SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD,
SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD,
SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED,
SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC,
SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC,
SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH,
SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE,
SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP,
SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS,
SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX,
SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX,
SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE,
SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE,
SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE,
SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG,
SQLITE_CONFIG_URI,
SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2,
SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2,
SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN,
SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG,
SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE,
SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE,
SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ,
SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ,
SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL,
SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC,
SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE,
SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE —
configuration options
#include
<sqlite3.h>
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_URI
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE
These constants are the available integer configuration options
that can be passed as the first argument to the
sqlite3_config()
interface.
Most of the configuration options for
sqlite3_config() will only work if invoked prior to
sqlite3_initialize()
or after
sqlite3_shutdown().
The few exceptions to this rule are called "anytime configuration
options". Calling sqlite3_config() with a first
argument that is not an anytime configuration option in between calls to
sqlite3_initialize() and
sqlite3_shutdown() is a no-op that returns
SQLITE_MISUSE.
The set of anytime configuration options can change (by insertions
and/or deletions) from one release of SQLite to the next. As of SQLite
version 3.42.0, the complete set of anytime configuration options is:
- SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG
- SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ
New configuration options may be added in
future releases of SQLite. Existing configuration options might be
discontinued. Applications should check the return code from
sqlite3_config()
to make sure that the call worked. The
sqlite3_config() interface will return a non-zero
error code if a discontinued or unsupported configuration option is
invoked.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD
- There are no arguments to this option. This option sets the threading mode
to Single-thread. In other words, it disables all mutexing and puts SQLite
into a mode where it can only be used by a single thread. If SQLite is
compiled with the SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0 compile-time option then it is not
possible to change the threading mode from its default value of
Single-thread and so
sqlite3_config() will return
SQLITE_ERROR if called with the SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD configuration
option.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD
- There are no arguments to this option. This option sets the threading mode
to Multi-thread. In other words, it disables mutexing on database
connection and prepared statement objects. The application is responsible
for serializing access to database connections and prepared statements.
But other mutexes are enabled so that SQLite will be safe to use in a
multi-threaded environment as long as no two threads attempt to use the
same database connection at the same time. If SQLite is compiled with the
SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0 compile-time option then it is not possible to set the
Multi-thread threading mode and
sqlite3_config()
will return SQLITE_ERROR if called with the SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD
configuration option.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED
- There are no arguments to this option. This option sets the threading mode
to Serialized. In other words, this option enables all mutexes including
the recursive mutexes on database connection and prepared statement
objects. In this mode (which is the default when SQLite is compiled with
SQLITE_THREADSAFE=1) the SQLite library will itself serialize access to
database connections and prepared statements so that the application is
free to use the same database connection or the same prepared statement in
different threads at the same time. If SQLite is compiled with the
SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0 compile-time option then it is not possible to set the
Serialized threading mode and
sqlite3_config()
will return SQLITE_ERROR if called with the SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED
configuration option.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC option takes a single argument which is a pointer
to an instance of the sqlite3_mem_methods structure. The argument
specifies alternative low-level memory allocation routines to be used in
place of the memory allocation routines built into SQLite. SQLite makes
its own private copy of the content of the sqlite3_mem_methods structure
before the
sqlite3_config() call returns.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC option takes a single argument which is a
pointer to an instance of the sqlite3_mem_methods structure. The
sqlite3_mem_methods structure is filled with the currently defined memory
allocation routines. This option can be used to overload the default
memory allocation routines with a wrapper that simulations memory
allocation failure or tracks memory usage, for example.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC option takes single argument of type int,
interpreted as a boolean, which if true provides a hint to SQLite that it
should avoid large memory allocations if possible. SQLite will run faster
if it is free to make large memory allocations, but some application might
prefer to run slower in exchange for guarantees about memory fragmentation
that are possible if large allocations are avoided. This hint is normally
off.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS option takes single argument of type int,
interpreted as a boolean, which enables or disables the collection of
memory allocation statistics. When memory allocation statistics are
disabled, the following SQLite interfaces become non-operational:
Memory allocation statistics are enabled by default unless
SQLite is compiled with SQLITE_DEFAULT_MEMSTATUS=0 in which case memory
allocation statistics are disabled by default.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH option is no longer used.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE option specifies a memory pool that SQLite can
use for the database page cache with the default page cache
implementation. This configuration option is a no-op if an
application-defined page cache implementation is loaded using the
SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2. There are three arguments to
SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE: A pointer to 8-byte aligned memory (pMem), the
size of each page cache line (sz), and the number of cache lines (N). The
sz argument should be the size of the largest database page (a power of
two between 512 and 65536) plus some extra bytes for each page header. The
number of extra bytes needed by the page header can be determined using
SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ. It is harmless, apart from the wasted memory,
for the sz parameter to be larger than necessary. The pMem argument must
be either a NULL pointer or a pointer to an 8-byte aligned block of memory
of at least sz*N bytes, otherwise subsequent behavior is undefined. When
pMem is not NULL, SQLite will strive to use the memory provided to satisfy
page cache needs, falling back to
sqlite3_malloc()
if a page cache line is larger than sz bytes or if all of the pMem buffer
is exhausted. If pMem is NULL and N is non-zero, then each database
connection does an initial bulk allocation for page cache memory from
sqlite3_malloc() sufficient for N cache lines if N
is positive or of -1024*N bytes if N is negative, . If additional page
cache memory is needed beyond what is provided by the initial allocation,
then SQLite goes to sqlite3_malloc() separately
for each additional cache line.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP option specifies a static memory buffer that SQLite
will use for all of its dynamic memory allocation needs beyond those
provided for by SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE. The SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP option is
only available if SQLite is compiled with either SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMSYS3 or
SQLITE_ENABLE_MEMSYS5 and returns SQLITE_ERROR if invoked otherwise. There
are three arguments to SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP: An 8-byte aligned pointer to
the memory, the number of bytes in the memory buffer, and the minimum
allocation size. If the first pointer (the memory pointer) is NULL, then
SQLite reverts to using its default memory allocator (the system malloc()
implementation), undoing any prior invocation of SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC. If
the memory pointer is not NULL then the alternative memory allocator is
engaged to handle all of SQLites memory allocation needs. The first
pointer (the memory pointer) must be aligned to an 8-byte boundary or
subsequent behavior of SQLite will be undefined. The minimum allocation
size is capped at 2**12. Reasonable values for the minimum allocation size
are 2**5 through 2**8.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX option takes a single argument which is a pointer
to an instance of the sqlite3_mutex_methods structure. The argument
specifies alternative low-level mutex routines to be used in place the
mutex routines built into SQLite. SQLite makes a copy of the content of
the sqlite3_mutex_methods structure before the call to
sqlite3_config() returns. If SQLite is compiled
with the SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0 compile-time option then the entire mutexing
subsystem is omitted from the build and hence calls to
sqlite3_config() with the SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX
configuration option will return SQLITE_ERROR.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX option takes a single argument which is a
pointer to an instance of the sqlite3_mutex_methods structure. The
sqlite3_mutex_methods structure is filled with the currently defined mutex
routines. This option can be used to overload the default mutex allocation
routines with a wrapper used to track mutex usage for performance
profiling or testing, for example. If SQLite is compiled with the
SQLITE_THREADSAFE=0 compile-time option then the entire mutexing subsystem
is omitted from the build and hence calls to
sqlite3_config() with the SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX
configuration option will return SQLITE_ERROR.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE option takes two arguments that determine the
default size of lookaside memory on each database connection. The first
argument is the size of each lookaside buffer slot and the second is the
number of slots allocated to each database connection.
SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE sets the default lookaside size. The
SQLITE_DBCONFIG_LOOKASIDE option to
sqlite3_db_config()
can be used to change the lookaside configuration on individual
connections.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2 option takes a single argument which is a
pointer to an sqlite3_pcache_methods2 object. This object specifies the
interface to a custom page cache implementation. SQLite makes a copy of
the sqlite3_pcache_methods2 object.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2 option takes a single argument which is a
pointer to an sqlite3_pcache_methods2 object. SQLite copies of the current
page cache implementation into that object.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG option is used to configure the SQLite global error
log. (The SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG option takes two arguments: a pointer to a
function with a call signature of void(*)(void*,int,const char*), and a
pointer to void. If the function pointer is not NULL, it is invoked by
sqlite3_log()
to process each logging event. If the function pointer is NULL, the
sqlite3_log() interface becomes a no-op. The void
pointer that is the second argument to SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG is passed through
as the first parameter to the application-defined logger function whenever
that function is invoked. The second parameter to the logger function is a
copy of the first parameter to the corresponding
sqlite3_log() call and is intended to be a result
code or an extended result code. The third parameter passed to the logger
is log message after formatting via
sqlite3_snprintf().
The SQLite logging interface is not reentrant; the logger function
supplied by the application must not invoke any SQLite interface. In a
multi-threaded application, the application-defined logger function must
be threadsafe.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_URI
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_URI option takes a single argument of type int. If
non-zero, then URI handling is globally enabled. If the parameter is zero,
then URI handling is globally disabled. If URI handling is globally
enabled, all filenames passed to
sqlite3_open(),
sqlite3_open_v2(),
sqlite3_open16()
or specified as part of ATTACH commands are interpreted as URIs,
regardless of whether or not the SQLITE_OPEN_URI flag is set when the
database connection is opened. If it is globally disabled, filenames are
only interpreted as URIs if the SQLITE_OPEN_URI flag is set when the
database connection is opened. By default, URI handling is globally
disabled. The default value may be changed by compiling with the
SQLITE_USE_URI symbol defined.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN option takes a single integer
argument which is interpreted as a boolean in order to enable or disable
the use of covering indices for full table scans in the query optimizer.
The default setting is determined by the SQLITE_ALLOW_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN
compile-time option, or is "on" if that compile-time option is
omitted. The ability to disable the use of covering indices for full table
scans is because some incorrectly coded legacy applications might
malfunction when the optimization is enabled. Providing the ability to
disable the optimization allows the older, buggy application code to work
without change even with newer versions of SQLite.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE and SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE
- These options are obsolete and should not be used by new code. They are
retained for backwards compatibility but are now no-ops.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG
- This option is only available if sqlite is compiled with the
SQLITE_ENABLE_SQLLOG pre-processor macro defined. The first argument
should be a pointer to a function of type void(*)(void*,sqlite3*,const
char*, int). The second should be of type (void*). The callback is invoked
by the library in three separate circumstances, identified by the value
passed as the fourth parameter. If the fourth parameter is 0, then the
database connection passed as the second argument has just been opened.
The third argument points to a buffer containing the name of the main
database file. If the fourth parameter is 1, then the SQL statement that
the third parameter points to has just been executed. Or, if the fourth
parameter is 2, then the connection being passed as the second parameter
is being closed. The third parameter is passed NULL In this case. An
example of using this configuration option can be seen in the
"test_sqllog.c" source file in the canonical SQLite source
tree.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE
- SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE takes two 64-bit integer (sqlite3_int64) values
that are the default mmap size limit (the default setting for PRAGMA
mmap_size) and the maximum allowed mmap size limit. The default setting
can be overridden by each database connection using either the PRAGMA
mmap_size command, or by using the SQLITE_FCNTL_MMAP_SIZE file control.
The maximum allowed mmap size will be silently truncated if necessary so
that it does not exceed the compile-time maximum mmap size set by the
SQLITE_MAX_MMAP_SIZE compile-time option. If either argument to this
option is negative, then that argument is changed to its compile-time
default.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE option is only available if SQLite is
compiled for Windows with the SQLITE_WIN32_MALLOC pre-processor macro
defined. SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE takes a 32-bit unsigned integer
value that specifies the maximum size of the created heap.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ option takes a single parameter which is a
pointer to an integer and writes into that integer the number of extra
bytes per page required for each page in SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE. The
amount of extra space required can change depending on the compiler,
target platform, and SQLite version.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ option takes a single parameter which is an
unsigned integer and sets the "Minimum PMA Size" for the
multithreaded sorter to that integer. The default minimum PMA Size is set
by the SQLITE_SORTER_PMASZ compile-time option. New threads are launched
to help with sort operations when multithreaded sorting is enabled (using
the PRAGMA threads command) and the amount of content to be sorted exceeds
the page size times the minimum of the PRAGMA cache_size setting and this
value.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL option takes a single parameter which
becomes the statement journal spill-to-disk threshold. Statement journals
are held in memory until their size (in bytes) exceeds this threshold, at
which point they are written to disk. Or if the threshold is -1, statement
journals are always held exclusively in memory. Since many statement
journals never become large, setting the spill threshold to a value such
as 64KiB can greatly reduce the amount of I/O required to support
statement rollback. The default value for this setting is controlled by
the SQLITE_STMTJRNL_SPILL compile-time option.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE option accepts a single parameter of type
(int) - the new value of the sorter-reference size threshold. Usually,
when SQLite uses an external sort to order records according to an ORDER
BY clause, all fields required by the caller are present in the sorted
records. However, if SQLite determines based on the declared type of a
table column that its values are likely to be very large - larger than the
configured sorter-reference size threshold - then a reference is stored in
each sorted record and the required column values loaded from the database
as records are returned in sorted order. The default value for this option
is to never use this optimization. Specifying a negative value for this
option restores the default behavior. This option is only available if
SQLite is compiled with the SQLITE_ENABLE_SORTER_REFERENCES compile-time
option.
- SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE
- The SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE option accepts a single parameter
sqlite3_int64 parameter which is the default maximum size for an in-memory
database created using
sqlite3_deserialize().
This default maximum size can be adjusted up or down for individual
databases using the SQLITE_FCNTL_SIZE_LIMIT file-control. If this
configuration setting is never used, then the default maximum is
determined by the SQLITE_MEMDB_DEFAULT_MAXSIZE compile-time option. If
that compile-time option is not set, then the default maximum is
1073741824.
These declarations were extracted from the interface documentation
at line 1777.
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SINGLETHREAD 1 /* nil */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MULTITHREAD 2 /* nil */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SERIALIZED 3 /* nil */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MALLOC 4 /* sqlite3_mem_methods* */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMALLOC 5 /* sqlite3_mem_methods* */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SCRATCH 6 /* No longer used */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PAGECACHE 7 /* void*, int sz, int N */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_HEAP 8 /* void*, int nByte, int min */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMSTATUS 9 /* boolean */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MUTEX 10 /* sqlite3_mutex_methods* */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETMUTEX 11 /* sqlite3_mutex_methods* */
/* previously SQLITE_CONFIG_CHUNKALLOC 12 which is now unused. */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOOKASIDE 13 /* int int */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE 14 /* no-op */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE 15 /* no-op */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_LOG 16 /* xFunc, void* */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_URI 17 /* int */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE2 18 /* sqlite3_pcache_methods2* */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_GETPCACHE2 19 /* sqlite3_pcache_methods2* */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_COVERING_INDEX_SCAN 20 /* int */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SQLLOG 21 /* xSqllog, void* */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MMAP_SIZE 22 /* sqlite3_int64, sqlite3_int64 */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_WIN32_HEAPSIZE 23 /* int nByte */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PCACHE_HDRSZ 24 /* int *psz */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_PMASZ 25 /* unsigned int szPma */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_STMTJRNL_SPILL 26 /* int nByte */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SMALL_MALLOC 27 /* boolean */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_SORTERREF_SIZE 28 /* int nByte */
#define SQLITE_CONFIG_MEMDB_MAXSIZE 29 /* sqlite3_int64 */
sqlite3(3),
sqlite3_config(3),
sqlite3_db_config(3),
sqlite3_deserialize(3),
sqlite3_file_control(3),
sqlite3_initialize(3),
sqlite3_log(3),
sqlite3_malloc(3),
sqlite3_mem_methods(3),
sqlite3_memory_used(3),
sqlite3_mprintf(3),
sqlite3_mutex_methods(3),
sqlite3_open(3),
sqlite3_pcache_methods2(3),
sqlite3_soft_heap_limit64(3),
sqlite3_status(3),
sqlite3_stmt(3),
SQLITE_DBCONFIG_MAINDBNAME(3),
SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCKSTATE(3),
sqlite_int64(3),
SQLITE_OK(3),
SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY(3)