mirror of
https://github.com/isar/libmdbx.git
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5121 lines
231 KiB
C++
5121 lines
231 KiB
C++
/**
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_libmdbx_ is an extremely fast, compact, powerful, embedded,
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transactional [key-value
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store](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key-value_database) database, with
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[permissive license](./LICENSE). _MDBX_ has a specific set of properties and
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capabilities, focused on creating unique lightweight solutions with
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extraordinary performance.
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_libmdbx_ is superior to [LMDB](https://bit.ly/26ts7tL) in terms of features
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and reliability, not inferior in performance. In comparison to LMDB, _libmdbx_
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makes many things just work perfectly, not silently and catastrophically
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break down. _libmdbx_ supports Linux, Windows, MacOS, OSX, iOS, Android,
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FreeBSD, DragonFly, Solaris, OpenSolaris, OpenIndiana, NetBSD, OpenBSD and other
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systems compliant with POSIX.1-2008.
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_The Future will (be) [Positive](https://www.ptsecurity.com). Всё будет хорошо._
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\section copyright LICENSE & COPYRIGHT
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\authors Copyright (c) 2015-2021, Leonid Yuriev <leo@yuriev.ru>
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and other _libmdbx_ authors: please see [AUTHORS](./AUTHORS) file.
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\copyright Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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modification, are permitted only as authorized by the OpenLDAP Public License.
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A copy of this license is available in the file LICENSE in the
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top-level directory of the distribution or, alternatively, at
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<http://www.OpenLDAP.org/license.html>.
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---
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This code is derived from "LMDB engine" written by
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Howard Chu (Symas Corporation), which itself derived from btree.c
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written by Martin Hedenfalk.
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---
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Portions Copyright 2011-2015 Howard Chu, Symas Corp. All rights reserved.
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Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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modification, are permitted only as authorized by the OpenLDAP
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Public License.
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A copy of this license is available in the file LICENSE in the
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top-level directory of the distribution or, alternatively, at
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<http://www.OpenLDAP.org/license.html>.
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---
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Portions Copyright (c) 2009, 2010 Martin Hedenfalk <martin@bzero.se>
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Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
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purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
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copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
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WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
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MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
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ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
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WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
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ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
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OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
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*******************************************************************************/
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#pragma once
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#ifndef LIBMDBX_H
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#define LIBMDBX_H
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#ifdef _MSC_VER
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#pragma warning(push, 1)
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#pragma warning(disable : 4548) /* expression before comma has no effect; \
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expected expression with side - effect */
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#pragma warning(disable : 4530) /* C++ exception handler used, but unwind \
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* semantics are not enabled. Specify /EHsc */
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#pragma warning(disable : 4577) /* 'noexcept' used with no exception handling \
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* mode specified; termination on exception is \
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* not guaranteed. Specify /EHsc */
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#endif /* _MSC_VER (warnings) */
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/* *INDENT-OFF* */
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/* clang-format off */
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/**
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\file mdbx.h
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\brief The libmdbx C API header file
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\defgroup c_api C API
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@{
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\defgroup c_err Error handling
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\defgroup c_opening Opening & Closing
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\defgroup c_transactions Transactions
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\defgroup c_dbi Databases
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\defgroup c_crud Create/Read/Update/Delete (see Quick Reference in details)
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\details
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\anchor c_crud_hints
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# Quick Reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations
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Historically, libmdbx inherits the API basis from LMDB, where it is often
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difficult to select flags/options and functions for the desired operation.
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So it is recommend using this hints.
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## Databases with UNIQUE keys
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In databases created without the \ref MDBX_DUPSORT option, keys are always
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unique. Thus always a single value corresponds to the each key, and so there
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are only a few cases of changing data.
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| Case | Flags to use | Result |
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|---------------------------------------------|---------------------|------------------------|
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| _INSERTING_|||
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|Key is absent → Insertion |\ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE|Insertion |
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|Key exist → Error since key present |\ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE|Error \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST and return Present value|
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| _UPSERTING_|||
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|Key is absent → Insertion |\ref MDBX_UPSERT |Insertion |
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|Key exist → Update |\ref MDBX_UPSERT |Update |
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| _UPDATING_|||
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|Key is absent → Error since no such key |\ref MDBX_CURRENT |Error \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND|
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|Key exist → Update |\ref MDBX_CURRENT |Update value |
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| _DELETING_|||
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|Key is absent → Error since no such key |\ref mdbx_del() or \ref mdbx_replace()|Error \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND|
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|Key exist → Delete by key |\ref mdbx_del() with the parameter `data = NULL`|Deletion|
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|Key exist → Delete by key with with data matching check|\ref mdbx_del() with the parameter `data` filled with the value which should be match for deletion|Deletion or \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND if the value does not match|
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|Delete at the current cursor position |\ref mdbx_cursor_del() with \ref MDBX_CURRENT flag|Deletion|
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|Extract (read & delete) value by the key |\ref mdbx_replace() with zero flag and parameter `new_data = NULL`|Returning a deleted value|
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## Databases with NON-UNIQUE keys
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In databases created with the \ref MDBX_DUPSORT (Sorted Duplicates) option, keys
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may be non unique. Such non-unique keys in a key-value database may be treated
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as a duplicates or as like a multiple values corresponds to keys.
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| Case | Flags to use | Result |
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|---------------------------------------------|---------------------|------------------------|
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| _INSERTING_|||
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|Key is absent → Insertion |\ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE|Insertion|
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|Key exist → Needn't to add new values |\ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE|Error \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST with returning the first value from those already present|
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| _UPSERTING_|||
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|Key is absent → Insertion |\ref MDBX_UPSERT |Insertion|
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|Key exist → Wanna to add new values |\ref MDBX_UPSERT |Add one more value to the key|
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|Key exist → Replace all values with a new one|\ref MDBX_UPSERT + \ref MDBX_ALLDUPS|Overwrite by single new value|
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| _UPDATING_|||
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|Key is absent → Error since no such key |\ref MDBX_CURRENT |Error \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND|
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|Key exist, Single value → Update |\ref MDBX_CURRENT |Update single value |
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|Key exist, Multiple values → Replace all values with a new one|\ref MDBX_CURRENT + \ref MDBX_ALLDUPS|Overwrite by single new value|
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|Key exist, Multiple values → Error since it is unclear which of the values should be updated|\ref mdbx_put() with \ref MDBX_CURRENT|Error \ref MDBX_EMULTIVAL|
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|Key exist, Multiple values → Update particular entry of multi-value|\ref mdbx_replace() with \ref MDBX_CURRENT + \ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE and the parameter `old_value` filled with the value that wanna to update|Update one multi-value entry|
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|Key exist, Multiple values → Update the current entry of multi-value|\ref mdbx_cursor_put() with \ref MDBX_CURRENT|Update one multi-value entry|
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| _DELETING_|||
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|Key is absent → Error since no such key |\ref mdbx_del() or \ref mdbx_replace()|Error \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND|
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|Key exist → Delete all values corresponds given key|\ref mdbx_del() with the parameter `data = NULL`|Deletion|
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|Key exist → Delete particular value corresponds given key|\ref mdbx_del() with the parameter `data` filled with the value that wanna to delete, or \ref mdbx_replace() with \ref MDBX_CURRENT + \ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE and the `old_value` parameter filled with the value that wanna to delete and `new_data = NULL`| Deletion or \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND if no such key-value pair|
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|Delete one value at the current cursor position|\ref mdbx_cursor_del() with \ref MDBX_CURRENT flag|Deletion only the current entry|
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|Delete all values of key at the current cursor position|\ref mdbx_cursor_del() with with \ref MDBX_ALLDUPS flag|Deletion all duplicates of key (all multi-values) at the current cursor position|
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\defgroup c_cursors Cursors
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\defgroup c_statinfo Statistics & Information
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\defgroup c_settings Settings
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\defgroup c_debug Logging and runtime debug
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\defgroup c_rqest Range query estimation
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\defgroup c_extra Extra operations
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*/
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/* *INDENT-ON* */
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/* clang-format on */
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#include <stdarg.h>
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#include <stddef.h>
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#include <stdint.h>
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#if defined(_WIN32) || defined(_WIN64)
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#include <windows.h>
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#include <winnt.h>
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#ifndef __mode_t_defined
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typedef unsigned short mdbx_mode_t;
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#else
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typedef mode_t mdbx_mode_t;
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#endif /* __mode_t_defined */
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typedef HANDLE mdbx_filehandle_t;
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typedef DWORD mdbx_pid_t;
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typedef DWORD mdbx_tid_t;
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#else /* Windows */
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#include <errno.h> /* for error codes */
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#include <pthread.h> /* for pthread_t */
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#include <sys/types.h> /* for pid_t */
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#include <sys/uio.h> /* for struct iovec */
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#define HAVE_STRUCT_IOVEC 1
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typedef int mdbx_filehandle_t;
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typedef pid_t mdbx_pid_t;
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typedef pthread_t mdbx_tid_t;
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typedef mode_t mdbx_mode_t;
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#endif /* !Windows */
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#ifdef _MSC_VER
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#pragma warning(pop)
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#endif
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/** @} close c_api
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* \defgroup api_macros Common Macros
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* @{ */
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/*----------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
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#ifndef __has_attribute
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#define __has_attribute(x) (0)
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#endif /* __has_attribute */
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#ifndef __has_cpp_attribute
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#define __has_cpp_attribute(x) 0
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#endif /* __has_cpp_attribute */
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#ifndef __has_feature
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#define __has_feature(x) (0)
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#endif /* __has_feature */
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#ifndef __has_extension
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#define __has_extension(x) (0)
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#endif /* __has_extension */
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#ifndef __has_builtin
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#define __has_builtin(x) (0)
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#endif /* __has_builtin */
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/** Many functions have no effects except the return value and their
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* return value depends only on the parameters and/or global variables.
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* Such a function can be subject to common subexpression elimination
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* and loop optimization just as an arithmetic operator would be.
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* These functions should be declared with the attribute pure. */
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#if (defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__pure__)) && \
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(!defined(__clang__) /* https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43275 */ \
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|| !defined(__cplusplus) || !__has_feature(cxx_exceptions))
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#define MDBX_PURE_FUNCTION __attribute__((__pure__))
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__) && _MSC_VER >= 1920
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#define MDBX_PURE_FUNCTION
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#elif defined(__cplusplus) && __has_cpp_attribute(gnu::pure) && \
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(!defined(__clang__) || !__has_feature(cxx_exceptions))
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#define MDBX_PURE_FUNCTION [[gnu::pure]]
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#else
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#define MDBX_PURE_FUNCTION
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#endif /* MDBX_PURE_FUNCTION */
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/** Like \ref MDBX_PURE_FUNCTION with addition `noexcept` restriction
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* that is compatible to CLANG and proposed [[pure]]. */
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#if defined(__GNUC__) || \
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(__has_attribute(__pure__) && __has_attribute(__nothrow__))
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION __attribute__((__pure__, __nothrow__))
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__) && _MSC_VER >= 1920
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#if __has_cpp_attribute(pure)
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION [[pure]]
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#else
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION
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#endif
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#elif defined(__cplusplus) && __has_cpp_attribute(gnu::pure)
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#if __has_cpp_attribute(gnu::nothrow)
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION [[gnu::pure, gnu::nothrow]]
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#else
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION [[gnu::pure]]
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#endif
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#elif defined(__cplusplus) && __has_cpp_attribute(pure)
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION [[pure]]
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#else
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION
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#endif /* MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION */
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/** Many functions do not examine any values except their arguments,
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* and have no effects except the return value. Basically this is just
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* slightly more strict class than the PURE attribute, since function
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* is not allowed to read global memory.
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*
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* Note that a function that has pointer arguments and examines the
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* data pointed to must not be declared const. Likewise, a function
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* that calls a non-const function usually must not be const.
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* It does not make sense for a const function to return void. */
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#if (defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__pure__)) && \
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(!defined(__clang__) /* https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43275 */ \
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|| !defined(__cplusplus) || !__has_feature(cxx_exceptions))
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#define MDBX_CONST_FUNCTION __attribute__((__const__))
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__) && _MSC_VER >= 1920
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#define MDBX_CONST_FUNCTION MDBX_PURE_FUNCTION
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#elif defined(__cplusplus) && __has_cpp_attribute(gnu::const) && \
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(!defined(__clang__) || !__has_feature(cxx_exceptions))
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#define MDBX_CONST_FUNCTION [[gnu::const]]
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#else
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#define MDBX_CONST_FUNCTION MDBX_PURE_FUNCTION
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#endif /* MDBX_CONST_FUNCTION */
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/** Like \ref MDBX_CONST_FUNCTION with addition `noexcept` restriction
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* that is compatible to CLANG and future [[const]]. */
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#if defined(__GNUC__) || \
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(__has_attribute(__const__) && __has_attribute(__nothrow__))
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION __attribute__((__const__, __nothrow__))
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__) && _MSC_VER >= 1920
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION
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#elif defined(__cplusplus) && __has_cpp_attribute(gnu::const)
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#if __has_cpp_attribute(gnu::nothrow)
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION [[gnu::const, gnu::nothrow]]
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#else
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION [[gnu::const]]
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#endif
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#elif defined(__cplusplus) && __has_cpp_attribute(const)
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION [[const]]
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#else
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#define MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION
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#endif /* MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION */
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#ifndef MDBX_DEPRECATED /* may be predefined to avoid warnings "deprecated" */
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#ifdef __deprecated
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#define MDBX_DEPRECATED __deprecated
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#elif defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__deprecated__)
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#define MDBX_DEPRECATED __attribute__((__deprecated__))
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER)
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#define MDBX_DEPRECATED __declspec(deprecated)
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#else
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#define MDBX_DEPRECATED
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#endif
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#endif /* MDBX_DEPRECATED */
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#ifndef __dll_export
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#if defined(_WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__)
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#if defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__dllexport__)
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#define __dll_export __attribute__((__dllexport__))
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER)
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#define __dll_export __declspec(dllexport)
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#else
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#define __dll_export
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#endif
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#elif defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__visibility__)
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#define __dll_export __attribute__((__visibility__("default")))
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#else
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#define __dll_export
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#endif
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#endif /* __dll_export */
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#ifndef __dll_import
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#if defined(_WIN32) || defined(__CYGWIN__)
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#if defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__dllimport__)
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#define __dll_import __attribute__((__dllimport__))
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER)
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#define __dll_import __declspec(dllimport)
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#else
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#define __dll_import
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#endif
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#else
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#define __dll_import
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#endif
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#endif /* __dll_import */
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/** \brief Auxiliary macro for robustly define the both inline version of API
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* function and non-inline fallback dll-exported version for applications linked
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* with old version of libmdbx, with a strictly ODR-common implementation. */
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#if defined(LIBMDBX_INTERNALS) && !defined(LIBMDBX_NO_EXPORTS_LEGACY_API)
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#define LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(TYPE, NAME, ARGS) \
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/* proto of exported which uses common impl */ LIBMDBX_API TYPE NAME ARGS; \
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/* definition of common impl */ static __inline TYPE __inline_##NAME ARGS
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#else
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#define LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(TYPE, NAME, ARGS) static __inline TYPE NAME ARGS
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#endif /* LIBMDBX_INLINE_API */
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/** \brief Converts a macro argument into a string constant. */
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#ifndef MDBX_STRINGIFY
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#define MDBX_STRINGIFY_HELPER(x) #x
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#define MDBX_STRINGIFY(x) MDBX_STRINGIFY_HELPER(x)
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#endif /* MDBX_STRINGIFY */
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/*----------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
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#ifndef __cplusplus
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#ifndef bool
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#define bool _Bool
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#endif
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#ifndef true
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#define true (1)
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#endif
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#ifndef false
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#define false (0)
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#endif
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#endif /* bool without __cplusplus */
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#if !defined(DOXYGEN) && (!defined(__cpp_noexcept_function_type) || \
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__cpp_noexcept_function_type < 201510L)
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#define MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT
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#else
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#define MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT noexcept
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#endif /* MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT */
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/* Workaround for old compilers without properly support for constexpr. */
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#if !defined(__cplusplus)
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#define MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR __inline
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#define MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR_VAR const
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#elif !defined(DOXYGEN) && \
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(!defined(__cpp_constexpr) || __cpp_constexpr < 200704L || \
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(defined(__LCC__) && __LCC__ < 124) || \
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(defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ * 100 + __GNUC_MINOR__ < 407) && \
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!defined(__clang__) && !defined(__LCC__)) || \
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(defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER < 1910) || \
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(defined(__clang__) && __clang_major__ < 4))
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#define MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR inline
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#define MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR_VAR const
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#else
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#define MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR constexpr
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#define MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR_VAR constexpr
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#endif /* MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR */
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#if !defined(__cplusplus)
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#define MDBX_CXX11_CONSTEXPR __inline
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#define MDBX_CXX11_CONSTEXPR_VAR const
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#elif !defined(DOXYGEN) && \
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(!defined(__cpp_constexpr) || __cpp_constexpr < 201304 || \
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(defined(__LCC__) && __LCC__ < 124) || \
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(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ < 6 && !defined(__clang__) && \
|
|
!defined(__LCC__)) || \
|
|
(defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER < 1910) || \
|
|
(defined(__clang__) && __clang_major__ < 5))
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX11_CONSTEXPR inline
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX11_CONSTEXPR_VAR const
|
|
#else
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX11_CONSTEXPR constexpr
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX11_CONSTEXPR_VAR constexpr
|
|
#endif /* MDBX_CXX11_CONSTEXPR */
|
|
|
|
#if !defined(__cplusplus)
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR __inline
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR_VAR const
|
|
#elif defined(DOXYGEN) || \
|
|
defined(__cpp_constexpr) && __cpp_constexpr >= 201304L && \
|
|
((defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER >= 1910) || \
|
|
(defined(__clang__) && __clang_major__ > 4) || \
|
|
(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ > 6) || \
|
|
(!defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__) && !defined(_MSC_VER)))
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR constexpr
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR_VAR constexpr
|
|
#else
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR inline
|
|
#define MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR_VAR const
|
|
#endif /* MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR */
|
|
|
|
#if defined(__noreturn)
|
|
#define MDBX_NORETURN __noreturn
|
|
#elif defined(_Noreturn)
|
|
#define MDBX_NORETURN _Noreturn
|
|
#elif defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__noreturn__)
|
|
#define MDBX_NORETURN __attribute__((__noreturn__))
|
|
#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__)
|
|
#define MDBX_NORETURN __declspec(noreturn)
|
|
#else
|
|
#define MDBX_NORETURN
|
|
#endif /* MDBX_NORETURN */
|
|
|
|
#ifndef MDBX_PRINTF_ARGS
|
|
#if defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__format__)
|
|
#define MDBX_PRINTF_ARGS(format_index, first_arg) \
|
|
__attribute__((__format__(__printf__, format_index, first_arg)))
|
|
#else
|
|
#define MDBX_PRINTF_ARGS(format_index, first_arg)
|
|
#endif
|
|
#endif /* MDBX_PRINTF_ARGS */
|
|
|
|
#if defined(DOXYGEN) || \
|
|
(defined(__cplusplus) && __cplusplus >= 201603 && \
|
|
__has_cpp_attribute(maybe_unused) && \
|
|
__has_cpp_attribute(maybe_unused) >= 201603) || \
|
|
(!defined(__cplusplus) && defined(__STDC_VERSION__) && \
|
|
__STDC_VERSION__ > 202005L)
|
|
#define MDBX_MAYBE_UNUSED [[maybe_unused]]
|
|
#elif defined(__GNUC__) || __has_attribute(__unused__)
|
|
#define MDBX_MAYBE_UNUSED __attribute__((__unused__))
|
|
#else
|
|
#define MDBX_MAYBE_UNUSED
|
|
#endif /* MDBX_MAYBE_UNUSED */
|
|
|
|
/* Oh, below are some songs and dances since:
|
|
* - C++ requires explicit definition of the necessary operators.
|
|
* - the proper implementation of DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS for C++ required
|
|
* the constexpr feature which is broken in most old compilers;
|
|
* - DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS may be defined broken as in the Windows SDK. */
|
|
#ifndef DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS
|
|
|
|
#ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
#if !defined(__cpp_constexpr) || __cpp_constexpr < 200704L || \
|
|
(defined(__LCC__) && __LCC__ < 124) || \
|
|
(defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ * 100 + __GNUC_MINOR__ < 407) && \
|
|
!defined(__clang__) && !defined(__LCC__)) || \
|
|
(defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER < 1910) || \
|
|
(defined(__clang__) && __clang_major__ < 4)
|
|
/* The constexpr feature is not available or (may be) broken */
|
|
#define CONSTEXPR_ENUM_FLAGS_OPERATIONS 0
|
|
#else
|
|
/* C always allows these operators for enums */
|
|
#define CONSTEXPR_ENUM_FLAGS_OPERATIONS 1
|
|
#endif /* __cpp_constexpr */
|
|
|
|
/// Define operator overloads to enable bit operations on enum values that are
|
|
/// used to define flags (based on Microsoft's DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS).
|
|
#define DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(ENUM) \
|
|
extern "C++" { \
|
|
MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR ENUM operator|(ENUM a, ENUM b) { \
|
|
return ENUM(unsigned(a) | unsigned(b)); \
|
|
} \
|
|
MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR ENUM &operator|=(ENUM &a, ENUM b) { return a = a | b; } \
|
|
MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR ENUM operator&(ENUM a, ENUM b) { \
|
|
return ENUM(unsigned(a) & unsigned(b)); \
|
|
} \
|
|
MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR ENUM operator&(ENUM a, unsigned b) { \
|
|
return ENUM(unsigned(a) & b); \
|
|
} \
|
|
MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR ENUM operator&(unsigned a, ENUM b) { \
|
|
return ENUM(a & unsigned(b)); \
|
|
} \
|
|
MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR ENUM &operator&=(ENUM &a, ENUM b) { return a = a & b; } \
|
|
MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR ENUM &operator&=(ENUM &a, unsigned b) { \
|
|
return a = a & b; \
|
|
} \
|
|
MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR unsigned operator~(ENUM a) { return ~unsigned(a); } \
|
|
MDBX_CXX01_CONSTEXPR ENUM operator^(ENUM a, ENUM b) { \
|
|
return ENUM(unsigned(a) ^ unsigned(b)); \
|
|
} \
|
|
MDBX_CXX14_CONSTEXPR ENUM &operator^=(ENUM &a, ENUM b) { return a = a ^ b; } \
|
|
}
|
|
#else /* __cplusplus */
|
|
/* nope for C since it always allows these operators for enums */
|
|
#define DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(ENUM)
|
|
#define CONSTEXPR_ENUM_FLAGS_OPERATIONS 1
|
|
#endif /* !__cplusplus */
|
|
|
|
#elif !defined(CONSTEXPR_ENUM_FLAGS_OPERATIONS)
|
|
|
|
#ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
/* DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS may be defined broken as in the Windows SDK */
|
|
#define CONSTEXPR_ENUM_FLAGS_OPERATIONS 0
|
|
#else
|
|
/* C always allows these operators for enums */
|
|
#define CONSTEXPR_ENUM_FLAGS_OPERATIONS 1
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
#endif /* DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS */
|
|
|
|
/** @} end of Common Macros */
|
|
|
|
/*----------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
|
|
|
|
/** \addtogroup c_api
|
|
* @{ */
|
|
|
|
#ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
extern "C" {
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/* MDBX version 0.10.x */
|
|
#define MDBX_VERSION_MAJOR 0
|
|
#define MDBX_VERSION_MINOR 10
|
|
|
|
#ifndef LIBMDBX_API
|
|
#if defined(LIBMDBX_EXPORTS)
|
|
#define LIBMDBX_API __dll_export
|
|
#elif defined(LIBMDBX_IMPORTS)
|
|
#define LIBMDBX_API __dll_import
|
|
#else
|
|
#define LIBMDBX_API
|
|
#endif
|
|
#endif /* LIBMDBX_API */
|
|
|
|
#ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
#if defined(__clang__) || __has_attribute(type_visibility)
|
|
#define LIBMDBX_API_TYPE LIBMDBX_API __attribute__((type_visibility("default")))
|
|
#else
|
|
#define LIBMDBX_API_TYPE LIBMDBX_API
|
|
#endif
|
|
#else
|
|
#define LIBMDBX_API_TYPE
|
|
#endif /* LIBMDBX_API_TYPE */
|
|
|
|
#if defined(LIBMDBX_IMPORTS)
|
|
#define LIBMDBX_VERINFO_API __dll_import
|
|
#else
|
|
#define LIBMDBX_VERINFO_API __dll_export
|
|
#endif /* LIBMDBX_VERINFO_API */
|
|
|
|
/** \brief libmdbx version information */
|
|
extern LIBMDBX_VERINFO_API const struct MDBX_version_info {
|
|
uint8_t major; /**< Major version number */
|
|
uint8_t minor; /**< Minor version number */
|
|
uint16_t release; /**< Release number of Major.Minor */
|
|
uint32_t revision; /**< Revision number of Release */
|
|
struct {
|
|
const char *datetime; /**< committer date, strict ISO-8601 format */
|
|
const char *tree; /**< commit hash (hexadecimal digits) */
|
|
const char *commit; /**< tree hash, i.e. digest of the source code */
|
|
const char *describe; /**< git-describe string */
|
|
} git; /**< source information from git */
|
|
const char *sourcery; /**< sourcery anchor for pinning */
|
|
} /** \brief libmdbx version information */ mdbx_version;
|
|
|
|
/** \brief libmdbx build information
|
|
* \attention Some strings could be NULL in case no corresponding information
|
|
* was provided at build time (i.e. flags). */
|
|
extern LIBMDBX_VERINFO_API const struct MDBX_build_info {
|
|
const char *datetime; /**< build timestamp (ISO-8601 or __DATE__ __TIME__) */
|
|
const char *target; /**< cpu/arch-system-config triplet */
|
|
const char *options; /**< mdbx-related options */
|
|
const char *compiler; /**< compiler */
|
|
const char *flags; /**< CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS */
|
|
} /** \brief libmdbx build information */ mdbx_build;
|
|
|
|
#if (defined(_WIN32) || defined(_WIN64)) && !MDBX_BUILD_SHARED_LIBRARY
|
|
/* MDBX internally uses global and thread local storage destructors to
|
|
* automatically (de)initialization, releasing reader lock table slots
|
|
* and so on.
|
|
*
|
|
* If MDBX builded as a DLL this is done out-of-the-box by DllEntry() function,
|
|
* which called automatically by Windows core with passing corresponding reason
|
|
* argument.
|
|
*
|
|
* Otherwise, if MDBX was builded not as a DLL, some black magic
|
|
* may be required depending of Windows version:
|
|
*
|
|
* - Modern Windows versions, including Windows Vista and later, provides
|
|
* support for "TLS Directory" (e.g .CRT$XL[A-Z] sections in executable
|
|
* or dll file). In this case, MDBX capable of doing all automatically,
|
|
* therefore you DON'T NEED to call mdbx_module_handler()
|
|
* so the MDBX_MANUAL_MODULE_HANDLER defined as 0.
|
|
*
|
|
* - Obsolete versions of Windows, prior to Windows Vista, REQUIRES calling
|
|
* mdbx_module_handler() manually from corresponding DllMain() or WinMain()
|
|
* of your DLL or application,
|
|
* so the MDBX_MANUAL_MODULE_HANDLER defined as 1.
|
|
*
|
|
* Therefore, building MDBX as a DLL is recommended for all version of Windows.
|
|
* So, if you doubt, just build MDBX as the separate DLL and don't care about
|
|
* the MDBX_MANUAL_MODULE_HANDLER. */
|
|
|
|
#ifndef _WIN32_WINNT
|
|
#error Non-dll build libmdbx requires target Windows version \
|
|
to be explicitly defined via _WIN32_WINNT for properly \
|
|
handling thread local storage destructors.
|
|
#endif /* _WIN32_WINNT */
|
|
|
|
#if _WIN32_WINNT >= 0x0600 /* Windows Vista */
|
|
/* As described above mdbx_module_handler() is NOT needed for Windows Vista
|
|
* and later. */
|
|
#define MDBX_MANUAL_MODULE_HANDLER 0
|
|
#else
|
|
/* As described above mdbx_module_handler() IS REQUIRED for Windows versions
|
|
* prior to Windows Vista. */
|
|
#define MDBX_MANUAL_MODULE_HANDLER 1
|
|
void LIBMDBX_API NTAPI mdbx_module_handler(PVOID module, DWORD reason,
|
|
PVOID reserved);
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
#endif /* Windows && !DLL && MDBX_MANUAL_MODULE_HANDLER */
|
|
|
|
/* OPACITY STRUCTURES *********************************************************/
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Opaque structure for a database environment.
|
|
* \details An environment supports multiple key-value sub-databases (aka
|
|
* key-value spaces or tables), all residing in the same shared-memory map.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_create() \see mdbx_env_close() */
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_env MDBX_env;
|
|
#else
|
|
struct MDBX_env;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Opaque structure for a transaction handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
* \details All database operations require a transaction handle. Transactions
|
|
* may be read-only or read-write.
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_begin() \see mdbx_txn_commit() \see mdbx_txn_abort() */
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_txn MDBX_txn;
|
|
#else
|
|
struct MDBX_txn;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief A handle for an individual database (key-value spaces) in the
|
|
* environment. \ingroup c_dbi \details Zero handle is used internally (hidden
|
|
* Garbage Collection DB). So, any valid DBI-handle great than 0 and less than
|
|
* or equal \ref MDBX_MAX_DBI. \see mdbx_dbi_open() \see mdbx_dbi_close() */
|
|
typedef uint32_t MDBX_dbi;
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Opaque structure for navigating through a database
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
* \see mdbx_cursor_create() \see mdbx_cursor_bind() \see mdbx_cursor_close()
|
|
*/
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_cursor MDBX_cursor;
|
|
#else
|
|
struct MDBX_cursor;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Generic structure used for passing keys and data in and out of the
|
|
* database.
|
|
* \anchor MDBX_val \see mdbx::slice \see mdbx::buffer
|
|
*
|
|
* \details 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 0 and \ref mdbx_env_get_maxkeysize() inclusive.
|
|
* The same applies to data sizes in databases with the \ref MDBX_DUPSORT flag.
|
|
* Other data items can in theory be from 0 to \ref MDBX_MAXDATASIZE bytes long.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note The notable difference between MDBX and LMDB is that MDBX support zero
|
|
* length keys. */
|
|
#ifndef HAVE_STRUCT_IOVEC
|
|
struct iovec {
|
|
void *iov_base; /**< pointer to some data */
|
|
size_t iov_len; /**< the length of data in bytes */
|
|
};
|
|
#define HAVE_STRUCT_IOVEC
|
|
#endif /* HAVE_STRUCT_IOVEC */
|
|
|
|
#if defined(__sun) || defined(__SVR4) || defined(__svr4__)
|
|
/* The `iov_len` is signed on Sun/Solaris.
|
|
* So define custom MDBX_val to avoid a lot of warnings. */
|
|
struct MDBX_val {
|
|
void *iov_base; /**< pointer to some data */
|
|
size_t iov_len; /**< the length of data in bytes */
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_val MDBX_val;
|
|
#endif
|
|
#else /* SunOS */
|
|
typedef struct iovec MDBX_val;
|
|
#endif /* ! SunOS */
|
|
|
|
enum MDBX_constants {
|
|
/** The hard limit for DBI handles */
|
|
MDBX_MAX_DBI = UINT32_C(32765),
|
|
|
|
/** The maximum size of a data item. */
|
|
MDBX_MAXDATASIZE = UINT32_C(0x7fff0000),
|
|
|
|
/** The minimal database page size in bytes. */
|
|
MDBX_MIN_PAGESIZE = 256,
|
|
|
|
/** The maximal database page size in bytes. */
|
|
MDBX_MAX_PAGESIZE = 65536,
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/* THE FILES *******************************************************************
|
|
* At the file system level, the environment corresponds to a pair of files. */
|
|
|
|
/** \brief The name of the lock file in the environment */
|
|
#define MDBX_LOCKNAME "/mdbx.lck"
|
|
/** \brief The name of the data file in the environment */
|
|
#define MDBX_DATANAME "/mdbx.dat"
|
|
|
|
/** \brief The suffix of the lock file when \ref MDBX_NOSUBDIR is used */
|
|
#define MDBX_LOCK_SUFFIX "-lck"
|
|
|
|
/* DEBUG & LOGGING ************************************************************/
|
|
|
|
/** \addtogroup c_debug
|
|
* \note Most of debug feature enabled only when libmdbx builded with
|
|
* \ref MDBX_DEBUG build option. @{ */
|
|
|
|
/** Log level (requires build libmdbx with \ref MDBX_DEBUG option) */
|
|
enum MDBX_log_level_t {
|
|
/** Critical conditions, i.e. assertion failures */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_FATAL = 0,
|
|
|
|
/** Enables logging for error conditions and \ref MDBX_LOG_FATAL */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_ERROR = 1,
|
|
|
|
/** Enables logging for warning conditions and \ref MDBX_LOG_ERROR ...
|
|
\ref MDBX_LOG_FATAL */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_WARN = 2,
|
|
|
|
/** Enables logging for normal but significant condition and
|
|
\ref MDBX_LOG_WARN ... \ref MDBX_LOG_FATAL */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_NOTICE = 3,
|
|
|
|
/** Enables logging for verbose informational and \ref MDBX_LOG_NOTICE ...
|
|
\ref MDBX_LOG_FATAL */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_VERBOSE = 4,
|
|
|
|
/** Enables logging for debug-level messages and \ref MDBX_LOG_VERBOSE ...
|
|
\ref MDBX_LOG_FATAL */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_DEBUG = 5,
|
|
|
|
/** Enables logging for trace debug-level messages and \ref MDBX_LOG_DEBUG ...
|
|
\ref MDBX_LOG_FATAL */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_TRACE = 6,
|
|
|
|
/** Enables extra debug-level messages (dump pgno lists)
|
|
and all other log-messages */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_EXTRA = 7,
|
|
|
|
/** for \ref mdbx_setup_debug() only: Don't change current settings */
|
|
MDBX_LOG_DONTCHANGE = -1
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_log_level_t MDBX_log_level_t;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Runtime debug flags
|
|
*
|
|
* \details `MDBX_DBG_DUMP` and `MDBX_DBG_LEGACY_MULTIOPEN` always have an
|
|
* effect, but `MDBX_DBG_ASSERT`, `MDBX_DBG_AUDIT` and `MDBX_DBG_JITTER` only if
|
|
* libmdbx builded with \ref MDBX_DEBUG. */
|
|
enum MDBX_debug_flags_t {
|
|
/** Enable assertion checks.
|
|
* Requires build with \ref MDBX_DEBUG > 0 */
|
|
MDBX_DBG_ASSERT = 1,
|
|
|
|
/** Enable pages usage audit at commit transactions.
|
|
* Requires build with \ref MDBX_DEBUG > 0 */
|
|
MDBX_DBG_AUDIT = 2,
|
|
|
|
/** Enable small random delays in critical points.
|
|
* Requires build with \ref MDBX_DEBUG > 0 */
|
|
MDBX_DBG_JITTER = 4,
|
|
|
|
/** Include or not meta-pages in coredump files.
|
|
* May affect performance in \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP mode */
|
|
MDBX_DBG_DUMP = 8,
|
|
|
|
/** Allow multi-opening environment(s) */
|
|
MDBX_DBG_LEGACY_MULTIOPEN = 16,
|
|
|
|
/** Allow read and write transactions overlapping for the same thread */
|
|
MDBX_DBG_LEGACY_OVERLAP = 32,
|
|
|
|
/** for mdbx_setup_debug() only: Don't change current settings */
|
|
MDBX_DBG_DONTCHANGE = -1
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_debug_flags_t MDBX_debug_flags_t;
|
|
#else
|
|
DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(MDBX_debug_flags_t)
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief A debug-logger callback function,
|
|
* called before printing the message and aborting.
|
|
* \see mdbx_setup_debug()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] msg The assertion message, not including newline. */
|
|
typedef void MDBX_debug_func(MDBX_log_level_t loglevel, const char *function,
|
|
int line, const char *fmt,
|
|
va_list args) MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT;
|
|
|
|
/** \brief The "don't change `logger`" value for mdbx_setup_debug() */
|
|
#define MDBX_LOGGER_DONTCHANGE ((MDBX_debug_func *)(intptr_t)-1)
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Setup global log-level, debug options and debug logger.
|
|
* \returns The previously `debug_flags` in the 0-15 bits
|
|
* and `log_level` in the 16-31 bits. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_setup_debug(MDBX_log_level_t log_level,
|
|
MDBX_debug_flags_t debug_flags,
|
|
MDBX_debug_func *logger);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief A callback function for most MDBX assert() failures,
|
|
* called before printing the message and aborting.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_assert()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] msg The assertion message, not including newline. */
|
|
typedef void MDBX_assert_func(const MDBX_env *env, const char *msg,
|
|
const char *function,
|
|
unsigned line) MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT;
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Set or reset the assert() callback of the environment.
|
|
*
|
|
* Does nothing if libmdbx was built with MDBX_DEBUG=0 or with NDEBUG,
|
|
* and will return `MDBX_ENOSYS` in such case.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] func An MDBX_assert_func function, or 0.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_set_assert(MDBX_env *env, MDBX_assert_func *func);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Dump given MDBX_val to the buffer
|
|
*
|
|
* Dumps it as string if value is printable (all bytes in the range 0x20..0x7E),
|
|
* otherwise made hexadecimal dump. Requires at least 4 byte length buffer.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns One of:
|
|
* - NULL if given buffer size less than 4 bytes;
|
|
* - pointer to constant string if given value NULL or empty;
|
|
* - otherwise pointer to given buffer. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API const char *mdbx_dump_val(const MDBX_val *key, char *const buf,
|
|
const size_t bufsize);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Panics with message and causes abnormal process termination. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API void mdbx_panic(const char *fmt, ...) MDBX_PRINTF_ARGS(1, 2);
|
|
|
|
/** @} end of logging & debug */
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Environment flags
|
|
* \ingroup c_opening
|
|
* \anchor env_flags
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_open() \see mdbx_env_set_flags() */
|
|
enum MDBX_env_flags_t {
|
|
MDBX_ENV_DEFAULTS = 0,
|
|
|
|
/** No environment directory.
|
|
*
|
|
* By default, MDBX creates its environment in a directory whose pathname is
|
|
* given in path, and creates its data and lock files under that directory.
|
|
* With this option, path is used as-is for the database main data file.
|
|
* The database lock file is the path with "-lck" appended.
|
|
*
|
|
* - with `MDBX_NOSUBDIR` = in a filesystem we have the pair of MDBX-files
|
|
* which names derived from given pathname by appending predefined suffixes.
|
|
*
|
|
* - without `MDBX_NOSUBDIR` = in a filesystem we have the MDBX-directory with
|
|
* given pathname, within that a pair of MDBX-files with predefined names.
|
|
*
|
|
* This flag affects only at new environment creating by \ref mdbx_env_open(),
|
|
* otherwise at opening an existing environment libmdbx will choice this
|
|
* automatically. */
|
|
MDBX_NOSUBDIR = UINT32_C(0x4000),
|
|
|
|
/** Read only mode.
|
|
*
|
|
* Open the environment in read-only mode. No write operations will be
|
|
* allowed. MDBX will still modify the lock file - except on read-only
|
|
* filesystems, where MDBX does not use locks.
|
|
*
|
|
* - with `MDBX_RDONLY` = open environment in read-only mode.
|
|
* MDBX supports pure read-only mode (i.e. without opening LCK-file) only
|
|
* when environment directory and/or both files are not writable (and the
|
|
* LCK-file may be missing). In such case allowing file(s) to be placed
|
|
* on a network read-only share.
|
|
*
|
|
* - without `MDBX_RDONLY` = open environment in read-write mode.
|
|
*
|
|
* This flag affects only at environment opening but can't be changed after.
|
|
*/
|
|
MDBX_RDONLY = UINT32_C(0x20000),
|
|
|
|
/** Open environment in exclusive/monopolistic mode.
|
|
*
|
|
* `MDBX_EXCLUSIVE` flag can be used as a replacement for `MDB_NOLOCK`,
|
|
* which don't supported by MDBX.
|
|
* In this way, you can get the minimal overhead, but with the correct
|
|
* multi-process and multi-thread locking.
|
|
*
|
|
* - with `MDBX_EXCLUSIVE` = open environment in exclusive/monopolistic mode
|
|
* or return \ref MDBX_BUSY if environment already used by other process.
|
|
* The main feature of the exclusive mode is the ability to open the
|
|
* environment placed on a network share.
|
|
*
|
|
* - without `MDBX_EXCLUSIVE` = open environment in cooperative mode,
|
|
* i.e. for multi-process access/interaction/cooperation.
|
|
* The main requirements of the cooperative mode are:
|
|
*
|
|
* 1. data files MUST be placed in the LOCAL file system,
|
|
* but NOT on a network share.
|
|
* 2. environment MUST be opened only by LOCAL processes,
|
|
* but NOT over a network.
|
|
* 3. OS kernel (i.e. file system and memory mapping implementation) and
|
|
* all processes that open the given environment MUST be running
|
|
* in the physically single RAM with cache-coherency. The only
|
|
* exception for cache-consistency requirement is Linux on MIPS
|
|
* architecture, but this case has not been tested for a long time).
|
|
*
|
|
* This flag affects only at environment opening but can't be changed after.
|
|
*/
|
|
MDBX_EXCLUSIVE = UINT32_C(0x400000),
|
|
|
|
/** Using database/environment which already opened by another process(es).
|
|
*
|
|
* The `MDBX_ACCEDE` flag is useful to avoid \ref MDBX_INCOMPATIBLE error
|
|
* while opening the database/environment which is already used by another
|
|
* process(es) with unknown mode/flags. In such cases, if there is a
|
|
* difference in the specified flags (\ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC,
|
|
* \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC, \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC, \ref MDBX_LIFORECLAIM,
|
|
* \ref MDBX_COALESCE and \ref MDBX_NORDAHEAD), instead of returning an error,
|
|
* the database will be opened in a compatibility with the already used mode.
|
|
*
|
|
* `MDBX_ACCEDE` has no effect if the current process is the only one either
|
|
* opening the DB in read-only mode or other process(es) uses the DB in
|
|
* read-only mode. */
|
|
MDBX_ACCEDE = UINT32_C(0x40000000),
|
|
|
|
/** Map data into memory with write permission.
|
|
*
|
|
* Use a writeable memory map unless \ref MDBX_RDONLY is set. This uses fewer
|
|
* mallocs and requires much less work for tracking database pages, 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. Also adds the
|
|
* possibility for stray application writes thru pointers to silently
|
|
* corrupt the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* - with `MDBX_WRITEMAP` = all data will be mapped into memory in the
|
|
* read-write mode. This offers a significant performance benefit, since the
|
|
* data will be modified directly in mapped memory and then flushed to disk
|
|
* by single system call, without any memory management nor copying.
|
|
*
|
|
* - without `MDBX_WRITEMAP` = data will be mapped into memory in the
|
|
* read-only mode. This requires stocking all modified database pages in
|
|
* memory and then writing them to disk through file operations.
|
|
*
|
|
* \warning On the other hand, `MDBX_WRITEMAP` adds the possibility for stray
|
|
* application writes thru pointers to silently corrupt the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note The `MDBX_WRITEMAP` mode is incompatible with nested transactions,
|
|
* since this is unreasonable. I.e. nested transactions requires mallocation
|
|
* of database pages and more work for tracking ones, which neuters a
|
|
* performance boost caused by the `MDBX_WRITEMAP` mode.
|
|
*
|
|
* This flag affects only at environment opening but can't be changed after.
|
|
*/
|
|
MDBX_WRITEMAP = UINT32_C(0x80000),
|
|
|
|
/** Tie reader locktable slots to read-only transactions
|
|
* instead of to threads.
|
|
*
|
|
* Don't use Thread-Local Storage, instead tie reader locktable slots to
|
|
* \ref MDBX_txn objects instead of to threads. So, \ref mdbx_txn_reset()
|
|
* keeps the slot reserved for the \ref MDBX_txn object. A thread may use
|
|
* parallel read-only transactions. And a read-only transaction may span
|
|
* threads if you 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 MDBX's write locking is unaware of
|
|
* the user threads.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note Regardless to `MDBX_NOTLS` flag a write transaction entirely should
|
|
* always be used in one thread from start to finish. MDBX checks this in a
|
|
* reasonable manner and return the \ref MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH error in rules
|
|
* violation.
|
|
*
|
|
* This flag affects only at environment opening but can't be changed after.
|
|
*/
|
|
MDBX_NOTLS = UINT32_C(0x200000),
|
|
|
|
/** Don't do readahead.
|
|
*
|
|
* 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.
|
|
*
|
|
* By default libmdbx dynamically enables/disables readahead depending on
|
|
* the actual database size and currently available memory. On the other
|
|
* hand, such automation has some limitation, i.e. could be performed only
|
|
* when DB size changing but can't tracks and reacts changing a free RAM
|
|
* availability, since it changes independently and asynchronously.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note The mdbx_is_readahead_reasonable() function allows to quickly find
|
|
* out whether to use readahead or not based on the size of the data and the
|
|
* amount of available memory.
|
|
*
|
|
* This flag affects only at environment opening and can't be changed after.
|
|
*/
|
|
MDBX_NORDAHEAD = UINT32_C(0x800000),
|
|
|
|
/** Don't initialize malloc'ed memory before writing to datafile.
|
|
*
|
|
* Don't initialize malloc'ed 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'ed 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 \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP, which writes directly to the mmap instead of using
|
|
* malloc for pages. The initialization is also skipped if \ref MDBX_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 `mdbx_env_set_flags()`. */
|
|
MDBX_NOMEMINIT = UINT32_C(0x1000000),
|
|
|
|
/** Aims to coalesce a Garbage Collection items.
|
|
*
|
|
* With `MDBX_COALESCE` flag MDBX will aims to coalesce items while recycling
|
|
* a Garbage Collection. Technically, when possible short lists of pages
|
|
* will be combined into longer ones, but to fit on one database page. As a
|
|
* result, there will be fewer items in Garbage Collection and a page lists
|
|
* are longer, which slightly increases the likelihood of returning pages to
|
|
* Unallocated space and reducing the database file.
|
|
*
|
|
* This flag may be changed at any time using mdbx_env_set_flags(). */
|
|
MDBX_COALESCE = UINT32_C(0x2000000),
|
|
|
|
/** LIFO policy for recycling a Garbage Collection items.
|
|
*
|
|
* `MDBX_LIFORECLAIM` flag turns on LIFO policy for recycling a Garbage
|
|
* Collection items, instead of FIFO by default. On systems with a disk
|
|
* write-back cache, this can significantly increase write performance, up
|
|
* to several times in a best case scenario.
|
|
*
|
|
* LIFO recycling policy means that for reuse pages will be taken which became
|
|
* unused the lastest (i.e. just now or most recently). Therefore the loop of
|
|
* database pages circulation becomes as short as possible. In other words,
|
|
* the number of pages, that are overwritten in memory and on disk during a
|
|
* series of write transactions, will be as small as possible. Thus creates
|
|
* ideal conditions for the efficient operation of the disk write-back cache.
|
|
*
|
|
* \ref MDBX_LIFORECLAIM is compatible with all no-sync flags, but gives NO
|
|
* noticeable impact in combination with \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC or
|
|
* \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC. Because MDBX will reused pages only before the
|
|
* last "steady" MVCC-snapshot, i.e. the loop length of database pages
|
|
* circulation will be mostly defined by frequency of calling
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_sync() rather than LIFO and FIFO difference.
|
|
*
|
|
* This flag may be changed at any time using mdbx_env_set_flags(). */
|
|
MDBX_LIFORECLAIM = UINT32_C(0x4000000),
|
|
|
|
/** Debugging option, fill/perturb released pages. */
|
|
MDBX_PAGEPERTURB = UINT32_C(0x8000000),
|
|
|
|
/* SYNC MODES****************************************************************/
|
|
/** \defgroup sync_modes SYNC MODES
|
|
*
|
|
* \attention Using any combination of \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC, \ref
|
|
* MDBX_NOMETASYNC and especially \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC is always a deal to
|
|
* reduce durability for gain write performance. You must know exactly what
|
|
* you are doing and what risks you are taking!
|
|
*
|
|
* \note for LMDB users: \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC is NOT similar to LMDB_NOSYNC,
|
|
* but \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC is exactly match LMDB_NOSYNC. See details
|
|
* below.
|
|
*
|
|
* THE SCENE:
|
|
* - The DAT-file contains several MVCC-snapshots of B-tree at same time,
|
|
* each of those B-tree has its own root page.
|
|
* - Each of meta pages at the beginning of the DAT file contains a
|
|
* pointer to the root page of B-tree which is the result of the particular
|
|
* transaction, and a number of this transaction.
|
|
* - For data durability, MDBX must first write all MVCC-snapshot data
|
|
* pages and ensure that are written to the disk, then update a meta page
|
|
* with the new transaction number and a pointer to the corresponding new
|
|
* root page, and flush any buffers yet again.
|
|
* - Thus during commit a I/O buffers should be flushed to the disk twice;
|
|
* i.e. fdatasync(), FlushFileBuffers() or similar syscall should be
|
|
* called twice for each commit. This is very expensive for performance,
|
|
* but guaranteed durability even on unexpected system failure or power
|
|
* outage. Of course, provided that the operating system and the
|
|
* underlying hardware (e.g. disk) work correctly.
|
|
*
|
|
* TRADE-OFF:
|
|
* By skipping some stages described above, you can significantly benefit in
|
|
* speed, while partially or completely losing in the guarantee of data
|
|
* durability and/or consistency in the event of system or power failure.
|
|
* Moreover, if for any reason disk write order is not preserved, then at
|
|
* moment of a system crash, a meta-page with a pointer to the new B-tree may
|
|
* be written to disk, while the itself B-tree not yet. In that case, the
|
|
* database will be corrupted!
|
|
*
|
|
* \see MDBX_SYNC_DURABLE \see MDBX_NOMETASYNC \see MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC
|
|
* \see MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC
|
|
*
|
|
* @{ */
|
|
|
|
/** Default robust and durable sync mode.
|
|
*
|
|
* Metadata is written and flushed to disk after a data is written and
|
|
* flushed, which guarantees the integrity of the database in the event
|
|
* of a crash at any time.
|
|
*
|
|
* \attention Please do not use other modes until you have studied all the
|
|
* details and are sure. Otherwise, you may lose your users' data, as happens
|
|
* in [Miranda NG](https://www.miranda-ng.org/) messenger. */
|
|
MDBX_SYNC_DURABLE = 0,
|
|
|
|
/** Don't sync the meta-page after commit.
|
|
*
|
|
* Flush system buffers to disk only once per transaction commit, omit the
|
|
* metadata flush. Defer that until the system flushes files to disk,
|
|
* or next non-\ref MDBX_RDONLY commit or \ref mdbx_env_sync(). Depending on
|
|
* the platform and hardware, with \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC you may get a doubling
|
|
* of write performance.
|
|
*
|
|
* This trade-off 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.
|
|
*
|
|
* `MDBX_NOMETASYNC` flag may be changed at any time using
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_flags() or by passing to \ref mdbx_txn_begin() for
|
|
* particular write transaction. \see sync_modes */
|
|
MDBX_NOMETASYNC = UINT32_C(0x40000),
|
|
|
|
/** Don't sync anything but keep previous steady commits.
|
|
*
|
|
* Like \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC the `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` flag disable similarly
|
|
* flush system buffers to disk when committing a transaction. But there is a
|
|
* huge difference in how are recycled the MVCC snapshots corresponding to
|
|
* previous "steady" transactions (see below).
|
|
*
|
|
* With \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP the `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` instructs MDBX to use
|
|
* asynchronous mmap-flushes to disk. Asynchronous mmap-flushes means that
|
|
* actually all writes will scheduled and performed by operation system on it
|
|
* own manner, i.e. unordered. MDBX itself just notify operating system that
|
|
* it would be nice to write data to disk, but no more.
|
|
*
|
|
* Depending on the platform and hardware, with `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` you may get
|
|
* a multiple increase of write performance, even 10 times or more.
|
|
*
|
|
* In contrast to \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC mode, with `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` flag
|
|
* MDBX will keeps untouched pages within B-tree of the last transaction
|
|
* "steady" which was synced to disk completely. This has big implications for
|
|
* both data durability and (unfortunately) performance:
|
|
* - a system crash can't corrupt the database, but you will lose the last
|
|
* transactions; because MDBX will rollback to last steady commit since it
|
|
* kept explicitly.
|
|
* - the last steady transaction makes an effect similar to "long-lived" read
|
|
* transaction (see above in the \ref restrictions section) since prevents
|
|
* reuse of pages freed by newer write transactions, thus the any data
|
|
* changes will be placed in newly allocated pages.
|
|
* - to avoid rapid database growth, the system will sync data and issue
|
|
* a steady commit-point to resume reuse pages, each time there is
|
|
* insufficient space and before increasing the size of the file on disk.
|
|
*
|
|
* In other words, with `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` flag MDBX insures you from the
|
|
* whole database corruption, at the cost increasing database size and/or
|
|
* number of disk IOPs. So, `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` flag could be used with
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_sync() as alternatively for batch committing or nested
|
|
* transaction (in some cases). As well, auto-sync feature exposed by
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_syncbytes() and \ref mdbx_env_set_syncperiod() functions
|
|
* could be very useful with `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` flag.
|
|
*
|
|
* The number and volume of of disk IOPs with MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC flag will
|
|
* exactly the as without any no-sync flags. However, you should expect a
|
|
* larger process's [work set](https://bit.ly/2kA2tFX) and significantly worse
|
|
* a [locality of reference](https://bit.ly/2mbYq2J), due to the more
|
|
* intensive allocation of previously unused pages and increase the size of
|
|
* the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` flag may be changed at any time using
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_flags() or by passing to \ref mdbx_txn_begin() for
|
|
* particular write transaction. */
|
|
MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC = UINT32_C(0x10000),
|
|
|
|
/** \deprecated Please use \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC instead of `MDBX_MAPASYNC`.
|
|
*
|
|
* Since version 0.9.x the `MDBX_MAPASYNC` is deprecated and has the same
|
|
* effect as \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC with \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP. This just API
|
|
* simplification is for convenience and clarity. */
|
|
MDBX_MAPASYNC = MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC,
|
|
|
|
/** Don't sync anything and wipe previous steady commits.
|
|
*
|
|
* Don't flush system buffers to disk when committing a transaction. This
|
|
* optimization means a system crash can corrupt the database, if buffers are
|
|
* not yet flushed to disk. Depending on the platform and hardware, with
|
|
* `MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC` you may get a multiple increase of write performance,
|
|
* even 100 times or more.
|
|
*
|
|
* If the filesystem preserves write order (which is rare and never provided
|
|
* unless explicitly noted) and the \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP and \ref
|
|
* MDBX_LIFORECLAIM flags are not used, then a system crash can't corrupt the
|
|
* database, but you can lose the last transactions, if at least one buffer is
|
|
* not yet flushed to disk. The risk is governed by how often the system
|
|
* flushes dirty buffers to disk and how often \ref mdbx_env_sync() is called.
|
|
* So, 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.
|
|
*
|
|
* Otherwise, if the filesystem not preserves write order (which is
|
|
* typically) or \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP or \ref MDBX_LIFORECLAIM flags are used,
|
|
* you should expect the corrupted database after a system crash.
|
|
*
|
|
* So, most important thing about `MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC`:
|
|
* - a system crash immediately after commit the write transaction
|
|
* high likely lead to database corruption.
|
|
* - successful completion of mdbx_env_sync(force = true) after one or
|
|
* more committed transactions guarantees consistency and durability.
|
|
* - BUT by committing two or more transactions you back database into
|
|
* a weak state, in which a system crash may lead to database corruption!
|
|
* In case single transaction after mdbx_env_sync, you may lose transaction
|
|
* itself, but not a whole database.
|
|
*
|
|
* Nevertheless, `MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC` provides "weak" durability in case
|
|
* of an application crash (but no durability on system failure), and
|
|
* therefore may be very useful in scenarios where data durability is
|
|
* not required over a system failure (e.g for short-lived data), or if you
|
|
* can take such risk.
|
|
*
|
|
* `MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC` flag may be changed at any time using
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_flags(), but don't has effect if passed to
|
|
* \ref mdbx_txn_begin() for particular write transaction. \see sync_modes */
|
|
MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC = MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC | UINT32_C(0x100000),
|
|
|
|
/** @} end of SYNC MODES */
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_opening */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_env_flags_t MDBX_env_flags_t;
|
|
#else
|
|
DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(MDBX_env_flags_t)
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** Transaction flags
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
* \anchor txn_flags
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_begin() \see mdbx_txn_flags() */
|
|
enum MDBX_txn_flags_t {
|
|
/** Start read-write transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* Only one write transaction may be active at a time. Writes are fully
|
|
* serialized, which guarantees that writers can never deadlock. */
|
|
MDBX_TXN_READWRITE = 0,
|
|
|
|
/** Start read-only transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* There can be multiple read-only transactions simultaneously that do not
|
|
* block each other and a write transactions. */
|
|
MDBX_TXN_RDONLY = MDBX_RDONLY,
|
|
|
|
/** Prepare but not start read-only transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* Transaction will not be started immediately, but created transaction handle
|
|
* will be ready for use with \ref mdbx_txn_renew(). This flag allows to
|
|
* preallocate memory and assign a reader slot, thus avoiding these operations
|
|
* at the next start of the transaction. */
|
|
#if CONSTEXPR_ENUM_FLAGS_OPERATIONS || defined(DOXYGEN)
|
|
MDBX_TXN_RDONLY_PREPARE = MDBX_RDONLY | MDBX_NOMEMINIT,
|
|
#else
|
|
MDBX_TXN_RDONLY_PREPARE = uint32_t(MDBX_RDONLY) | uint32_t(MDBX_NOMEMINIT),
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** Do not block when starting a write transaction. */
|
|
MDBX_TXN_TRY = UINT32_C(0x10000000),
|
|
|
|
/** Exactly the same as \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC,
|
|
* but for this transaction only */
|
|
MDBX_TXN_NOMETASYNC = MDBX_NOMETASYNC,
|
|
|
|
/** Exactly the same as \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC,
|
|
* but for this transaction only */
|
|
MDBX_TXN_NOSYNC = MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_txn_flags_t MDBX_txn_flags_t;
|
|
#else
|
|
DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(MDBX_txn_flags_t)
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Database flags
|
|
* \ingroup c_dbi
|
|
* \anchor db_flags
|
|
* \see mdbx_dbi_open() */
|
|
enum MDBX_db_flags_t {
|
|
MDBX_DB_DEFAULTS = 0,
|
|
|
|
/** Use reverse string keys */
|
|
MDBX_REVERSEKEY = UINT32_C(0x02),
|
|
|
|
/** Use sorted duplicates, i.e. allow multi-values */
|
|
MDBX_DUPSORT = UINT32_C(0x04),
|
|
|
|
/** Numeric keys in native byte order either uint32_t or uint64_t. The keys
|
|
* must all be of the same size and must be aligned while passing as
|
|
* arguments. */
|
|
MDBX_INTEGERKEY = UINT32_C(0x08),
|
|
|
|
/** With \ref MDBX_DUPSORT; sorted dup items have fixed size */
|
|
MDBX_DUPFIXED = UINT32_C(0x10),
|
|
|
|
/** With \ref MDBX_DUPSORT and with \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED; dups are fixed size
|
|
* \ref MDBX_INTEGERKEY -style integers. The data values must all be of the
|
|
* same size and must be aligned while passing as arguments. */
|
|
MDBX_INTEGERDUP = UINT32_C(0x20),
|
|
|
|
/** With \ref MDBX_DUPSORT; use reverse string comparison */
|
|
MDBX_REVERSEDUP = UINT32_C(0x40),
|
|
|
|
/** Create DB if not already existing */
|
|
MDBX_CREATE = UINT32_C(0x40000),
|
|
|
|
/** Opens an existing sub-database created with unknown flags.
|
|
*
|
|
* The `MDBX_DB_ACCEDE` flag is intend to open a existing sub-database which
|
|
* was created with unknown flags (\ref MDBX_REVERSEKEY, \ref MDBX_DUPSORT,
|
|
* \ref MDBX_INTEGERKEY, \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED, \ref MDBX_INTEGERDUP and
|
|
* \ref MDBX_REVERSEDUP).
|
|
*
|
|
* In such cases, instead of returning the \ref MDBX_INCOMPATIBLE error, the
|
|
* sub-database will be opened with flags which it was created, and then an
|
|
* application could determine the actual flags by \ref mdbx_dbi_flags(). */
|
|
MDBX_DB_ACCEDE = MDBX_ACCEDE
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_dbi */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_db_flags_t MDBX_db_flags_t;
|
|
#else
|
|
DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(MDBX_db_flags_t)
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Data changing flags
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
* \see \ref c_crud_hints "Quick reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations"
|
|
* \see mdbx_put() \see mdbx_cursor_put() \see mdbx_replace() */
|
|
enum MDBX_put_flags_t {
|
|
/** Upsertion by default (without any other flags) */
|
|
MDBX_UPSERT = 0,
|
|
|
|
/** For insertion: Don't write if the key already exists. */
|
|
MDBX_NOOVERWRITE = UINT32_C(0x10),
|
|
|
|
/** Has effect only for \ref MDBX_DUPSORT databases.
|
|
* For upsertion: don't write if the key-value pair already exist.
|
|
* For deletion: remove all values for key. */
|
|
MDBX_NODUPDATA = UINT32_C(0x20),
|
|
|
|
/** For upsertion: overwrite the current key/data pair.
|
|
* MDBX allows this flag for \ref mdbx_put() for explicit overwrite/update
|
|
* without insertion.
|
|
* For deletion: remove only single entry at the current cursor position. */
|
|
MDBX_CURRENT = UINT32_C(0x40),
|
|
|
|
/** Has effect only for \ref MDBX_DUPSORT databases.
|
|
* For deletion: remove all multi-values (aka duplicates) for given key.
|
|
* For upsertion: replace all multi-values for given key with a new one. */
|
|
MDBX_ALLDUPS = UINT32_C(0x80),
|
|
|
|
/** For upsertion: Just reserve space for data, don't copy it.
|
|
* Return a pointer to the reserved space. */
|
|
MDBX_RESERVE = UINT32_C(0x10000),
|
|
|
|
/** Data is being appended.
|
|
* Don't split full pages, continue on a new instead. */
|
|
MDBX_APPEND = UINT32_C(0x20000),
|
|
|
|
/** Has effect only for \ref MDBX_DUPSORT databases.
|
|
* Duplicate data is being appended.
|
|
* Don't split full pages, continue on a new instead. */
|
|
MDBX_APPENDDUP = UINT32_C(0x40000),
|
|
|
|
/** Only for \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED.
|
|
* Store multiple data items in one call. */
|
|
MDBX_MULTIPLE = UINT32_C(0x80000)
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_crud */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_put_flags_t MDBX_put_flags_t;
|
|
#else
|
|
DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(MDBX_put_flags_t)
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Environment copy flags
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_copy() \see mdbx_env_copy2fd() */
|
|
enum MDBX_copy_flags_t {
|
|
MDBX_CP_DEFAULTS = 0,
|
|
|
|
/** Copy with compactification: Omit free space from copy and renumber all
|
|
* pages sequentially */
|
|
MDBX_CP_COMPACT = 1u,
|
|
|
|
/** Force to make resizeable copy, i.e. dynamic size instead of fixed */
|
|
MDBX_CP_FORCE_DYNAMIC_SIZE = 2u
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_extra */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_copy_flags_t MDBX_copy_flags_t;
|
|
#else
|
|
DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(MDBX_copy_flags_t)
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Cursor operations
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
* This is the set of all operations for retrieving data using a cursor.
|
|
* \see mdbx_cursor_get() */
|
|
enum MDBX_cursor_op {
|
|
/** Position at first key/data item */
|
|
MDBX_FIRST,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPSORT -only: Position at first data item of current key. */
|
|
MDBX_FIRST_DUP,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPSORT -only: Position at key/data pair. */
|
|
MDBX_GET_BOTH,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPSORT -only: Position at given key and at first data greater
|
|
* than or equal to specified data. */
|
|
MDBX_GET_BOTH_RANGE,
|
|
|
|
/** Return key/data at current cursor position */
|
|
MDBX_GET_CURRENT,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED -only: Return up to a page of duplicate data items
|
|
* from current cursor position. Move cursor to prepare
|
|
* for \ref MDBX_NEXT_MULTIPLE. */
|
|
MDBX_GET_MULTIPLE,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at last key/data item */
|
|
MDBX_LAST,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPSORT -only: Position at last data item of current key. */
|
|
MDBX_LAST_DUP,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at next data item */
|
|
MDBX_NEXT,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPSORT -only: Position at next data item of current key. */
|
|
MDBX_NEXT_DUP,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED -only: Return up to a page of duplicate data items
|
|
* from next cursor position. Move cursor to prepare
|
|
* for `MDBX_NEXT_MULTIPLE`. */
|
|
MDBX_NEXT_MULTIPLE,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at first data item of next key */
|
|
MDBX_NEXT_NODUP,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at previous data item */
|
|
MDBX_PREV,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPSORT -only: Position at previous data item of current key. */
|
|
MDBX_PREV_DUP,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at last data item of previous key */
|
|
MDBX_PREV_NODUP,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at specified key */
|
|
MDBX_SET,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at specified key, return both key and data */
|
|
MDBX_SET_KEY,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at first key greater than or equal to specified key. */
|
|
MDBX_SET_RANGE,
|
|
|
|
/** \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED -only: Position at previous page and return up to
|
|
* a page of duplicate data items. */
|
|
MDBX_PREV_MULTIPLE,
|
|
|
|
/** Position at first key-value pair greater than or equal to specified,
|
|
* return both key and data, and the return code depends on a exact match.
|
|
*
|
|
* For non DUPSORT-ed collections this work the same to \ref MDBX_SET_RANGE,
|
|
* but returns \ref MDBX_SUCCESS if key found exactly and
|
|
* \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE if greater key was found.
|
|
*
|
|
* For DUPSORT-ed a data value is taken into account for duplicates,
|
|
* i.e. for a pairs/tuples of a key and an each data value of duplicates.
|
|
* Returns \ref MDBX_SUCCESS if key-value pair found exactly and
|
|
* \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE if the next pair was returned. */
|
|
MDBX_SET_LOWERBOUND
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_cursors */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_cursor_op MDBX_cursor_op;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Errors and return codes
|
|
* \ingroup c_err
|
|
*
|
|
* BerkeleyDB uses -30800 to -30999, we'll go under them
|
|
* \see mdbx_strerror() \see mdbx_strerror_r() \see mdbx_liberr2str() */
|
|
enum MDBX_error_t {
|
|
/** Successful result */
|
|
MDBX_SUCCESS = 0,
|
|
|
|
/** Alias for \ref MDBX_SUCCESS */
|
|
MDBX_RESULT_FALSE = MDBX_SUCCESS,
|
|
|
|
/** Successful result with special meaning or a flag */
|
|
MDBX_RESULT_TRUE = -1,
|
|
|
|
/** key/data pair already exists */
|
|
MDBX_KEYEXIST = -30799,
|
|
|
|
/** The first LMDB-compatible defined error code */
|
|
MDBX_FIRST_LMDB_ERRCODE = MDBX_KEYEXIST,
|
|
|
|
/** key/data pair not found (EOF) */
|
|
MDBX_NOTFOUND = -30798,
|
|
|
|
/** Requested page not found - this usually indicates corruption */
|
|
MDBX_PAGE_NOTFOUND = -30797,
|
|
|
|
/** Database is corrupted (page was wrong type and so on) */
|
|
MDBX_CORRUPTED = -30796,
|
|
|
|
/** Environment had fatal error,
|
|
* i.e. update of meta page failed and so on. */
|
|
MDBX_PANIC = -30795,
|
|
|
|
/** DB file version mismatch with libmdbx */
|
|
MDBX_VERSION_MISMATCH = -30794,
|
|
|
|
/** File is not a valid MDBX file */
|
|
MDBX_INVALID = -30793,
|
|
|
|
/** Environment mapsize reached */
|
|
MDBX_MAP_FULL = -30792,
|
|
|
|
/** Environment maxdbs reached */
|
|
MDBX_DBS_FULL = -30791,
|
|
|
|
/** Environment maxreaders reached */
|
|
MDBX_READERS_FULL = -30790,
|
|
|
|
/** Transaction has too many dirty pages, i.e transaction too big */
|
|
MDBX_TXN_FULL = -30788,
|
|
|
|
/** Cursor stack too deep - this usually indicates corruption,
|
|
* i.e branch-pages loop */
|
|
MDBX_CURSOR_FULL = -30787,
|
|
|
|
/** Page has not enough space - internal error */
|
|
MDBX_PAGE_FULL = -30786,
|
|
|
|
/** Database engine was unable to extend mapping, e.g. since address space
|
|
* is unavailable or busy. This can mean:
|
|
* - Database size extended by other process beyond to environment mapsize
|
|
* and engine was unable to extend mapping while starting read
|
|
* transaction. Environment should be reopened to continue.
|
|
* - Engine was unable to extend mapping during write transaction
|
|
* or explicit call of \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry(). */
|
|
MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE = -30785,
|
|
|
|
/** Environment or database is not compatible with the requested operation
|
|
* or the specified flags. This can mean:
|
|
* - The operation expects an \ref MDBX_DUPSORT / \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED
|
|
* database.
|
|
* - Opening a named DB when the unnamed DB has \ref MDBX_DUPSORT /
|
|
* \ref MDBX_INTEGERKEY.
|
|
* - Accessing a data record as a database, or vice versa.
|
|
* - The database was dropped and recreated with different flags. */
|
|
MDBX_INCOMPATIBLE = -30784,
|
|
|
|
/** Invalid reuse of reader locktable slot,
|
|
* e.g. read-transaction already run for current thread */
|
|
MDBX_BAD_RSLOT = -30783,
|
|
|
|
/** Transaction is not valid for requested operation,
|
|
* e.g. had errored and be must aborted, has a child, or is invalid */
|
|
MDBX_BAD_TXN = -30782,
|
|
|
|
/** Invalid size or alignment of key or data for target database,
|
|
* either invalid subDB name */
|
|
MDBX_BAD_VALSIZE = -30781,
|
|
|
|
/** The specified DBI-handle is invalid
|
|
* or changed by another thread/transaction */
|
|
MDBX_BAD_DBI = -30780,
|
|
|
|
/** Unexpected internal error, transaction should be aborted */
|
|
MDBX_PROBLEM = -30779,
|
|
|
|
/** The last LMDB-compatible defined error code */
|
|
MDBX_LAST_LMDB_ERRCODE = MDBX_PROBLEM,
|
|
|
|
/** Another write transaction is running or environment is already used while
|
|
* opening with \ref MDBX_EXCLUSIVE flag */
|
|
MDBX_BUSY = -30778,
|
|
|
|
/** The first of MDBX-added error codes */
|
|
MDBX_FIRST_ADDED_ERRCODE = MDBX_BUSY,
|
|
|
|
/** The specified key has more than one associated value */
|
|
MDBX_EMULTIVAL = -30421,
|
|
|
|
/** Bad signature of a runtime object(s), this can mean:
|
|
* - memory corruption or double-free;
|
|
* - ABI version mismatch (rare case); */
|
|
MDBX_EBADSIGN = -30420,
|
|
|
|
/** Database should be recovered, but this could NOT be done for now
|
|
* since it opened in read-only mode */
|
|
MDBX_WANNA_RECOVERY = -30419,
|
|
|
|
/** The given key value is mismatched to the current cursor position */
|
|
MDBX_EKEYMISMATCH = -30418,
|
|
|
|
/** Database is too large for current system,
|
|
* e.g. could NOT be mapped into RAM. */
|
|
MDBX_TOO_LARGE = -30417,
|
|
|
|
/** A thread has attempted to use a not owned object,
|
|
* e.g. a transaction that started by another thread. */
|
|
MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH = -30416,
|
|
|
|
/** Overlapping read and write transactions for the current thread */
|
|
MDBX_TXN_OVERLAPPING = -30415,
|
|
|
|
/* The last of MDBX-added error codes */
|
|
MDBX_LAST_ADDED_ERRCODE = MDBX_TXN_OVERLAPPING,
|
|
|
|
#if defined(_WIN32) || defined(_WIN64)
|
|
MDBX_ENODATA = ERROR_HANDLE_EOF,
|
|
MDBX_EINVAL = ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER,
|
|
MDBX_EACCESS = ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED,
|
|
MDBX_ENOMEM = ERROR_OUTOFMEMORY,
|
|
MDBX_EROFS = ERROR_FILE_READ_ONLY,
|
|
MDBX_ENOSYS = ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED,
|
|
MDBX_EIO = ERROR_WRITE_FAULT,
|
|
MDBX_EPERM = ERROR_INVALID_FUNCTION,
|
|
MDBX_EINTR = ERROR_CANCELLED,
|
|
MDBX_ENOFILE = ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND,
|
|
MDBX_EREMOTE = ERROR_REMOTE_STORAGE_MEDIA_ERROR
|
|
#else /* Windows */
|
|
#ifdef ENODATA
|
|
MDBX_ENODATA = ENODATA,
|
|
#else
|
|
MDBX_ENODATA = -1,
|
|
#endif /* ENODATA */
|
|
MDBX_EINVAL = EINVAL,
|
|
MDBX_EACCESS = EACCES,
|
|
MDBX_ENOMEM = ENOMEM,
|
|
MDBX_EROFS = EROFS,
|
|
MDBX_ENOSYS = ENOSYS,
|
|
MDBX_EIO = EIO,
|
|
MDBX_EPERM = EPERM,
|
|
MDBX_EINTR = EINTR,
|
|
MDBX_ENOFILE = ENOENT,
|
|
MDBX_EREMOTE = ENOTBLK
|
|
#endif /* !Windows */
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_err */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_error_t MDBX_error_t;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** MDBX_MAP_RESIZED
|
|
* \ingroup c_err
|
|
* \deprecated Please review your code to use MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE
|
|
* instead. */
|
|
MDBX_DEPRECATED static __inline int MDBX_MAP_RESIZED_is_deprecated() {
|
|
return MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE;
|
|
}
|
|
#define MDBX_MAP_RESIZED MDBX_MAP_RESIZED_is_deprecated()
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return a string describing a given error code.
|
|
* \ingroup c_err
|
|
*
|
|
* This function is a superset of the ANSI C X3.159-1989 (ANSI C) `strerror()`
|
|
* function. If the error code is greater than or equal to 0, then the string
|
|
* returned by the system function `strerror()` is returned. If the error code
|
|
* is less than 0, an error string corresponding to the MDBX library error is
|
|
* returned. See errors for a list of MDBX-specific error codes.
|
|
*
|
|
* `mdbx_strerror()` is NOT thread-safe because may share common internal buffer
|
|
* for system messages. The returned string must NOT be modified by the
|
|
* application, but MAY be modified by a subsequent call to
|
|
* \ref mdbx_strerror(), `strerror()` and other related functions.
|
|
* \see mdbx_strerror_r()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] errnum The error code.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns "error message" The description of the error. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API const char *mdbx_strerror(int errnum);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return a string describing a given error code.
|
|
* \ingroup c_err
|
|
*
|
|
* This function is a superset of the ANSI C X3.159-1989 (ANSI C) `strerror()`
|
|
* function. If the error code is greater than or equal to 0, then the string
|
|
* returned by the system function `strerror()` is returned. If the error code
|
|
* is less than 0, an error string corresponding to the MDBX library error is
|
|
* returned. See errors for a list of MDBX-specific error codes.
|
|
*
|
|
* `mdbx_strerror_r()` is thread-safe since uses user-supplied buffer where
|
|
* appropriate. The returned string must NOT be modified by the application,
|
|
* since it may be pointer to internal constant string. However, there is no
|
|
* restriction if the returned string points to the supplied buffer.
|
|
* \see mdbx_strerror()
|
|
*
|
|
* mdbx_liberr2str() returns string describing only MDBX error numbers but NULL
|
|
* for non-MDBX error codes. This function is thread-safe since return pointer
|
|
* to constant non-localized strings.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] errnum The error code.
|
|
* \param [in,out] buf Buffer to store the error message.
|
|
* \param [in] buflen The size of buffer to store the message.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns "error message" The description of the error. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API const char *mdbx_strerror_r(int errnum, char *buf, size_t buflen);
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API const char *mdbx_liberr2str(int errnum);
|
|
|
|
#if defined(_WIN32) || defined(_WIN64) || defined(DOXYGEN)
|
|
/** Bit of Windows' madness. The similar to \ref mdbx_strerror() but returns
|
|
* Windows error-messages in the OEM-encoding for console utilities.
|
|
* \ingroup c_err
|
|
* \see mdbx_strerror_r_ANSI2OEM() */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API const char *mdbx_strerror_ANSI2OEM(int errnum);
|
|
|
|
/** Bit of Windows' madness. The similar to \ref mdbx_strerror_r() but returns
|
|
* Windows error-messages in the OEM-encoding for console utilities.
|
|
* \ingroup c_err
|
|
* \see mdbx_strerror_ANSI2OEM() */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API const char *mdbx_strerror_r_ANSI2OEM(int errnum, char *buf,
|
|
size_t buflen);
|
|
#endif /* Bit of Windows' madness */
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Create an MDBX environment instance.
|
|
* \ingroup c_opening
|
|
*
|
|
* This function allocates memory for a \ref MDBX_env structure. To release
|
|
* the allocated memory and discard the handle, call \ref mdbx_env_close().
|
|
* Before the handle may be used, it must be opened using \ref mdbx_env_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* Various other options may also need to be set before opening the handle,
|
|
* e.g. \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry(), \ref mdbx_env_set_maxreaders(),
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_maxdbs(), depending on usage requirements.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [out] penv The address where the new handle will be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns a non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_create(MDBX_env **penv);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief MDBX environment options. */
|
|
enum MDBX_option_t {
|
|
/** \brief Controls the maximum number of named databases for the environment.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details By default only unnamed key-value database could used and
|
|
* appropriate value should set by `MDBX_opt_max_db` to using any more named
|
|
* subDB(s). To reduce overhead, use the minimum sufficient value. This option
|
|
* may only set after \ref mdbx_env_create() and before \ref mdbx_env_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_maxdbs() \see mdbx_env_get_maxdbs() */
|
|
MDBX_opt_max_db,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Defines the maximum number of threads/reader slots
|
|
* for all processes interacting with the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details This defines the number of slots in the lock table that is used to
|
|
* track readers in the the environment. The default is about 100 for 4K
|
|
* system page size. Starting a read-only transaction normally ties a lock
|
|
* table slot to the current thread until the environment closes or the thread
|
|
* exits. If \ref MDBX_NOTLS is in use, \ref mdbx_txn_begin() instead ties the
|
|
* slot to the \ref MDBX_txn object until it or the \ref MDBX_env object is
|
|
* destroyed. This option may only set after \ref mdbx_env_create() and before
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_open(), and has an effect only when the database is opened by
|
|
* the first process interacts with the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_maxreaders() \see mdbx_env_get_maxreaders() */
|
|
MDBX_opt_max_readers,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls interprocess/shared threshold to force flush the data
|
|
* buffers to disk, if \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC is used.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_syncbytes() \see mdbx_env_get_syncbytes() */
|
|
MDBX_opt_sync_bytes,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls interprocess/shared relative period since the last
|
|
* unsteady commit to force flush the data buffers to disk,
|
|
* if \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC is used.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_syncperiod() \see mdbx_env_get_syncperiod() */
|
|
MDBX_opt_sync_period,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process limit to grow a list of reclaimed/recycled
|
|
* page's numbers for finding a sequence of contiguous pages for large data
|
|
* items.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details A long values requires allocation of contiguous database pages.
|
|
* To find such sequences, it may be necessary to accumulate very large lists,
|
|
* especially when placing very long values (more than a megabyte) in a large
|
|
* databases (several tens of gigabytes), which is much expensive in extreme
|
|
* cases. This threshold allows you to avoid such costs by allocating new
|
|
* pages at the end of the database (with its possible growth on disk),
|
|
* instead of further accumulating/reclaiming Garbage Collection records.
|
|
*
|
|
* On the other hand, too small threshold will lead to unreasonable database
|
|
* growth, or/and to the inability of put long values.
|
|
*
|
|
* The `MDBX_opt_rp_augment_limit` controls described limit for the current
|
|
* process. Default is 262144, it is usually enough for most cases. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_rp_augment_limit,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process limit to grow a cache of dirty
|
|
* pages for reuse in the current transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details A 'dirty page' refers to a page that has been updated in memory
|
|
* only, the changes to a dirty page are not yet stored on disk.
|
|
* To reduce overhead, it is reasonable to release not all such pages
|
|
* immediately, but to leave some ones in cache for reuse in the current
|
|
* transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* The `MDBX_opt_loose_limit` allows you to set a limit for such cache inside
|
|
* the current process. Should be in the range 0..255, default is 64. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_loose_limit,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process limit of a pre-allocated memory items
|
|
* for dirty pages.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details A 'dirty page' refers to a page that has been updated in memory
|
|
* only, the changes to a dirty page are not yet stored on disk.
|
|
* Without \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP dirty pages are allocated from memory and
|
|
* released when a transaction is committed. To reduce overhead, it is
|
|
* reasonable to release not all ones, but to leave some allocations in
|
|
* reserve for reuse in the next transaction(s).
|
|
*
|
|
* The `MDBX_opt_dp_reserve_limit` allows you to set a limit for such reserve
|
|
* inside the current process. Default is 1024. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_dp_reserve_limit,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process limit of dirty pages
|
|
* for a write transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details A 'dirty page' refers to a page that has been updated in memory
|
|
* only, the changes to a dirty page are not yet stored on disk.
|
|
* Without \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP dirty pages are allocated from memory and will
|
|
* be busy until are written to disk. Therefore for a large transactions is
|
|
* reasonable to limit dirty pages collecting above an some threshold but
|
|
* spill to disk instead.
|
|
*
|
|
* The `MDBX_opt_txn_dp_limit` controls described threshold for the current
|
|
* process. Default is 65536, it is usually enough for most cases. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_txn_dp_limit,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process initial allocation size for dirty pages
|
|
* list of a write transaction. Default is 1024. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_txn_dp_initial,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process how maximal part of the dirty pages may be
|
|
* spilled when necessary.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details The `MDBX_opt_spill_max_denominator` defines the denominator for
|
|
* limiting from the top for part of the current dirty pages may be spilled
|
|
* when the free room for a new dirty pages (i.e. distance to the
|
|
* `MDBX_opt_txn_dp_limit` threshold) is not enough to perform requested
|
|
* operation.
|
|
* Exactly `max_pages_to_spill = dirty_pages - dirty_pages / N`,
|
|
* where `N` is the value set by `MDBX_opt_spill_max_denominator`.
|
|
*
|
|
* Should be in the range 0..255, where zero means no limit, i.e. all dirty
|
|
* pages could be spilled. Default is 8, i.e. no more than 7/8 of the current
|
|
* dirty pages may be spilled when reached the condition described above. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_spill_max_denominator,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process how minimal part of the dirty pages should
|
|
* be spilled when necessary.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details The `MDBX_opt_spill_min_denominator` defines the denominator for
|
|
* limiting from the bottom for part of the current dirty pages should be
|
|
* spilled when the free room for a new dirty pages (i.e. distance to the
|
|
* `MDBX_opt_txn_dp_limit` threshold) is not enough to perform requested
|
|
* operation.
|
|
* Exactly `min_pages_to_spill = dirty_pages / N`,
|
|
* where `N` is the value set by `MDBX_opt_spill_min_denominator`.
|
|
*
|
|
* Should be in the range 0..255, where zero means no restriction at the
|
|
* bottom. Default is 8, i.e. at least the 1/8 of the current dirty pages
|
|
* should be spilled when reached the condition described above. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_spill_min_denominator,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process how much of the parent transaction dirty
|
|
* pages will be spilled while start each child transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* \details The `MDBX_opt_spill_parent4child_denominator` defines the
|
|
* denominator to determine how much of parent transaction dirty pages will be
|
|
* spilled explicitly while start each child transaction.
|
|
* Exactly `pages_to_spill = dirty_pages / N`,
|
|
* where `N` is the value set by `MDBX_opt_spill_parent4child_denominator`.
|
|
*
|
|
* For a stack of nested transactions each dirty page could be spilled only
|
|
* once, and parent's dirty pages couldn't be spilled while child
|
|
* transaction(s) are running. Therefore a child transaction could reach
|
|
* \ref MDBX_TXN_FULL when parent(s) transaction has spilled too less (and
|
|
* child reach the limit of dirty pages), either when parent(s) has spilled
|
|
* too more (since child can't spill already spilled pages). So there is no
|
|
* universal golden ratio.
|
|
*
|
|
* Should be in the range 0..255, where zero means no explicit spilling will
|
|
* be performed during starting nested transactions.
|
|
* Default is 0, i.e. by default no spilling performed during starting nested
|
|
* transactions, that correspond historically behaviour. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_spill_parent4child_denominator,
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Controls the in-process threshold of semi-empty pages merge.
|
|
* \warning This is experimental option and subject for change or removal.
|
|
* \details This option controls the in-process threshold of minimum page
|
|
* fill, as used space of percentage of a page. Neighbour pages emptier than
|
|
* this value are candidates for merging. The threshold value is specified
|
|
* in 1/65536 of percent, which is equivalent to the 16-dot-16 fixed point
|
|
* format. The specified value must be in the range from 12.5% (almost empty)
|
|
* to 50% (half empty) which corresponds to the range from 8192 and to 32768
|
|
* in units respectively. */
|
|
MDBX_opt_merge_threshold_16dot16_percent,
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_settings */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_option_t MDBX_option_t;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Sets the value of a runtime options for an environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] option The option from \ref MDBX_option_t to set value of it.
|
|
* \param [in] value The value of option to be set.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see MDBX_option_t
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_get_option()
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_set_option(MDBX_env *env, const MDBX_option_t option,
|
|
const uint64_t value);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Gets the value of runtime options from an environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] option The option from \ref MDBX_option_t to get value of it.
|
|
* \param [out] pvalue The address where the option's value will be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see MDBX_option_t
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_get_option()
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_get_option(const MDBX_env *env,
|
|
const MDBX_option_t option,
|
|
uint64_t *pvalue);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Open an environment instance.
|
|
* \ingroup c_opening
|
|
*
|
|
* Indifferently this function will fails or not, the \ref mdbx_env_close() must
|
|
* be called later to discard the \ref MDBX_env handle and release associated
|
|
* resources.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_env_create()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] pathname The pathname for the database or the directory in which
|
|
* the database files reside. In the case of directory it
|
|
* 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 above in the
|
|
* \ref env_flags and \ref sync_modes sections.
|
|
*
|
|
* Flags set by mdbx_env_set_flags() are also used:
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_NOSUBDIR, \ref MDBX_RDONLY, \ref MDBX_EXCLUSIVE,
|
|
* \ref MDBX_WRITEMAP, \ref MDBX_NOTLS, \ref MDBX_NORDAHEAD,
|
|
* \ref MDBX_NOMEMINIT, \ref MDBX_COALESCE, \ref MDBX_LIFORECLAIM.
|
|
* See \ref env_flags section.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC, \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC, \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC.
|
|
* See \ref sync_modes section.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note `MDB_NOLOCK` flag don't supported by MDBX,
|
|
* try use \ref MDBX_EXCLUSIVE as a replacement.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note MDBX don't allow to mix processes with different \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC
|
|
* flags on the same environment.
|
|
* In such case \ref MDBX_INCOMPATIBLE will be returned.
|
|
*
|
|
* If the database is already exist and parameters specified early by
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry() are incompatible (i.e. for instance, different
|
|
* page size) then \ref mdbx_env_open() will return \ref MDBX_INCOMPATIBLE
|
|
* error.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] mode The UNIX permissions to set on created files.
|
|
* Zero value means to open existing, but do not create.
|
|
*
|
|
* \return A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_VERSION_MISMATCH The version of the MDBX library doesn't match
|
|
* the version that created the database environment.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_INVALID The environment file headers are corrupted.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_ENOENT The directory specified by the path parameter
|
|
* doesn't exist.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCES The user didn't have permission to access
|
|
* the environment files.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EAGAIN The environment was locked by another process.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BUSY The \ref MDBX_EXCLUSIVE flag was specified and the
|
|
* environment is in use by another process,
|
|
* or the current process tries to open environment
|
|
* more than once.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_INCOMPATIBLE Environment is already opened by another process,
|
|
* but with different set of \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC,
|
|
* \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC flags.
|
|
* Or if the database is already exist and parameters
|
|
* specified early by \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry()
|
|
* are incompatible (i.e. different pagesize, etc).
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval MDBX_WANNA_RECOVERY The \ref MDBX_RDONLY flag was specified but
|
|
* read-write access is required to rollback
|
|
* inconsistent state after a system crash.
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval MDBX_TOO_LARGE Database is too large for this process,
|
|
* i.e. 32-bit process tries to open >4Gb database.
|
|
*/
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_open(MDBX_env *env, const char *pathname,
|
|
MDBX_env_flags_t flags, mdbx_mode_t mode);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Deletion modes for \ref mdbx_env_delete().
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_delete() */
|
|
enum MDBX_env_delete_mode_t {
|
|
/** \brief Just delete the environment's files and directory if any.
|
|
* \note On POSIX systems, processes already working with the database will
|
|
* continue to work without interference until it close the environment.
|
|
* \note On Windows, the behavior of `MDB_ENV_JUST_DELETE` is different
|
|
* because the system does not support deleting files that are currently
|
|
* memory mapped. */
|
|
MDBX_ENV_JUST_DELETE = 0,
|
|
/** \brief Make sure that the environment is not being used by other
|
|
* processes, or return an error otherwise. */
|
|
MDBX_ENV_ENSURE_UNUSED = 1,
|
|
/** \brief Wait until other processes closes the environment before deletion.
|
|
*/
|
|
MDBX_ENV_WAIT_FOR_UNUSED = 2,
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_extra */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_env_delete_mode_t MDBX_env_delete_mode_t;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Delete the environment's files in a proper and multiprocess-safe way.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] pathname The pathname for the database or the directory in which
|
|
* the database files reside.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] mode Special deletion mode for the environment. This
|
|
* parameter must be set to one of the values described
|
|
* above in the \ref MDBX_env_delete_mode_t section.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note The \ref MDBX_ENV_JUST_DELETE don't supported on Windows since system
|
|
* unable to delete a memory-mapped files.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE No corresponding files or directories were found,
|
|
* so no deletion was performed. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_delete(const char *pathname,
|
|
MDBX_env_delete_mode_t mode);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Copy an MDBX environment to the specified path, with options.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
*
|
|
* 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 restrictions section.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* It must have already been opened successfully.
|
|
* \param [in] dest The pathname of a file in which the copy will reside.
|
|
* This file must not be already exist, but parent directory
|
|
* must be writable.
|
|
* \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:
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_CP_COMPACT
|
|
* Perform compaction while copying: omit free pages and sequentially
|
|
* renumber all pages in output. This option consumes little bit more
|
|
* CPU for processing, but may running quickly than the default, on
|
|
* account skipping free pages.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_CP_FORCE_DYNAMIC_SIZE
|
|
* Force to make resizeable copy, i.e. dynamic size instead of fixed.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_copy(MDBX_env *env, const char *dest,
|
|
MDBX_copy_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Copy an environment to the specified file descriptor, with
|
|
* options. \ingroup c_extra
|
|
*
|
|
* This function may be used to make a backup of an existing environment.
|
|
* No lockfile is created, since it gets recreated at need.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_copy()
|
|
*
|
|
* \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 restrictions
|
|
* section.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note Fails if the environment has suffered a page leak and the destination
|
|
* file descriptor is associated with a pipe, socket, or FIFO.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* It must have already been opened successfully.
|
|
* \param [in] fd The file descriptor to write the copy to. It must have
|
|
* already been opened for Write access.
|
|
* \param [in] flags Special options for this operation. \see mdbx_env_copy()
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_copy2fd(MDBX_env *env, mdbx_filehandle_t fd,
|
|
MDBX_copy_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Statistics for a database in the environment
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_stat_ex() \see mdbx_dbi_stat() */
|
|
struct MDBX_stat {
|
|
uint32_t ms_psize; /**< Size of a database page. This is the same for all
|
|
databases. */
|
|
uint32_t ms_depth; /**< Depth (height) of the B-tree */
|
|
uint64_t ms_branch_pages; /**< Number of internal (non-leaf) pages */
|
|
uint64_t ms_leaf_pages; /**< Number of leaf pages */
|
|
uint64_t ms_overflow_pages; /**< Number of overflow pages */
|
|
uint64_t ms_entries; /**< Number of data items */
|
|
uint64_t ms_mod_txnid; /**< Transaction ID of committed last modification */
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_stat MDBX_stat;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return statistics about the MDBX environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* At least one of env or txn argument must be non-null. If txn is passed
|
|
* non-null then stat will be filled accordingly to the given transaction.
|
|
* Otherwise, if txn is null, then stat will be populated by a snapshot from
|
|
* the last committed write transaction, and at next time, other information
|
|
* can be returned.
|
|
*
|
|
* Legacy mdbx_env_stat() correspond to calling \ref mdbx_env_stat_ex() with the
|
|
* null `txn` argument.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create()
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin()
|
|
* \param [out] stat The address of an \ref MDBX_stat structure where
|
|
* the statistics will be copied
|
|
* \param [in] bytes The size of \ref MDBX_stat.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_stat_ex(const MDBX_env *env, const MDBX_txn *txn,
|
|
MDBX_stat *stat, size_t bytes);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return statistics about the MDBX environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \deprecated Please use mdbx_env_stat_ex() instead. */
|
|
MDBX_DEPRECATED LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_stat,
|
|
(const MDBX_env *env, MDBX_stat *stat,
|
|
size_t bytes)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_stat_ex(env, NULL, stat, bytes);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Information about the environment
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_info_ex() */
|
|
struct MDBX_envinfo {
|
|
struct {
|
|
uint64_t lower; /**< Lower limit for datafile size */
|
|
uint64_t upper; /**< Upper limit for datafile size */
|
|
uint64_t current; /**< Current datafile size */
|
|
uint64_t shrink; /**< Shrink threshold for datafile */
|
|
uint64_t grow; /**< Growth step for datafile */
|
|
} mi_geo;
|
|
uint64_t mi_mapsize; /**< Size of the data memory map */
|
|
uint64_t mi_last_pgno; /**< Number of the last used page */
|
|
uint64_t mi_recent_txnid; /**< ID of the last committed transaction */
|
|
uint64_t mi_latter_reader_txnid; /**< ID of the last reader transaction */
|
|
uint64_t mi_self_latter_reader_txnid; /**< ID of the last reader transaction
|
|
of caller process */
|
|
uint64_t mi_meta0_txnid, mi_meta0_sign;
|
|
uint64_t mi_meta1_txnid, mi_meta1_sign;
|
|
uint64_t mi_meta2_txnid, mi_meta2_sign;
|
|
uint32_t mi_maxreaders; /**< Total reader slots in the environment */
|
|
uint32_t mi_numreaders; /**< Max reader slots used in the environment */
|
|
uint32_t mi_dxb_pagesize; /**< Database pagesize */
|
|
uint32_t mi_sys_pagesize; /**< System pagesize */
|
|
|
|
/** \brief A mostly unique ID that is regenerated on each boot.
|
|
|
|
As such it can be used to identify the local machine's current boot. MDBX
|
|
uses such when open the database to determine whether rollback required to
|
|
the last steady sync point or not. I.e. if current bootid is differ from the
|
|
value within a database then the system was rebooted and all changes since
|
|
last steady sync must be reverted for data integrity. Zeros mean that no
|
|
relevant information is available from the system. */
|
|
struct {
|
|
struct {
|
|
uint64_t x, y;
|
|
} current, meta0, meta1, meta2;
|
|
} mi_bootid;
|
|
|
|
/** Bytes not explicitly synchronized to disk */
|
|
uint64_t mi_unsync_volume;
|
|
/** Current auto-sync threshold, see \ref mdbx_env_set_syncbytes(). */
|
|
uint64_t mi_autosync_threshold;
|
|
/** Time since the last steady sync in 1/65536 of second */
|
|
uint32_t mi_since_sync_seconds16dot16;
|
|
/** Current auto-sync period in 1/65536 of second,
|
|
* see \ref mdbx_env_set_syncperiod(). */
|
|
uint32_t mi_autosync_period_seconds16dot16;
|
|
/** Time since the last readers check in 1/65536 of second,
|
|
* see \ref mdbx_reader_check(). */
|
|
uint32_t mi_since_reader_check_seconds16dot16;
|
|
/** Current environment mode.
|
|
* The same as \ref mdbx_env_get_flags() returns. */
|
|
uint32_t mi_mode;
|
|
|
|
/** Statistics of page operations.
|
|
* \details Overall statistics of page operations of all (running, completed
|
|
* and aborted) transactions in the current multi-process session (since the
|
|
* first process opened the database after everyone had previously closed it).
|
|
*/
|
|
struct {
|
|
uint64_t newly; /**< Quantity of a new pages added */
|
|
uint64_t cow; /**< Quantity of pages copied for update */
|
|
uint64_t clone; /**< Quantity of parent's dirty pages clones
|
|
for nested transactions */
|
|
uint64_t split; /**< Page splits */
|
|
uint64_t merge; /**< Page merges */
|
|
uint64_t spill; /**< Quantity of spilled dirty pages */
|
|
uint64_t unspill; /**< Quantity of unspilled/reloaded pages */
|
|
uint64_t wops; /**< Number of explicit write operations (not a pages)
|
|
to a disk */
|
|
} mi_pgop_stat;
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_envinfo MDBX_envinfo;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return information about the MDBX environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* At least one of env or txn argument must be non-null. If txn is passed
|
|
* non-null then stat will be filled accordingly to the given transaction.
|
|
* Otherwise, if txn is null, then stat will be populated by a snapshot from
|
|
* the last committed write transaction, and at next time, other information
|
|
* can be returned.
|
|
*
|
|
* Legacy \ref mdbx_env_info() correspond to calling \ref mdbx_env_info_ex()
|
|
* with the null `txn` argument.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create()
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin()
|
|
* \param [out] info The address of an \ref MDBX_envinfo structure
|
|
* where the information will be copied
|
|
* \param [in] bytes The size of \ref MDBX_envinfo.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_info_ex(const MDBX_env *env, const MDBX_txn *txn,
|
|
MDBX_envinfo *info, size_t bytes);
|
|
/** \brief Return information about the MDBX environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \deprecated Please use mdbx_env_info_ex() instead. */
|
|
MDBX_DEPRECATED LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_info,
|
|
(const MDBX_env *env, MDBX_envinfo *info,
|
|
size_t bytes)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_info_ex(env, NULL, info, bytes);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Flush the environment data buffers to disk.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
*
|
|
* Unless the environment was opened with no-sync flags (\ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC,
|
|
* \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC and \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC), then
|
|
* data is always written an flushed to disk when \ref mdbx_txn_commit() is
|
|
* called. Otherwise \ref mdbx_env_sync() may be called to manually write and
|
|
* flush unsynced data to disk.
|
|
*
|
|
* Besides, \ref mdbx_env_sync_ex() with argument `force=false` may be used to
|
|
* provide polling mode for lazy/asynchronous sync in conjunction with
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_syncbytes() and/or \ref mdbx_env_set_syncperiod().
|
|
*
|
|
* \note This call is not valid if the environment was opened with MDBX_RDONLY.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create()
|
|
* \param [in] force If non-zero, force a flush. Otherwise, If force is
|
|
* zero, then will run in polling mode,
|
|
* i.e. it will check the thresholds that were
|
|
* set \ref mdbx_env_set_syncbytes()
|
|
* and/or \ref mdbx_env_set_syncperiod() and perform flush
|
|
* if at least one of the thresholds is reached.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] nonblock Don't wait if write transaction
|
|
* is running by other thread.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE or 0 on
|
|
* success. The \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE means no data pending for flush
|
|
* to disk, and 0 otherwise. Some possible errors are:
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCES the environment is read-only.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BUSY the environment is used by other thread
|
|
* and `nonblock=true`.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL an invalid parameter was specified.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EIO an error occurred during synchronization. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_sync_ex(MDBX_env *env, bool force, bool nonblock);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief The shortcut to calling \ref mdbx_env_sync_ex() with
|
|
* the `force=true` and `nonblock=false` arguments.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_sync, (MDBX_env * env)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_sync_ex(env, true, false);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief The shortcut to calling \ref mdbx_env_sync_ex() with
|
|
* the `force=false` and `nonblock=true` arguments.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_sync_poll, (MDBX_env * env)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_sync_ex(env, false, true);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Sets threshold to force flush the data buffers to disk, even any of
|
|
* \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC flag in the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* The threshold value affects all processes which operates with given
|
|
* environment until the last process close environment or a new value will be
|
|
* settled.
|
|
*
|
|
* Data is always written to disk when \ref mdbx_txn_commit() is called, but
|
|
* the operating system may keep it buffered. MDBX always flushes the OS buffers
|
|
* upon commit as well, unless the environment was opened with
|
|
* \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC, \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC
|
|
* or in part \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC.
|
|
*
|
|
* The default is 0, than mean no any threshold checked, and no additional
|
|
* flush will be made.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] threshold The size in bytes of summary changes when
|
|
* a synchronous flush would be made.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_set_syncbytes,
|
|
(MDBX_env * env, size_t threshold)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_set_option(env, MDBX_opt_sync_bytes, threshold);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Sets relative period since the last unsteady commit to force flush
|
|
* the data buffers to disk, even of \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC flag in the
|
|
* environment.
|
|
*
|
|
* \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* The relative period value affects all processes which operates with given
|
|
* environment until the last process close environment or a new value will be
|
|
* settled.
|
|
*
|
|
* Data is always written to disk when \ref mdbx_txn_commit() is called, but the
|
|
* operating system may keep it buffered. MDBX always flushes the OS buffers
|
|
* upon commit as well, unless the environment was opened with
|
|
* \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC or in part \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC.
|
|
*
|
|
* Settled period don't checked asynchronously, but only by the
|
|
* \ref mdbx_txn_commit() and \ref mdbx_env_sync() functions. Therefore, in
|
|
* cases where transactions are committed infrequently and/or irregularly,
|
|
* polling by \ref mdbx_env_sync() may be a reasonable solution to timeout
|
|
* enforcement.
|
|
*
|
|
* The default is 0, than mean no any timeout checked, and no additional
|
|
* flush will be made.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] seconds_16dot16 The period in 1/65536 of second when
|
|
* a synchronous flush would be made since
|
|
* the last unsteady commit.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_set_syncperiod,
|
|
(MDBX_env * env, unsigned seconds_16dot16)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_set_option(env, MDBX_opt_sync_period, seconds_16dot16);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Close the environment and release the memory map.
|
|
* \ingroup c_opening
|
|
*
|
|
* 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
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] dont_sync A dont'sync flag, if non-zero the last checkpoint
|
|
* will be kept "as is" and may be still "weak" in the
|
|
* \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC or \ref MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC
|
|
* modes. Such "weak" checkpoint will be ignored on
|
|
* opening next time, and transactions since the last
|
|
* non-weak checkpoint (meta-page update) will rolledback
|
|
* for consistency guarantee.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BUSY The write transaction is running by other thread,
|
|
* in such case \ref MDBX_env instance has NOT be destroyed
|
|
* not released!
|
|
* \note If any OTHER error code was returned then
|
|
* given MDBX_env instance has been destroyed and released.
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EBADSIGN Environment handle already closed or not valid,
|
|
* i.e. \ref mdbx_env_close() was already called for the
|
|
* `env` or was not created by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval MDBX_PANIC If \ref mdbx_env_close_ex() was called in the child
|
|
* process after `fork()`. In this case \ref MDBX_PANIC
|
|
* is expected, i.e. \ref MDBX_env instance was freed in
|
|
* proper manner.
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EIO An error occurred during synchronization. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_close_ex(MDBX_env *env, bool dont_sync);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief The shortcut to calling \ref mdbx_env_close_ex() with
|
|
* the `dont_sync=false` argument.
|
|
* \ingroup c_opening */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_close, (MDBX_env * env)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_close_ex(env, false);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Set environment flags.
|
|
* \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* This may be used to set some flags in addition to those from
|
|
* mdbx_env_open(), or to unset these flags.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_get_flags()
|
|
*
|
|
* \note In contrast to LMDB, the MDBX serialize threads via mutex while
|
|
* changing the flags. Therefore this function will be blocked while a write
|
|
* transaction running by other thread, or \ref MDBX_BUSY will be returned if
|
|
* function called within a write transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] flags The \ref env_flags to change, bitwise OR'ed together.
|
|
* \param [in] onoff A non-zero value sets the flags, zero clears them.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_set_flags(MDBX_env *env, MDBX_env_flags_t flags,
|
|
bool onoff);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Get environment flags.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_flags()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [out] flags The address of an integer to store the flags.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_get_flags(const MDBX_env *env, unsigned *flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return the path that was used in mdbx_env_open().
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create()
|
|
* \param [out] dest 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.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_get_path(const MDBX_env *env, const char **dest);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return the file descriptor for the given environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \note All MDBX file descriptors have `FD_CLOEXEC` and
|
|
* couldn't be used after exec() and or `fork()`.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [out] fd Address of a int to contain the descriptor.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_get_fd(const MDBX_env *env, mdbx_filehandle_t *fd);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Set all size-related parameters of environment, including page size
|
|
* and the min/max size of the memory map. \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* In contrast to LMDB, the MDBX provide automatic size management of an
|
|
* database according the given parameters, including shrinking and resizing
|
|
* on the fly. From user point of view all of these just working. Nevertheless,
|
|
* it is reasonable to know some details in order to make optimal decisions
|
|
* when choosing parameters.
|
|
*
|
|
* Both \ref mdbx_env_info_ex() and legacy \ref mdbx_env_info() are inapplicable
|
|
* to read-only opened environment.
|
|
*
|
|
* Both \ref mdbx_env_info_ex() and legacy \ref mdbx_env_info() could be called
|
|
* either before or after \ref mdbx_env_open(), either within the write
|
|
* transaction running by current thread or not:
|
|
*
|
|
* - In case \ref mdbx_env_info_ex() or legacy \ref mdbx_env_info() was called
|
|
* BEFORE \ref mdbx_env_open(), i.e. for closed environment, then the
|
|
* specified parameters will be used for new database creation, or will be
|
|
* applied during opening if database exists and no other process using it.
|
|
*
|
|
* If the database is already exist, opened with \ref MDBX_EXCLUSIVE or not
|
|
* used by any other process, and parameters specified by
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry() are incompatible (i.e. for instance,
|
|
* different page size) then \ref mdbx_env_open() will return
|
|
* \ref MDBX_INCOMPATIBLE error.
|
|
*
|
|
* In another way, if database will opened read-only or will used by other
|
|
* process during calling \ref mdbx_env_open() that specified parameters will
|
|
* silently discarded (open the database with \ref MDBX_EXCLUSIVE flag
|
|
* to avoid this).
|
|
*
|
|
* - In case \ref mdbx_env_info_ex() or legacy \ref mdbx_env_info() was called
|
|
* after \ref mdbx_env_open() WITHIN the write transaction running by current
|
|
* thread, then specified parameters will be applied as a part of write
|
|
* transaction, i.e. will not be visible to any others processes until the
|
|
* current write transaction has been committed by the current process.
|
|
* However, if transaction will be aborted, then the database file will be
|
|
* reverted to the previous size not immediately, but when a next transaction
|
|
* will be committed or when the database will be opened next time.
|
|
*
|
|
* - In case \ref mdbx_env_info_ex() or legacy \ref mdbx_env_info() was called
|
|
* after \ref mdbx_env_open() but OUTSIDE a write transaction, then MDBX will
|
|
* execute internal pseudo-transaction to apply new parameters (but only if
|
|
* anything has been changed), and changes be visible to any others processes
|
|
* immediately after succesful completion of function.
|
|
*
|
|
* Essentially a concept of "automatic size management" is simple and useful:
|
|
* - There are the lower and upper bound of the database file size;
|
|
* - There is the growth step by which the database file will be increased,
|
|
* in case of lack of space.
|
|
* - There is the threshold for unused space, beyond which the database file
|
|
* will be shrunk.
|
|
* - The size of the memory map is also the maximum size of the database.
|
|
* - MDBX will automatically manage both the size of the database and the size
|
|
* of memory map, according to the given parameters.
|
|
*
|
|
* So, there some considerations about choosing these parameters:
|
|
* - The lower bound allows you to prevent database shrinking below some
|
|
* rational size to avoid unnecessary resizing costs.
|
|
* - The upper bound allows you to prevent database growth above some rational
|
|
* size. Besides, the upper bound defines the linear address space
|
|
* reservation in each process that opens the database. Therefore changing
|
|
* the upper bound is costly and may be required reopening environment in
|
|
* case of \ref MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE errors, and so on. Therefore, this
|
|
* value should be chosen reasonable as large as possible, to accommodate
|
|
* future growth of the database.
|
|
* - The growth step must be greater than zero to allow the database to grow,
|
|
* but also reasonable not too small, since increasing the size by little
|
|
* steps will result a large overhead.
|
|
* - The shrink threshold must be greater than zero to allow the database
|
|
* to shrink but also reasonable not too small (to avoid extra overhead) and
|
|
* not less than growth step to avoid up-and-down flouncing.
|
|
* - The current size (i.e. size_now argument) is an auxiliary parameter for
|
|
* simulation legacy \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize() and as workaround Windows
|
|
* issues (see below).
|
|
*
|
|
* Unfortunately, Windows has is a several issues
|
|
* with resizing of memory-mapped file:
|
|
* - Windows unable shrinking a memory-mapped file (i.e memory-mapped section)
|
|
* in any way except unmapping file entirely and then map again. Moreover,
|
|
* it is impossible in any way if a memory-mapped file is used more than
|
|
* one process.
|
|
* - Windows does not provide the usual API to augment a memory-mapped file
|
|
* (that is, a memory-mapped partition), but only by using "Native API"
|
|
* in an undocumented way.
|
|
*
|
|
* MDBX bypasses all Windows issues, but at a cost:
|
|
* - Ability to resize database on the fly requires an additional lock
|
|
* and release `SlimReadWriteLock during` each read-only transaction.
|
|
* - During resize all in-process threads should be paused and then resumed.
|
|
* - Shrinking of database file is performed only when it used by single
|
|
* process, i.e. when a database closes by the last process or opened
|
|
* by the first.
|
|
* = Therefore, the size_now argument may be useful to set database size
|
|
* by the first process which open a database, and thus avoid expensive
|
|
* remapping further.
|
|
*
|
|
* For create a new database with particular parameters, including the page
|
|
* size, \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry() should be called after
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_create() and before mdbx_env_open(). Once the database is
|
|
* created, the page size cannot be changed. If you do not specify all or some
|
|
* of the parameters, the corresponding default values will be used. For
|
|
* instance, the default for database size is 10485760 bytes.
|
|
*
|
|
* If the mapsize is increased by another process, MDBX silently and
|
|
* transparently adopt these changes at next transaction start. However,
|
|
* \ref mdbx_txn_begin() will return \ref MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE if new
|
|
* mapping size could not be applied for current process (for instance if
|
|
* address space is busy). Therefore, in the case of
|
|
* \ref MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE error you need close and reopen the
|
|
* environment to resolve error.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note Actual values may be different than your have specified because of
|
|
* rounding to specified database page size, the system page size and/or the
|
|
* size of the system virtual memory management unit. You can get actual values
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_env_sync_ex() or see by using the tool `mdbx_chk` with the `-v`
|
|
* option.
|
|
*
|
|
* Legacy \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize() correspond to calling
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry() with the arguments `size_lower`, `size_now`,
|
|
* `size_upper` equal to the `size` and `-1` (i.e. default) for all other
|
|
* parameters.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_env_create()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] size_lower The lower bound of database size in bytes.
|
|
* Zero value means "minimal acceptable",
|
|
* and negative means "keep current or use default".
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] size_now The size in bytes to setup the database size for
|
|
* now. Zero value means "minimal acceptable", and
|
|
* negative means "keep current or use default". So,
|
|
* it is recommended always pass -1 in this argument
|
|
* except some special cases.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] size_upper The upper bound of database size in bytes.
|
|
* Zero value means "minimal acceptable",
|
|
* and negative means "keep current or use default".
|
|
* It is recommended to avoid change upper bound while
|
|
* database is used by other processes or threaded
|
|
* (i.e. just pass -1 in this argument except absolutely
|
|
* necessary). Otherwise you must be ready for
|
|
* \ref MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE error(s), unexpected
|
|
* pauses during remapping and/or system errors like
|
|
* "address busy", and so on. In other words, there
|
|
* is no way to handle a growth of the upper bound
|
|
* robustly because there may be a lack of appropriate
|
|
* system resources (which are extremely volatile in
|
|
* a multi-process multi-threaded environment).
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] growth_step The growth step in bytes, must be greater than
|
|
* zero to allow the database to grow. Negative value
|
|
* means "keep current or use default".
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] shrink_threshold The shrink threshold in bytes, must be greater
|
|
* than zero to allow the database to shrink and
|
|
* greater than growth_step to avoid shrinking
|
|
* right after grow.
|
|
* Negative value means "keep current
|
|
* or use default". Default is 2*growth_step.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] pagesize The database page size for new database
|
|
* creation or -1 otherwise. Must be power of 2
|
|
* in the range between \ref MDBX_MIN_PAGESIZE and
|
|
* \ref MDBX_MAX_PAGESIZE. Zero value means
|
|
* "minimal acceptable", and negative means
|
|
* "keep current or use default".
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified,
|
|
* or the environment has an active write transaction.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EPERM Specific for Windows: Shrinking was disabled before
|
|
* and now it wanna be enabled, but there are reading
|
|
* threads that don't use the additional `SRWL` (that
|
|
* is required to avoid Windows issues).
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCESS The environment opened in read-only.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_MAP_FULL Specified size smaller than the space already
|
|
* consumed by the environment.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_TOO_LARGE Specified size is too large, i.e. too many pages for
|
|
* given size, or a 32-bit process requests too much
|
|
* bytes for the 32-bit address space. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_set_geometry(MDBX_env *env, intptr_t size_lower,
|
|
intptr_t size_now, intptr_t size_upper,
|
|
intptr_t growth_step,
|
|
intptr_t shrink_threshold,
|
|
intptr_t pagesize);
|
|
|
|
/** \deprecated Please use \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry() instead.
|
|
* \ingroup c_settings */
|
|
MDBX_DEPRECATED LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_set_mapsize,
|
|
(MDBX_env * env, size_t size)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_set_geometry(env, size, size, size, -1, -1, -1);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Find out whether to use readahead or not, based on the given database
|
|
* size and the amount of available memory. \ingroup c_extra
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] volume The expected database size in bytes.
|
|
* \param [in] redundancy Additional reserve or overload in case of negative
|
|
* value.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE or \ref MDBX_RESULT_FALSE value,
|
|
* otherwise the error code:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE Readahead is reasonable.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_FALSE Readahead is NOT reasonable,
|
|
* i.e. \ref MDBX_NORDAHEAD is useful to
|
|
* open environment by \ref mdbx_env_open().
|
|
* \retval Otherwise the error code. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_is_readahead_reasonable(size_t volume,
|
|
intptr_t redundancy);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns the minimal database page size in bytes.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(intptr_t, mdbx_limits_pgsize_min,
|
|
(void)) {
|
|
return MDBX_MIN_PAGESIZE;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns the maximal database page size in bytes.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(intptr_t, mdbx_limits_pgsize_max,
|
|
(void)) {
|
|
return MDBX_MAX_PAGESIZE;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns minimal database size in bytes for given page size,
|
|
* or -1 if pagesize is invalid.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API intptr_t
|
|
mdbx_limits_dbsize_min(intptr_t pagesize);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns maximal database size in bytes for given page size,
|
|
* or -1 if pagesize is invalid.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API intptr_t
|
|
mdbx_limits_dbsize_max(intptr_t pagesize);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns maximal key size in bytes for given page size
|
|
* and database flags, or -1 if pagesize is invalid.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see db_flags */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API intptr_t
|
|
mdbx_limits_keysize_max(intptr_t pagesize, MDBX_db_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns maximal data size in bytes for given page size
|
|
* and database flags, or -1 if pagesize is invalid.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see db_flags */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API intptr_t
|
|
mdbx_limits_valsize_max(intptr_t pagesize, MDBX_db_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns maximal write transaction size (i.e. limit for summary volume
|
|
* of dirty pages) in bytes for given page size, or -1 if pagesize is invalid.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API intptr_t
|
|
mdbx_limits_txnsize_max(intptr_t pagesize);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Set the maximum number of threads/reader slots for for all processes
|
|
* interacts with the database. \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* \details This defines the number of slots in the lock table that is used to
|
|
* track readers in the the environment. The default is about 100 for 4K system
|
|
* page size. Starting a read-only transaction normally ties a lock table slot
|
|
* to the current thread until the environment closes or the thread exits. If
|
|
* \ref MDBX_NOTLS is in use, \ref mdbx_txn_begin() instead ties the slot to the
|
|
* \ref MDBX_txn object until it or the \ref MDBX_env object is destroyed.
|
|
* This function may only be called after \ref mdbx_env_create() and before
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_open(), and has an effect only when the database is opened by
|
|
* the first process interacts with the database.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_get_maxreaders()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] readers The maximum number of reader lock table slots.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EPERM The environment is already open. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_set_maxreaders,
|
|
(MDBX_env * env, unsigned readers)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_set_option(env, MDBX_opt_max_readers, readers);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Get the maximum number of threads/reader slots for the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_maxreaders()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [out] readers Address of an integer to store the number of readers.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_get_maxreaders,
|
|
(const MDBX_env *env, unsigned *readers)) {
|
|
int rc = MDBX_EINVAL;
|
|
if (readers) {
|
|
uint64_t proxy = 0;
|
|
rc = mdbx_env_get_option(env, MDBX_opt_max_readers, &proxy);
|
|
*readers = (unsigned)proxy;
|
|
}
|
|
return rc;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Set the maximum number of named databases for the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* 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 \ref mdbx_env_create() and before
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* Currently a moderate number of slots are cheap but a huge number gets
|
|
* expensive: 7-120 words per transaction, and every \ref mdbx_dbi_open()
|
|
* does a linear search of the opened slots.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_get_maxdbs()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] dbs The maximum number of databases.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EPERM The environment is already open. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_set_maxdbs, (MDBX_env * env, MDBX_dbi dbs)) {
|
|
return mdbx_env_set_option(env, MDBX_opt_max_db, dbs);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Get the maximum number of named databases for the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_maxdbs()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [out] dbs Address to store the maximum number of databases.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_env_get_maxdbs,
|
|
(const MDBX_env *env, MDBX_dbi *dbs)) {
|
|
int rc = MDBX_EINVAL;
|
|
if (dbs) {
|
|
uint64_t proxy = 0;
|
|
rc = mdbx_env_get_option(env, MDBX_opt_max_db, &proxy);
|
|
*dbs = (MDBX_dbi)proxy;
|
|
}
|
|
return rc;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns the default size of database page for the current system.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \details Default size of database page depends on the size of the system
|
|
* page and usually exactly match it. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API size_t mdbx_default_pagesize(void);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns basic information about system RAM.
|
|
* This function provides a portable way to get information about available RAM
|
|
* and can be useful in that it returns the same information that libmdbx uses
|
|
* internally to adjust various options and control readahead.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [out] page_size Optional address where the system page size
|
|
* will be stored.
|
|
* \param [out] total_pages Optional address where the number of total RAM
|
|
* pages will be stored.
|
|
* \param [out] avail_pages Optional address where the number of
|
|
* available/free RAM pages will be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_get_sysraminfo(intptr_t *page_size, intptr_t *total_pages,
|
|
intptr_t *avail_pages);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns the maximum size of keys can put.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] flags Database options (\ref MDBX_DUPSORT, \ref MDBX_INTEGERKEY
|
|
* and so on). \see db_flags
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns The maximum size of a key can write,
|
|
* or -1 if something is wrong. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int
|
|
mdbx_env_get_maxkeysize_ex(const MDBX_env *env, MDBX_db_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns the maximum size of data we can put.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] flags Database options (\ref MDBX_DUPSORT, \ref MDBX_INTEGERKEY
|
|
* and so on). \see db_flags
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns The maximum size of a data can write,
|
|
* or -1 if something is wrong. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int
|
|
mdbx_env_get_maxvalsize_ex(const MDBX_env *env, MDBX_db_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \deprecated Please use \ref mdbx_env_get_maxkeysize_ex()
|
|
* and/or \ref mdbx_env_get_maxvalsize_ex()
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION MDBX_DEPRECATED LIBMDBX_API int
|
|
mdbx_env_get_maxkeysize(const MDBX_env *env);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Sets application information (a context pointer) associated with
|
|
* the environment.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_get_userctx()
|
|
* \ingroup c_settings
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] ctx An arbitrary pointer for whatever the application needs.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_set_userctx(MDBX_env *env, void *ctx);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns an application information (a context pointer) associated
|
|
* with the environment.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_userctx()
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create()
|
|
* \returns The pointer set by \ref mdbx_env_set_userctx()
|
|
* or `NULL` if something wrong. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API void *
|
|
mdbx_env_get_userctx(const MDBX_env *env);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Create a transaction with a user provided context pointer
|
|
* for use with the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* The transaction handle may be discarded using \ref mdbx_txn_abort()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_txn_commit().
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_begin()
|
|
*
|
|
* \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 \ref MDBX_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 \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] parent If this parameter is non-NULL, the new transaction will
|
|
* be a nested transaction, with the transaction indicated
|
|
* by parent as its parent. Transactions may be nested
|
|
* to any level. A parent transaction and its cursors may
|
|
* not issue any other operations than mdbx_txn_commit and
|
|
* \ref mdbx_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:
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_RDONLY This transaction will not perform
|
|
* any write operations.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_TXN_TRY Do not block when starting
|
|
* a write transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC, \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC.
|
|
* Do not sync data to disk corresponding
|
|
* to \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC or \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC
|
|
* description. \see sync_modes
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [out] txn Address where the new \ref MDBX_txn handle
|
|
* will be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] context A pointer to application context to be associated with
|
|
* created transaction and could be retrieved by
|
|
* \ref mdbx_txn_get_userctx() until transaction finished.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_PANIC A fatal error occurred earlier and the
|
|
* environment must be shut down.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE Another process wrote data beyond
|
|
* this MDBX_env's mapsize and this
|
|
* environment map must be resized as well.
|
|
* See \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_READERS_FULL A read-only transaction was requested and
|
|
* the reader lock table is full.
|
|
* See \ref mdbx_env_set_maxreaders().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_ENOMEM Out of memory.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BUSY The write transaction is already started by the
|
|
* current thread. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_begin_ex(MDBX_env *env, MDBX_txn *parent,
|
|
MDBX_txn_flags_t flags, MDBX_txn **txn,
|
|
void *context);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Create a transaction for use with the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* The transaction handle may be discarded using \ref mdbx_txn_abort()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_txn_commit().
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_begin_ex()
|
|
*
|
|
* \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 \ref MDBX_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 \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] parent If this parameter is non-NULL, the new transaction will
|
|
* be a nested transaction, with the transaction indicated
|
|
* by parent as its parent. Transactions may be nested
|
|
* to any level. A parent transaction and its cursors may
|
|
* not issue any other operations than mdbx_txn_commit and
|
|
* \ref mdbx_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:
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_RDONLY This transaction will not perform
|
|
* any write operations.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_TXN_TRY Do not block when starting
|
|
* a write transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC, \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC.
|
|
* Do not sync data to disk corresponding
|
|
* to \ref MDBX_NOMETASYNC or \ref MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC
|
|
* description. \see sync_modes
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [out] txn Address where the new \ref MDBX_txn handle
|
|
* will be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_PANIC A fatal error occurred earlier and the
|
|
* environment must be shut down.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE Another process wrote data beyond
|
|
* this MDBX_env's mapsize and this
|
|
* environment map must be resized as well.
|
|
* See \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_READERS_FULL A read-only transaction was requested and
|
|
* the reader lock table is full.
|
|
* See \ref mdbx_env_set_maxreaders().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_ENOMEM Out of memory.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BUSY The write transaction is already started by the
|
|
* current thread. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_txn_begin,
|
|
(MDBX_env * env, MDBX_txn *parent, MDBX_txn_flags_t flags,
|
|
MDBX_txn **txn)) {
|
|
return mdbx_txn_begin_ex(env, parent, flags, txn, NULL);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Sets application information associated (a context pointer) with the
|
|
* transaction.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_get_userctx()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn An transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin_ex()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] ctx An arbitrary pointer for whatever the application needs.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_set_userctx(MDBX_txn *txn, void *ctx);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns an application information (a context pointer) associated
|
|
* with the transaction.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_set_userctx()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn An transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin_ex()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \returns The pointer which was passed via the `context` parameter
|
|
* of `mdbx_txn_begin_ex()` or set by \ref mdbx_txn_set_userctx(),
|
|
* or `NULL` if something wrong. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API void *
|
|
mdbx_txn_get_userctx(const MDBX_txn *txn);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Information about the transaction
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_info */
|
|
struct MDBX_txn_info {
|
|
/** The ID of the transaction. For a READ-ONLY transaction, this corresponds
|
|
to the snapshot being read. */
|
|
uint64_t txn_id;
|
|
|
|
/** For READ-ONLY transaction: the lag from a recent MVCC-snapshot, i.e. the
|
|
number of committed transaction since read transaction started.
|
|
For WRITE transaction (provided if `scan_rlt=true`): the lag of the oldest
|
|
reader from current transaction (i.e. at least 1 if any reader running). */
|
|
uint64_t txn_reader_lag;
|
|
|
|
/** Used space by this transaction, i.e. corresponding to the last used
|
|
* database page. */
|
|
uint64_t txn_space_used;
|
|
|
|
/** Current size of database file. */
|
|
uint64_t txn_space_limit_soft;
|
|
|
|
/** Upper bound for size the database file, i.e. the value `size_upper`
|
|
argument of the appropriate call of \ref mdbx_env_set_geometry(). */
|
|
uint64_t txn_space_limit_hard;
|
|
|
|
/** For READ-ONLY transaction: The total size of the database pages that were
|
|
retired by committed write transactions after the reader's MVCC-snapshot,
|
|
i.e. the space which would be freed after the Reader releases the
|
|
MVCC-snapshot for reuse by completion read transaction.
|
|
For WRITE transaction: The summarized size of the database pages that were
|
|
retired for now due Copy-On-Write during this transaction. */
|
|
uint64_t txn_space_retired;
|
|
|
|
/** For READ-ONLY transaction: the space available for writer(s) and that
|
|
must be exhausted for reason to call the Handle-Slow-Readers callback for
|
|
this read transaction.
|
|
For WRITE transaction: the space inside transaction
|
|
that left to `MDBX_TXN_FULL` error. */
|
|
uint64_t txn_space_leftover;
|
|
|
|
/** For READ-ONLY transaction (provided if `scan_rlt=true`): The space that
|
|
actually become available for reuse when only this transaction will be
|
|
finished.
|
|
For WRITE transaction: The summarized size of the dirty database
|
|
pages that generated during this transaction. */
|
|
uint64_t txn_space_dirty;
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_txn_info MDBX_txn_info;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return information about the MDBX transaction.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin()
|
|
* \param [out] info The address of an \ref MDBX_txn_info structure
|
|
* where the information will be copied.
|
|
* \param [in] scan_rlt The boolean flag controls the scan of the read lock
|
|
* table to provide complete information. Such scan
|
|
* is relatively expensive and you can avoid it
|
|
* if corresponding fields are not needed.
|
|
* See description of \ref MDBX_txn_info.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_info(const MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_txn_info *info,
|
|
bool scan_rlt);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns the transaction's MDBX_env.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin() */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API MDBX_env *
|
|
mdbx_txn_env(const MDBX_txn *txn);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return the transaction's flags.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* This returns the flags associated with this transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A transaction flags, valid if input is an valid transaction,
|
|
* otherwise -1. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_flags(const MDBX_txn *txn);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return the transaction's ID.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* 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 \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A transaction ID, valid if input is an active transaction,
|
|
* otherwise 0. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API uint64_t
|
|
mdbx_txn_id(const MDBX_txn *txn);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Latency of commit stages in 1/65536 of seconds units.
|
|
* \warning This structure may be changed in future releases.
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_commit_ex() */
|
|
struct MDBX_commit_latency {
|
|
/** \brief Duration of preparation (commit child transactions, update
|
|
* sub-databases records and cursors destroying). */
|
|
uint32_t preparation;
|
|
/** \brief Duration of GC/freeDB handling & updation. */
|
|
uint32_t gc;
|
|
/** \brief Duration of internal audit if enabled. */
|
|
uint32_t audit;
|
|
/** \brief Duration of writing dirty/modified data pages. */
|
|
uint32_t write;
|
|
/** \brief Duration of syncing written data to the dist/storage. */
|
|
uint32_t sync;
|
|
/** \brief Duration of transaction ending (releasing resources). */
|
|
uint32_t ending;
|
|
/** \brief The total duration of a commit. */
|
|
uint32_t whole;
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_commit_latency MDBX_commit_latency;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Commit all the operations of a transaction into the database and
|
|
* collect latency information.
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_commit()
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \warning This function may be changed in future releases. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_commit_ex(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_commit_latency *latency);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Commit all the operations of a transaction into the database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* If the current thread is not eligible to manage the transaction then
|
|
* the \ref MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH error will returned. Otherwise the transaction
|
|
* will be committed and its handle is freed. If the transaction cannot
|
|
* be committed, it will be aborted with the corresponding error returned.
|
|
*
|
|
* Thus, a result other than \ref MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH means that the
|
|
* transaction is terminated:
|
|
* - Resources are released;
|
|
* - Transaction handle is invalid;
|
|
* - Cursor(s) associated with transaction must not be used, except with
|
|
* mdbx_cursor_renew() and \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
* Such cursor(s) must be closed explicitly by \ref mdbx_cursor_close()
|
|
* before or after transaction commit, either can be reused with
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_renew() until it will be explicitly closed by
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE Transaction was aborted since it should
|
|
* be aborted due to previous errors.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_PANIC A fatal error occurred earlier
|
|
* and the environment must be shut down.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BAD_TXN Transaction is already finished or never began.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EBADSIGN Transaction object has invalid signature,
|
|
* e.g. transaction was already terminated
|
|
* or memory was corrupted.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL Transaction handle is NULL.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_ENOSPC No more disk space.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EIO A system-level I/O error occurred.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_ENOMEM Out of memory. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_txn_commit, (MDBX_txn * txn)) {
|
|
return mdbx_txn_commit_ex(txn, NULL);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Abandon all the operations of the transaction instead of saving them.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* The transaction handle is freed. It and its cursors must not be used again
|
|
* after this call, except with \ref mdbx_cursor_renew() and
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
*
|
|
* If the current thread is not eligible to manage the transaction then
|
|
* the \ref MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH error will returned. Otherwise the transaction
|
|
* will be aborted and its handle is freed. Thus, a result other than
|
|
* \ref MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH means that the transaction is terminated:
|
|
* - Resources are released;
|
|
* - Transaction handle is invalid;
|
|
* - Cursor(s) associated with transaction must not be used, except with
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_renew() and \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
* Such cursor(s) must be closed explicitly by \ref mdbx_cursor_close()
|
|
* before or after transaction abort, either can be reused with
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_renew() until it will be explicitly closed by
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_PANIC A fatal error occurred earlier and
|
|
* the environment must be shut down.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BAD_TXN Transaction is already finished or never began.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EBADSIGN Transaction object has invalid signature,
|
|
* e.g. transaction was already terminated
|
|
* or memory was corrupted.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL Transaction handle is NULL. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_abort(MDBX_txn *txn);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Marks transaction as broken.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* Function keeps the transaction handle and corresponding locks, but makes
|
|
* impossible to perform any operations within a broken transaction.
|
|
* Broken transaction must then be aborted explicitly later.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
*
|
|
* \see mdbx_txn_abort() \see mdbx_txn_reset() \see mdbx_txn_commit()
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_break(MDBX_txn *txn);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Reset a read-only transaction.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* Abort the read-only transaction like \ref mdbx_txn_abort(), but keep the
|
|
* transaction handle. Therefore \ref mdbx_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 \ref MDBX_NOTLS is in use. The
|
|
* reader table lock is released, but the table slot stays tied to its thread
|
|
* or \ref MDBX_txn. Use \ref mdbx_txn_abort() to discard a reset handle, and to
|
|
* free its lock table slot if \ref MDBX_NOTLS is in use.
|
|
*
|
|
* Cursors opened within the transaction must not be used again after this
|
|
* call, except with \ref mdbx_cursor_renew() and \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
*
|
|
* 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 \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_PANIC A fatal error occurred earlier and
|
|
* the environment must be shut down.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BAD_TXN Transaction is already finished or never began.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EBADSIGN Transaction object has invalid signature,
|
|
* e.g. transaction was already terminated
|
|
* or memory was corrupted.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL Transaction handle is NULL. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_reset(MDBX_txn *txn);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Renew a read-only transaction.
|
|
* \ingroup c_transactions
|
|
*
|
|
* This acquires a new reader lock for a transaction handle that had been
|
|
* released by \ref mdbx_txn_reset(). It must be called before a reset
|
|
* transaction may be used again.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_PANIC A fatal error occurred earlier and
|
|
* the environment must be shut down.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_BAD_TXN Transaction is already finished or never began.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EBADSIGN Transaction object has invalid signature,
|
|
* e.g. transaction was already terminated
|
|
* or memory was corrupted.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL Transaction handle is NULL. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_renew(MDBX_txn *txn);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief The fours integers markers (aka "canary") associated with the
|
|
* environment. \ingroup c_crud \see mdbx_canary_set() \see mdbx_canary_get()
|
|
*
|
|
* The `x`, `y` and `z` values could be set by \ref mdbx_canary_put(), while the
|
|
* 'v' will be always set to the transaction number. Updated values becomes
|
|
* visible outside the current transaction only after it was committed. Current
|
|
* values could be retrieved by \ref mdbx_canary_get(). */
|
|
struct MDBX_canary {
|
|
uint64_t x, y, z, v;
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_crud */
|
|
typedef struct MDBX_canary MDBX_canary;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Set integers markers (aka "canary") associated with the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
* \see mdbx_canary_get()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin()
|
|
* \param [in] canary A optional pointer to \ref MDBX_canary structure for `x`,
|
|
* `y` and `z` values from.
|
|
* - If canary is NOT NULL then the `x`, `y` and `z` values will be
|
|
* updated from given canary argument, but the 'v' be always set
|
|
* to the current transaction number if at least one `x`, `y` or
|
|
* `z` values have changed (i.e. if `x`, `y` and `z` have the same
|
|
* values as currently present then nothing will be changes or
|
|
* updated).
|
|
* - if canary is NULL then the `v` value will be explicitly update
|
|
* to the current transaction number without changes `x`, `y` nor
|
|
* `z`.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_canary_put(MDBX_txn *txn, const MDBX_canary *canary);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns fours integers markers (aka "canary") associated with the
|
|
* environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
* \see mdbx_canary_set()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] canary The address of an MDBX_canary structure where the
|
|
* information will be copied.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_canary_get(const MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_canary *canary);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief A callback function used to compare two keys in a database
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
* \see mdbx_cmp() \see mdbx_get_keycmp()
|
|
* \see mdbx_get_datacmp \see mdbx_dcmp()
|
|
*
|
|
* \anchor avoid_custom_comparators
|
|
* It is recommend not using custom comparison functions, but instead
|
|
* converting the keys to one of the forms that are suitable for built-in
|
|
* comparators (for instance take look to the \ref value2key).
|
|
* The reasons to not using custom comparators are:
|
|
* - The order of records could not be validated without your code.
|
|
* So `mdbx_chk` utility will reports "wrong order" errors
|
|
* and the `-i` option is required to ignore ones.
|
|
* - A records could not be ordered or sorted without your code.
|
|
* So mdbx_load utility should be used with `-a` option to preserve
|
|
* input data order. */
|
|
typedef int(MDBX_cmp_func)(const MDBX_val *a,
|
|
const MDBX_val *b) MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT;
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Open or Create a database in the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_dbi
|
|
*
|
|
* 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 \ref mdbx_dbi_close(). The old database handle is
|
|
* returned if the database was already open. The handle may only be closed
|
|
* once.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note A notable difference between MDBX and LMDB is that MDBX make handles
|
|
* opened for existing databases immediately available for other transactions,
|
|
* regardless this transaction will be aborted or reset. The REASON for this is
|
|
* to avoiding the requirement for multiple opening a same handles in
|
|
* concurrent read transactions, and tracking of such open but hidden handles
|
|
* until the completion of read transactions which opened them.
|
|
*
|
|
* Nevertheless, the handle for the NEWLY CREATED database will be invisible
|
|
* for other transactions until the this write transaction is successfully
|
|
* committed. If the write transaction is aborted the handle will be closed
|
|
* automatically. After a successful commit the such handle will reside in the
|
|
* shared environment, and may be used by other transactions.
|
|
*
|
|
* In contrast to LMDB, the MDBX allow this function to be called from multiple
|
|
* concurrent transactions or threads in the same process.
|
|
*
|
|
* To use named database (with name != NULL), \ref mdbx_env_set_maxdbs()
|
|
* must be called before opening the environment. Table names are
|
|
* keys in the internal unnamed database, and may be read but not written.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_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:
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_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.
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_INTEGERKEY
|
|
* Keys are binary integers in native byte order, either uint32_t or
|
|
* uint64_t, and will be sorted as such. The keys must all be of the
|
|
* same size and must be aligned while passing as arguments.
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_DUPSORT
|
|
* Duplicate keys may be used in the database. Or, from another point of
|
|
* view, keys may have multiple data items, stored in sorted order. By
|
|
* default keys must be unique and may have only a single data item.
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED
|
|
* This flag may only be used in combination with \ref MDBX_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
|
|
* \ref MDBX_GET_MULTIPLE, \ref MDBX_NEXT_MULTIPLE and
|
|
* \ref MDBX_PREV_MULTIPLE cursor operations may be used to retrieve
|
|
* multiple items at once.
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_INTEGERDUP
|
|
* This option specifies that duplicate data items are binary integers,
|
|
* similar to \ref MDBX_INTEGERKEY keys. The data values must all be of the
|
|
* same size and must be aligned while passing as arguments.
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_REVERSEDUP
|
|
* This option specifies that duplicate data items should be compared as
|
|
* strings in reverse order (the comparison is performed in the direction
|
|
* from the last byte to the first).
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_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.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [out] dbi Address where the new \ref MDBX_dbi handle
|
|
* will be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* For \ref mdbx_dbi_open_ex() additional arguments allow you to set custom
|
|
* comparison functions for keys and values (for multimaps).
|
|
* \see avoid_custom_comparators
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_NOTFOUND The specified database doesn't exist in the
|
|
* environment and \ref MDBX_CREATE was not specified.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_DBS_FULL Too many databases have been opened.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_maxdbs()
|
|
* \retval MDBX_INCOMPATIBLE Database is incompatible with given flags,
|
|
* i.e. the passed flags is different with which the
|
|
* database was created, or the database was already
|
|
* opened with a different comparison function(s).
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_dbi_open(MDBX_txn *txn, const char *name,
|
|
MDBX_db_flags_t flags, MDBX_dbi *dbi);
|
|
|
|
/** \deprecated Please
|
|
* \ref avoid_custom_comparators "avoid using custom comparators" and use
|
|
* \ref mdbx_dbi_open() instead.
|
|
*
|
|
* \ingroup c_dbi
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_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.
|
|
* \param [in] keycmp Optional custom key comparison function for a database.
|
|
* \param [in] datacmp Optional custom data comparison function for a database.
|
|
* \param [out] dbi Address where the new MDBX_dbi handle will be stored.
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
MDBX_DEPRECATED LIBMDBX_API int
|
|
mdbx_dbi_open_ex(MDBX_txn *txn, const char *name, MDBX_db_flags_t flags,
|
|
MDBX_dbi *dbi, MDBX_cmp_func *keycmp, MDBX_cmp_func *datacmp);
|
|
|
|
/** \defgroup value2key Value-to-Key functions
|
|
* \brief Value-to-Key functions to
|
|
* \ref avoid_custom_comparators "avoid using custom comparators"
|
|
* \see key2value
|
|
* @{
|
|
*
|
|
* The \ref mdbx_key_from_jsonInteger() build a keys which are comparable with
|
|
* keys created by \ref mdbx_key_from_double(). So this allows mixing `int64_t`
|
|
* and IEEE754 double values in one index for JSON-numbers with restriction for
|
|
* integer numbers range corresponding to RFC-7159, i.e. \f$[-2^{53}+1,
|
|
* 2^{53}-1]\f$. See bottom of page 6 at https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7159 */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API uint64_t
|
|
mdbx_key_from_jsonInteger(const int64_t json_integer);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API uint64_t
|
|
mdbx_key_from_double(const double ieee754_64bit);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API uint64_t
|
|
mdbx_key_from_ptrdouble(const double *const ieee754_64bit);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API uint32_t
|
|
mdbx_key_from_float(const float ieee754_32bit);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API uint32_t
|
|
mdbx_key_from_ptrfloat(const float *const ieee754_32bit);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(uint64_t, mdbx_key_from_int64,
|
|
(const int64_t i64)) {
|
|
return UINT64_C(0x8000000000000000) + i64;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(uint32_t, mdbx_key_from_int32,
|
|
(const int32_t i32)) {
|
|
return UINT32_C(0x80000000) + i32;
|
|
}
|
|
/** @} */
|
|
|
|
/** \defgroup key2value Key-to-Value functions
|
|
* \brief Key-to-Value functions to
|
|
* \ref avoid_custom_comparators "avoid using custom comparators"
|
|
* \see value2key
|
|
* @{ */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int64_t
|
|
mdbx_jsonInteger_from_key(const MDBX_val);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API double
|
|
mdbx_double_from_key(const MDBX_val);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API float
|
|
mdbx_float_from_key(const MDBX_val);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int32_t
|
|
mdbx_int32_from_key(const MDBX_val);
|
|
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int64_t
|
|
mdbx_int64_from_key(const MDBX_val);
|
|
/** @} */
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Retrieve statistics for a database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [out] stat The address of an \ref MDBX_stat structure where
|
|
* the statistics will be copied.
|
|
* \param [in] bytes The size of \ref MDBX_stat.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_dbi_stat(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, MDBX_stat *stat,
|
|
size_t bytes);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Retrieve depth (bitmask) information of nested dupsort (multi-value)
|
|
* B+trees for given database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [out] mask The address of an uint32_t value where the bitmask
|
|
* will be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE The dbi isn't a dupsort (multi-value) database. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_dbi_dupsort_depthmask(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi,
|
|
uint32_t *mask);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief DBI state bits returted by \ref mdbx_dbi_flags_ex()
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
* \see mdbx_dbi_flags_ex() */
|
|
enum MDBX_dbi_state_t {
|
|
/** DB was written in this txn */
|
|
MDBX_DBI_DIRTY = 0x01,
|
|
/** Named-DB record is older than txnID */
|
|
MDBX_DBI_STALE = 0x02,
|
|
/** Named-DB handle opened in this txn */
|
|
MDBX_DBI_FRESH = 0x04,
|
|
/** Named-DB handle created in this txn */
|
|
MDBX_DBI_CREAT = 0x08,
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
/** \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_dbi_state_t MDBX_dbi_state_t;
|
|
#else
|
|
DEFINE_ENUM_FLAG_OPERATORS(MDBX_dbi_state_t)
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Retrieve the DB flags and status for a database handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [out] flags Address where the flags will be returned.
|
|
* \param [out] state Address where the state will be returned.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_dbi_flags_ex(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, unsigned *flags,
|
|
unsigned *state);
|
|
/** \brief The shortcut to calling \ref mdbx_dbi_flags_ex() with `state=NULL`
|
|
* for discarding it result. \ingroup c_statinfo */
|
|
LIBMDBX_INLINE_API(int, mdbx_dbi_flags,
|
|
(MDBX_txn * txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, unsigned *flags)) {
|
|
unsigned state;
|
|
return mdbx_dbi_flags_ex(txn, dbi, flags, &state);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Close a database handle. Normally unnecessary.
|
|
* \ingroup c_dbi
|
|
*
|
|
* Closing a database handle is not necessary, but lets \ref mdbx_dbi_open()
|
|
* reuse the handle value. Usually it's better to set a bigger
|
|
* \ref mdbx_env_set_maxdbs(), unless that value would be large.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note Use with care.
|
|
* This call is synchronized via mutex with \ref mdbx_dbi_close(), but NOT with
|
|
* other transactions running by other threads. The "next" version of libmdbx
|
|
* (\ref MithrilDB) will solve this issue.
|
|
*
|
|
* Handles should only be closed 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 \ref MDBX_BAD_DBI
|
|
* (since the DB name is gone).
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_dbi_close(MDBX_env *env, MDBX_dbi dbi);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Empty or delete and close a database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* \see mdbx_dbi_close() \see mdbx_dbi_open()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] del `false` to empty the DB, `true` to delete it
|
|
* from the environment and close the DB handle.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_drop(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, bool del);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Get items from a database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* This function retrieves key/data pairs from the database. The address
|
|
* and length of the data associated with the specified key are returned
|
|
* in the structure to which data refers.
|
|
* If the database supports duplicate keys (\ref MDBX_DUPSORT) then the
|
|
* first data item for the key will be returned. Retrieval of other
|
|
* items requires the use of \ref mdbx_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 \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] key The key to search for in the database.
|
|
* \param [in,out] data The data corresponding to the key.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_NOTFOUND The key was not in the database.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_get(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, const MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Get items from a database
|
|
* and optionally number of data items for a given key.
|
|
*
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* Briefly this function does the same as \ref mdbx_get() with a few
|
|
* differences:
|
|
* 1. If values_count is NOT NULL, then returns the count
|
|
* of multi-values/duplicates for a given key.
|
|
* 2. Updates BOTH the key and the data for pointing to the actual key-value
|
|
* pair inside the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in,out] key The key to search for in the database.
|
|
* \param [in,out] data The data corresponding to the key.
|
|
* \param [out] values_count The optional address to return number of values
|
|
* associated with given key:
|
|
* = 0 - in case \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND error;
|
|
* = 1 - exactly for databases
|
|
* WITHOUT \ref MDBX_DUPSORT;
|
|
* >= 1 for databases WITH \ref MDBX_DUPSORT.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_NOTFOUND The key was not in the database.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_get_ex(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, size_t *values_count);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Get equal or great item from a database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* Briefly this function does the same as \ref mdbx_get() with a few
|
|
* differences:
|
|
* 1. Return equal or great (due comparison function) key-value
|
|
* pair, but not only exactly matching with the key.
|
|
* 2. On success return \ref MDBX_SUCCESS if key found exactly,
|
|
* and \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE otherwise. Moreover, for databases with
|
|
* \ref MDBX_DUPSORT flag the data argument also will be used to match over
|
|
* multi-value/duplicates, and \ref MDBX_SUCCESS will be returned only when
|
|
* BOTH the key and the data match exactly.
|
|
* 3. Updates BOTH the key and the data for pointing to the actual key-value
|
|
* pair inside the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in,out] key The key to search for in the database.
|
|
* \param [in,out] data The data corresponding to the key.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and \ref MDBX_RESULT_FALSE
|
|
* or \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE on success (as described above).
|
|
* Some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_NOTFOUND The key was not in the database.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_get_equal_or_great(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi,
|
|
MDBX_val *key, MDBX_val *data);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Store items into a database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* 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 (see \ref MDBX_DUPSORT).
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_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:
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_NODUPDATA
|
|
* Enter the new key-value pair only if it does not already appear
|
|
* in the database. This flag may only be specified if the database
|
|
* was opened with \ref MDBX_DUPSORT. The function will return
|
|
* \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST if the key/data pair already appears in the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE
|
|
* Enter the new key/data pair only if the key does not already appear
|
|
* in the database. The function will return \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST if the key
|
|
* already appears in the database, even if the database supports
|
|
* duplicates (see \ref MDBX_DUPSORT). The data parameter will be set
|
|
* to point to the existing item.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_CURRENT
|
|
* Update an single existing entry, but not add new ones. The function will
|
|
* return \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND if the given key not exist in the database.
|
|
* In case multi-values for the given key, with combination of
|
|
* the \ref MDBX_ALLDUPS will replace all multi-values,
|
|
* otherwise return the \ref MDBX_EMULTIVAL.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_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. MDBX 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 \ref MDBX_DUPSORT.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_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 \ref MDBX_EKEYMISMATCH error.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_APPENDDUP
|
|
* As above, but for sorted dup data.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_MULTIPLE
|
|
* Store multiple contiguous data elements in a single request. This flag
|
|
* may only be specified if the database was opened with
|
|
* \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED. With combination the \ref MDBX_ALLDUPS
|
|
* will replace all multi-values.
|
|
* The data argument must be an array of two \ref MDBX_val. The `iov_len`
|
|
* of the first \ref MDBX_val must be the size of a single data element.
|
|
* The `iov_base` of the first \ref MDBX_val must point to the beginning
|
|
* of the array of contiguous data elements which must be properly aligned
|
|
* in case of database with \ref MDBX_INTEGERDUP flag.
|
|
* The `iov_len` of the second \ref MDBX_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 `iov_base` of
|
|
* the second \ref MDBX_val is unused.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see \ref c_crud_hints "Quick reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations"
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_KEYEXIST The key/value pair already exists in the database.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_MAP_FULL The database is full, see \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_TXN_FULL The transaction has too many dirty pages.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCES An attempt was made to write
|
|
* in a read-only transaction.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_put(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, const MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, MDBX_put_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Replace items in a database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* This function allows to update or delete an existing value at the same time
|
|
* as the previous value is retrieved. If the argument new_data equal is NULL
|
|
* zero, the removal is performed, otherwise the update/insert.
|
|
*
|
|
* The current value may be in an already changed (aka dirty) page. In this
|
|
* case, the page will be overwritten during the update, and the old value will
|
|
* be lost. Therefore, an additional buffer must be passed via old_data
|
|
* argument initially to copy the old value. If the buffer passed in is too
|
|
* small, the function will return \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE by setting iov_len
|
|
* field pointed by old_data argument to the appropriate value, without
|
|
* performing any changes.
|
|
*
|
|
* For databases with non-unique keys (i.e. with \ref MDBX_DUPSORT flag),
|
|
* another use case is also possible, when by old_data argument selects a
|
|
* specific item from multi-value/duplicates with the same key for deletion or
|
|
* update. To select this scenario in flags should simultaneously specify
|
|
* \ref MDBX_CURRENT and \ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE. This combination is chosen
|
|
* because it makes no sense, and thus allows you to identify the request of
|
|
* such a scenario.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] key The key to store in the database.
|
|
* \param [in] new_data The data to store, if NULL then deletion will
|
|
* be performed.
|
|
* \param [in,out] old_data The buffer for retrieve previous value as describe
|
|
* above.
|
|
* \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 in \ref mdbx_put() description above,
|
|
* and additionally
|
|
* (\ref MDBX_CURRENT | \ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE)
|
|
* combination for selection particular item from
|
|
* multi-value/duplicates.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see \ref c_crud_hints "Quick reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations"
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_replace(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, const MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *new_data, MDBX_val *old_data,
|
|
MDBX_put_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
typedef int (*MDBX_preserve_func)(void *context, MDBX_val *target,
|
|
const void *src, size_t bytes);
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_replace_ex(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi,
|
|
const MDBX_val *key, MDBX_val *new_data,
|
|
MDBX_val *old_data, MDBX_put_flags_t flags,
|
|
MDBX_preserve_func preserver,
|
|
void *preserver_context);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Delete items from a database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* This function removes key/data pairs from the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note The data parameter is NOT ignored regardless the database does
|
|
* support sorted duplicate data items or not. If the data parameter
|
|
* is non-NULL only the matching data item will be deleted. Otherwise, if data
|
|
* parameter is NULL, any/all value(s) for specified key will be deleted.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function will return \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND if the specified key/data
|
|
* pair is not in the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see \ref c_crud_hints "Quick reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations"
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] key The key to delete from the database.
|
|
* \param [in] data The data to delete.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCES An attempt was made to write
|
|
* in a read-only transaction.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_del(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, const MDBX_val *key,
|
|
const MDBX_val *data);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Create a cursor handle but not bind it to transaction nor DBI handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* An capable of operation 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 \ref mdbx_cursor_bind() and
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_renew().
|
|
* Also it can be discarded with \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
*
|
|
* A cursor must be closed explicitly always, before or after its transaction
|
|
* ends. It can be reused with \ref mdbx_cursor_bind()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_cursor_renew() before finally closing it.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note In contrast to LMDB, the MDBX required that any opened cursors can be
|
|
* reused and must be freed explicitly, regardless ones was opened in a
|
|
* read-only or write transaction. The REASON for this is eliminates ambiguity
|
|
* which helps to avoid errors such as: use-after-free, double-free, i.e.
|
|
* memory corruption and segfaults.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] context A pointer to application context to be associated with
|
|
* created cursor and could be retrieved by
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_get_userctx() until cursor closed.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns Created cursor handle or NULL in case out of memory. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API MDBX_cursor *mdbx_cursor_create(void *context);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Set application information associated with the \ref MDBX_cursor.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
* \see mdbx_cursor_get_userctx()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor An cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_create()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
* \param [in] ctx An arbitrary pointer for whatever the application needs.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_set_userctx(MDBX_cursor *cursor, void *ctx);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Get the application information associated with the MDBX_cursor.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
* \see mdbx_cursor_set_userctx()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor An cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_create()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
* \returns The pointer which was passed via the `context` parameter
|
|
* of `mdbx_cursor_create()` or set by \ref mdbx_cursor_set_userctx(),
|
|
* or `NULL` if something wrong. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API void *
|
|
mdbx_cursor_get_userctx(const MDBX_cursor *cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Bind cursor to specified transaction and DBI handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* Using of the `mdbx_cursor_bind()` is equivalent to calling
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_renew() but with specifying an arbitrary dbi handle.
|
|
*
|
|
* An capable of operation cursor is associated with a specific transaction and
|
|
* database. The cursor may be associated with a new transaction,
|
|
* and referencing a new or the same database handle as it was created with.
|
|
* This may be done whether the previous transaction is live or dead.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note In contrast to LMDB, the MDBX required that any opened cursors can be
|
|
* reused and must be freed explicitly, regardless ones was opened in a
|
|
* read-only or write transaction. The REASON for this is eliminates ambiguity
|
|
* which helps to avoid errors such as: use-after-free, double-free, i.e.
|
|
* memory corruption and segfaults.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [out] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_create().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_bind(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_cursor *cursor,
|
|
MDBX_dbi dbi);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Create a cursor handle for the specified transaction and DBI handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* Using of the `mdbx_cursor_open()` is equivalent to calling
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_create() and then \ref mdbx_cursor_bind() functions.
|
|
*
|
|
* An capable of operation 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 \ref mdbx_cursor_bind() and
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_renew().
|
|
* Also it can be discarded with \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
*
|
|
* A cursor must be closed explicitly always, before or after its transaction
|
|
* ends. It can be reused with \ref mdbx_cursor_bind()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_cursor_renew() before finally closing it.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note In contrast to LMDB, the MDBX required that any opened cursors can be
|
|
* reused and must be freed explicitly, regardless ones was opened in a
|
|
* read-only or write transaction. The REASON for this is eliminates ambiguity
|
|
* which helps to avoid errors such as: use-after-free, double-free, i.e.
|
|
* memory corruption and segfaults.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [out] cursor Address where the new \ref MDBX_cursor handle will be
|
|
* stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_open(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi,
|
|
MDBX_cursor **cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Close a cursor handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* The cursor handle will be freed and must not be used again after this call,
|
|
* but its transaction may still be live.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note In contrast to LMDB, the MDBX required that any opened cursors can be
|
|
* reused and must be freed explicitly, regardless ones was opened in a
|
|
* read-only or write transaction. The REASON for this is eliminates ambiguity
|
|
* which helps to avoid errors such as: use-after-free, double-free, i.e.
|
|
* memory corruption and segfaults.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_cursor_create(). */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API void mdbx_cursor_close(MDBX_cursor *cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Renew a cursor handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* An capable of operation cursor is associated with a specific transaction and
|
|
* database. The cursor may be associated with a new transaction,
|
|
* and referencing a new or the same database handle as it was created with.
|
|
* This may be done whether the previous transaction is live or dead.
|
|
*
|
|
* Using of the `mdbx_cursor_renew()` is equivalent to calling
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_bind() with the DBI handle that previously
|
|
* the cursor was used with.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note In contrast to LMDB, the MDBX allow any cursor to be re-used by using
|
|
* \ref mdbx_cursor_renew(), to avoid unnecessary malloc/free overhead until it
|
|
* freed by \ref mdbx_cursor_close().
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_renew(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_cursor *cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return the cursor's transaction handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open(). */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API MDBX_txn *
|
|
mdbx_cursor_txn(const MDBX_cursor *cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return the cursor's database handle.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open(). */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API MDBX_dbi mdbx_cursor_dbi(const MDBX_cursor *cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Copy cursor position and state.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] src A source cursor handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_cursor_create() or \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in,out] dest A destination cursor handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_cursor_create() or \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_copy(const MDBX_cursor *src, MDBX_cursor *dest);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Retrieve by cursor.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* This function retrieves key/data pairs from the database. The address and
|
|
* length of the key are returned in the object to which key refers (except
|
|
* for the case of the \ref MDBX_SET option, in which the key object is
|
|
* unchanged), and the address and length of the data are returned in the object
|
|
* to which data refers.
|
|
* \see mdbx_get()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_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 \ref MDBX_cursor_op.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_NOTFOUND No matching key found.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_get(MDBX_cursor *cursor, MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, MDBX_cursor_op op);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Store by cursor.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* This function stores key/data pairs into the database. The cursor is
|
|
* positioned at the new item, or on failure usually near it.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
* \param [in] key The key operated on.
|
|
* \param [in,out] data The data operated on.
|
|
* \param [in] flags 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:
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_CURRENT
|
|
* Replace the item at the current cursor position. The key parameter
|
|
* must still be provided, and must match it, otherwise the function
|
|
* return \ref MDBX_EKEYMISMATCH. With combination the
|
|
* \ref MDBX_ALLDUPS will replace all multi-values.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note MDBX allows (unlike LMDB) you to change the size of the data and
|
|
* automatically handles reordering for sorted duplicates
|
|
* (see \ref MDBX_DUPSORT).
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_NODUPDATA
|
|
* Enter the new key-value pair only if it does not already appear in the
|
|
* database. This flag may only be specified if the database was opened
|
|
* with \ref MDBX_DUPSORT. The function will return \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST
|
|
* if the key/data pair already appears in the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE
|
|
* Enter the new key/data pair only if the key does not already appear
|
|
* in the database. The function will return \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST if the key
|
|
* already appears in the database, even if the database supports
|
|
* duplicates (\ref MDBX_DUPSORT).
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_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 \ref MDBX_DUPSORT.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_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 \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST error.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_APPENDDUP
|
|
* As above, but for sorted dup data.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_MULTIPLE
|
|
* Store multiple contiguous data elements in a single request. This flag
|
|
* may only be specified if the database was opened with
|
|
* \ref MDBX_DUPFIXED. With combination the \ref MDBX_ALLDUPS
|
|
* will replace all multi-values.
|
|
* The data argument must be an array of two \ref MDBX_val. The `iov_len`
|
|
* of the first \ref MDBX_val must be the size of a single data element.
|
|
* The `iov_base` of the first \ref MDBX_val must point to the beginning
|
|
* of the array of contiguous data elements which must be properly aligned
|
|
* in case of database with \ref MDBX_INTEGERDUP flag.
|
|
* The `iov_len` of the second \ref MDBX_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 `iov_base` of
|
|
* the second \ref MDBX_val is unused.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see \ref c_crud_hints "Quick reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations"
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EKEYMISMATCH The given key value is mismatched to the current
|
|
* cursor position
|
|
* \retval MDBX_MAP_FULL The database is full,
|
|
* see \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_TXN_FULL The transaction has too many dirty pages.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCES An attempt was made to write in a read-only
|
|
* transaction.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_put(MDBX_cursor *cursor, const MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, MDBX_put_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Delete current key/data pair.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* This function deletes the key/data pair to which the cursor refers. This
|
|
* does not invalidate the cursor, so operations such as \ref MDBX_NEXT can
|
|
* still be used on it. Both \ref MDBX_NEXT and \ref MDBX_GET_CURRENT will
|
|
* return the same record after this operation.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
* \param [in] flags Options for this operation. This parameter must be set
|
|
* to one of the values described here.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_CURRENT Delete only single entry at current cursor position.
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_ALLDUPS
|
|
* or \ref MDBX_NODUPDATA (supported for compatibility)
|
|
* Delete all of the data items for the current key. This flag has effect
|
|
* only for database(s) was created with \ref MDBX_DUPSORT.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see \ref c_crud_hints "Quick reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations"
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_MAP_FULL The database is full,
|
|
* see \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_TXN_FULL The transaction has too many dirty pages.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCES An attempt was made to write in a read-only
|
|
* transaction.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_del(MDBX_cursor *cursor, MDBX_put_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Return count of duplicates for current key.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* This call is valid for all databases, but reasonable only for that support
|
|
* sorted duplicate data items \ref MDBX_DUPSORT.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
* \param [out] pcount Address where the count will be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_THREAD_MISMATCH Given transaction is not owned
|
|
* by current thread.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL Cursor is not initialized, or an invalid parameter
|
|
* was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_count(const MDBX_cursor *cursor, size_t *pcount);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Determines whether the cursor is pointed to a key-value pair or not,
|
|
* i.e. was not positioned or points to the end of data.
|
|
* \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE or \ref MDBX_RESULT_FALSE value,
|
|
* otherwise the error code:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE No more data available or cursor not
|
|
* positioned
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_FALSE A data is available
|
|
* \retval Otherwise the error code */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int
|
|
mdbx_cursor_eof(const MDBX_cursor *cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Determines whether the cursor is pointed to the first key-value pair
|
|
* or not. \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A MDBX_RESULT_TRUE or MDBX_RESULT_FALSE value,
|
|
* otherwise the error code:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE Cursor positioned to the first key-value pair
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_FALSE Cursor NOT positioned to the first key-value
|
|
* pair \retval Otherwise the error code */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int
|
|
mdbx_cursor_on_first(const MDBX_cursor *cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Determines whether the cursor is pointed to the last key-value pair
|
|
* or not. \ingroup c_cursors
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE or \ref MDBX_RESULT_FALSE value,
|
|
* otherwise the error code:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE Cursor positioned to the last key-value pair
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_FALSE Cursor NOT positioned to the last key-value pair
|
|
* \retval Otherwise the error code */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int
|
|
mdbx_cursor_on_last(const MDBX_cursor *cursor);
|
|
|
|
/** \addtogroup c_rqest
|
|
* \details \note The estimation result varies greatly depending on the filling
|
|
* of specific pages and the overall balance of the b-tree:
|
|
*
|
|
* 1. The number of items is estimated by analyzing the height and fullness of
|
|
* the b-tree. The accuracy of the result directly depends on the balance of
|
|
* the b-tree, which in turn is determined by the history of previous
|
|
* insert/delete operations and the nature of the data (i.e. variability of
|
|
* keys length and so on). Therefore, the accuracy of the estimation can vary
|
|
* greatly in a particular situation.
|
|
*
|
|
* 2. To understand the potential spread of results, you should consider a
|
|
* possible situations basing on the general criteria for splitting and merging
|
|
* b-tree pages:
|
|
* - the page is split into two when there is no space for added data;
|
|
* - two pages merge if the result fits in half a page;
|
|
* - thus, the b-tree can consist of an arbitrary combination of pages filled
|
|
* both completely and only 1/4. Therefore, in the worst case, the result
|
|
* can diverge 4 times for each level of the b-tree excepting the first and
|
|
* the last.
|
|
*
|
|
* 3. In practice, the probability of extreme cases of the above situation is
|
|
* close to zero and in most cases the error does not exceed a few percent. On
|
|
* the other hand, it's just a chance you shouldn't overestimate. */
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Estimates the distance between cursors as a number of elements.
|
|
* \ingroup c_rqest
|
|
*
|
|
* This function performs a rough estimate based only on b-tree pages that are
|
|
* common for the both cursor's stacks. The results of such estimation can be
|
|
* used to build and/or optimize query execution plans.
|
|
*
|
|
* Please see notes on accuracy of the result in the details
|
|
* of \ref c_rqest section.
|
|
*
|
|
* Both cursors must be initialized for the same database and the same
|
|
* transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] first The first cursor for estimation.
|
|
* \param [in] last The second cursor for estimation.
|
|
* \param [out] distance_items The pointer to store estimated distance value,
|
|
* i.e. `*distance_items = distance(first, last)`.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_estimate_distance(const MDBX_cursor *first,
|
|
const MDBX_cursor *last,
|
|
ptrdiff_t *distance_items);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Estimates the move distance.
|
|
* \ingroup c_rqest
|
|
*
|
|
* This function performs a rough estimate distance between the current
|
|
* cursor position and next position after the specified move-operation with
|
|
* given key and data. The results of such estimation can be used to build
|
|
* and/or optimize query execution plans. Current cursor position and state are
|
|
* preserved.
|
|
*
|
|
* Please see notes on accuracy of the result in the details
|
|
* of \ref c_rqest section.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor Cursor for estimation.
|
|
* \param [in,out] key The key for a retrieved item.
|
|
* \param [in,out] data The data of a retrieved item.
|
|
* \param [in] move_op A cursor operation \ref MDBX_cursor_op.
|
|
* \param [out] distance_items A pointer to store estimated move distance
|
|
* as the number of elements.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_estimate_move(const MDBX_cursor *cursor, MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, MDBX_cursor_op move_op,
|
|
ptrdiff_t *distance_items);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Estimates the size of a range as a number of elements.
|
|
* \ingroup c_rqest
|
|
*
|
|
* The results of such estimation can be used to build and/or optimize query
|
|
* execution plans.
|
|
*
|
|
* Please see notes on accuracy of the result in the details
|
|
* of \ref c_rqest section.
|
|
*
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] begin_key The key of range beginning or NULL for explicit FIRST.
|
|
* \param [in] begin_data Optional additional data to seeking among sorted
|
|
* duplicates.
|
|
* Only for \ref MDBX_DUPSORT, NULL otherwise.
|
|
* \param [in] end_key The key of range ending or NULL for explicit LAST.
|
|
* \param [in] end_data Optional additional data to seeking among sorted
|
|
* duplicates.
|
|
* Only for \ref MDBX_DUPSORT, NULL otherwise.
|
|
* \param [out] distance_items A pointer to store range estimation result.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_estimate_range(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi,
|
|
MDBX_val *begin_key, MDBX_val *begin_data,
|
|
MDBX_val *end_key, MDBX_val *end_data,
|
|
ptrdiff_t *distance_items);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief The EPSILON value for mdbx_estimate_range()
|
|
* \ingroup c_rqest */
|
|
#define MDBX_EPSILON ((MDBX_val *)((ptrdiff_t)-1))
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Determines whether the given address is on a dirty database page of
|
|
* the transaction or not. \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* Ultimately, this allows to avoid copy data from non-dirty pages.
|
|
*
|
|
* "Dirty" pages are those that have already been changed during a write
|
|
* transaction. Accordingly, any further changes may result in such pages being
|
|
* overwritten. Therefore, all functions libmdbx performing changes inside the
|
|
* database as arguments should NOT get pointers to data in those pages. In
|
|
* turn, "not dirty" pages before modification will be copied.
|
|
*
|
|
* In other words, data from dirty pages must either be copied before being
|
|
* passed as arguments for further processing or rejected at the argument
|
|
* validation stage. Thus, `mdbx_is_dirty()` allows you to get rid of
|
|
* unnecessary copying, and perform a more complete check of the arguments.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note The address passed must point to the beginning of the data. This is
|
|
* the only way to ensure that the actual page header is physically located in
|
|
* the same memory page, including for multi-pages with long data.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note In rare cases the function may return a false positive answer
|
|
* (\ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE when data is NOT on a dirty page), but never a false
|
|
* negative if the arguments are correct.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] ptr The address of data to check.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A MDBX_RESULT_TRUE or MDBX_RESULT_FALSE value,
|
|
* otherwise the error code:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE Given address is on the dirty page.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_FALSE Given address is NOT on the dirty page.
|
|
* \retval Otherwise the error code. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_is_dirty(const MDBX_txn *txn,
|
|
const void *ptr);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Sequence generation for a database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
*
|
|
* The function allows to create a linear sequence of unique positive integers
|
|
* for each database. The function can be called for a read transaction to
|
|
* retrieve the current sequence value, and the increment must be zero.
|
|
* Sequence changes become visible outside the current write transaction after
|
|
* it is committed, and discarded on abort.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [out] result The optional address where the value of sequence
|
|
* before the change will be stored.
|
|
* \param [in] increment Value to increase the sequence,
|
|
* must be 0 for read-only transactions.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_RESULT_TRUE Increasing the sequence has resulted in an
|
|
* overflow and therefore cannot be executed. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_dbi_sequence(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, uint64_t *result,
|
|
uint64_t increment);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Compare two keys according to a particular database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
* \see MDBX_cmp_func
|
|
*
|
|
* This returns a comparison as if the two data items were keys in the
|
|
* specified database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \warning There ss a Undefined behavior if one of arguments is invalid.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] a The first item to compare.
|
|
* \param [in] b The second item to compare.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns < 0 if a < b, 0 if a == b, > 0 if a > b */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cmp(const MDBX_txn *txn,
|
|
MDBX_dbi dbi,
|
|
const MDBX_val *a,
|
|
const MDBX_val *b);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns default internal key's comparator for given database flags.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API MDBX_cmp_func *
|
|
mdbx_get_keycmp(MDBX_db_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Compare two data items according to a particular database.
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
* \see MDBX_cmp_func
|
|
*
|
|
* This returns a comparison as if the two items were data items of the
|
|
* specified database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \warning There ss a Undefined behavior if one of arguments is invalid.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] a The first item to compare.
|
|
* \param [in] b The second item to compare.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns < 0 if a < b, 0 if a == b, > 0 if a > b */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_dcmp(const MDBX_txn *txn,
|
|
MDBX_dbi dbi,
|
|
const MDBX_val *a,
|
|
const MDBX_val *b);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns default internal data's comparator for given database flags
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_CONST_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API MDBX_cmp_func *
|
|
mdbx_get_datacmp(MDBX_db_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief A callback function used to enumerate the reader lock table.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] ctx An arbitrary context pointer for the callback.
|
|
* \param [in] num The serial number during enumeration,
|
|
* starting from 1.
|
|
* \param [in] slot The reader lock table slot number.
|
|
* \param [in] txnid The ID of the transaction being read,
|
|
* i.e. the MVCC-snapshot number.
|
|
* \param [in] lag The lag from a recent MVCC-snapshot,
|
|
* i.e. the number of committed write transactions
|
|
* since the current read transaction started.
|
|
* \param [in] pid The reader process ID.
|
|
* \param [in] thread The reader thread ID.
|
|
* \param [in] bytes_used The number of last used page in the MVCC-snapshot
|
|
* which being read,
|
|
* i.e. database file can't shrinked beyond this.
|
|
* \param [in] bytes_retired The total size of the database pages that were
|
|
* retired by committed write transactions after
|
|
* the reader's MVCC-snapshot,
|
|
* i.e. the space which would be freed after
|
|
* the Reader releases the MVCC-snapshot
|
|
* for reuse by completion read transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns < 0 on failure, >= 0 on success. \see mdbx_reader_list() */
|
|
typedef int(MDBX_reader_list_func)(void *ctx, int num, int slot, mdbx_pid_t pid,
|
|
mdbx_tid_t thread, uint64_t txnid,
|
|
uint64_t lag, size_t bytes_used,
|
|
size_t bytes_retained) MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT;
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Enumerate the entries in the reader lock table.
|
|
*
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] func A \ref MDBX_reader_list_func function.
|
|
* \param [in] ctx An arbitrary context pointer for the enumeration
|
|
* function.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* or \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE if the reader lock table is empty. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_reader_list(const MDBX_env *env,
|
|
MDBX_reader_list_func *func, void *ctx);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Check for stale entries in the reader lock table.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [out] dead Number of stale slots that were cleared.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* or \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE if a dead reader(s) found or mutex was recovered. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_reader_check(MDBX_env *env, int *dead);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Returns a lag of the reading for the given transaction.
|
|
* \ingroup c_statinfo
|
|
*
|
|
* Returns an information for estimate how much given read-only
|
|
* transaction is lagging relative the to actual head.
|
|
* \deprecated Please use \ref mdbx_txn_info() instead.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [out] percent Percentage of page allocation in the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns Number of transactions committed after the given was started for
|
|
* read, or negative value on failure. */
|
|
MDBX_DEPRECATED LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_txn_straggler(const MDBX_txn *txn,
|
|
int *percent);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Registers the current thread as a reader for the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
*
|
|
* To perform read operations without blocking, a reader slot must be assigned
|
|
* for each thread. However, this assignment requires a short-term lock
|
|
* acquisition which is performed automatically. This function allows you to
|
|
* assign the reader slot in advance and thus avoid capturing the blocker when
|
|
* the read transaction starts firstly from current thread.
|
|
* \see mdbx_thread_unregister()
|
|
*
|
|
* \note Threads are registered automatically the first time a read transaction
|
|
* starts. Therefore, there is no need to use this function, except in
|
|
* special cases.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* or \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE if thread is already registered. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_thread_register(const MDBX_env *env);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Unregisters the current thread as a reader for the environment.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
*
|
|
* To perform read operations without blocking, a reader slot must be assigned
|
|
* for each thread. However, the assigned reader slot will remain occupied until
|
|
* the thread ends or the environment closes. This function allows you to
|
|
* explicitly release the assigned reader slot.
|
|
* \see mdbx_thread_register()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success, or
|
|
* \ref MDBX_RESULT_TRUE if thread is not registered or already unregistered. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_thread_unregister(const MDBX_env *env);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief A Handle-Slow-Readers callback function to resolve database
|
|
* full/overflow issue due to a reader(s) which prevents the old data from being
|
|
* recycled.
|
|
* \ingroup c_err
|
|
*
|
|
* Read transactions prevent reuse of pages freed by newer write transactions,
|
|
* thus the database can grow quickly. This callback will be called when there
|
|
* is not enough space in the database (i.e. before increasing the database size
|
|
* or before \ref MDBX_MAP_FULL error) and thus can be used to resolve issues
|
|
* with a "long-lived" read transactions.
|
|
* \see long-lived-read
|
|
*
|
|
* Using this callback you can choose how to resolve the situation:
|
|
* - abort the write transaction with an error;
|
|
* - wait for the read transaction(s) to complete;
|
|
* - notify a thread performing a long-lived read transaction
|
|
* and wait for an effect;
|
|
* - kill the thread or whole process that performs the long-lived read
|
|
* transaction;
|
|
*
|
|
* Depending on the arguments and needs, your implementation may wait,
|
|
* terminate a process or thread that is performing a long read, or perform
|
|
* some other action. In doing so it is important that the returned code always
|
|
* corresponds to the performed action.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] txn The current write transaction which internally at
|
|
* the \ref MDBX_MAP_FULL condition.
|
|
* \param [in] pid A pid of the reader process.
|
|
* \param [in] tid A thread_id of the reader thread.
|
|
* \param [in] laggard An oldest read transaction number on which stalled.
|
|
* \param [in] gap A lag from the last committed txn.
|
|
* \param [in] space A space that actually become available for reuse after
|
|
* this reader finished. The callback function can take
|
|
* this value into account to evaluate the impact that
|
|
* a long-running transaction has.
|
|
* \param [in] retry A retry number starting from 0.
|
|
* If callback has returned 0 at least once, then at end
|
|
* of current handling loop the callback function will be
|
|
* called additionally with negative value to notify about
|
|
* the end of loop. The callback function can use this value
|
|
* to implement timeout logic while waiting for readers.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns The RETURN CODE determines the further actions libmdbx and must
|
|
* match the action which was executed by the callback:
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval -2 or less An error condition and the reader was not killed.
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval -1 The callback was unable to solve the problem and
|
|
* agreed on \ref MDBX_MAP_FULL error;
|
|
* libmdbx should increase the database size or
|
|
* return \ref MDBX_MAP_FULL error.
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval 0 (zero) The callback solved the problem or just waited for
|
|
* a while, libmdbx should rescan the reader lock table and
|
|
* retry. This also includes a situation when corresponding
|
|
* transaction terminated in normal way by
|
|
* \ref mdbx_txn_abort() or \ref mdbx_txn_reset(),
|
|
* and my be restarted. I.e. reader slot don't needed
|
|
* to be cleaned from transaction.
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval 1 Transaction aborted asynchronous and reader slot
|
|
* should be cleared immediately, i.e. read transaction
|
|
* will not continue but \ref mdbx_txn_abort()
|
|
* or \ref mdbx_txn_reset() will be called later.
|
|
*
|
|
* \retval 2 or great The reader process was terminated or killed,
|
|
* and libmdbx should entirely reset reader registration.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_hsr() \see mdbx_env_get_hsr()
|
|
*/
|
|
typedef int(MDBX_hsr_func)(const MDBX_env *env, const MDBX_txn *txn,
|
|
mdbx_pid_t pid, mdbx_tid_t tid, uint64_t laggard,
|
|
unsigned gap, size_t space,
|
|
int retry) MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT;
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Sets a Handle-Slow-Readers callback to resolve database full/overflow
|
|
* issue due to a reader(s) which prevents the old data from being recycled.
|
|
* \ingroup c_err
|
|
*
|
|
* The callback will only be triggered when the database is full due to a
|
|
* reader(s) prevents the old data from being recycled.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_get_hsr()
|
|
* \see long-lived-read
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned
|
|
* by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
* \param [in] hsr_callback A \ref MDBX_hsr_func function
|
|
* or NULL to disable.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_set_hsr(MDBX_env *env, MDBX_hsr_func *hsr_callback);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Gets current Handle-Slow-Readers callback used to resolve database
|
|
* full/overflow issue due to a reader(s) which prevents the old data from being
|
|
* recycled.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_set_hsr()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] env An environment handle returned by \ref mdbx_env_create().
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A MDBX_hsr_func function or NULL if disabled
|
|
* or something wrong. */
|
|
MDBX_NOTHROW_PURE_FUNCTION LIBMDBX_API MDBX_hsr_func *
|
|
mdbx_env_get_hsr(const MDBX_env *env);
|
|
|
|
/** \defgroup btree_traversal B-tree Traversal
|
|
* This is internal API for mdbx_chk tool. You should avoid to use it, except
|
|
* some extremal special cases.
|
|
* \ingroup c_extra
|
|
* @{ */
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Page types for traverse the b-tree.
|
|
* \see mdbx_env_pgwalk() \see MDBX_pgvisitor_func */
|
|
enum MDBX_page_type_t {
|
|
MDBX_page_broken,
|
|
MDBX_page_meta,
|
|
MDBX_page_large,
|
|
MDBX_page_branch,
|
|
MDBX_page_leaf,
|
|
MDBX_page_dupfixed_leaf,
|
|
MDBX_subpage_leaf,
|
|
MDBX_subpage_dupfixed_leaf,
|
|
MDBX_subpage_broken,
|
|
};
|
|
#ifndef __cplusplus
|
|
typedef enum MDBX_page_type_t MDBX_page_type_t;
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Pseudo-name for MainDB */
|
|
#define MDBX_PGWALK_MAIN ((const char *)((ptrdiff_t)0))
|
|
/** \brief Pseudo-name for GarbageCollectorDB */
|
|
#define MDBX_PGWALK_GC ((const char *)((ptrdiff_t)-1))
|
|
/** \brief Pseudo-name for MetaPages */
|
|
#define MDBX_PGWALK_META ((const char *)((ptrdiff_t)-2))
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Callback function for traverse the b-tree. \see mdbx_env_pgwalk() */
|
|
typedef int MDBX_pgvisitor_func(
|
|
const uint64_t pgno, const unsigned number, void *const ctx, const int deep,
|
|
const char *const dbi, const size_t page_size, const MDBX_page_type_t type,
|
|
const MDBX_error_t err, const size_t nentries, const size_t payload_bytes,
|
|
const size_t header_bytes, const size_t unused_bytes) MDBX_CXX17_NOEXCEPT;
|
|
|
|
/** \brief B-tree traversal function. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_pgwalk(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_pgvisitor_func *visitor,
|
|
void *ctx, bool dont_check_keys_ordering);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Open an environment instance using specific meta-page
|
|
* for checking and recovery.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function mostly of internal API for `mdbx_chk` utility and subject to
|
|
* change at any time. Do not use this function to avoid shooting your own
|
|
* leg(s). */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_open_for_recovery(MDBX_env *env, const char *pathname,
|
|
unsigned target_meta,
|
|
bool writeable);
|
|
|
|
/** \brief Turn database to the specified meta-page.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function mostly of internal API for `mdbx_chk` utility and subject to
|
|
* change at any time. Do not use this function to avoid shooting your own
|
|
* leg(s). */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_env_turn_for_recovery(MDBX_env *env, unsigned target_meta);
|
|
|
|
/** @} B-tree Traversal */
|
|
|
|
/**** Attribute support functions for Nexenta (scheduled for removal)
|
|
* *****************************************************************/
|
|
#if defined(MDBX_NEXENTA_ATTRS) || defined(DOXYGEN)
|
|
/** \defgroup nexenta Attribute support functions for Nexenta
|
|
* \ingroup c_crud
|
|
* @{ */
|
|
typedef uint_fast64_t mdbx_attr_t;
|
|
|
|
/** Store by cursor with attribute.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function stores key/data pairs into the database. The cursor is
|
|
* positioned at the new item, or on failure usually near it.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note Internally based on \ref MDBX_RESERVE feature,
|
|
* therefore doesn't support \ref MDBX_DUPSORT.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open()
|
|
* \param [in] key The key operated on.
|
|
* \param [in] data The data operated on.
|
|
* \param [in] attr The attribute.
|
|
* \param [in] flags Options for this operation. This parameter must be set
|
|
* to 0 or one of the values described here:
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_CURRENT
|
|
* Replace the item at the current cursor position. The key parameter
|
|
* must still be provided, and must match it, otherwise the function
|
|
* return \ref MDBX_EKEYMISMATCH.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_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 \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST error.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see \ref c_crud_hints "Quick reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations"
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EKEYMISMATCH
|
|
* \retval MDBX_MAP_FULL The database is full, see \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_TXN_FULL The transaction has too many dirty pages.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCES An attempt was made to write in a read-only
|
|
* transaction.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL an invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_put_attr(MDBX_cursor *cursor, MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, mdbx_attr_t attr,
|
|
MDBX_put_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** Store items and attributes 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.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note Internally based on \ref MDBX_RESERVE feature,
|
|
* therefore doesn't support \ref MDBX_DUPSORT.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] key The key to store in the database.
|
|
* \param [in] attr The attribute 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:
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_NOOVERWRITE
|
|
* Enter the new key/data pair only if the key does not already appear
|
|
* in the database. The function will return \ref MDBX_KEYEXIST if the key
|
|
* already appears in the database. The data parameter will be set to
|
|
* point to the existing item.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_CURRENT
|
|
* Update an single existing entry, but not add new ones. The function
|
|
* will return \ref MDBX_NOTFOUND if the given key not exist in the
|
|
* database. Or the \ref MDBX_EMULTIVAL in case duplicates for the given
|
|
* key.
|
|
*
|
|
* - \ref MDBX_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 \ref MDBX_EKEYMISMATCH error.
|
|
*
|
|
* \see \ref c_crud_hints "Quick reference for Insert/Update/Delete operations"
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_KEYEXIST
|
|
* \retval MDBX_MAP_FULL The database is full, see \ref mdbx_env_set_mapsize().
|
|
* \retval MDBX_TXN_FULL The transaction has too many dirty pages.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EACCES An attempt was made to write
|
|
* in a read-only transaction.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_put_attr(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, mdbx_attr_t attr,
|
|
MDBX_put_flags_t flags);
|
|
|
|
/** Set items attribute from a database.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function stores key/data pairs attribute to the database.
|
|
*
|
|
* \note Internally based on \ref MDBX_RESERVE feature,
|
|
* therefore doesn't support \ref MDBX_DUPSORT.
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] txn A transaction handle returned by \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] key The key to search for in the database.
|
|
* \param [in] data The data to be stored or NULL to save previous value.
|
|
* \param [in] attr The attribute to be stored.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_NOTFOUND The key-value pair was not in the database.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_set_attr(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, mdbx_attr_t attr);
|
|
|
|
/** Get items attribute from a database cursor.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function retrieves key/data pairs from the database. The address and
|
|
* length of the key are returned in the object to which key refers (except
|
|
* for the case of the \ref MDBX_SET option, in which the key object is
|
|
* unchanged), and the address and length of the data are returned in the object
|
|
* to which data refers.
|
|
* \see mdbx_get()
|
|
*
|
|
* \param [in] cursor A cursor handle returned by \ref mdbx_cursor_open().
|
|
* \param [in,out] key The key for a retrieved item.
|
|
* \param [in,out] data The data of a retrieved item.
|
|
* \param [out] pattr The pointer to retrieve attribute.
|
|
* \param [in] op A cursor operation MDBX_cursor_op.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_NOTFOUND No matching key found.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_cursor_get_attr(MDBX_cursor *cursor, MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, mdbx_attr_t *pattr,
|
|
MDBX_cursor_op op);
|
|
|
|
/** Get items attribute from a database.
|
|
*
|
|
* This function retrieves key/data pairs from the database. The address
|
|
* and length of the data associated with the specified key are returned
|
|
* in the structure to which data refers.
|
|
* If the database supports duplicate keys (see \ref MDBX_DUPSORT) then the
|
|
* first data item for the key will be returned. Retrieval of other
|
|
* items requires the use of \ref mdbx_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 \ref mdbx_txn_begin().
|
|
* \param [in] dbi A database handle returned by \ref mdbx_dbi_open().
|
|
* \param [in] key The key to search for in the database.
|
|
* \param [in,out] data The data corresponding to the key.
|
|
* \param [out] pattr The pointer to retrieve attribute.
|
|
*
|
|
* \returns A non-zero error value on failure and 0 on success,
|
|
* some possible errors are:
|
|
* \retval MDBX_NOTFOUND The key was not in the database.
|
|
* \retval MDBX_EINVAL An invalid parameter was specified. */
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_get_attr(MDBX_txn *txn, MDBX_dbi dbi, MDBX_val *key,
|
|
MDBX_val *data, mdbx_attr_t *pattr);
|
|
/** @} end of Attribute support functions for Nexenta */
|
|
#endif /* MDBX_NEXENTA_ATTRS */
|
|
|
|
/** @} end of C API */
|
|
|
|
/*******************************************************************************
|
|
* Workaround for mmaped-lookahead-cross-page-boundary bug
|
|
* in an obsolete versions of Elbrus's libc and kernels. */
|
|
#if defined(__e2k__) && defined(MDBX_E2K_MLHCPB_WORKAROUND) && \
|
|
MDBX_E2K_MLHCPB_WORKAROUND
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_e2k_memcmp_bug_workaround(const void *s1, const void *s2,
|
|
size_t n);
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_e2k_strcmp_bug_workaround(const char *s1, const char *s2);
|
|
LIBMDBX_API int mdbx_e2k_strncmp_bug_workaround(const char *s1, const char *s2,
|
|
size_t n);
|
|
LIBMDBX_API size_t mdbx_e2k_strlen_bug_workaround(const char *s);
|
|
LIBMDBX_API size_t mdbx_e2k_strnlen_bug_workaround(const char *s,
|
|
size_t maxlen);
|
|
#ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
namespace std {
|
|
inline int mdbx_e2k_memcmp_bug_workaround(const void *s1, const void *s2,
|
|
size_t n) {
|
|
return ::mdbx_e2k_memcmp_bug_workaround(s1, s2, n);
|
|
}
|
|
inline int mdbx_e2k_strcmp_bug_workaround(const char *s1, const char *s2) {
|
|
return ::mdbx_e2k_strcmp_bug_workaround(s1, s2);
|
|
}
|
|
inline int mdbx_e2k_strncmp_bug_workaround(const char *s1, const char *s2,
|
|
size_t n) {
|
|
return ::mdbx_e2k_strncmp_bug_workaround(s1, s2, n);
|
|
}
|
|
inline size_t mdbx_e2k_strlen_bug_workaround(const char *s) {
|
|
return ::mdbx_e2k_strlen_bug_workaround(s);
|
|
}
|
|
inline size_t mdbx_e2k_strnlen_bug_workaround(const char *s, size_t maxlen) {
|
|
return ::mdbx_e2k_strnlen_bug_workaround(s, maxlen);
|
|
}
|
|
} // namespace std
|
|
#endif /* __cplusplus */
|
|
|
|
#include <string.h>
|
|
#include <strings.h>
|
|
#undef memcmp
|
|
#define memcmp mdbx_e2k_memcmp_bug_workaround
|
|
#undef bcmp
|
|
#define bcmp mdbx_e2k_memcmp_bug_workaround
|
|
#undef strcmp
|
|
#define strcmp mdbx_e2k_strcmp_bug_workaround
|
|
#undef strncmp
|
|
#define strncmp mdbx_e2k_strncmp_bug_workaround
|
|
#undef strlen
|
|
#define strlen mdbx_e2k_strlen_bug_workaround
|
|
#undef strnlen
|
|
#define strnlen mdbx_e2k_strnlen_bug_workaround
|
|
#endif /* MDBX_E2K_MLHCPB_WORKAROUND */
|
|
|
|
#ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
} /* extern "C" */
|
|
#endif
|
|
|
|
#endif /* LIBMDBX_H */
|