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1422 1423 1424 1425 1426 1427 1428 1429 1430 1431 1432 1433 1434 1435 1436 1437 1438 1439 1440 1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466 1467 1468 1469 1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479 1480 1481 1482 1483 1484 1485 1486 1487 1488 1489 1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498 1499 1500 1501 1502 1503 1504 1505 1506 1507 1508 1509 1510 1511 1512 1513 1514 1515 1516 1517 1518 1519 1520 1521 1522 1523 1524 1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540 1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 1570 1571 1572 1573 1574 1575 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 1591 1592 1593 1594 1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600 1601 1602 1603 1604 | /** @file lmdb.h
* @brief Lightning memory-mapped database library
*
* @mainpage Lightning Memory-Mapped Database Manager (LMDB)
*
* @section intro_sec Introduction
* LMDB is a Btree-based database management library modeled loosely on the
* BerkeleyDB API, but much simplified. The entire database is exposed
* in a memory map, and all data fetches return data directly
* from the mapped memory, so no malloc's or memcpy's occur during
* data fetches. As such, the library is extremely simple because it
* requires no page caching layer of its own, and it is extremely high
* performance and memory-efficient. It is also fully transactional with
* full ACID semantics, and when the memory map is read-only, the
* database integrity cannot be corrupted by stray pointer writes from
* application code.
*
* The library is fully thread-aware and supports concurrent read/write
* access from multiple processes and threads. Data pages use a copy-on-
* write strategy so no active data pages are ever overwritten, which
* also provides resistance to corruption and eliminates the need of any
* special recovery procedures after a system crash. Writes are fully
* serialized; only one write transaction may be active at a time, which
* guarantees that writers can never deadlock. The database structure is
* multi-versioned so readers run with no locks; writers cannot block
* readers, and readers don't block writers.
*
* Unlike other well-known database mechanisms which use either write-ahead
* transaction logs or append-only data writes, LMDB requires no maintenance
* during operation. Both write-ahead loggers and append-only databases
* require periodic checkpointing and/or compaction of their log or database
* files otherwise they grow without bound. LMDB tracks free pages within
* the database and re-uses them for new write operations, so the database
* size does not grow without bound in normal use.
*
* The memory map can be used as a read-only or read-write map. It is
* read-only by default as this provides total immunity to corruption.
* Using read-write mode offers much higher write performance, but adds
* the possibility for stray application writes thru pointers to silently
* corrupt the database. Of course if your application code is known to
* be bug-free (...) then this is not an issue.
*
* If this is your first time using a transactional embedded key/value
* store, you may find the \ref starting page to be helpful.
*
* @section caveats_sec Caveats
* Troubleshooting the lock file, plus semaphores on BSD systems:
*
* - A broken lockfile can cause sync issues.
* Stale reader transactions left behind by an aborted program
* cause further writes to grow the database quickly, and
* stale locks can block further operation.
*
* Fix: Check for stale readers periodically, using the
* #mdb_reader_check function or the \ref mdb_stat_1 "mdb_stat" tool.
* Stale writers will be cleared automatically on some systems:
* - Windows - automatic
* - Linux, systems using POSIX mutexes with Robust option - automatic
* - not on BSD, systems using POSIX semaphores.
* Otherwise just make all programs using the database close it;
* the lockfile is always reset on first open of the environment.
*
* - On BSD systems or others configured with MDB_USE_POSIX_SEM,
* startup can fail due to semaphores owned by another userid.
*
* Fix: Open and close the database as the user which owns the
* semaphores (likely last user) or as root, while no other
* process is using the database.
*
* Restrictions/caveats (in addition to those listed for some functions):
*
* - Only the database owner should normally use the database on
* BSD systems or when otherwise configured with MDB_USE_POSIX_SEM.
* Multiple users can cause startup to fail later, as noted above.
*
* - There is normally no pure read-only mode, since readers need write
* access to locks and lock file. Exceptions: On read-only filesystems
* or with the #MDB_NOLOCK flag described under #mdb_env_open().
*
* - An LMDB configuration will often reserve considerable \b unused
* memory address space and maybe file size for future growth.
* This does not use actual memory or disk space, but users may need
* to understand the difference so they won't be scared off.
*
* - By default, in versions before 0.9.10, unused portions of the data
* file might receive garbage data from memory freed by other code.
* (This does not happen when using the #MDB_WRITEMAP flag.) As of
* 0.9.10 the default behavior is to initialize such memory before
* writing to the data file. Since there may be a slight performance
* cost due to this initialization, applications may disable it using
* the #MDB_NOMEMINIT flag. Applications handling sensitive data
* which must not be written should not use this flag. This flag is
* irrelevant when using #MDB_WRITEMAP.
*
* - A thread can only use one transaction at a time, plus any child
* transactions. Each transaction belongs to one thread. See below.
* The #MDB_NOTLS flag changes this for read-only transactions.
*
* - Use an MDB_env* in the process which opened it, not after fork().
*
* - Do not have open an LMDB database twice in the same process at
* the same time. Not even from a plain open() call - close()ing it
* breaks fcntl() advisory locking. (It is OK to reopen it after
* fork() - exec*(), since the lockfile has FD_CLOEXEC set.)
*
* - Avoid long-lived transactions. Read transactions prevent
* reuse of pages freed by newer write transactions, thus the
* database can grow quickly. Write transactions prevent
* other write transactions, since writes are serialized.
*
* - Avoid suspending a process with active transactions. These
* would then be "long-lived" as above. Also read transactions
* suspended when writers commit could sometimes see wrong data.
*
* ...when several processes can use a database concurrently:
*
* - Avoid aborting a process with an active transaction.
* The transaction becomes "long-lived" as above until a check
* for stale readers is performed or the lockfile is reset,
* since the process may not remove it from the lockfile.
*
* This does not apply to write transactions if the system clears
* stale writers, see above.
*
* - If you do that anyway, do a periodic check for stale readers. Or
* close the environment once in a while, so the lockfile can get reset.
*
* - Do not use LMDB databases on remote filesystems, even between
* processes on the same host. This breaks flock() on some OSes,
* possibly memory map sync, and certainly sync between programs
* on different hosts.
*
* - Opening a database can fail if another process is opening or
* closing it at exactly the same time.
*
* @author Howard Chu, Symas Corporation.
*
* @copyright Copyright 2011-2017 Howard Chu, Symas Corp. All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted only as authorized by the OpenLDAP
* Public License.
*
* A copy of this license is available in the file LICENSE in the
* top-level directory of the distribution or, alternatively, at
* <http://www.OpenLDAP.org/license.html>.
*
* @par Derived From:
* This code is derived from btree.c written by Martin Hedenfalk.
*
* Copyright (c) 2009, 2010 Martin Hedenfalk <martin@bzero.se>
*
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
* purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
* copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
* WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
* ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
* WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
* ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
* OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
*/
#ifndef _LMDB_H_
#define _LMDB_H_
#include <sys/types.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/** Unix permissions for creating files, or dummy definition for Windows */
#ifdef _MSC_VER
typedef int mdb_mode_t;
#else
typedef mode_t mdb_mode_t;
#endif
/** An abstraction for a file handle.
* On POSIX systems file handles are small integers. On Windows
* they're opaque pointers.
*/
#ifdef _WIN32
typedef void *mdb_filehandle_t;
#else
typedef int mdb_filehandle_t;
#endif
/** @defgroup mdb LMDB API
* @{
* @brief OpenLDAP Lightning Memory-Mapped Database Manager
*/
/** @defgroup Version Version Macros
* @{
*/
/** Library major version */
#define MDB_VERSION_MAJOR 0
/** Library minor version */
#define MDB_VERSION_MINOR 9
/** Library patch version */
#define MDB_VERSION_PATCH 21
/** Combine args a,b,c into a single integer for easy version comparisons */
#define MDB_VERINT(a,b,c) (((a) << 24) | ((b) << 16) | (c))
/** The full library version as a single integer */
#define MDB_VERSION_FULL \
MDB_VERINT(MDB_VERSION_MAJOR,MDB_VERSION_MINOR,MDB_VERSION_PATCH)
/** The release date of this library version */
#define MDB_VERSION_DATE "June 1, 2017"
/** A stringifier for the version info */
#define MDB_VERSTR(a,b,c,d) "LMDB " #a "." #b "." #c ": (" d ")"
/** A helper for the stringifier macro */
#define MDB_VERFOO(a,b,c,d) MDB_VERSTR(a,b,c,d)
/** The full library version as a C string */
#define MDB_VERSION_STRING \
MDB_VERFOO(MDB_VERSION_MAJOR,MDB_VERSION_MINOR,MDB_VERSION_PATCH,MDB_VERSION_DATE)
/** @} */
/** @brief Opaque structure for a database environment.
*
* A DB environment supports multiple databases, all residing in the same
* shared-memory map.
*/
typedef struct MDB_env MDB_env;
/** @brief Opaque structure for a transaction handle.
*
* All database operations require a transaction handle. Transactions may be
* read-only or read-write.
*/
typedef struct MDB_txn MDB_txn;
/** @brief A handle for an individual database in the DB environment. */
typedef unsigned int MDB_dbi;
/** @brief Opaque structure for navigating through a database */
typedef struct MDB_cursor MDB_cursor;
/** @brief Generic structure used for passing keys and data in and out
* of the database.
*
* Values returned from the database are valid only until a subsequent
* update operation, or the end of the transaction. Do not modify or
* free them, they commonly point into the database itself.
*
* Key sizes must be between 1 and #mdb_env_get_maxkeysize() inclusive.
* The same applies to data sizes in databases with the #MDB_DUPSORT flag.
* Other data items can in theory be from 0 to 0xffffffff bytes long.
*/
typedef struct MDB_val {
size_t mv_size; /**< size of the data item */
void *mv_data; /**< address of the data item */
} MDB_val;
/** @brief A callback function used to compare two keys in a database */
typedef int (MDB_cmp_func)(const MDB_val *a, const MDB_val *b);
/** @brief A callback function used to relocate a position-dependent data item
* in a fixed-address database.
*
* The \b newptr gives the item's desired address in
* the memory map, and \b oldptr gives its previous address. The item's actual
* data resides at the address in \b item. This callback is expected to walk
* through the fields of the record in \b item and modify any
* values based at the \b oldptr address to be relative to the \b newptr address.
* @param[in,out] item The item that is to be relocated.
* @param[in] oldptr The previous address.
* @param[in] newptr The new address to relocate to.
* @param[in] relctx An application-provided context, set by #mdb_set_relctx().
* @todo This feature is currently unimplemented.
*/
typedef void (MDB_rel_func)(MDB_val *item, void *oldptr, void *newptr, void *relctx);
/** @defgroup mdb_env Environment Flags
* @{
*/
/** mmap at a fixed address (experimental) */
#define MDB_FIXEDMAP 0x01
/** no environment directory */
#define MDB_NOSUBDIR 0x4000
/** don't fsync after commit */
#define MDB_NOSYNC 0x10000
/** read only */
#define MDB_RDONLY 0x20000
/** don't fsync metapage after commit */
#define MDB_NOMETASYNC 0x40000
/** use writable mmap */
#define MDB_WRITEMAP 0x80000
/** use asynchronous msync when #MDB_WRITEMAP is used */
#define MDB_MAPASYNC 0x100000
/** tie reader locktable slots to #MDB_txn objects instead of to threads */
#define MDB_NOTLS 0x200000
/** don't do any locking, caller must manage their own locks */
#define MDB_NOLOCK 0x400000
/** don't do readahead (no effect on Windows) */
#define MDB_NORDAHEAD 0x800000
/** don't initialize malloc'd memory before writing to datafile */
#define MDB_NOMEMINIT 0x1000000
/** @} */
/** @defgroup mdb_dbi_open Database Flags
* @{
*/
/** use reverse string keys */
#define MDB_REVERSEKEY 0x02
/** use sorted duplicates */
#define MDB_DUPSORT 0x04
/** numeric keys in native byte order: either unsigned int or size_t.
* The keys must all be of the same size. */
#define MDB_INTEGERKEY 0x08
/** with #MDB_DUPSORT, sorted dup items have fixed size */
#define MDB_DUPFIXED 0x10
/** with #MDB_DUPSORT, dups are #MDB_INTEGERKEY-style integers */
#define MDB_INTEGERDUP 0x20
/** with #MDB_DUPSORT, use reverse string dups */
#define MDB_REVERSEDUP 0x40
/** create DB if not already existing */
#define MDB_CREATE 0x40000
/** @} */
/** @defgroup mdb_put Write Flags
* @{
*/
/** For put: Don't write if the key already exists. */
#define MDB_NOOVERWRITE 0x10
/** Only for #MDB_DUPSORT<br>
* For put: don't write if the key and data pair already exist.<br>
* For mdb_cursor_del: remove all duplicate data items.
*/
#define MDB_NODUPDATA 0x20
/** For mdb_cursor_put: overwrite the current key/data pair */
#define MDB_CURRENT 0x40
/** For put: Just reserve space for data, don't copy it. Return a
* pointer to the reserved space.
*/
#define MDB_RESERVE 0x10000
/** Data is being appended, don't split full pages. */
#define MDB_APPEND 0x20000
/** Duplicate data is being appended, don't split full pages. */
#define MDB_APPENDDUP 0x40000
/** Store multiple data items in one call. Only for #MDB_DUPFIXED. */
#define MDB_MULTIPLE 0x80000
/* @} */
/** @defgroup mdb_copy Copy Flags
* @{
*/
/** Compacting copy: Omit free space from copy, and renumber all
* pages sequentially.
*/
#define MDB_CP_COMPACT 0x01
/* @} */
/** @brief Cursor Get operations.
*
* This is the set of all operations for retrieving data
* using a cursor.
*/
typedef enum MDB_cursor_op {
MDB_FIRST, /**< Position at first key/data item */
MDB_FIRST_DUP, /**< Position at first data item of current key.
Only for #MDB_DUPSORT */
MDB_GET_BOTH, /**< Position at key/data pair. Only for #MDB_DUPSORT */
MDB_GET_BOTH_RANGE, /**< position at key, nearest data. Only for #MDB_DUPSORT */
MDB_GET_CURRENT, /**< Return key/data at current cursor position */
MDB_GET_MULTIPLE, /**< Return key and up to a page of duplicate data items
from current cursor position. Move cursor to prepare
for #MDB_NEXT_MULTIPLE. Only for #MDB_DUPFIXED */
MDB_LAST, /**< Position at last key/data item */
MDB_LAST_DUP, /**< Position at last data item of current key.
Only for #MDB_DUPSORT */
MDB_NEXT, /**< Position at next data item */
MDB_NEXT_DUP, /**< Position at next data item of current key.
Only for #MDB_DUPSORT */
MDB_NEXT_MULTIPLE, /**< Return key and up to a page of duplicate data items
from next cursor position. Move cursor to prepare
for #MDB_NEXT_MULTIPLE. Only for #MDB_DUPFIXED */
MDB_NEXT_NODUP, /**< Position at first data item of next key */
MDB_PREV, /**< Position at previous data item */
MDB_PREV_DUP, /**< Position at previous data item of current key.
Only for #MDB_DUPSORT */
MDB_PREV_NODUP, /**< Position at last data item of previous key */
MDB_SET, /**< Position at specified key */
MDB_SET_KEY, /**< Position at specified key, return key + data */
MDB_SET_RANGE, /**< Position at first key greater than or equal to specified key. */
MDB_PREV_MULTIPLE /**< Position at previous page and return key and up to
a page of duplicate data items. Only for #MDB_DUPFIXED */
} MDB_cursor_op;
/** @defgroup errors Return Codes
*
* BerkeleyDB uses -30800 to -30999, we'll go under them
* @{
*/
/** Successful result */
#define MDB_SUCCESS 0
/** key/data pair already exists */
#define MDB_KEYEXIST (-30799)
/** key/data pair not found (EOF) */
#define MDB_NOTFOUND (-30798)
/** Requested page not found - this usually indicates corruption */
#define MDB_PAGE_NOTFOUND (-30797)
/** Located page was wrong type */
#define MDB_CORRUPTED (-30796)
/** Update of meta page failed or environment had fatal error */
#define MDB_PANIC (-30795)
/** Environment version mismatch */
#define MDB_VERSION_MISMATCH (-30794)
/** File is not a valid LMDB file */
#define MDB_INVALID (-30793)
/** Environment mapsize reached */
#define MDB_MAP_FULL (-30792)
/** Environment maxdbs reached */
#define MDB_DBS_FULL (-30791)
/** Environment maxreaders reached */
#define MDB_READERS_FULL (-30790)
/** Too many TLS keys in use - Windows only */
#define MDB_TLS_FULL (-30789)
/** Txn has too many dirty pages */
#define MDB_TXN_FULL (-30788)
/** Cursor stack too deep - internal error */
#define MDB_CURSOR_FULL (-30787)
/** Page has not enough space - internal error */
#define MDB_PAGE_FULL (-30786)
/** Database contents grew beyond environment mapsize */
#define MDB_MAP_RESIZED (-30785)
/** Operation and DB incompatible, or DB type changed. This can mean:
* <ul>
* <li>The operation expects an #MDB_DUPSORT / #MDB_DUPFIXED database.
* <li>Opening a named DB when the unnamed DB has #MDB_DUPSORT / #MDB_INTEGERKEY.
* <li>Accessing a data record as a database, or vice versa.
* <li>The database was dropped and recreated with different flags.
* </ul>
*/
#define MDB_INCOMPATIBLE (-30784)
/** Invalid reuse of reader locktable slot */
#define MDB_BAD_RSLOT (-30783)
/** Transaction must abort, has a child, or is invalid */
#define MDB_BAD_TXN (-30782)
/** Unsupported size of key/DB name/data, or wrong DUPFIXED size */
#define MDB_BAD_VALSIZE (-30781)
/** The specified DBI was changed unexpectedly */
#define MDB_BAD_DBI (-30780)
/** The last defined error code */
#define MDB_LAST_ERRCODE MDB_BAD_DBI
/** @} */
/** @brief Statistics for a database in the environment */
typedef struct MDB_stat {
unsigned int ms_psize; /**< Size of a database page.
This is currently the same for all databases. */
unsigned int ms_depth; /**< Depth (height) of the B-tree */
size_t ms_branch_pages; /**< Number of internal (non-leaf) pages */
size_t ms_leaf_pages; /**< Number of leaf pages */
size_t ms_overflow_pages; /**< Number of overflow pages */
size_t ms_entries; /**< Number of data items */
} MDB_stat;
/** @brief Information about the environment */
typedef struct MDB_envinfo {
void *me_mapaddr; /**< Address of map, if fixed */
size_t me_mapsize; /**< Size of the data memory map */
size_t me_last_pgno; /**< ID of the last used page */
size_t me_last_txnid; /**< ID of the last committed transaction */
unsigned int me_maxreaders; /**< max reader slots in the environment */
unsigned int me_numreaders; /**< max reader slots used in the environment */
} MDB_envinfo;
/** @brief Return the LMDB library version information.
*
* @param[out] major if non-NULL, the library major version number is copied here
* @param[out] minor if non-NULL, the library minor version number is copied here
* @param[out] patch if non-NULL, the library patch version number is copied here
* @retval "version string" The library version as a string
*/
char *mdb_version(int *major, int *minor, int *patch);
/** @brief Return a string describing a given error code.
*
* This function is a superset of the ANSI C X3.159-1989 (ANSI C) strerror(3)
* function. If the error code is greater than or equal to 0, then the string
* returned by the system function strerror(3) is returned. If the error code
* is less than 0, an error string corresponding to the LMDB library error is
* returned. See @ref errors for a list of LMDB-specific error codes.
* @param[in] err The error code
* @retval "error message" The description of the error
*/
char *mdb_strerror(int err);
/** @brief Create an LMDB environment handle.
*
* This function allocates memory for a #MDB_env structure. To release
* the allocated memory and discard the handle, call #mdb_env_close().
* Before the handle may be used, it must be opened using #mdb_env_open().
* Various other options may also need to be set before opening the handle,
* e.g. #mdb_env_set_mapsize(), #mdb_env_set_maxreaders(), #mdb_env_set_maxdbs(),
* depending on usage requirements.
* @param[out] env The address where the new handle will be stored
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_env_create(MDB_env **env);
/** @brief Open an environment handle.
*
* If this function fails, #mdb_env_close() must be called to discard the #MDB_env handle.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] path The directory in which the database files reside. This
* directory must already exist and be writable.
* @param[in] flags Special options for this environment. This parameter
* must be set to 0 or by bitwise OR'ing together one or more of the
* values described here.
* Flags set by mdb_env_set_flags() are also used.
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_FIXEDMAP
* use a fixed address for the mmap region. This flag must be specified
* when creating the environment, and is stored persistently in the environment.
* If successful, the memory map will always reside at the same virtual address
* and pointers used to reference data items in the database will be constant
* across multiple invocations. This option may not always work, depending on
* how the operating system has allocated memory to shared libraries and other uses.
* The feature is highly experimental.
* <li>#MDB_NOSUBDIR
* By default, LMDB creates its environment in a directory whose
* pathname is given in \b path, and creates its data and lock files
* under that directory. With this option, \b path is used as-is for
* the database main data file. The database lock file is the \b path
* with "-lock" appended.
* <li>#MDB_RDONLY
* Open the environment in read-only mode. No write operations will be
* allowed. LMDB will still modify the lock file - except on read-only
* filesystems, where LMDB does not use locks.
* <li>#MDB_WRITEMAP
* Use a writeable memory map unless MDB_RDONLY is set. This uses
* fewer mallocs but loses protection from application bugs
* like wild pointer writes and other bad updates into the database.
* This may be slightly faster for DBs that fit entirely in RAM, but
* is slower for DBs larger than RAM.
* Incompatible with nested transactions.
* Do not mix processes with and without MDB_WRITEMAP on the same
* environment. This can defeat durability (#mdb_env_sync etc).
* <li>#MDB_NOMETASYNC
* Flush system buffers to disk only once per transaction, omit the
* metadata flush. Defer that until the system flushes files to disk,
* or next non-MDB_RDONLY commit or #mdb_env_sync(). This optimization
* maintains database integrity, but a system crash may undo the last
* committed transaction. I.e. it preserves the ACI (atomicity,
* consistency, isolation) but not D (durability) database property.
* This flag may be changed at any time using #mdb_env_set_flags().
* <li>#MDB_NOSYNC
* Don't flush system buffers to disk when committing a transaction.
* This optimization means a system crash can corrupt the database or
* lose the last transactions if buffers are not yet flushed to disk.
* The risk is governed by how often the system flushes dirty buffers
* to disk and how often #mdb_env_sync() is called. However, if the
* filesystem preserves write order and the #MDB_WRITEMAP flag is not
* used, transactions exhibit ACI (atomicity, consistency, isolation)
* properties and only lose D (durability). I.e. database integrity
* is maintained, but a system crash may undo the final transactions.
* Note that (#MDB_NOSYNC | #MDB_WRITEMAP) leaves the system with no
* hint for when to write transactions to disk, unless #mdb_env_sync()
* is called. (#MDB_MAPASYNC | #MDB_WRITEMAP) may be preferable.
* This flag may be changed at any time using #mdb_env_set_flags().
* <li>#MDB_MAPASYNC
* When using #MDB_WRITEMAP, use asynchronous flushes to disk.
* As with #MDB_NOSYNC, a system crash can then corrupt the
* database or lose the last transactions. Calling #mdb_env_sync()
* ensures on-disk database integrity until next commit.
* This flag may be changed at any time using #mdb_env_set_flags().
* <li>#MDB_NOTLS
* Don't use Thread-Local Storage. Tie reader locktable slots to
* #MDB_txn objects instead of to threads. I.e. #mdb_txn_reset() keeps
* the slot reseved for the #MDB_txn object. A thread may use parallel
* read-only transactions. A read-only transaction may span threads if
* the user synchronizes its use. Applications that multiplex many
* user threads over individual OS threads need this option. Such an
* application must also serialize the write transactions in an OS
* thread, since LMDB's write locking is unaware of the user threads.
* <li>#MDB_NOLOCK
* Don't do any locking. If concurrent access is anticipated, the
* caller must manage all concurrency itself. For proper operation
* the caller must enforce single-writer semantics, and must ensure
* that no readers are using old transactions while a writer is
* active. The simplest approach is to use an exclusive lock so that
* no readers may be active at all when a writer begins.
* <li>#MDB_NORDAHEAD
* Turn off readahead. Most operating systems perform readahead on
* read requests by default. This option turns it off if the OS
* supports it. Turning it off may help random read performance
* when the DB is larger than RAM and system RAM is full.
* The option is not implemented on Windows.
* <li>#MDB_NOMEMINIT
* Don't initialize malloc'd memory before writing to unused spaces
* in the data file. By default, memory for pages written to the data
* file is obtained using malloc. While these pages may be reused in
* subsequent transactions, freshly malloc'd pages will be initialized
* to zeroes before use. This avoids persisting leftover data from other
* code (that used the heap and subsequently freed the memory) into the
* data file. Note that many other system libraries may allocate
* and free memory from the heap for arbitrary uses. E.g., stdio may
* use the heap for file I/O buffers. This initialization step has a
* modest performance cost so some applications may want to disable
* it using this flag. This option can be a problem for applications
* which handle sensitive data like passwords, and it makes memory
* checkers like Valgrind noisy. This flag is not needed with #MDB_WRITEMAP,
* which writes directly to the mmap instead of using malloc for pages. The
* initialization is also skipped if #MDB_RESERVE is used; the
* caller is expected to overwrite all of the memory that was
* reserved in that case.
* This flag may be changed at any time using #mdb_env_set_flags().
* </ul>
* @param[in] mode The UNIX permissions to set on created files and semaphores.
* This parameter is ignored on Windows.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_VERSION_MISMATCH - the version of the LMDB library doesn't match the
* version that created the database environment.
* <li>#MDB_INVALID - the environment file headers are corrupted.
* <li>ENOENT - the directory specified by the path parameter doesn't exist.
* <li>EACCES - the user didn't have permission to access the environment files.
* <li>EAGAIN - the environment was locked by another process.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_open(MDB_env *env, const char *path, unsigned int flags, mdb_mode_t mode);
/** @brief Copy an LMDB environment to the specified path.
*
* This function may be used to make a backup of an existing environment.
* No lockfile is created, since it gets recreated at need.
* @note This call can trigger significant file size growth if run in
* parallel with write transactions, because it employs a read-only
* transaction. See long-lived transactions under @ref caveats_sec.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create(). It
* must have already been opened successfully.
* @param[in] path The directory in which the copy will reside. This
* directory must already exist and be writable but must otherwise be
* empty.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_env_copy(MDB_env *env, const char *path);
/** @brief Copy an LMDB environment to the specified file descriptor.
*
* This function may be used to make a backup of an existing environment.
* No lockfile is created, since it gets recreated at need.
* @note This call can trigger significant file size growth if run in
* parallel with write transactions, because it employs a read-only
* transaction. See long-lived transactions under @ref caveats_sec.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create(). It
* must have already been opened successfully.
* @param[in] fd The filedescriptor to write the copy to. It must
* have already been opened for Write access.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_env_copyfd(MDB_env *env, mdb_filehandle_t fd);
/** @brief Copy an LMDB environment to the specified path, with options.
*
* This function may be used to make a backup of an existing environment.
* No lockfile is created, since it gets recreated at need.
* @note This call can trigger significant file size growth if run in
* parallel with write transactions, because it employs a read-only
* transaction. See long-lived transactions under @ref caveats_sec.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create(). It
* must have already been opened successfully.
* @param[in] path The directory in which the copy will reside. This
* directory must already exist and be writable but must otherwise be
* empty.
* @param[in] flags Special options for this operation. This parameter
* must be set to 0 or by bitwise OR'ing together one or more of the
* values described here.
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_CP_COMPACT - Perform compaction while copying: omit free
* pages and sequentially renumber all pages in output. This option
* consumes more CPU and runs more slowly than the default.
* Currently it fails if the environment has suffered a page leak.
* </ul>
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_env_copy2(MDB_env *env, const char *path, unsigned int flags);
/** @brief Copy an LMDB environment to the specified file descriptor,
* with options.
*
* This function may be used to make a backup of an existing environment.
* No lockfile is created, since it gets recreated at need. See
* #mdb_env_copy2() for further details.
* @note This call can trigger significant file size growth if run in
* parallel with write transactions, because it employs a read-only
* transaction. See long-lived transactions under @ref caveats_sec.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create(). It
* must have already been opened successfully.
* @param[in] fd The filedescriptor to write the copy to. It must
* have already been opened for Write access.
* @param[in] flags Special options for this operation.
* See #mdb_env_copy2() for options.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_env_copyfd2(MDB_env *env, mdb_filehandle_t fd, unsigned int flags);
/** @brief Return statistics about the LMDB environment.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[out] stat The address of an #MDB_stat structure
* where the statistics will be copied
*/
int mdb_env_stat(MDB_env *env, MDB_stat *stat);
/** @brief Return information about the LMDB environment.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[out] stat The address of an #MDB_envinfo structure
* where the information will be copied
*/
int mdb_env_info(MDB_env *env, MDB_envinfo *stat);
/** @brief Flush the data buffers to disk.
*
* Data is always written to disk when #mdb_txn_commit() is called,
* but the operating system may keep it buffered. LMDB always flushes
* the OS buffers upon commit as well, unless the environment was
* opened with #MDB_NOSYNC or in part #MDB_NOMETASYNC. This call is
* not valid if the environment was opened with #MDB_RDONLY.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] force If non-zero, force a synchronous flush. Otherwise
* if the environment has the #MDB_NOSYNC flag set the flushes
* will be omitted, and with #MDB_MAPASYNC they will be asynchronous.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EACCES - the environment is read-only.
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* <li>EIO - an error occurred during synchronization.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_sync(MDB_env *env, int force);
/** @brief Close the environment and release the memory map.
*
* Only a single thread may call this function. All transactions, databases,
* and cursors must already be closed before calling this function. Attempts to
* use any such handles after calling this function will cause a SIGSEGV.
* The environment handle will be freed and must not be used again after this call.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
*/
void mdb_env_close(MDB_env *env);
/** @brief Set environment flags.
*
* This may be used to set some flags in addition to those from
* #mdb_env_open(), or to unset these flags. If several threads
* change the flags at the same time, the result is undefined.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] flags The flags to change, bitwise OR'ed together
* @param[in] onoff A non-zero value sets the flags, zero clears them.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_set_flags(MDB_env *env, unsigned int flags, int onoff);
/** @brief Get environment flags.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[out] flags The address of an integer to store the flags
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_get_flags(MDB_env *env, unsigned int *flags);
/** @brief Return the path that was used in #mdb_env_open().
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[out] path Address of a string pointer to contain the path. This
* is the actual string in the environment, not a copy. It should not be
* altered in any way.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_get_path(MDB_env *env, const char **path);
/** @brief Return the filedescriptor for the given environment.
*
* This function may be called after fork(), so the descriptor can be
* closed before exec*(). Other LMDB file descriptors have FD_CLOEXEC.
* (Until LMDB 0.9.18, only the lockfile had that.)
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[out] fd Address of a mdb_filehandle_t to contain the descriptor.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_get_fd(MDB_env *env, mdb_filehandle_t *fd);
/** @brief Set the size of the memory map to use for this environment.
*
* The size should be a multiple of the OS page size. The default is
* 10485760 bytes. The size of the memory map is also the maximum size
* of the database. The value should be chosen as large as possible,
* to accommodate future growth of the database.
* This function should be called after #mdb_env_create() and before #mdb_env_open().
* It may be called at later times if no transactions are active in
* this process. Note that the library does not check for this condition,
* the caller must ensure it explicitly.
*
* The new size takes effect immediately for the current process but
* will not be persisted to any others until a write transaction has been
* committed by the current process. Also, only mapsize increases are
* persisted into the environment.
*
* If the mapsize is increased by another process, and data has grown
* beyond the range of the current mapsize, #mdb_txn_begin() will
* return #MDB_MAP_RESIZED. This function may be called with a size
* of zero to adopt the new size.
*
* Any attempt to set a size smaller than the space already consumed
* by the environment will be silently changed to the current size of the used space.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] size The size in bytes
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified, or the environment has
* an active write transaction.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_set_mapsize(MDB_env *env, size_t size);
/** @brief Set the maximum number of threads/reader slots for the environment.
*
* This defines the number of slots in the lock table that is used to track readers in the
* the environment. The default is 126.
* Starting a read-only transaction normally ties a lock table slot to the
* current thread until the environment closes or the thread exits. If
* MDB_NOTLS is in use, #mdb_txn_begin() instead ties the slot to the
* MDB_txn object until it or the #MDB_env object is destroyed.
* This function may only be called after #mdb_env_create() and before #mdb_env_open().
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] readers The maximum number of reader lock table slots
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified, or the environment is already open.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_set_maxreaders(MDB_env *env, unsigned int readers);
/** @brief Get the maximum number of threads/reader slots for the environment.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[out] readers Address of an integer to store the number of readers
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_get_maxreaders(MDB_env *env, unsigned int *readers);
/** @brief Set the maximum number of named databases for the environment.
*
* This function is only needed if multiple databases will be used in the
* environment. Simpler applications that use the environment as a single
* unnamed database can ignore this option.
* This function may only be called after #mdb_env_create() and before #mdb_env_open().
*
* Currently a moderate number of slots are cheap but a huge number gets
* expensive: 7-120 words per transaction, and every #mdb_dbi_open()
* does a linear search of the opened slots.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] dbs The maximum number of databases
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified, or the environment is already open.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_env_set_maxdbs(MDB_env *env, MDB_dbi dbs);
/** @brief Get the maximum size of keys and #MDB_DUPSORT data we can write.
*
* Depends on the compile-time constant #MDB_MAXKEYSIZE. Default 511.
* See @ref MDB_val.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @return The maximum size of a key we can write
*/
int mdb_env_get_maxkeysize(MDB_env *env);
/** @brief Set application information associated with the #MDB_env.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] ctx An arbitrary pointer for whatever the application needs.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_env_set_userctx(MDB_env *env, void *ctx);
/** @brief Get the application information associated with the #MDB_env.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @return The pointer set by #mdb_env_set_userctx().
*/
void *mdb_env_get_userctx(MDB_env *env);
/** @brief A callback function for most LMDB assert() failures,
* called before printing the message and aborting.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create().
* @param[in] msg The assertion message, not including newline.
*/
typedef void MDB_assert_func(MDB_env *env, const char *msg);
/** Set or reset the assert() callback of the environment.
* Disabled if liblmdb is buillt with NDEBUG.
* @note This hack should become obsolete as lmdb's error handling matures.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create().
* @param[in] func An #MDB_assert_func function, or 0.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_env_set_assert(MDB_env *env, MDB_assert_func *func);
/** @brief Create a transaction for use with the environment.
*
* The transaction handle may be discarded using #mdb_txn_abort() or #mdb_txn_commit().
* @note A transaction and its cursors must only be used by a single
* thread, and a thread may only have a single transaction at a time.
* If #MDB_NOTLS is in use, this does not apply to read-only transactions.
* @note Cursors may not span transactions.
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] parent If this parameter is non-NULL, the new transaction
* will be a nested transaction, with the transaction indicated by \b parent
* as its parent. Transactions may be nested to any level. A parent
* transaction and its cursors may not issue any other operations than
* mdb_txn_commit and mdb_txn_abort while it has active child transactions.
* @param[in] flags Special options for this transaction. This parameter
* must be set to 0 or by bitwise OR'ing together one or more of the
* values described here.
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_RDONLY
* This transaction will not perform any write operations.
* </ul>
* @param[out] txn Address where the new #MDB_txn handle will be stored
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_PANIC - a fatal error occurred earlier and the environment
* must be shut down.
* <li>#MDB_MAP_RESIZED - another process wrote data beyond this MDB_env's
* mapsize and this environment's map must be resized as well.
* See #mdb_env_set_mapsize().
* <li>#MDB_READERS_FULL - a read-only transaction was requested and
* the reader lock table is full. See #mdb_env_set_maxreaders().
* <li>ENOMEM - out of memory.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_txn_begin(MDB_env *env, MDB_txn *parent, unsigned int flags, MDB_txn **txn);
/** @brief Returns the transaction's #MDB_env
*
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
*/
MDB_env *mdb_txn_env(MDB_txn *txn);
/** @brief Return the transaction's ID.
*
* This returns the identifier associated with this transaction. For a
* read-only transaction, this corresponds to the snapshot being read;
* concurrent readers will frequently have the same transaction ID.
*
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @return A transaction ID, valid if input is an active transaction.
*/
size_t mdb_txn_id(MDB_txn *txn);
/** @brief Commit all the operations of a transaction into the database.
*
* The transaction handle is freed. It and its cursors must not be used
* again after this call, except with #mdb_cursor_renew().
* @note Earlier documentation incorrectly said all cursors would be freed.
* Only write-transactions free cursors.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* <li>ENOSPC - no more disk space.
* <li>EIO - a low-level I/O error occurred while writing.
* <li>ENOMEM - out of memory.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_txn_commit(MDB_txn *txn);
/** @brief Abandon all the operations of the transaction instead of saving them.
*
* The transaction handle is freed. It and its cursors must not be used
* again after this call, except with #mdb_cursor_renew().
* @note Earlier documentation incorrectly said all cursors would be freed.
* Only write-transactions free cursors.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
*/
void mdb_txn_abort(MDB_txn *txn);
/** @brief Reset a read-only transaction.
*
* Abort the transaction like #mdb_txn_abort(), but keep the transaction
* handle. #mdb_txn_renew() may reuse the handle. This saves allocation
* overhead if the process will start a new read-only transaction soon,
* and also locking overhead if #MDB_NOTLS is in use. The reader table
* lock is released, but the table slot stays tied to its thread or
* #MDB_txn. Use mdb_txn_abort() to discard a reset handle, and to free
* its lock table slot if MDB_NOTLS is in use.
* Cursors opened within the transaction must not be used
* again after this call, except with #mdb_cursor_renew().
* Reader locks generally don't interfere with writers, but they keep old
* versions of database pages allocated. Thus they prevent the old pages
* from being reused when writers commit new data, and so under heavy load
* the database size may grow much more rapidly than otherwise.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
*/
void mdb_txn_reset(MDB_txn *txn);
/** @brief Renew a read-only transaction.
*
* This acquires a new reader lock for a transaction handle that had been
* released by #mdb_txn_reset(). It must be called before a reset transaction
* may be used again.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_PANIC - a fatal error occurred earlier and the environment
* must be shut down.
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_txn_renew(MDB_txn *txn);
/** Compat with version <= 0.9.4, avoid clash with libmdb from MDB Tools project */
#define mdb_open(txn,name,flags,dbi) mdb_dbi_open(txn,name,flags,dbi)
/** Compat with version <= 0.9.4, avoid clash with libmdb from MDB Tools project */
#define mdb_close(env,dbi) mdb_dbi_close(env,dbi)
/** @brief Open a database in the environment.
*
* A database handle denotes the name and parameters of a database,
* independently of whether such a database exists.
* The database handle may be discarded by calling #mdb_dbi_close().
* The old database handle is returned if the database was already open.
* The handle may only be closed once.
*
* The database handle will be private to the current transaction until
* the transaction is successfully committed. If the transaction is
* aborted the handle will be closed automatically.
* After a successful commit the handle will reside in the shared
* environment, and may be used by other transactions.
*
* This function must not be called from multiple concurrent
* transactions in the same process. A transaction that uses
* this function must finish (either commit or abort) before
* any other transaction in the process may use this function.
*
* To use named databases (with name != NULL), #mdb_env_set_maxdbs()
* must be called before opening the environment. Database names are
* keys in the unnamed database, and may be read but not written.
*
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] name The name of the database to open. If only a single
* database is needed in the environment, this value may be NULL.
* @param[in] flags Special options for this database. This parameter
* must be set to 0 or by bitwise OR'ing together one or more of the
* values described here.
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_REVERSEKEY
* Keys are strings to be compared in reverse order, from the end
* of the strings to the beginning. By default, Keys are treated as strings and
* compared from beginning to end.
* <li>#MDB_DUPSORT
* Duplicate keys may be used in the database. (Or, from another perspective,
* keys may have multiple data items, stored in sorted order.) By default
* keys must be unique and may have only a single data item.
* <li>#MDB_INTEGERKEY
* Keys are binary integers in native byte order, either unsigned int
* or size_t, and will be sorted as such.
* The keys must all be of the same size.
* <li>#MDB_DUPFIXED
* This flag may only be used in combination with #MDB_DUPSORT. This option
* tells the library that the data items for this database are all the same
* size, which allows further optimizations in storage and retrieval. When
* all data items are the same size, the #MDB_GET_MULTIPLE, #MDB_NEXT_MULTIPLE
* and #MDB_PREV_MULTIPLE cursor operations may be used to retrieve multiple
* items at once.
* <li>#MDB_INTEGERDUP
* This option specifies that duplicate data items are binary integers,
* similar to #MDB_INTEGERKEY keys.
* <li>#MDB_REVERSEDUP
* This option specifies that duplicate data items should be compared as
* strings in reverse order.
* <li>#MDB_CREATE
* Create the named database if it doesn't exist. This option is not
* allowed in a read-only transaction or a read-only environment.
* </ul>
* @param[out] dbi Address where the new #MDB_dbi handle will be stored
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_NOTFOUND - the specified database doesn't exist in the environment
* and #MDB_CREATE was not specified.
* <li>#MDB_DBS_FULL - too many databases have been opened. See #mdb_env_set_maxdbs().
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_dbi_open(MDB_txn *txn, const char *name, unsigned int flags, MDB_dbi *dbi);
/** @brief Retrieve statistics for a database.
*
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[out] stat The address of an #MDB_stat structure
* where the statistics will be copied
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_stat(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, MDB_stat *stat);
/** @brief Retrieve the DB flags for a database handle.
*
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[out] flags Address where the flags will be returned.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_dbi_flags(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, unsigned int *flags);
/** @brief Close a database handle. Normally unnecessary. Use with care:
*
* This call is not mutex protected. Handles should only be closed by
* a single thread, and only if no other threads are going to reference
* the database handle or one of its cursors any further. Do not close
* a handle if an existing transaction has modified its database.
* Doing so can cause misbehavior from database corruption to errors
* like MDB_BAD_VALSIZE (since the DB name is gone).
*
* Closing a database handle is not necessary, but lets #mdb_dbi_open()
* reuse the handle value. Usually it's better to set a bigger
* #mdb_env_set_maxdbs(), unless that value would be large.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
*/
void mdb_dbi_close(MDB_env *env, MDB_dbi dbi);
/** @brief Empty or delete+close a database.
*
* See #mdb_dbi_close() for restrictions about closing the DB handle.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] del 0 to empty the DB, 1 to delete it from the
* environment and close the DB handle.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_drop(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, int del);
/** @brief Set a custom key comparison function for a database.
*
* The comparison function is called whenever it is necessary to compare a
* key specified by the application with a key currently stored in the database.
* If no comparison function is specified, and no special key flags were specified
* with #mdb_dbi_open(), the keys are compared lexically, with shorter keys collating
* before longer keys.
* @warning This function must be called before any data access functions are used,
* otherwise data corruption may occur. The same comparison function must be used by every
* program accessing the database, every time the database is used.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] cmp A #MDB_cmp_func function
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_set_compare(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, MDB_cmp_func *cmp);
/** @brief Set a custom data comparison function for a #MDB_DUPSORT database.
*
* This comparison function is called whenever it is necessary to compare a data
* item specified by the application with a data item currently stored in the database.
* This function only takes effect if the database was opened with the #MDB_DUPSORT
* flag.
* If no comparison function is specified, and no special key flags were specified
* with #mdb_dbi_open(), the data items are compared lexically, with shorter items collating
* before longer items.
* @warning This function must be called before any data access functions are used,
* otherwise data corruption may occur. The same comparison function must be used by every
* program accessing the database, every time the database is used.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] cmp A #MDB_cmp_func function
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_set_dupsort(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, MDB_cmp_func *cmp);
/** @brief Set a relocation function for a #MDB_FIXEDMAP database.
*
* @todo The relocation function is called whenever it is necessary to move the data
* of an item to a different position in the database (e.g. through tree
* balancing operations, shifts as a result of adds or deletes, etc.). It is
* intended to allow address/position-dependent data items to be stored in
* a database in an environment opened with the #MDB_FIXEDMAP option.
* Currently the relocation feature is unimplemented and setting
* this function has no effect.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] rel A #MDB_rel_func function
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_set_relfunc(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, MDB_rel_func *rel);
/** @brief Set a context pointer for a #MDB_FIXEDMAP database's relocation function.
*
* See #mdb_set_relfunc and #MDB_rel_func for more details.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] ctx An arbitrary pointer for whatever the application needs.
* It will be passed to the callback function set by #mdb_set_relfunc
* as its \b relctx parameter whenever the callback is invoked.
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_set_relctx(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, void *ctx);
/** @brief Get items from a database.
*
* This function retrieves key/data pairs from the database. The address
* and length of the data associated with the specified \b key are returned
* in the structure to which \b data refers.
* If the database supports duplicate keys (#MDB_DUPSORT) then the
* first data item for the key will be returned. Retrieval of other
* items requires the use of #mdb_cursor_get().
*
* @note The memory pointed to by the returned values is owned by the
* database. The caller need not dispose of the memory, and may not
* modify it in any way. For values returned in a read-only transaction
* any modification attempts will cause a SIGSEGV.
* @note Values returned from the database are valid only until a
* subsequent update operation, or the end of the transaction.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] key The key to search for in the database
* @param[out] data The data corresponding to the key
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_NOTFOUND - the key was not in the database.
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_get(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, MDB_val *key, MDB_val *data);
/** @brief Store items into a database.
*
* This function stores key/data pairs in the database. The default behavior
* is to enter the new key/data pair, replacing any previously existing key
* if duplicates are disallowed, or adding a duplicate data item if
* duplicates are allowed (#MDB_DUPSORT).
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] key The key to store in the database
* @param[in,out] data The data to store
* @param[in] flags Special options for this operation. This parameter
* must be set to 0 or by bitwise OR'ing together one or more of the
* values described here.
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_NODUPDATA - enter the new key/data pair only if it does not
* already appear in the database. This flag may only be specified
* if the database was opened with #MDB_DUPSORT. The function will
* return #MDB_KEYEXIST if the key/data pair already appears in the
* database.
* <li>#MDB_NOOVERWRITE - enter the new key/data pair only if the key
* does not already appear in the database. The function will return
* #MDB_KEYEXIST if the key already appears in the database, even if
* the database supports duplicates (#MDB_DUPSORT). The \b data
* parameter will be set to point to the existing item.
* <li>#MDB_RESERVE - reserve space for data of the given size, but
* don't copy the given data. Instead, return a pointer to the
* reserved space, which the caller can fill in later - before
* the next update operation or the transaction ends. This saves
* an extra memcpy if the data is being generated later.
* LMDB does nothing else with this memory, the caller is expected
* to modify all of the space requested. This flag must not be
* specified if the database was opened with #MDB_DUPSORT.
* <li>#MDB_APPEND - append the given key/data pair to the end of the
* database. This option allows fast bulk loading when keys are
* already known to be in the correct order. Loading unsorted keys
* with this flag will cause a #MDB_KEYEXIST error.
* <li>#MDB_APPENDDUP - as above, but for sorted dup data.
* </ul>
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_MAP_FULL - the database is full, see #mdb_env_set_mapsize().
* <li>#MDB_TXN_FULL - the transaction has too many dirty pages.
* <li>EACCES - an attempt was made to write in a read-only transaction.
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_put(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, MDB_val *key, MDB_val *data,
unsigned int flags);
/** @brief Delete items from a database.
*
* This function removes key/data pairs from the database.
* If the database does not support sorted duplicate data items
* (#MDB_DUPSORT) the data parameter is ignored.
* If the database supports sorted duplicates and the data parameter
* is NULL, all of the duplicate data items for the key will be
* deleted. Otherwise, if the data parameter is non-NULL
* only the matching data item will be deleted.
* This function will return #MDB_NOTFOUND if the specified key/data
* pair is not in the database.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] key The key to delete from the database
* @param[in] data The data to delete
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EACCES - an attempt was made to write in a read-only transaction.
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_del(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, MDB_val *key, MDB_val *data);
/** @brief Create a cursor handle.
*
* A cursor is associated with a specific transaction and database.
* A cursor cannot be used when its database handle is closed. Nor
* when its transaction has ended, except with #mdb_cursor_renew().
* It can be discarded with #mdb_cursor_close().
* A cursor in a write-transaction can be closed before its transaction
* ends, and will otherwise be closed when its transaction ends.
* A cursor in a read-only transaction must be closed explicitly, before
* or after its transaction ends. It can be reused with
* #mdb_cursor_renew() before finally closing it.
* @note Earlier documentation said that cursors in every transaction
* were closed when the transaction committed or aborted.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[out] cursor Address where the new #MDB_cursor handle will be stored
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_cursor_open(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, MDB_cursor **cursor);
/** @brief Close a cursor handle.
*
* The cursor handle will be freed and must not be used again after this call.
* Its transaction must still be live if it is a write-transaction.
* @param[in] cursor A cursor handle returned by #mdb_cursor_open()
*/
void mdb_cursor_close(MDB_cursor *cursor);
/** @brief Renew a cursor handle.
*
* A cursor is associated with a specific transaction and database.
* Cursors that are only used in read-only
* transactions may be re-used, to avoid unnecessary malloc/free overhead.
* The cursor may be associated with a new read-only transaction, and
* referencing the same database handle as it was created with.
* This may be done whether the previous transaction is live or dead.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] cursor A cursor handle returned by #mdb_cursor_open()
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_cursor_renew(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_cursor *cursor);
/** @brief Return the cursor's transaction handle.
*
* @param[in] cursor A cursor handle returned by #mdb_cursor_open()
*/
MDB_txn *mdb_cursor_txn(MDB_cursor *cursor);
/** @brief Return the cursor's database handle.
*
* @param[in] cursor A cursor handle returned by #mdb_cursor_open()
*/
MDB_dbi mdb_cursor_dbi(MDB_cursor *cursor);
/** @brief Retrieve by cursor.
*
* This function retrieves key/data pairs from the database. The address and length
* of the key are returned in the object to which \b key refers (except for the
* case of the #MDB_SET option, in which the \b key object is unchanged), and
* the address and length of the data are returned in the object to which \b data
* refers.
* See #mdb_get() for restrictions on using the output values.
* @param[in] cursor A cursor handle returned by #mdb_cursor_open()
* @param[in,out] key The key for a retrieved item
* @param[in,out] data The data of a retrieved item
* @param[in] op A cursor operation #MDB_cursor_op
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_NOTFOUND - no matching key found.
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_cursor_get(MDB_cursor *cursor, MDB_val *key, MDB_val *data,
MDB_cursor_op op);
/** @brief Store by cursor.
*
* This function stores key/data pairs into the database.
* The cursor is positioned at the new item, or on failure usually near it.
* @note Earlier documentation incorrectly said errors would leave the
* state of the cursor unchanged.
* @param[in] cursor A cursor handle returned by #mdb_cursor_open()
* @param[in] key The key operated on.
* @param[in] data The data operated on.
* @param[in] flags Options for this operation. This parameter
* must be set to 0 or one of the values described here.
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_CURRENT - replace the item at the current cursor position.
* The \b key parameter must still be provided, and must match it.
* If using sorted duplicates (#MDB_DUPSORT) the data item must still
* sort into the same place. This is intended to be used when the
* new data is the same size as the old. Otherwise it will simply
* perform a delete of the old record followed by an insert.
* <li>#MDB_NODUPDATA - enter the new key/data pair only if it does not
* already appear in the database. This flag may only be specified
* if the database was opened with #MDB_DUPSORT. The function will
* return #MDB_KEYEXIST if the key/data pair already appears in the
* database.
* <li>#MDB_NOOVERWRITE - enter the new key/data pair only if the key
* does not already appear in the database. The function will return
* #MDB_KEYEXIST if the key already appears in the database, even if
* the database supports duplicates (#MDB_DUPSORT).
* <li>#MDB_RESERVE - reserve space for data of the given size, but
* don't copy the given data. Instead, return a pointer to the
* reserved space, which the caller can fill in later - before
* the next update operation or the transaction ends. This saves
* an extra memcpy if the data is being generated later. This flag
* must not be specified if the database was opened with #MDB_DUPSORT.
* <li>#MDB_APPEND - append the given key/data pair to the end of the
* database. No key comparisons are performed. This option allows
* fast bulk loading when keys are already known to be in the
* correct order. Loading unsorted keys with this flag will cause
* a #MDB_KEYEXIST error.
* <li>#MDB_APPENDDUP - as above, but for sorted dup data.
* <li>#MDB_MULTIPLE - store multiple contiguous data elements in a
* single request. This flag may only be specified if the database
* was opened with #MDB_DUPFIXED. The \b data argument must be an
* array of two MDB_vals. The mv_size of the first MDB_val must be
* the size of a single data element. The mv_data of the first MDB_val
* must point to the beginning of the array of contiguous data elements.
* The mv_size of the second MDB_val must be the count of the number
* of data elements to store. On return this field will be set to
* the count of the number of elements actually written. The mv_data
* of the second MDB_val is unused.
* </ul>
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_MAP_FULL - the database is full, see #mdb_env_set_mapsize().
* <li>#MDB_TXN_FULL - the transaction has too many dirty pages.
* <li>EACCES - an attempt was made to write in a read-only transaction.
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_cursor_put(MDB_cursor *cursor, MDB_val *key, MDB_val *data,
unsigned int flags);
/** @brief Delete current key/data pair
*
* This function deletes the key/data pair to which the cursor refers.
* @param[in] cursor A cursor handle returned by #mdb_cursor_open()
* @param[in] flags Options for this operation. This parameter
* must be set to 0 or one of the values described here.
* <ul>
* <li>#MDB_NODUPDATA - delete all of the data items for the current key.
* This flag may only be specified if the database was opened with #MDB_DUPSORT.
* </ul>
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EACCES - an attempt was made to write in a read-only transaction.
* <li>EINVAL - an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_cursor_del(MDB_cursor *cursor, unsigned int flags);
/** @brief Return count of duplicates for current key.
*
* This call is only valid on databases that support sorted duplicate
* data items #MDB_DUPSORT.
* @param[in] cursor A cursor handle returned by #mdb_cursor_open()
* @param[out] countp Address where the count will be stored
* @return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. Some possible
* errors are:
* <ul>
* <li>EINVAL - cursor is not initialized, or an invalid parameter was specified.
* </ul>
*/
int mdb_cursor_count(MDB_cursor *cursor, size_t *countp);
/** @brief Compare two data items according to a particular database.
*
* This returns a comparison as if the two data items were keys in the
* specified database.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] a The first item to compare
* @param[in] b The second item to compare
* @return < 0 if a < b, 0 if a == b, > 0 if a > b
*/
int mdb_cmp(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, const MDB_val *a, const MDB_val *b);
/** @brief Compare two data items according to a particular database.
*
* This returns a comparison as if the two items were data items of
* the specified database. The database must have the #MDB_DUPSORT flag.
* @param[in] txn A transaction handle returned by #mdb_txn_begin()
* @param[in] dbi A database handle returned by #mdb_dbi_open()
* @param[in] a The first item to compare
* @param[in] b The second item to compare
* @return < 0 if a < b, 0 if a == b, > 0 if a > b
*/
int mdb_dcmp(MDB_txn *txn, MDB_dbi dbi, const MDB_val *a, const MDB_val *b);
/** @brief A callback function used to print a message from the library.
*
* @param[in] msg The string to be printed.
* @param[in] ctx An arbitrary context pointer for the callback.
* @return < 0 on failure, >= 0 on success.
*/
typedef int (MDB_msg_func)(const char *msg, void *ctx);
/** @brief Dump the entries in the reader lock table.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[in] func A #MDB_msg_func function
* @param[in] ctx Anything the message function needs
* @return < 0 on failure, >= 0 on success.
*/
int mdb_reader_list(MDB_env *env, MDB_msg_func *func, void *ctx);
/** @brief Check for stale entries in the reader lock table.
*
* @param[in] env An environment handle returned by #mdb_env_create()
* @param[out] dead Number of stale slots that were cleared
* @return 0 on success, non-zero on failure.
*/
int mdb_reader_check(MDB_env *env, int *dead);
/** @} */
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
/** @page tools LMDB Command Line Tools
The following describes the command line tools that are available for LMDB.
\li \ref mdb_copy_1
\li \ref mdb_dump_1
\li \ref mdb_load_1
\li \ref mdb_stat_1
*/
#endif /* _LMDB_H_ */
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