases.
50 **
51 ** It is assumed that the system uses UNIX-like path-names. Specifically,
52 ** that '/' characters are used to separate path components and that
53 ** a path-name is a relative path unless it begins with a '/'. And that
54 ** no UTF-8 encoded paths are greater than 512 bytes in length.
55 **
56 ** JOURNAL WRITE-BUFFERING
57 **
58 ** To commit a transaction to the database, SQLite first writes rollback
59 ** information into the journal file. This usually consists of 4 steps:
60 **
61 ** 1. The rollback information is sequentially written into the journal
62 ** file, starting at the start of the file.
63 ** 2. The journal file is synced to disk.
64 ** 3. A modification is made to the first few bytes of the journal file.
65 ** 4. The journal file is synced to disk again.
66 **
67 ** Most of the data is written in step 1 using a series of calls to the
68 ** VFS xWrite() method. The buffers passed to the xWrite() calls are of
69 ** various sizes. For example, as of version 3.6.24, when committing a
70 ** transaction that modifies 3 pages of a database file that uses 4096
71 ** byte pages residing on a media with 512 byte sectors, SQLite makes
72 ** eleven calls to the xWrite() method to create the rollback journal,
73 ** as follows:
74 **
75 ** Write offset | Bytes written
76 ** ----------------------------
77 ** 0 512
78 ** 512 4
79 ** 516 4096
80 ** 4612 4
81 ** 4616 4
82 ** 4620 4096
83 ** 8716 4
84 ** 8720 4
85 ** 8724 4096
86 ** 12820 4
87 ** ++++++++++++SYNC+++++++++++
88 ** 0 12
89 ** ++++++++++++SYNC+++++++++++
90 **
91 ** On many operating systems, this is an efficient way to write to a file.
92 ** However, on some embedded systems that do not cache writes in OS
93 ** buffers it is much more efficient to write data in blocks that are
94 ** an integer multiple of the sector-size in size and aligned at the
95 ** start of a sector.
96 **
97 ** To work around this, the code in this file allocates a fixed size
98 ** buffer of SQLITE_DEMOVFS_BUFFERSZ using sqlite3_malloc() whenever a
99 ** journal file is opened. It uses the buffer to coalesce sequential
100 ** writes into aligned SQLITE_DEMOVFS_BUFFERSZ blocks. When SQLite
101 ** invokes the xSync() method to sync the contents of the file to disk,
102 ** all accumulated data is written out, even if it does not constitute
103 ** a complete block. This means the actual IO to create the rollback
104 ** journal for the example transaction above is this:
105 **
106 ** Write offset | Bytes written
107 ** ----------------------------
108 ** 0 8192
109 ** 8192 4632
110 ** ++++++++++++SYNC+++++++++++
111 ** 0 12
112 ** ++++++++++++SYNC+++++++++++
113 **
114 ** Much more efficient if the underlying OS is not caching write
115 ** operations.
116 */
117
118 #if !defined(SQLITE_TEST) || SQLITE_OS_UNIX
119
120 #include <sqlite3.h>
121
122 #include <assert.h>
123 #include <string.h>
124 #include <sys/types.h>
125 #include <sys/stat.h>
126 #include <sys/file.h>
127 #include <sys/param.h>
128 #include <unistd.h>
129 #include <time.h>
130 #include <errno.h>
131
132 /*
133 ** Size of the write buffer used by journal files in bytes.
134 */
135 #ifndef SQLITE_DEMOVFS_BUFFERSZ
136 # define SQLITE_DEMOVFS_BUFFERSZ 8192
137 #endif
138
139 /*
140 ** The maximum pathname length supported by this VFS.
141 */
142 #define MAXPATHNAME 512
143
144 /*
145 ** When using this VFS, the sqlite3_file* handles that SQLite uses are
146 ** actually pointers to instances of type DemoFile.
147 */
148 typedef struct DemoFile DemoFile;
149 struct DemoFile {
150 sqlite3_file base; /* Base class. Must be first. */
151 int fd; /* File descriptor */
152
153 char *aBuffer; /* Pointer to malloc'd buffer */
154 int nBuffer; /* Valid bytes of data in zBuffer */
155 sqlite3_int64 iBufferOfst; /* Offset in file of zBuffer[0] */
156 };
157
158 /*
159 ** Write directly to the file passed as the first argument. Even if the
160 ** file has a write-buffer (DemoFile.aBuffer), ignore it.
161 */
demoDirectWrite(DemoFile * p,const void * zBuf,int iAmt,sqlite_int64 iOfst)162 static int demoDirectWrite(
163 DemoFile *p, /* File handle */
164 const void *zBuf, /* Buffer containing data to write */
165 int iAmt, /* Size of data to write in bytes */
166 sqlite_int64 iOfst /* File offset to write to */
167 ){
168 off_t ofst; /* Return value from lseek() */
169 size_t nWrite; /* Return value from write() */
170
171 ofst = lseek(p->fd, iOfst, SEEK_SET);
172 if( ofst!=iOfst ){
173 return SQLITE_IOERR_WRITE;
174 }
175
176 nWrite = write(p->fd, zBuf, iAmt);
177 if( nWrite!=iAmt ){
178 return SQLITE_IOERR_WRITE;
179 }
180
181 return SQLITE_OK;
182 }
183
184 /*
185 ** Flush the contents of the DemoFile.aBuffer buffer to disk. This is a
186 ** no-op if this particular file does not have a buffer (i.e. it is not
187 ** a journal file) or if the buffer is currently empty.
188 */
demoFlushBuffer(DemoFile * p)189 static int demoFlushBuffer(DemoFile *p){
190 int rc = SQLITE_OK;
191 if( p->nBuffer ){
192 rc = demoDirectWrite(p, p->aBuffer, p->nBuffer, p->iBufferOfst);
193 p->nBuffer = 0;
194 }
195 return rc;
196 }
197
198 /*
199 ** Close a file.
200 */
demoClose(sqlite3_file * pFile)201 static int demoClose(sqlite3_file *pFile){
202 int rc;
203 DemoFile *p = (DemoFile*)pFile;
204 rc = demoFlushBuffer(p);
205 sqlite3_free(p->aBuffer);
206 close(p->fd);
207 return rc;
208 }
209
210 /*
211 ** Read data from a file.
212 */
demoRead(sqlite3_file * pFile,void * zBuf,int iAmt,sqlite_int64 iOfst)213 static int demoRead(
214 sqlite3_file *pFile,
215 void *zBuf,
216 int iAmt,
217 sqlite_int64 iOfst
218 ){
219 DemoFile *p = (DemoFile*)pFile;
220 off_t ofst; /* Return value from lseek() */
221 int nRead; /* Return value from read() */
222 int rc; /* Return code from demoFlushBuffer() */
223
224 /* Flush any data in the write buffer to disk in case this operation
225 ** is trying to read data the file-region currently cached in the buffer.
226 ** It would be possible to detect this case and possibly save an
227 ** unnecessary write here, but in practice SQLite will rarely read from
228 ** a journal file when there is data cached in the write-buffer.
229 */
230 rc = demoFlushBuffer(p);
231 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
232 return rc;
233 }
234
235 ofst = lseek(p->fd, iOfst, SEEK_SET);
236 if( ofst!=iOfst ){
237 return SQLITE_IOERR_READ;
238 }
239 nRead = read(p->fd, zBuf, iAmt);
240
241 if( nRead==iAmt ){
242 return SQLITE_OK;
243 }else if( nRead>=0 ){
244 return SQLITE_IOERR_SHORT_READ;
245 }
246
247 return SQLITE_IOERR_READ;
248 }
249
250 /*
251 ** Write data to a crash-file.
252 */
demoWrite(sqlite3_file * pFile,const void * zBuf,int iAmt,sqlite_int64 iOfst)253 static int demoWrite(
254 sqlite3_file *pFile,
255 const void *zBuf,
256 int iAmt,
257 sqlite_int64 iOfst
258 ){
259 DemoFile *p = (DemoFile*)pFile;
260
261 if( p->aBuffer ){
262 char *z = (char *)zBuf; /* Pointer to remaining data to write */
263 int n = iAmt; /* Number of bytes at z */
264 sqlite3_int64 i = iOfst; /* File offset to write to */
265
266 while( n>0 ){
267 int nCopy; /* Number of bytes to copy into buffer */
268
269 /* If the buffer is full, or if this data is not being written directly
270 ** following the data already buffered, flush the buffer. Flushing
271 ** the buffer is a no-op if it is empty.
272 */
273 if( p->nBuffer==SQLITE_DEMOVFS_BUFFERSZ || p->iBufferOfst+p->nBuffer!=i ){
274 int rc = demoFlushBuffer(p);
275 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
276 return rc;
277 }
278 }
279 assert( p->nBuffer==0 || p->iBufferOfst+p->nBuffer==i );
280 p->iBufferOfst = i - p->nBuffer;
281
282 /* Copy as much data as possible into the buffer. */
283 nCopy = SQLITE_DEMOVFS_BUFFERSZ - p->nBuffer;
284 if( nCopy>n ){
285 nCopy = n;
286 }
287 memcpy(&p->aBuffer[p->nBuffer], z, nCopy);
288 p->nBuffer += nCopy;
289
290 n -= nCopy;
291 i += nCopy;
292 z += nCopy;
293 }
294 }else{
295 return demoDirectWrite(p, zBuf, iAmt, iOfst);
296 }
297
298 return SQLITE_OK;
299 }
300
301 /*
302 ** Truncate a file. This is a no-op for this VFS (see header comments at
303 ** the top of the file).
304 */
demoTruncate(sqlite3_file * pFile,sqlite_int64 size)305 static int demoTruncate(sqlite3_file *pFile, sqlite_int64 size){
306 #if 0
307 if( ftruncate(((DemoFile *)pFile)->fd, size) ) return SQLITE_IOERR_TRUNCATE;
308 #endif
309 return SQLITE_OK;
310 }
311
312 /*
313 ** Sync the contents of the file to the persistent media.
314 */
demoSync(sqlite3_file * pFile,int flags)315 static int demoSync(sqlite3_file *pFile, int flags){
316 DemoFile *p = (DemoFile*)pFile;
317 int rc;
318
319 rc = demoFlushBuffer(p);
320 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
321 return rc;
322 }
323
324 rc = fsync(p->fd);
325 return (rc==0 ? SQLITE_OK : SQLITE_IOERR_FSYNC);
326 }
327
328 /*
329 ** Write the size of the file in bytes to *pSize.
330 */
demoFileSize(sqlite3_file * pFile,sqlite_int64 * pSize)331 static int demoFileSize(sqlite3_file *pFile, sqlite_int64 *pSize){
332 DemoFile *p = (DemoFile*)pFile;
333 int rc; /* Return code from fstat() call */
334 struct stat sStat; /* Output of fstat() call */
335
336 /* Flush the contents of the buffer to disk. As with the flush in the
337 ** demoRead() method, it would be possible to avoid this and save a write
338 ** here and there. But in practice this comes up so infrequently it is
339 ** not worth the trouble.
340 */
341 rc = demoFlushBuffer(p);
342 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){
343 return rc;
344 }
345
346 rc = fstat(p->fd, &sStat);
347 if( rc!=0 ) return SQLITE_IOERR_FSTAT;
348 *pSize = sStat.st_size;
349 return SQLITE_OK;
350 }
351
352 /*
353 ** Locking functions. The xLock() and xUnlock() methods are both no-ops.
354 ** The xCheckReservedLock() always indicates that no other process holds
355 ** a reserved lock on the database file. This ensures that if a hot-journal
356 ** file is found in the file-system it is rolled back.
357 */
demoLock(sqlite3_file * pFile,int eLock)358 static int demoLock(sqlite3_file *pFile, int eLock){
359 return SQLITE_OK;
360 }
demoUnlock(sqlite3_file * pFile,int eLock)361 static int demoUnlock(sqlite3_file *pFile, int eLock){
362 return SQLITE_OK;
363 }
demoCheckReservedLock(sqlite3_file * pFile,int * pResOut)364 static int demoCheckReservedLock(sqlite3_file *pFile, int *pResOut){
365 *pResOut = 0;
366 return SQLITE_OK;
367 }
368
369 /*
370 ** No xFileControl() verbs are implemented by this VFS.
371 */
demoFileControl(sqlite3_file * pFile,int op,void * pArg)372 static int demoFileControl(sqlite3_file *pFile, int op, void *pArg){
373 return SQLITE_OK;
374 }
375
376 /*
377 ** The xSectorSize() and xDeviceCharacteristics() methods. These two
378 ** may return special values allowing SQLite to optimize file-system
379 ** access to some extent. But it is also safe to simply return 0.
380 */
demoSectorSize(sqlite3_file * pFile)381 static int demoSectorSize(sqlite3_file *pFile){
382 return 0;
383 }
demoDeviceCharacteristics(sqlite3_file * pFile)384 static int demoDeviceCharacteristics(sqlite3_file *pFile){
385 return 0;
386 }
387
388 /*
389 ** Open a file handle.
390 */
demoOpen(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,const char * zName,sqlite3_file * pFile,int flags,int * pOutFlags)391 static int demoOpen(
392 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, /* VFS */
393 const char *zName, /* File to open, or 0 for a temp file */
394 sqlite3_file *pFile, /* Pointer to DemoFile struct to populate */
395 int flags, /* Input SQLITE_OPEN_XXX flags */
396 int *pOutFlags /* Output SQLITE_OPEN_XXX flags (or NULL) */
397 ){
398 static const sqlite3_io_methods demoio = {
399 1, /* iVersion */
400 demoClose, /* xClose */
401 demoRead, /* xRead */
402 demoWrite, /* xWrite */
403 demoTruncate, /* xTruncate */
404 demoSync, /* xSync */
405 demoFileSize, /* xFileSize */
406 demoLock, /* xLock */
407 demoUnlock, /* xUnlock */
408 demoCheckReservedLock, /* xCheckReservedLock */
409 demoFileControl, /* xFileControl */
410 demoSectorSize, /* xSectorSize */
411 demoDeviceCharacteristics /* xDeviceCharacteristics */
412 };
413
414 DemoFile *p = (DemoFile*)pFile; /* Populate this structure */
415 int oflags = 0; /* flags to pass to open() call */
416 char *aBuf = 0;
417
418 if( zName==0 ){
419 return SQLITE_IOERR;
420 }
421
422 if( flags&SQLITE_OPEN_MAIN_JOURNAL ){
423 aBuf = (char *)sqlite3_malloc(SQLITE_DEMOVFS_BUFFERSZ);
424 if( !aBuf ){
425 return SQLITE_NOMEM;
426 }
427 }
428
429 if( flags&SQLITE_OPEN_EXCLUSIVE ) oflags |= O_EXCL;
430 if( flags&SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE ) oflags |= O_CREAT;
431 if( flags&SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY ) oflags |= O_RDONLY;
432 if( flags&SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE ) oflags |= O_RDWR;
433
434 memset(p, 0, sizeof(DemoFile));
435 p->fd = open(zName, oflags, 0600);
436 if( p->fd<0 ){
437 sqlite3_free(aBuf);
438 return SQLITE_CANTOPEN;
439 }
440 p->aBuffer = aBuf;
441
442 if( pOutFlags ){
443 *pOutFlags = flags;
444 }
445 p->base.pMethods = &demoio;
446 return SQLITE_OK;
447 }
448
449 /*
450 ** Delete the file identified by argument zPath. If the dirSync parameter
451 ** is non-zero, then ensure the file-system modification to delete the
452 ** file has been synced to disk before returning.
453 */
demoDelete(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,const char * zPath,int dirSync)454 static int demoDelete(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, const char *zPath, int dirSync){
455 int rc; /* Return code */
456
457 rc = unlink(zPath);
458 if( rc!=0 && errno==ENOENT ) return SQLITE_OK;
459
460 if( rc==0 && dirSync ){
461 int dfd; /* File descriptor open on directory */
462 int i; /* Iterator variable */
463 char zDir[MAXPATHNAME+1]; /* Name of directory containing file zPath */
464
465 /* Figure out the directory name from the path of the file deleted. */
466 sqlite3_snprintf(MAXPATHNAME, zDir, "%s", zPath);
467 zDir[MAXPATHNAME] = '\0';
468 for(i=strlen(zDir); i>1 && zDir[i]!='/'; i++);
469 zDir[i] = '\0';
470
471 /* Open a file-descriptor on the directory. Sync. Close. */
472 dfd = open(zDir, O_RDONLY, 0);
473 if( dfd<0 ){
474 rc = -1;
475 }else{
476 rc = fsync(dfd);
477 close(dfd);
478 }
479 }
480 return (rc==0 ? SQLITE_OK : SQLITE_IOERR_DELETE);
481 }
482
483 #ifndef F_OK
484 # define F_OK 0
485 #endif
486 #ifndef R_OK
487 # define R_OK 4
488 #endif
489 #ifndef W_OK
490 # define W_OK 2
491 #endif
492
493 /*
494 ** Query the file-system to see if the named file exists, is readable or
495 ** is both readable and writable.
496 */
demoAccess(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,const char * zPath,int flags,int * pResOut)497 static int demoAccess(
498 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs,
499 const char *zPath,
500 int flags,
501 int *pResOut
502 ){
503 int rc; /* access() return code */
504 int eAccess = F_OK; /* Second argument to access() */
505
506 assert( flags==SQLITE_ACCESS_EXISTS /* access(zPath, F_OK) */
507 || flags==SQLITE_ACCESS_READ /* access(zPath, R_OK) */
508 || flags==SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE /* access(zPath, R_OK|W_OK) */
509 );
510
511 if( flags==SQLITE_ACCESS_READWRITE ) eAccess = R_OK|W_OK;
512 if( flags==SQLITE_ACCESS_READ ) eAccess = R_OK;
513
514 rc = access(zPath, eAccess);
515 *pResOut = (rc==0);
516 return SQLITE_OK;
517 }
518
519 /*
520 ** Argument zPath points to a nul-terminated string containing a file path.
521 ** If zPath is an absolute path, then it is copied as is into the output
522 ** buffer. Otherwise, if it is a relative path, then the equivalent full
523 ** path is written to the output buffer.
524 **
525 ** This function assumes that paths are UNIX style. Specifically, that:
526 **
527 ** 1. Path components are separated by a '/'. and
528 ** 2. Full paths begin with a '/' character.
529 */
demoFullPathname(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,const char * zPath,int nPathOut,char * zPathOut)530 static int demoFullPathname(
531 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, /* VFS */
532 const char *zPath, /* Input path (possibly a relative path) */
533 int nPathOut, /* Size of output buffer in bytes */
534 char *zPathOut /* Pointer to output buffer */
535 ){
536 char zDir[MAXPATHNAME+1];
537 if( zPath[0]=='/' ){
538 zDir[0] = '\0';
539 }else{
540 getcwd(zDir, sizeof(zDir));
541 }
542 zDir[MAXPATHNAME] = '\0';
543
544 sqlite3_snprintf(nPathOut, zPathOut, "%s/%s", zDir, zPath);
545 zPathOut[nPathOut-1] = '\0';
546
547 return SQLITE_OK;
548 }
549
550 /*
551 ** The following four VFS methods:
552 **
553 ** xDlOpen
554 ** xDlError
555 ** xDlSym
556 ** xDlClose
557 **
558 ** are supposed to implement the functionality needed by SQLite to load
559 ** extensions compiled as shared objects. This simple VFS does not support
560 ** this functionality, so the following functions are no-ops.
561 */
demoDlOpen(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,const char * zPath)562 static void *demoDlOpen(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, const char *zPath){
563 return 0;
564 }
demoDlError(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,int nByte,char * zErrMsg)565 static void demoDlError(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, int nByte, char *zErrMsg){
566 sqlite3_snprintf(nByte, zErrMsg, "Loadable extensions are not supported");
567 zErrMsg[nByte-1] = '\0';
568 }
demoDlSym(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,void * pH,const char * z)569 static void (*demoDlSym(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, void *pH, const char *z))(void){
570 return 0;
571 }
demoDlClose(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,void * pHandle)572 static void demoDlClose(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, void *pHandle){
573 return;
574 }
575
576 /*
577 ** Parameter zByte points to a buffer nByte bytes in size. Populate this
578 ** buffer with pseudo-random data.
579 */
demoRandomness(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,int nByte,char * zByte)580 static int demoRandomness(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, int nByte, char *zByte){
581 return SQLITE_OK;
582 }
583
584 /*
585 ** Sleep for at least nMicro microseconds. Return the (approximate) number
586 ** of microseconds slept for.
587 */
demoSleep(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,int nMicro)588 static int demoSleep(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, int nMicro){
589 sleep(nMicro / 1000000);
590 usleep(nMicro % 1000000);
591 return nMicro;
592 }
593
594 /*
595 ** Set *pTime to the current UTC time expressed as a Julian day. Return
596 ** SQLITE_OK if successful, or an error code otherwise.
597 **
598 ** http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_day
599 **
600 ** This implementation is not very good. The current time is rounded to
601 ** an integer number of seconds. Also, assuming time_t is a signed 32-bit
602 ** value, it will stop working some time in the year 2038 AD (the so-called
603 ** "year 2038" problem that afflicts systems that store time this way).
604 */
demoCurrentTime(sqlite3_vfs * pVfs,double * pTime)605 static int demoCurrentTime(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, double *pTime){
606 time_t t = time(0);
607 *pTime = t/86400.0 + 2440587.5;
608 return SQLITE_OK;
609 }
610
611 /*
612 ** This function returns a pointer to the VFS implemented in this file.
613 ** To make the VFS available to SQLite:
614 **
615 ** sqlite3_vfs_register(sqlite3_demovfs(), 0);
616 */
sqlite3_demovfs(void)617 sqlite3_vfs *sqlite3_demovfs(void){
618 static sqlite3_vfs demovfs = {
619 1, /* iVersion */
620 sizeof(DemoFile), /* szOsFile */
621 MAXPATHNAME, /* mxPathname */
622 0, /* pNext */
623 "demo", /* zName */
624 0, /* pAppData */
625 demoOpen, /* xOpen */
626 demoDelete, /* xDelete */
627 demoAccess, /* xAccess */
628 demoFullPathname, /* xFullPathname */
629 demoDlOpen, /* xDlOpen */
630 demoDlError, /* xDlError */
631 demoDlSym, /* xDlSym */
632 demoDlClose, /* xDlClose */
633 demoRandomness, /* xRandomness */
634 demoSleep, /* xSleep */
635 demoCurrentTime, /* xCurrentTime */
636 };
637 return &demovfs;
638 }
639
640 #endif /* !defined(SQLITE_TEST) || SQLITE_OS_UNIX */
641
642
643 #ifdef SQLITE_TEST
644
645 #include <tcl.h>
646
647 #if SQLITE_OS_UNIX
register_demovfs(ClientData clientData,Tcl_Interp * interp,int objc,Tcl_Obj * CONST objv[])648 static int register_demovfs(
649 ClientData clientData, /* Pointer to sqlite3_enable_XXX function */
650 Tcl_Interp *interp, /* The TCL interpreter that invoked this command */
651 int objc, /* Number of arguments */
652 Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[] /* Command arguments */
653 ){
654 sqlite3_vfs_register(sqlite3_demovfs(), 1);
655 return TCL_OK;
656 }
unregister_demovfs(ClientData clientData,Tcl_Interp * interp,int objc,Tcl_Obj * CONST objv[])657 static int unregister_demovfs(
658 ClientData clientData, /* Pointer to sqlite3_enable_XXX function */
659 Tcl_Interp *interp, /* The TCL interpreter that invoked this command */
660 int objc, /* Number of arguments */
661 Tcl_Obj *CONST objv[] /* Command arguments */
662 ){
663 sqlite3_vfs_unregister(sqlite3_demovfs());
664 return TCL_OK;
665 }
666
667 /*
668 ** Register commands with the TCL interpreter.
669 */
Sqlitetest_demovfs_Init(Tcl_Interp * interp)670 int Sqlitetest_demovfs_Init(Tcl_Interp *interp){
671 Tcl_CreateObjCommand(interp, "register_demovfs", register_demovfs, 0, 0);
672 Tcl_CreateObjCommand(interp, "unregister_demovfs", unregister_demovfs, 0, 0);
673 return TCL_OK;
674 }
675
676 #else
Sqlitetest_demovfs_Init(Tcl_Interp * interp)677 int Sqlitetest_demovfs_Init(Tcl_Interp *interp){ return TCL_OK; }
678 #endif
679
680 #endif /* SQLITE_TEST */
681