1 /* 2 ** 2007 May 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 ** This file defines various limits of what SQLite can process. 14 */ 15 16 /* 17 ** The maximum length of a TEXT or BLOB in bytes. This also 18 ** limits the size of a row in a table or index. 19 ** 20 ** The hard limit is the ability of a 32-bit signed integer 21 ** to count the size: 2^31-1 or 2147483647. 22 */ 23 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_LENGTH 24 # define SQLITE_MAX_LENGTH 1000000000 25 #endif 26 27 /* 28 ** This is the maximum number of 29 ** 30 ** * Columns in a table 31 ** * Columns in an index 32 ** * Columns in a view 33 ** * Terms in the SET clause of an UPDATE statement 34 ** * Terms in the result set of a SELECT statement 35 ** * Terms in the GROUP BY or ORDER BY clauses of a SELECT statement. 36 ** * Terms in the VALUES clause of an INSERT statement 37 ** 38 ** The hard upper limit here is 32676. Most database people will 39 ** tell you that in a well-normalized database, you usually should 40 ** not have more than a dozen or so columns in any table. And if 41 ** that is the case, there is no point in having more than a few 42 ** dozen values in any of the other situations described above. 43 */ 44 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_COLUMN 45 # define SQLITE_MAX_COLUMN 2000 46 #endif 47 48 /* 49 ** The maximum length of a single SQL statement in bytes. 50 ** 51 ** It used to be the case that setting this value to zero would 52 ** turn the limit off. That is no longer true. It is not possible 53 ** to turn this limit off. 54 */ 55 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_SQL_LENGTH 56 # define SQLITE_MAX_SQL_LENGTH 1000000000 57 #endif 58 59 /* 60 ** The maximum depth of an expression tree. This is limited to 61 ** some extent by SQLITE_MAX_SQL_LENGTH. But sometime you might 62 ** want to place more severe limits on the complexity of an 63 ** expression. 64 ** 65 ** A value of 0 used to mean that the limit was not enforced. 66 ** But that is no longer true. The limit is now strictly enforced 67 ** at all times. 68 */ 69 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_EXPR_DEPTH 70 # define SQLITE_MAX_EXPR_DEPTH 1000 71 #endif 72 73 /* 74 ** The maximum number of terms in a compound SELECT statement. 75 ** The code generator for compound SELECT statements does one 76 ** level of recursion for each term. A stack overflow can result 77 ** if the number of terms is too large. In practice, most SQL 78 ** never has more than 3 or 4 terms. Use a value of 0 to disable 79 ** any limit on the number of terms in a compount SELECT. 80 */ 81 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_COMPOUND_SELECT 82 # define SQLITE_MAX_COMPOUND_SELECT 500 83 #endif 84 85 /* 86 ** The maximum number of opcodes in a VDBE program. 87 ** Not currently enforced. 88 */ 89 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_VDBE_OP 90 # define SQLITE_MAX_VDBE_OP 25000 91 #endif 92 93 /* 94 ** The maximum number of arguments to an SQL function. 95 */ 96 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_FUNCTION_ARG 97 # define SQLITE_MAX_FUNCTION_ARG 127 98 #endif 99 100 /* 101 ** The maximum number of in-memory pages to use for the main database 102 ** table and for temporary tables. The SQLITE_DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE 103 */ 104 #ifndef SQLITE_DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE 105 # define SQLITE_DEFAULT_CACHE_SIZE 2000 106 #endif 107 #ifndef SQLITE_DEFAULT_TEMP_CACHE_SIZE 108 # define SQLITE_DEFAULT_TEMP_CACHE_SIZE 500 109 #endif 110 111 /* 112 ** The default number of frames to accumulate in the log file before 113 ** checkpointing the database in WAL mode. 114 */ 115 #ifndef SQLITE_DEFAULT_WAL_AUTOCHECKPOINT 116 # define SQLITE_DEFAULT_WAL_AUTOCHECKPOINT 1000 117 #endif 118 119 /* 120 ** The maximum number of attached databases. This must be between 0 121 ** and 62. The upper bound on 62 is because a 64-bit integer bitmap 122 ** is used internally to track attached databases. 123 */ 124 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_ATTACHED 125 # define SQLITE_MAX_ATTACHED 10 126 #endif 127 128 129 /* 130 ** The maximum value of a ?nnn wildcard that the parser will accept. 131 */ 132 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_VARIABLE_NUMBER 133 # define SQLITE_MAX_VARIABLE_NUMBER 999 134 #endif 135 136 /* Maximum page size. The upper bound on this value is 65536. This a limit 137 ** imposed by the use of 16-bit offsets within each page. 138 ** 139 ** Earlier versions of SQLite allowed the user to change this value at 140 ** compile time. This is no longer permitted, on the grounds that it creates 141 ** a library that is technically incompatible with an SQLite library 142 ** compiled with a different limit. If a process operating on a database 143 ** with a page-size of 65536 bytes crashes, then an instance of SQLite 144 ** compiled with the default page-size limit will not be able to rollback 145 ** the aborted transaction. This could lead to database corruption. 146 */ 147 #ifdef SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE 148 # undef SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE 149 #endif 150 #define SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE 65536 151 152 153 /* 154 ** The default size of a database page. 155 */ 156 #ifndef SQLITE_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE 157 # define SQLITE_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE 1024 158 #endif 159 #if SQLITE_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE>SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE 160 # undef SQLITE_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE 161 # define SQLITE_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE 162 #endif 163 164 /* 165 ** Ordinarily, if no value is explicitly provided, SQLite creates databases 166 ** with page size SQLITE_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE. However, based on certain 167 ** device characteristics (sector-size and atomic write() support), 168 ** SQLite may choose a larger value. This constant is the maximum value 169 ** SQLite will choose on its own. 170 */ 171 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE 172 # define SQLITE_MAX_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE 8192 173 #endif 174 #if SQLITE_MAX_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE>SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE 175 # undef SQLITE_MAX_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE 176 # define SQLITE_MAX_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE 177 #endif 178 179 180 /* 181 ** Maximum number of pages in one database file. 182 ** 183 ** This is really just the default value for the max_page_count pragma. 184 ** This value can be lowered (or raised) at run-time using that the 185 ** max_page_count macro. 186 */ 187 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_COUNT 188 # define SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_COUNT 1073741823 189 #endif 190 191 /* 192 ** Maximum length (in bytes) of the pattern in a LIKE or GLOB 193 ** operator. 194 */ 195 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_LIKE_PATTERN_LENGTH 196 # define SQLITE_MAX_LIKE_PATTERN_LENGTH 50000 197 #endif 198 199 /* 200 ** Maximum depth of recursion for triggers. 201 ** 202 ** A value of 1 means that a trigger program will not be able to itself 203 ** fire any triggers. A value of 0 means that no trigger programs at all 204 ** may be executed. 205 */ 206 #ifndef SQLITE_MAX_TRIGGER_DEPTH 207 # define SQLITE_MAX_TRIGGER_DEPTH 1000 208 #endif 209