AIXCC-C-Challenge
/
local-test-sqlite3-delta-01
/afc-sqlite3
/ext
/wasm
/api
/sqlite3-api-oo1.c-pp.js
| //#ifnot omit-oo1 | |
| /* | |
| 2022-07-22 | |
| The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of a | |
| legal notice, here is a blessing: | |
| * May you do good and not evil. | |
| * May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. | |
| * May you share freely, never taking more than you give. | |
| *********************************************************************** | |
| This file contains the so-called OO #1 API wrapper for the sqlite3 | |
| WASM build. It requires that sqlite3-api-glue.js has already run | |
| and it installs its deliverable as globalThis.sqlite3.oo1. | |
| */ | |
| globalThis.sqlite3ApiBootstrap.initializers.push(function(sqlite3){ | |
| const toss = (...args)=>{throw new Error(args.join(' '))}; | |
| const toss3 = (...args)=>{throw new sqlite3.SQLite3Error(...args)}; | |
| const capi = sqlite3.capi, wasm = sqlite3.wasm, util = sqlite3.util; | |
| /* What follows is colloquially known as "OO API #1". It is a | |
| binding of the sqlite3 API which is designed to be run within | |
| the same thread (main or worker) as the one in which the | |
| sqlite3 WASM binding was initialized. This wrapper cannot use | |
| the sqlite3 binding if, e.g., the wrapper is in the main thread | |
| and the sqlite3 API is in a worker. */ | |
| /** | |
| In order to keep clients from manipulating, perhaps | |
| inadvertently, the underlying pointer values of DB and Stmt | |
| instances, we'll gate access to them via the `pointer` property | |
| accessor and store their real values in this map. Keys = DB/Stmt | |
| objects, values = pointer values. This also unifies how those are | |
| accessed, for potential use downstream via custom | |
| wasm.xWrap() function signatures which know how to extract | |
| it. | |
| */ | |
| const __ptrMap = new WeakMap(); | |
| /** | |
| Map of DB instances to objects, each object being a map of Stmt | |
| wasm pointers to Stmt objects. | |
| */ | |
| const __stmtMap = new WeakMap(); | |
| /** If object opts has _its own_ property named p then that | |
| property's value is returned, else dflt is returned. */ | |
| const getOwnOption = (opts, p, dflt)=>{ | |
| const d = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(opts,p); | |
| return d ? d.value : dflt; | |
| }; | |
| // Documented in DB.checkRc() | |
| const checkSqlite3Rc = function(dbPtr, sqliteResultCode){ | |
| if(sqliteResultCode){ | |
| if(dbPtr instanceof DB) dbPtr = dbPtr.pointer; | |
| toss3( | |
| sqliteResultCode, | |
| "sqlite3 result code",sqliteResultCode+":", | |
| (dbPtr | |
| ? capi.sqlite3_errmsg(dbPtr) | |
| : capi.sqlite3_errstr(sqliteResultCode)) | |
| ); | |
| } | |
| return arguments[0]; | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| sqlite3_trace_v2() callback which gets installed by the DB ctor | |
| if its open-flags contain "t". | |
| */ | |
| const __dbTraceToConsole = | |
| wasm.installFunction('i(ippp)', function(t,c,p,x){ | |
| if(capi.SQLITE_TRACE_STMT===t){ | |
| // x == SQL, p == sqlite3_stmt* | |
| console.log("SQL TRACE #"+(++this.counter)+' via sqlite3@'+c+':', | |
| wasm.cstrToJs(x)); | |
| } | |
| }.bind({counter: 0})); | |
| /** | |
| A map of sqlite3_vfs pointers to SQL code or a callback function | |
| to run when the DB constructor opens a database with the given | |
| VFS. In the latter case, the call signature is | |
| (theDbObject,sqlite3Namespace) and the callback is expected to | |
| throw on error. | |
| */ | |
| const __vfsPostOpenCallback = Object.create(null); | |
| //#if enable-see | |
| /** | |
| Converts ArrayBuffer or Uint8Array ba into a string of hex | |
| digits. | |
| */ | |
| const byteArrayToHex = function(ba){ | |
| if( ba instanceof ArrayBuffer ){ | |
| ba = new Uint8Array(ba); | |
| } | |
| const li = []; | |
| const digits = "0123456789abcdef"; | |
| for( const d of ba ){ | |
| li.push( digits[(d & 0xf0) >> 4], digits[d & 0x0f] ); | |
| } | |
| return li.join(''); | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| Internal helper to apply an SEE key to a just-opened | |
| database. Requires that db be-a DB object which has just been | |
| opened, opt be the options object processed by its ctor, and opt | |
| must have either the key, hexkey, or textkey properties, either | |
| as a string, an ArrayBuffer, or a Uint8Array. | |
| This is a no-op in non-SEE builds. It throws on error and returns | |
| without side effects if none of the key/textkey/hexkey options | |
| are set. It throws if more than one is set or if any are set to | |
| values of an invalid type. | |
| Returns true if it applies the key, else an unspecified falsy | |
| value. Note that applying the key does not imply that the key is | |
| correct, only that it was passed on to the db. | |
| */ | |
| const dbCtorApplySEEKey = function(db,opt){ | |
| if( !capi.sqlite3_key_v2 ) return; | |
| let keytype; | |
| let key; | |
| const check = (opt.key ? 1 : 0) + (opt.hexkey ? 1 : 0) + (opt.textkey ? 1 : 0); | |
| if( !check ) return; | |
| else if( check>1 ){ | |
| toss3(capi.SQLITE_MISUSE, | |
| "Only ONE of (key, hexkey, textkey) may be provided."); | |
| } | |
| if( opt.key ){ | |
| /* It is not legal to bind an argument to PRAGMA key=?, so we | |
| convert it to a hexkey... */ | |
| keytype = 'key'; | |
| key = opt.key; | |
| if('string'===typeof key){ | |
| key = new TextEncoder('utf-8').encode(key); | |
| } | |
| if((key instanceof ArrayBuffer) || (key instanceof Uint8Array)){ | |
| key = byteArrayToHex(key); | |
| keytype = 'hexkey'; | |
| }else{ | |
| toss3(capi.SQLITE_MISUSE, | |
| "Invalid value for the 'key' option. Expecting a string,", | |
| "ArrayBuffer, or Uint8Array."); | |
| return; | |
| } | |
| }else if( opt.textkey ){ | |
| /* For textkey we need it to be in string form, so convert it to | |
| a string if it's a byte array... */ | |
| keytype = 'textkey'; | |
| key = opt.textkey; | |
| if(key instanceof ArrayBuffer){ | |
| key = new Uint8Array(key); | |
| } | |
| if(key instanceof Uint8Array){ | |
| key = new TextDecoder('utf-8').decode(key); | |
| }else if('string'!==typeof key){ | |
| toss3(capi.SQLITE_MISUSE, | |
| "Invalid value for the 'textkey' option. Expecting a string,", | |
| "ArrayBuffer, or Uint8Array."); | |
| } | |
| }else if( opt.hexkey ){ | |
| keytype = 'hexkey'; | |
| key = opt.hexkey; | |
| if((key instanceof ArrayBuffer) || (key instanceof Uint8Array)){ | |
| key = byteArrayToHex(key); | |
| }else if('string'!==typeof key){ | |
| toss3(capi.SQLITE_MISUSE, | |
| "Invalid value for the 'hexkey' option. Expecting a string,", | |
| "ArrayBuffer, or Uint8Array."); | |
| } | |
| /* else assume it's valid hex codes */ | |
| }else{ | |
| return; | |
| } | |
| let stmt; | |
| try{ | |
| stmt = db.prepare("PRAGMA "+keytype+"="+util.sqlite3__wasm_qfmt_token(key, 1)); | |
| stmt.step(); | |
| return true; | |
| }finally{ | |
| if(stmt) stmt.finalize(); | |
| } | |
| }; | |
| //#endif enable-see | |
| /** | |
| A proxy for DB class constructors. It must be called with the | |
| being-construct DB object as its "this". See the DB constructor | |
| for the argument docs. This is split into a separate function | |
| in order to enable simple creation of special-case DB constructors, | |
| e.g. JsStorageDb and OpfsDb. | |
| Expects to be passed a configuration object with the following | |
| properties: | |
| - `.filename`: the db filename. It may be a special name like ":memory:" | |
| or "". | |
| - `.flags`: as documented in the DB constructor. | |
| - `.vfs`: as documented in the DB constructor. | |
| It also accepts those as the first 3 arguments. | |
| */ | |
| const dbCtorHelper = function ctor(...args){ | |
| if(!ctor._name2vfs){ | |
| /** | |
| Map special filenames which we handle here (instead of in C) | |
| to some helpful metadata... | |
| As of 2022-09-20, the C API supports the names :localStorage: | |
| and :sessionStorage: for kvvfs. However, C code cannot | |
| determine (without embedded JS code, e.g. via Emscripten's | |
| EM_JS()) whether the kvvfs is legal in the current browser | |
| context (namely the main UI thread). In order to help client | |
| code fail early on, instead of it being delayed until they | |
| try to read or write a kvvfs-backed db, we'll check for those | |
| names here and throw if they're not legal in the current | |
| context. | |
| */ | |
| ctor._name2vfs = Object.create(null); | |
| const isWorkerThread = ('function'===typeof importScripts/*===running in worker thread*/) | |
| ? (n)=>toss3("The VFS for",n,"is only available in the main window thread.") | |
| : false; | |
| ctor._name2vfs[':localStorage:'] = { | |
| vfs: 'kvvfs', filename: isWorkerThread || (()=>'local') | |
| }; | |
| ctor._name2vfs[':sessionStorage:'] = { | |
| vfs: 'kvvfs', filename: isWorkerThread || (()=>'session') | |
| }; | |
| } | |
| const opt = ctor.normalizeArgs(...args); | |
| let fn = opt.filename, vfsName = opt.vfs, flagsStr = opt.flags; | |
| if(('string'!==typeof fn && 'number'!==typeof fn) | |
| || 'string'!==typeof flagsStr | |
| || (vfsName && ('string'!==typeof vfsName && 'number'!==typeof vfsName))){ | |
| sqlite3.config.error("Invalid DB ctor args",opt,arguments); | |
| toss3("Invalid arguments for DB constructor."); | |
| } | |
| let fnJs = ('number'===typeof fn) ? wasm.cstrToJs(fn) : fn; | |
| const vfsCheck = ctor._name2vfs[fnJs]; | |
| if(vfsCheck){ | |
| vfsName = vfsCheck.vfs; | |
| fn = fnJs = vfsCheck.filename(fnJs); | |
| } | |
| let pDb, oflags = 0; | |
| if( flagsStr.indexOf('c')>=0 ){ | |
| oflags |= capi.SQLITE_OPEN_CREATE | capi.SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE; | |
| } | |
| if( flagsStr.indexOf('w')>=0 ) oflags |= capi.SQLITE_OPEN_READWRITE; | |
| if( 0===oflags ) oflags |= capi.SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY; | |
| oflags |= capi.SQLITE_OPEN_EXRESCODE; | |
| const stack = wasm.pstack.pointer; | |
| try { | |
| const pPtr = wasm.pstack.allocPtr() /* output (sqlite3**) arg */; | |
| let rc = capi.sqlite3_open_v2(fn, pPtr, oflags, vfsName || 0); | |
| pDb = wasm.peekPtr(pPtr); | |
| checkSqlite3Rc(pDb, rc); | |
| capi.sqlite3_extended_result_codes(pDb, 1); | |
| if(flagsStr.indexOf('t')>=0){ | |
| capi.sqlite3_trace_v2(pDb, capi.SQLITE_TRACE_STMT, | |
| __dbTraceToConsole, pDb); | |
| } | |
| }catch( e ){ | |
| if( pDb ) capi.sqlite3_close_v2(pDb); | |
| throw e; | |
| }finally{ | |
| wasm.pstack.restore(stack); | |
| } | |
| this.filename = fnJs; | |
| __ptrMap.set(this, pDb); | |
| __stmtMap.set(this, Object.create(null)); | |
| try{ | |
| //#if enable-see | |
| dbCtorApplySEEKey(this,opt); | |
| //#endif | |
| // Check for per-VFS post-open SQL/callback... | |
| const pVfs = capi.sqlite3_js_db_vfs(pDb) | |
| || toss3("Internal error: cannot get VFS for new db handle."); | |
| const postInitSql = __vfsPostOpenCallback[pVfs]; | |
| if(postInitSql){ | |
| /** | |
| Reminder: if this db is encrypted and the client did _not_ pass | |
| in the key, any init code will fail, causing the ctor to throw. | |
| We don't actually know whether the db is encrypted, so we cannot | |
| sensibly apply any heuristics which skip the init code only for | |
| encrypted databases for which no key has yet been supplied. | |
| */ | |
| if(postInitSql instanceof Function){ | |
| postInitSql(this, sqlite3); | |
| }else{ | |
| checkSqlite3Rc( | |
| pDb, capi.sqlite3_exec(pDb, postInitSql, 0, 0, 0) | |
| ); | |
| } | |
| } | |
| }catch(e){ | |
| this.close(); | |
| throw e; | |
| } | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| Sets a callback which should be called after a db is opened with | |
| the given sqlite3_vfs pointer. The 2nd argument must be a | |
| function, which gets called with | |
| (theOo1DbObject,sqlite3Namespace) at the end of the DB() | |
| constructor. The function must throw on error, in which case the | |
| db is closed and the exception is propagated. This function is | |
| intended only for use by DB subclasses or sqlite3_vfs | |
| implementations. | |
| Prior to 2024-07-22, it was legal to pass SQL code as the second | |
| argument, but that can interfere with a client's ability to run | |
| pragmas which must be run before anything else, namely (pragma | |
| locking_mode=exclusive) for use with WAL mode. That capability | |
| had only ever been used as an internal detail of the two OPFS | |
| VFSes, and they no longer use it that way. | |
| */ | |
| dbCtorHelper.setVfsPostOpenCallback = function(pVfs, callback){ | |
| if( !(callback instanceof Function)){ | |
| toss3("dbCtorHelper.setVfsPostOpenCallback() should not be used with "+ | |
| "a non-function argument.",arguments); | |
| } | |
| __vfsPostOpenCallback[pVfs] = callback; | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| A helper for DB constructors. It accepts either a single | |
| config-style object or up to 3 arguments (filename, dbOpenFlags, | |
| dbVfsName). It returns a new object containing: | |
| { filename: ..., flags: ..., vfs: ... } | |
| If passed an object, any additional properties it has are copied | |
| as-is into the new object. | |
| */ | |
| dbCtorHelper.normalizeArgs = function(filename=':memory:',flags = 'c',vfs = null){ | |
| const arg = {}; | |
| if(1===arguments.length && arguments[0] && 'object'===typeof arguments[0]){ | |
| Object.assign(arg, arguments[0]); | |
| if(undefined===arg.flags) arg.flags = 'c'; | |
| if(undefined===arg.vfs) arg.vfs = null; | |
| if(undefined===arg.filename) arg.filename = ':memory:'; | |
| }else{ | |
| arg.filename = filename; | |
| arg.flags = flags; | |
| arg.vfs = vfs; | |
| } | |
| return arg; | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| The DB class provides a high-level OO wrapper around an sqlite3 | |
| db handle. | |
| The given db filename must be resolvable using whatever | |
| filesystem layer (virtual or otherwise) is set up for the default | |
| sqlite3 VFS. | |
| Note that the special sqlite3 db names ":memory:" and "" | |
| (temporary db) have their normal special meanings here and need | |
| not resolve to real filenames, but "" uses an on-storage | |
| temporary database and requires that the VFS support that. | |
| The second argument specifies the open/create mode for the | |
| database. It must be string containing a sequence of letters (in | |
| any order, but case sensitive) specifying the mode: | |
| - "c": create if it does not exist, else fail if it does not | |
| exist. Implies the "w" flag. | |
| - "w": write. Implies "r": a db cannot be write-only. | |
| - "r": read-only if neither "w" nor "c" are provided, else it | |
| is ignored. | |
| - "t": enable tracing of SQL executed on this database handle, | |
| sending it to `console.log()`. To disable it later, call | |
| `sqlite3.capi.sqlite3_trace_v2(thisDb.pointer, 0, 0, 0)`. | |
| If "w" is not provided, the db is implicitly read-only, noting | |
| that "rc" is meaningless | |
| Any other letters are currently ignored. The default is | |
| "c". These modes are ignored for the special ":memory:" and "" | |
| names and _may_ be ignored altogether for certain VFSes. | |
| The final argument is analogous to the final argument of | |
| sqlite3_open_v2(): the name of an sqlite3 VFS. Pass a falsy value, | |
| or none at all, to use the default. If passed a value, it must | |
| be the string name of a VFS. | |
| The constructor optionally (and preferably) takes its arguments | |
| in the form of a single configuration object with the following | |
| properties: | |
| - `filename`: database file name | |
| - `flags`: open-mode flags | |
| - `vfs`: the VFS fname | |
| //#if enable-see | |
| SEE-capable builds optionally support ONE of the following | |
| additional options: | |
| - `key`, `hexkey`, or `textkey`: encryption key as a string, | |
| ArrayBuffer, or Uint8Array. These flags function as documented | |
| for the SEE pragmas of the same names. Using a byte array for | |
| `hexkey` is equivalent to the same series of hex codes in | |
| string form, so `'666f6f'` is equivalent to | |
| `Uint8Array([0x66,0x6f,0x6f])`. A `textkey` byte array is | |
| assumed to be UTF-8. A `key` string is transformed into a UTF-8 | |
| byte array, and a `key` byte array is transformed into a | |
| `hexkey` with the same bytes. | |
| In non-SEE builds, these options are ignored. In SEE builds, | |
| `PRAGMA key/textkey/hexkey=X` is executed immediately after | |
| opening the db. If more than one of the options is provided, | |
| or any option has an invalid argument type, an exception is | |
| thrown. | |
| Note that some DB subclasses may run post-initialization SQL | |
| code, e.g. to set a busy-handler timeout or tweak the page cache | |
| size. Such code is run _after_ the SEE key is applied. If no key | |
| is supplied and the database is encrypted, execution of the | |
| post-initialization SQL will fail, causing the constructor to | |
| throw. | |
| //#endif enable-see | |
| The `filename` and `vfs` arguments may be either JS strings or | |
| C-strings allocated via WASM. `flags` is required to be a JS | |
| string (because it's specific to this API, which is specific | |
| to JS). | |
| For purposes of passing a DB instance to C-style sqlite3 | |
| functions, the DB object's read-only `pointer` property holds its | |
| `sqlite3*` pointer value. That property can also be used to check | |
| whether this DB instance is still open: it will evaluate to | |
| `undefined` after the DB object's close() method is called. | |
| In the main window thread, the filenames `":localStorage:"` and | |
| `":sessionStorage:"` are special: they cause the db to use either | |
| localStorage or sessionStorage for storing the database using | |
| the kvvfs. If one of these names are used, they trump | |
| any vfs name set in the arguments. | |
| */ | |
| const DB = function(...args){ | |
| dbCtorHelper.apply(this, args); | |
| }; | |
| DB.dbCtorHelper = dbCtorHelper; | |
| /** | |
| Internal-use enum for mapping JS types to DB-bindable types. | |
| These do not (and need not) line up with the SQLITE_type | |
| values. All values in this enum must be truthy and distinct | |
| but they need not be numbers. | |
| */ | |
| const BindTypes = { | |
| null: 1, | |
| number: 2, | |
| string: 3, | |
| boolean: 4, | |
| blob: 5 | |
| }; | |
| BindTypes['undefined'] == BindTypes.null; | |
| if(wasm.bigIntEnabled){ | |
| BindTypes.bigint = BindTypes.number; | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| This class wraps sqlite3_stmt. Calling this constructor | |
| directly will trigger an exception. Use DB.prepare() to create | |
| new instances. | |
| For purposes of passing a Stmt instance to C-style sqlite3 | |
| functions, its read-only `pointer` property holds its `sqlite3_stmt*` | |
| pointer value. | |
| Other non-function properties include: | |
| - `db`: the DB object which created the statement. | |
| - `columnCount`: the number of result columns in the query, or 0 | |
| for queries which cannot return results. This property is a proxy | |
| for sqlite3_column_count() and its use in loops should be avoided | |
| because of the call overhead associated with that. The | |
| `columnCount` is not cached when the Stmt is created because a | |
| schema change made via a separate db connection between this | |
| statement's preparation and when it is stepped may invalidate it. | |
| - `parameterCount`: the number of bindable parameters in the query. | |
| As a general rule, most methods of this class will throw if | |
| called on an instance which has been finalized. For brevity's | |
| sake, the method docs do not all repeat this warning. | |
| */ | |
| const Stmt = function(){ | |
| if(BindTypes!==arguments[2]){ | |
| toss3(capi.SQLITE_MISUSE, "Do not call the Stmt constructor directly. Use DB.prepare()."); | |
| } | |
| this.db = arguments[0]; | |
| __ptrMap.set(this, arguments[1]); | |
| this.parameterCount = capi.sqlite3_bind_parameter_count(this.pointer); | |
| }; | |
| /** Throws if the given DB has been closed, else it is returned. */ | |
| const affirmDbOpen = function(db){ | |
| if(!db.pointer) toss3("DB has been closed."); | |
| return db; | |
| }; | |
| /** Throws if ndx is not an integer or if it is out of range | |
| for stmt.columnCount, else returns stmt. | |
| Reminder: this will also fail after the statement is finalized | |
| but the resulting error will be about an out-of-bounds column | |
| index rather than a statement-is-finalized error. | |
| */ | |
| const affirmColIndex = function(stmt,ndx){ | |
| if((ndx !== (ndx|0)) || ndx<0 || ndx>=stmt.columnCount){ | |
| toss3("Column index",ndx,"is out of range."); | |
| } | |
| return stmt; | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| Expects to be passed the `arguments` object from DB.exec(). Does | |
| the argument processing/validation, throws on error, and returns | |
| a new object on success: | |
| { sql: the SQL, opt: optionsObj, cbArg: function} | |
| The opt object is a normalized copy of any passed to this | |
| function. The sql will be converted to a string if it is provided | |
| in one of the supported non-string formats. | |
| cbArg is only set if the opt.callback or opt.resultRows are set, | |
| in which case it's a function which expects to be passed the | |
| current Stmt and returns the callback argument of the type | |
| indicated by the input arguments. | |
| */ | |
| const parseExecArgs = function(db, args){ | |
| const out = Object.create(null); | |
| out.opt = Object.create(null); | |
| switch(args.length){ | |
| case 1: | |
| if('string'===typeof args[0] || util.isSQLableTypedArray(args[0])){ | |
| out.sql = args[0]; | |
| }else if(Array.isArray(args[0])){ | |
| out.sql = args[0]; | |
| }else if(args[0] && 'object'===typeof args[0]){ | |
| out.opt = args[0]; | |
| out.sql = out.opt.sql; | |
| } | |
| break; | |
| case 2: | |
| out.sql = args[0]; | |
| out.opt = args[1]; | |
| break; | |
| default: toss3("Invalid argument count for exec()."); | |
| }; | |
| out.sql = util.flexibleString(out.sql); | |
| if('string'!==typeof out.sql){ | |
| toss3("Missing SQL argument or unsupported SQL value type."); | |
| } | |
| const opt = out.opt; | |
| switch(opt.returnValue){ | |
| case 'resultRows': | |
| if(!opt.resultRows) opt.resultRows = []; | |
| out.returnVal = ()=>opt.resultRows; | |
| break; | |
| case 'saveSql': | |
| if(!opt.saveSql) opt.saveSql = []; | |
| out.returnVal = ()=>opt.saveSql; | |
| break; | |
| case undefined: | |
| case 'this': | |
| out.returnVal = ()=>db; | |
| break; | |
| default: | |
| toss3("Invalid returnValue value:",opt.returnValue); | |
| } | |
| if(!opt.callback && !opt.returnValue && undefined!==opt.rowMode){ | |
| if(!opt.resultRows) opt.resultRows = []; | |
| out.returnVal = ()=>opt.resultRows; | |
| } | |
| if(opt.callback || opt.resultRows){ | |
| switch((undefined===opt.rowMode) ? 'array' : opt.rowMode) { | |
| case 'object': | |
| out.cbArg = (stmt,cache)=>{ | |
| if( !cache.columnNames ) cache.columnNames = stmt.getColumnNames([]); | |
| /* https://sqlite.org/forum/forumpost/3632183d2470617d: | |
| conversion of rows to objects (key/val pairs) is | |
| somewhat expensive for large data sets because of the | |
| native-to-JS conversion of the column names. If we | |
| instead cache the names and build objects from that | |
| list of strings, it can run twice as fast. The | |
| difference is not noticeable for small data sets but | |
| becomes human-perceivable when enough rows are | |
| involved. */ | |
| const row = stmt.get([]); | |
| const rv = Object.create(null); | |
| for( const i in cache.columnNames ) rv[cache.columnNames[i]] = row[i]; | |
| return rv; | |
| }; | |
| break; | |
| case 'array': out.cbArg = (stmt)=>stmt.get([]); break; | |
| case 'stmt': | |
| if(Array.isArray(opt.resultRows)){ | |
| toss3("exec(): invalid rowMode for a resultRows array: must", | |
| "be one of 'array', 'object',", | |
| "a result column number, or column name reference."); | |
| } | |
| out.cbArg = (stmt)=>stmt; | |
| break; | |
| default: | |
| if(util.isInt32(opt.rowMode)){ | |
| out.cbArg = (stmt)=>stmt.get(opt.rowMode); | |
| break; | |
| }else if('string'===typeof opt.rowMode | |
| && opt.rowMode.length>1 | |
| && '$'===opt.rowMode[0]){ | |
| /* "$X": fetch column named "X" (case-sensitive!). Prior | |
| to 2022-12-14 ":X" and "@X" were also permitted, but | |
| having so many options is unnecessary and likely to | |
| cause confusion. */ | |
| const $colName = opt.rowMode.substr(1); | |
| out.cbArg = (stmt)=>{ | |
| const rc = stmt.get(Object.create(null))[$colName]; | |
| return (undefined===rc) | |
| ? toss3(capi.SQLITE_NOTFOUND, | |
| "exec(): unknown result column:",$colName) | |
| : rc; | |
| }; | |
| break; | |
| } | |
| toss3("Invalid rowMode:",opt.rowMode); | |
| } | |
| } | |
| return out; | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| Internal impl of the DB.selectValue(), selectArray(), and | |
| selectObject() methods. | |
| */ | |
| const __selectFirstRow = (db, sql, bind, ...getArgs)=>{ | |
| const stmt = db.prepare(sql); | |
| try { | |
| const rc = stmt.bind(bind).step() ? stmt.get(...getArgs) : undefined; | |
| stmt.reset(/*for INSERT...RETURNING locking case*/); | |
| return rc; | |
| }finally{ | |
| stmt.finalize(); | |
| } | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| Internal impl of the DB.selectArrays() and selectObjects() | |
| methods. | |
| */ | |
| const __selectAll = | |
| (db, sql, bind, rowMode)=>db.exec({ | |
| sql, bind, rowMode, returnValue: 'resultRows' | |
| }); | |
| /** | |
| Expects to be given a DB instance or an `sqlite3*` pointer (may | |
| be null) and an sqlite3 API result code. If the result code is | |
| not falsy, this function throws an SQLite3Error with an error | |
| message from sqlite3_errmsg(), using db (or, if db is-a DB, | |
| db.pointer) as the db handle, or sqlite3_errstr() if db is | |
| falsy. Note that if it's passed a non-error code like SQLITE_ROW | |
| or SQLITE_DONE, it will still throw but the error string might be | |
| "Not an error." The various non-0 non-error codes need to be | |
| checked for in client code where they are expected. | |
| The thrown exception's `resultCode` property will be the value of | |
| the second argument to this function. | |
| If it does not throw, it returns its first argument. | |
| */ | |
| DB.checkRc = (db,resultCode)=>checkSqlite3Rc(db,resultCode); | |
| DB.prototype = { | |
| /** Returns true if this db handle is open, else false. */ | |
| isOpen: function(){ | |
| return !!this.pointer; | |
| }, | |
| /** Throws if this given DB has been closed, else returns `this`. */ | |
| affirmOpen: function(){ | |
| return affirmDbOpen(this); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Finalizes all open statements and closes this database | |
| connection. This is a no-op if the db has already been | |
| closed. After calling close(), `this.pointer` will resolve to | |
| `undefined`, so that can be used to check whether the db | |
| instance is still opened. | |
| If this.onclose.before is a function then it is called before | |
| any close-related cleanup. | |
| If this.onclose.after is a function then it is called after the | |
| db is closed but before auxiliary state like this.filename is | |
| cleared. | |
| Both onclose handlers are passed this object, with the onclose | |
| object as their "this," noting that the db will have been | |
| closed when onclose.after is called. If this db is not opened | |
| when close() is called, neither of the handlers are called. Any | |
| exceptions the handlers throw are ignored because "destructors | |
| must not throw." | |
| Note that garbage collection of a db handle, if it happens at | |
| all, will never trigger close(), so onclose handlers are not a | |
| reliable way to implement close-time cleanup or maintenance of | |
| a db. | |
| */ | |
| close: function(){ | |
| if(this.pointer){ | |
| if(this.onclose && (this.onclose.before instanceof Function)){ | |
| try{this.onclose.before(this)} | |
| catch(e){/*ignore*/} | |
| } | |
| const pDb = this.pointer; | |
| Object.keys(__stmtMap.get(this)).forEach((k,s)=>{ | |
| if(s && s.pointer){ | |
| try{s.finalize()} | |
| catch(e){/*ignore*/} | |
| } | |
| }); | |
| __ptrMap.delete(this); | |
| __stmtMap.delete(this); | |
| capi.sqlite3_close_v2(pDb); | |
| if(this.onclose && (this.onclose.after instanceof Function)){ | |
| try{this.onclose.after(this)} | |
| catch(e){/*ignore*/} | |
| } | |
| delete this.filename; | |
| } | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Returns the number of changes, as per sqlite3_changes() | |
| (if the first argument is false) or sqlite3_total_changes() | |
| (if it's true). If the 2nd argument is true, it uses | |
| sqlite3_changes64() or sqlite3_total_changes64(), which | |
| will trigger an exception if this build does not have | |
| BigInt support enabled. | |
| */ | |
| changes: function(total=false,sixtyFour=false){ | |
| const p = affirmDbOpen(this).pointer; | |
| if(total){ | |
| return sixtyFour | |
| ? capi.sqlite3_total_changes64(p) | |
| : capi.sqlite3_total_changes(p); | |
| }else{ | |
| return sixtyFour | |
| ? capi.sqlite3_changes64(p) | |
| : capi.sqlite3_changes(p); | |
| } | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Similar to the this.filename but returns the | |
| sqlite3_db_filename() value for the given database name, | |
| defaulting to "main". The argument may be either a JS string | |
| or a pointer to a WASM-allocated C-string. | |
| */ | |
| dbFilename: function(dbName='main'){ | |
| return capi.sqlite3_db_filename(affirmDbOpen(this).pointer, dbName); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Returns the name of the given 0-based db number, as documented | |
| for sqlite3_db_name(). | |
| */ | |
| dbName: function(dbNumber=0){ | |
| return capi.sqlite3_db_name(affirmDbOpen(this).pointer, dbNumber); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Returns the name of the sqlite3_vfs used by the given database | |
| of this connection (defaulting to 'main'). The argument may be | |
| either a JS string or a WASM C-string. Returns undefined if the | |
| given db name is invalid. Throws if this object has been | |
| close()d. | |
| */ | |
| dbVfsName: function(dbName=0){ | |
| let rc; | |
| const pVfs = capi.sqlite3_js_db_vfs( | |
| affirmDbOpen(this).pointer, dbName | |
| ); | |
| if(pVfs){ | |
| const v = new capi.sqlite3_vfs(pVfs); | |
| try{ rc = wasm.cstrToJs(v.$zName) } | |
| finally { v.dispose() } | |
| } | |
| return rc; | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Compiles the given SQL and returns a prepared Stmt. This is | |
| the only way to create new Stmt objects. Throws on error. | |
| The given SQL must be a string, a Uint8Array holding SQL, a | |
| WASM pointer to memory holding the NUL-terminated SQL string, | |
| or an array of strings. In the latter case, the array is | |
| concatenated together, with no separators, to form the SQL | |
| string (arrays are often a convenient way to formulate long | |
| statements). If the SQL contains no statements, an | |
| SQLite3Error is thrown. | |
| Design note: the C API permits empty SQL, reporting it as a 0 | |
| result code and a NULL stmt pointer. Supporting that case here | |
| would cause extra work for all clients: any use of the Stmt API | |
| on such a statement will necessarily throw, so clients would be | |
| required to check `stmt.pointer` after calling `prepare()` in | |
| order to determine whether the Stmt instance is empty or not. | |
| Long-time practice (with other sqlite3 script bindings) | |
| suggests that the empty-prepare case is sufficiently rare that | |
| supporting it here would simply hurt overall usability. | |
| */ | |
| prepare: function(sql){ | |
| affirmDbOpen(this); | |
| const stack = wasm.pstack.pointer; | |
| let ppStmt, pStmt; | |
| try{ | |
| ppStmt = wasm.pstack.alloc(8)/* output (sqlite3_stmt**) arg */; | |
| DB.checkRc(this, capi.sqlite3_prepare_v2(this.pointer, sql, -1, ppStmt, null)); | |
| pStmt = wasm.peekPtr(ppStmt); | |
| } | |
| finally { | |
| wasm.pstack.restore(stack); | |
| } | |
| if(!pStmt) toss3("Cannot prepare empty SQL."); | |
| const stmt = new Stmt(this, pStmt, BindTypes); | |
| __stmtMap.get(this)[pStmt] = stmt; | |
| return stmt; | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Executes one or more SQL statements in the form of a single | |
| string. Its arguments must be either (sql,optionsObject) or | |
| (optionsObject). In the latter case, optionsObject.sql must | |
| contain the SQL to execute. By default it returns this object | |
| but that can be changed via the `returnValue` option as | |
| described below. Throws on error. | |
| If no SQL is provided, or a non-string is provided, an | |
| exception is triggered. Empty SQL, on the other hand, is | |
| simply a no-op. | |
| The optional options object may contain any of the following | |
| properties: | |
| - `sql` = the SQL to run (unless it's provided as the first | |
| argument). This must be of type string, Uint8Array, or an array | |
| of strings. In the latter case they're concatenated together | |
| as-is, _with no separator_ between elements, before evaluation. | |
| The array form is often simpler for long hand-written queries. | |
| - `bind` = a single value valid as an argument for | |
| Stmt.bind(). This is _only_ applied to the _first_ non-empty | |
| statement in the SQL which has any bindable parameters. (Empty | |
| statements are skipped entirely.) | |
| - `saveSql` = an optional array. If set, the SQL of each | |
| executed statement is appended to this array before the | |
| statement is executed (but after it is prepared - we don't have | |
| the string until after that). Empty SQL statements are elided | |
| but can have odd effects in the output. e.g. SQL of: `"select | |
| 1; -- empty\n; select 2"` will result in an array containing | |
| `["select 1;", "--empty \n; select 2"]`. That's simply how | |
| sqlite3 records the SQL for the 2nd statement. | |
| ================================================================== | |
| The following options apply _only_ to the _first_ statement | |
| which has a non-zero result column count, regardless of whether | |
| the statement actually produces any result rows. | |
| ================================================================== | |
| - `columnNames`: if this is an array, the column names of the | |
| result set are stored in this array before the callback (if | |
| any) is triggered (regardless of whether the query produces any | |
| result rows). If no statement has result columns, this value is | |
| unchanged. Achtung: an SQL result may have multiple columns | |
| with identical names. | |
| - `callback` = a function which gets called for each row of the | |
| result set, but only if that statement has any result rows. The | |
| callback's "this" is the options object, noting that this | |
| function synthesizes one if the caller does not pass one to | |
| exec(). The second argument passed to the callback is always | |
| the current Stmt object, as it's needed if the caller wants to | |
| fetch the column names or some such (noting that they could | |
| also be fetched via `this.columnNames`, if the client provides | |
| the `columnNames` option). If the callback returns a literal | |
| `false` (as opposed to any other falsy value, e.g. an implicit | |
| `undefined` return), any ongoing statement-`step()` iteration | |
| stops without an error. The return value of the callback is | |
| otherwise ignored. | |
| ACHTUNG: The callback MUST NOT modify the Stmt object. Calling | |
| any of the Stmt.get() variants, Stmt.getColumnName(), or | |
| similar, is legal, but calling step() or finalize() is | |
| not. Member methods which are illegal in this context will | |
| trigger an exception, but clients must also refrain from using | |
| any lower-level (C-style) APIs which might modify the | |
| statement. | |
| The first argument passed to the callback defaults to an array of | |
| values from the current result row but may be changed with ... | |
| - `rowMode` = specifies the type of he callback's first argument. | |
| It may be any of... | |
| A) A string describing what type of argument should be passed | |
| as the first argument to the callback: | |
| A.1) `'array'` (the default) causes the results of | |
| `stmt.get([])` to be passed to the `callback` and/or appended | |
| to `resultRows`. | |
| A.2) `'object'` causes the results of | |
| `stmt.get(Object.create(null))` to be passed to the | |
| `callback` and/or appended to `resultRows`. Achtung: an SQL | |
| result may have multiple columns with identical names. In | |
| that case, the right-most column will be the one set in this | |
| object! | |
| A.3) `'stmt'` causes the current Stmt to be passed to the | |
| callback, but this mode will trigger an exception if | |
| `resultRows` is an array because appending the transient | |
| statement to the array would be downright unhelpful. | |
| B) An integer, indicating a zero-based column in the result | |
| row. Only that one single value will be passed on. | |
| C) A string with a minimum length of 2 and leading character of | |
| '$' will fetch the row as an object, extract that one field, | |
| and pass that field's value to the callback. Note that these | |
| keys are case-sensitive so must match the case used in the | |
| SQL. e.g. `"select a A from t"` with a `rowMode` of `'$A'` | |
| would work but `'$a'` would not. A reference to a column not in | |
| the result set will trigger an exception on the first row (as | |
| the check is not performed until rows are fetched). Note also | |
| that `$` is a legal identifier character in JS so need not be | |
| quoted. | |
| Any other `rowMode` value triggers an exception. | |
| - `resultRows`: if this is an array, it functions similarly to | |
| the `callback` option: each row of the result set (if any), | |
| with the exception that the `rowMode` 'stmt' is not legal. It | |
| is legal to use both `resultRows` and `callback`, but | |
| `resultRows` is likely much simpler to use for small data sets | |
| and can be used over a WebWorker-style message interface. | |
| exec() throws if `resultRows` is set and `rowMode` is 'stmt'. | |
| - `returnValue`: is a string specifying what this function | |
| should return: | |
| A) The default value is (usually) `"this"`, meaning that the | |
| DB object itself should be returned. The exception is if | |
| the caller passes neither of `callback` nor `returnValue` | |
| but does pass an explicit `rowMode` then the default | |
| `returnValue` is `"resultRows"`, described below. | |
| B) `"resultRows"` means to return the value of the | |
| `resultRows` option. If `resultRows` is not set, this | |
| function behaves as if it were set to an empty array. | |
| C) `"saveSql"` means to return the value of the | |
| `saveSql` option. If `saveSql` is not set, this | |
| function behaves as if it were set to an empty array. | |
| Potential TODOs: | |
| - `bind`: permit an array of arrays/objects to bind. The first | |
| sub-array would act on the first statement which has bindable | |
| parameters (as it does now). The 2nd would act on the next such | |
| statement, etc. | |
| - `callback` and `resultRows`: permit an array entries with | |
| semantics similar to those described for `bind` above. | |
| */ | |
| exec: function(/*(sql [,obj]) || (obj)*/){ | |
| affirmDbOpen(this); | |
| const arg = parseExecArgs(this, arguments); | |
| if(!arg.sql){ | |
| return toss3("exec() requires an SQL string."); | |
| } | |
| const opt = arg.opt; | |
| const callback = opt.callback; | |
| const resultRows = | |
| Array.isArray(opt.resultRows) ? opt.resultRows : undefined; | |
| let stmt; | |
| let bind = opt.bind; | |
| let evalFirstResult = !!( | |
| arg.cbArg || opt.columnNames || resultRows | |
| ) /* true to step through the first result-returning statement */; | |
| const stack = wasm.scopedAllocPush(); | |
| const saveSql = Array.isArray(opt.saveSql) ? opt.saveSql : undefined; | |
| try{ | |
| const isTA = util.isSQLableTypedArray(arg.sql) | |
| /* Optimization: if the SQL is a TypedArray we can save some string | |
| conversion costs. */; | |
| /* Allocate the two output pointers (ppStmt, pzTail) and heap | |
| space for the SQL (pSql). When prepare_v2() returns, pzTail | |
| will point to somewhere in pSql. */ | |
| let sqlByteLen = isTA ? arg.sql.byteLength : wasm.jstrlen(arg.sql); | |
| const ppStmt = wasm.scopedAlloc( | |
| /* output (sqlite3_stmt**) arg and pzTail */ | |
| (2 * wasm.ptrSizeof) + (sqlByteLen + 1/* SQL + NUL */) | |
| ); | |
| const pzTail = ppStmt + wasm.ptrSizeof /* final arg to sqlite3_prepare_v2() */; | |
| let pSql = pzTail + wasm.ptrSizeof; | |
| const pSqlEnd = pSql + sqlByteLen; | |
| if(isTA) wasm.heap8().set(arg.sql, pSql); | |
| else wasm.jstrcpy(arg.sql, wasm.heap8(), pSql, sqlByteLen, false); | |
| wasm.poke(pSql + sqlByteLen, 0/*NUL terminator*/); | |
| while(pSql && wasm.peek(pSql, 'i8') | |
| /* Maintenance reminder:^^^ _must_ be 'i8' or else we | |
| will very likely cause an endless loop. What that's | |
| doing is checking for a terminating NUL byte. If we | |
| use i32 or similar then we read 4 bytes, read stuff | |
| around the NUL terminator, and get stuck in and | |
| endless loop at the end of the SQL, endlessly | |
| re-preparing an empty statement. */ ){ | |
| wasm.pokePtr([ppStmt, pzTail], 0); | |
| DB.checkRc(this, capi.sqlite3_prepare_v3( | |
| this.pointer, pSql, sqlByteLen, 0, ppStmt, pzTail | |
| )); | |
| const pStmt = wasm.peekPtr(ppStmt); | |
| pSql = wasm.peekPtr(pzTail); | |
| sqlByteLen = pSqlEnd - pSql; | |
| if(!pStmt) continue; | |
| if(saveSql) saveSql.push(capi.sqlite3_sql(pStmt).trim()); | |
| stmt = new Stmt(this, pStmt, BindTypes); | |
| if(bind && stmt.parameterCount){ | |
| stmt.bind(bind); | |
| bind = null; | |
| } | |
| if(evalFirstResult && stmt.columnCount){ | |
| /* Only forward SELECT-style results for the FIRST query | |
| in the SQL which potentially has them. */ | |
| let gotColNames = Array.isArray( | |
| opt.columnNames | |
| /* As reported in | |
| https://sqlite.org/forum/forumpost/7774b773937cbe0a | |
| we need to delay fetching of the column names until | |
| after the first step() (if we step() at all) because | |
| a schema change between the prepare() and step(), via | |
| another connection, may invalidate the column count | |
| and names. */) ? 0 : 1; | |
| evalFirstResult = false; | |
| if(arg.cbArg || resultRows){ | |
| const cbArgCache = Object.create(null) | |
| /* 2nd arg for arg.cbArg, used by (at least) row-to-object | |
| converter */; | |
| for(; stmt.step(); stmt._lockedByExec = false){ | |
| if(0===gotColNames++){ | |
| stmt.getColumnNames(cbArgCache.columnNames = (opt.columnNames || [])); | |
| } | |
| stmt._lockedByExec = true; | |
| const row = arg.cbArg(stmt,cbArgCache); | |
| if(resultRows) resultRows.push(row); | |
| if(callback && false === callback.call(opt, row, stmt)){ | |
| break; | |
| } | |
| } | |
| stmt._lockedByExec = false; | |
| } | |
| if(0===gotColNames){ | |
| /* opt.columnNames was provided but we visited no result rows */ | |
| stmt.getColumnNames(opt.columnNames); | |
| } | |
| }else{ | |
| stmt.step(); | |
| } | |
| stmt.reset( | |
| /* In order to trigger an exception in the | |
| INSERT...RETURNING locking scenario: | |
| https://sqlite.org/forum/forumpost/36f7a2e7494897df | |
| */).finalize(); | |
| stmt = null; | |
| }/*prepare() loop*/ | |
| }/*catch(e){ | |
| sqlite3.config.warn("DB.exec() is propagating exception",opt,e); | |
| throw e; | |
| }*/finally{ | |
| wasm.scopedAllocPop(stack); | |
| if(stmt){ | |
| delete stmt._lockedByExec; | |
| stmt.finalize(); | |
| } | |
| } | |
| return arg.returnVal(); | |
| }/*exec()*/, | |
| /** | |
| Creates a new UDF (User-Defined Function) which is accessible | |
| via SQL code. This function may be called in any of the | |
| following forms: | |
| - (name, function) | |
| - (name, function, optionsObject) | |
| - (name, optionsObject) | |
| - (optionsObject) | |
| In the final two cases, the function must be defined as the | |
| `callback` property of the options object (optionally called | |
| `xFunc` to align with the C API documentation). In the final | |
| case, the function's name must be the 'name' property. | |
| The first two call forms can only be used for creating scalar | |
| functions. Creating an aggregate or window function requires | |
| the options-object form (see below for details). | |
| UDFs can be removed as documented for | |
| sqlite3_create_function_v2() and | |
| sqlite3_create_window_function(), but doing so will "leak" the | |
| JS-created WASM binding of those functions (meaning that their | |
| entries in the WASM indirect function table still | |
| exist). Eliminating that potential leak is a pending TODO. | |
| On success, returns this object. Throws on error. | |
| When called from SQL arguments to the UDF, and its result, | |
| will be converted between JS and SQL with as much fidelity as | |
| is feasible, triggering an exception if a type conversion | |
| cannot be determined. The docs for sqlite3_create_function_v2() | |
| describe the conversions in more detail. | |
| The values set in the options object differ for scalar and | |
| aggregate functions: | |
| - Scalar: set the `xFunc` function-type property to the UDF | |
| function. | |
| - Aggregate: set the `xStep` and `xFinal` function-type | |
| properties to the "step" and "final" callbacks for the | |
| aggregate. Do not set the `xFunc` property. | |
| - Window: set the `xStep`, `xFinal`, `xValue`, and `xInverse` | |
| function-type properties. Do not set the `xFunc` property. | |
| The options object may optionally have an `xDestroy` | |
| function-type property, as per sqlite3_create_function_v2(). | |
| Its argument will be the WASM-pointer-type value of the `pApp` | |
| property, and this function will throw if `pApp` is defined but | |
| is not null, undefined, or a numeric (WASM pointer) | |
| value. i.e. `pApp`, if set, must be value suitable for use as a | |
| WASM pointer argument, noting that `null` or `undefined` will | |
| translate to 0 for that purpose. | |
| The options object may contain flags to modify how | |
| the function is defined: | |
| - `arity`: the number of arguments which SQL calls to this | |
| function expect or require. The default value is `xFunc.length` | |
| or `xStep.length` (i.e. the number of declared parameters it | |
| has) **MINUS 1** (see below for why). As a special case, if the | |
| `length` is 0, its arity is also 0 instead of -1. A negative | |
| arity value means that the function is variadic and may accept | |
| any number of arguments, up to sqlite3's compile-time | |
| limits. sqlite3 will enforce the argument count if is zero or | |
| greater. The callback always receives a pointer to an | |
| `sqlite3_context` object as its first argument. Any arguments | |
| after that are from SQL code. The leading context argument does | |
| _not_ count towards the function's arity. See the docs for | |
| sqlite3.capi.sqlite3_create_function_v2() for why that argument | |
| is needed in the interface. | |
| The following options-object properties correspond to flags | |
| documented at: | |
| https://sqlite.org/c3ref/create_function.html | |
| - `deterministic` = sqlite3.capi.SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC | |
| - `directOnly` = sqlite3.capi.SQLITE_DIRECTONLY | |
| - `innocuous` = sqlite3.capi.SQLITE_INNOCUOUS | |
| Sidebar: the ability to add new WASM-accessible functions to | |
| the runtime requires that the WASM build is compiled with the | |
| equivalent functionality as that provided by Emscripten's | |
| `-sALLOW_TABLE_GROWTH` flag. | |
| */ | |
| createFunction: function f(name, xFunc, opt){ | |
| const isFunc = (f)=>(f instanceof Function); | |
| switch(arguments.length){ | |
| case 1: /* (optionsObject) */ | |
| opt = name; | |
| name = opt.name; | |
| xFunc = opt.xFunc || 0; | |
| break; | |
| case 2: /* (name, callback|optionsObject) */ | |
| if(!isFunc(xFunc)){ | |
| opt = xFunc; | |
| xFunc = opt.xFunc || 0; | |
| } | |
| break; | |
| case 3: /* name, xFunc, opt */ | |
| break; | |
| default: break; | |
| } | |
| if(!opt) opt = {}; | |
| if('string' !== typeof name){ | |
| toss3("Invalid arguments: missing function name."); | |
| } | |
| let xStep = opt.xStep || 0; | |
| let xFinal = opt.xFinal || 0; | |
| const xValue = opt.xValue || 0; | |
| const xInverse = opt.xInverse || 0; | |
| let isWindow = undefined; | |
| if(isFunc(xFunc)){ | |
| isWindow = false; | |
| if(isFunc(xStep) || isFunc(xFinal)){ | |
| toss3("Ambiguous arguments: scalar or aggregate?"); | |
| } | |
| xStep = xFinal = null; | |
| }else if(isFunc(xStep)){ | |
| if(!isFunc(xFinal)){ | |
| toss3("Missing xFinal() callback for aggregate or window UDF."); | |
| } | |
| xFunc = null; | |
| }else if(isFunc(xFinal)){ | |
| toss3("Missing xStep() callback for aggregate or window UDF."); | |
| }else{ | |
| toss3("Missing function-type properties."); | |
| } | |
| if(false === isWindow){ | |
| if(isFunc(xValue) || isFunc(xInverse)){ | |
| toss3("xValue and xInverse are not permitted for non-window UDFs."); | |
| } | |
| }else if(isFunc(xValue)){ | |
| if(!isFunc(xInverse)){ | |
| toss3("xInverse must be provided if xValue is."); | |
| } | |
| isWindow = true; | |
| }else if(isFunc(xInverse)){ | |
| toss3("xValue must be provided if xInverse is."); | |
| } | |
| const pApp = opt.pApp; | |
| if(undefined!==pApp && | |
| null!==pApp && | |
| (('number'!==typeof pApp) || !util.isInt32(pApp))){ | |
| toss3("Invalid value for pApp property. Must be a legal WASM pointer value."); | |
| } | |
| const xDestroy = opt.xDestroy || 0; | |
| if(xDestroy && !isFunc(xDestroy)){ | |
| toss3("xDestroy property must be a function."); | |
| } | |
| let fFlags = 0 /*flags for sqlite3_create_function_v2()*/; | |
| if(getOwnOption(opt, 'deterministic')) fFlags |= capi.SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC; | |
| if(getOwnOption(opt, 'directOnly')) fFlags |= capi.SQLITE_DIRECTONLY; | |
| if(getOwnOption(opt, 'innocuous')) fFlags |= capi.SQLITE_INNOCUOUS; | |
| name = name.toLowerCase(); | |
| const xArity = xFunc || xStep; | |
| const arity = getOwnOption(opt, 'arity'); | |
| const arityArg = ('number'===typeof arity | |
| ? arity | |
| : (xArity.length ? xArity.length-1/*for pCtx arg*/ : 0)); | |
| let rc; | |
| if( isWindow ){ | |
| rc = capi.sqlite3_create_window_function( | |
| this.pointer, name, arityArg, | |
| capi.SQLITE_UTF8 | fFlags, pApp || 0, | |
| xStep, xFinal, xValue, xInverse, xDestroy); | |
| }else{ | |
| rc = capi.sqlite3_create_function_v2( | |
| this.pointer, name, arityArg, | |
| capi.SQLITE_UTF8 | fFlags, pApp || 0, | |
| xFunc, xStep, xFinal, xDestroy); | |
| } | |
| DB.checkRc(this, rc); | |
| return this; | |
| }/*createFunction()*/, | |
| /** | |
| Prepares the given SQL, step()s it one time, and returns | |
| the value of the first result column. If it has no results, | |
| undefined is returned. | |
| If passed a second argument, it is treated like an argument | |
| to Stmt.bind(), so may be any type supported by that | |
| function. Passing the undefined value is the same as passing | |
| no value, which is useful when... | |
| If passed a 3rd argument, it is expected to be one of the | |
| SQLITE_{typename} constants. Passing the undefined value is | |
| the same as not passing a value. | |
| Throws on error (e.g. malformed SQL). | |
| */ | |
| selectValue: function(sql,bind,asType){ | |
| return __selectFirstRow(this, sql, bind, 0, asType); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Runs the given query and returns an array of the values from | |
| the first result column of each row of the result set. The 2nd | |
| argument is an optional value for use in a single-argument call | |
| to Stmt.bind(). The 3rd argument may be any value suitable for | |
| use as the 2nd argument to Stmt.get(). If a 3rd argument is | |
| desired but no bind data are needed, pass `undefined` for the 2nd | |
| argument. | |
| If there are no result rows, an empty array is returned. | |
| */ | |
| selectValues: function(sql,bind,asType){ | |
| const stmt = this.prepare(sql), rc = []; | |
| try { | |
| stmt.bind(bind); | |
| while(stmt.step()) rc.push(stmt.get(0,asType)); | |
| stmt.reset(/*for INSERT...RETURNING locking case*/); | |
| }finally{ | |
| stmt.finalize(); | |
| } | |
| return rc; | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Prepares the given SQL, step()s it one time, and returns an | |
| array containing the values of the first result row. If it has | |
| no results, `undefined` is returned. | |
| If passed a second argument other than `undefined`, it is | |
| treated like an argument to Stmt.bind(), so may be any type | |
| supported by that function. | |
| Throws on error (e.g. malformed SQL). | |
| */ | |
| selectArray: function(sql,bind){ | |
| return __selectFirstRow(this, sql, bind, []); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Prepares the given SQL, step()s it one time, and returns an | |
| object containing the key/value pairs of the first result | |
| row. If it has no results, `undefined` is returned. | |
| Note that the order of returned object's keys is not guaranteed | |
| to be the same as the order of the fields in the query string. | |
| If passed a second argument other than `undefined`, it is | |
| treated like an argument to Stmt.bind(), so may be any type | |
| supported by that function. | |
| Throws on error (e.g. malformed SQL). | |
| */ | |
| selectObject: function(sql,bind){ | |
| return __selectFirstRow(this, sql, bind, {}); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Runs the given SQL and returns an array of all results, with | |
| each row represented as an array, as per the 'array' `rowMode` | |
| option to `exec()`. An empty result set resolves | |
| to an empty array. The second argument, if any, is treated as | |
| the 'bind' option to a call to exec(). | |
| */ | |
| selectArrays: function(sql,bind){ | |
| return __selectAll(this, sql, bind, 'array'); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Works identically to selectArrays() except that each value | |
| in the returned array is an object, as per the 'object' `rowMode` | |
| option to `exec()`. | |
| */ | |
| selectObjects: function(sql,bind){ | |
| return __selectAll(this, sql, bind, 'object'); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Returns the number of currently-opened Stmt handles for this db | |
| handle, or 0 if this DB instance is closed. Note that only | |
| handles prepared via this.prepare() are counted, and not | |
| handles prepared using capi.sqlite3_prepare_v3() (or | |
| equivalent). | |
| */ | |
| openStatementCount: function(){ | |
| return this.pointer ? Object.keys(__stmtMap.get(this)).length : 0; | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Starts a transaction, calls the given callback, and then either | |
| rolls back or commits the savepoint, depending on whether the | |
| callback throws. The callback is passed this db object as its | |
| only argument. On success, returns the result of the | |
| callback. Throws on error. | |
| Note that transactions may not be nested, so this will throw if | |
| it is called recursively. For nested transactions, use the | |
| savepoint() method or manually manage SAVEPOINTs using exec(). | |
| If called with 2 arguments, the first must be a keyword which | |
| is legal immediately after a BEGIN statement, e.g. one of | |
| "DEFERRED", "IMMEDIATE", or "EXCLUSIVE". Though the exact list | |
| of supported keywords is not hard-coded here, in order to be | |
| future-compatible, if the argument does not look like a single | |
| keyword then an exception is triggered with a description of | |
| the problem. | |
| */ | |
| transaction: function(/* [beginQualifier,] */callback){ | |
| let opener = 'BEGIN'; | |
| if(arguments.length>1){ | |
| if(/[^a-zA-Z]/.test(arguments[0])){ | |
| toss3(capi.SQLITE_MISUSE, "Invalid argument for BEGIN qualifier."); | |
| } | |
| opener += ' '+arguments[0]; | |
| callback = arguments[1]; | |
| } | |
| affirmDbOpen(this).exec(opener); | |
| try { | |
| const rc = callback(this); | |
| this.exec("COMMIT"); | |
| return rc; | |
| }catch(e){ | |
| this.exec("ROLLBACK"); | |
| throw e; | |
| } | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| This works similarly to transaction() but uses sqlite3's SAVEPOINT | |
| feature. This function starts a savepoint (with an unspecified name) | |
| and calls the given callback function, passing it this db object. | |
| If the callback returns, the savepoint is released (committed). If | |
| the callback throws, the savepoint is rolled back. If it does not | |
| throw, it returns the result of the callback. | |
| */ | |
| savepoint: function(callback){ | |
| affirmDbOpen(this).exec("SAVEPOINT oo1"); | |
| try { | |
| const rc = callback(this); | |
| this.exec("RELEASE oo1"); | |
| return rc; | |
| }catch(e){ | |
| this.exec("ROLLBACK to SAVEPOINT oo1; RELEASE SAVEPOINT oo1"); | |
| throw e; | |
| } | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| A convenience form of DB.checkRc(this,resultCode). If it does | |
| not throw, it returns this object. | |
| */ | |
| checkRc: function(resultCode){ | |
| return checkSqlite3Rc(this, resultCode); | |
| } | |
| }/*DB.prototype*/; | |
| /** Throws if the given Stmt has been finalized, else stmt is | |
| returned. */ | |
| const affirmStmtOpen = function(stmt){ | |
| if(!stmt.pointer) toss3("Stmt has been closed."); | |
| return stmt; | |
| }; | |
| /** Returns an opaque truthy value from the BindTypes | |
| enum if v's type is a valid bindable type, else | |
| returns a falsy value. As a special case, a value of | |
| undefined is treated as a bind type of null. */ | |
| const isSupportedBindType = function(v){ | |
| let t = BindTypes[(null===v||undefined===v) ? 'null' : typeof v]; | |
| switch(t){ | |
| case BindTypes.boolean: | |
| case BindTypes.null: | |
| case BindTypes.number: | |
| case BindTypes.string: | |
| return t; | |
| case BindTypes.bigint: | |
| if(wasm.bigIntEnabled) return t; | |
| /* else fall through */ | |
| default: | |
| return util.isBindableTypedArray(v) ? BindTypes.blob : undefined; | |
| } | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| If isSupportedBindType(v) returns a truthy value, this | |
| function returns that value, else it throws. | |
| */ | |
| const affirmSupportedBindType = function(v){ | |
| //sqlite3.config.log('affirmSupportedBindType',v); | |
| return isSupportedBindType(v) || toss3("Unsupported bind() argument type:",typeof v); | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| If key is a number and within range of stmt's bound parameter | |
| count, key is returned. | |
| If key is not a number then it is checked against named | |
| parameters. If a match is found, its index is returned. | |
| Else it throws. | |
| */ | |
| const affirmParamIndex = function(stmt,key){ | |
| const n = ('number'===typeof key) | |
| ? key : capi.sqlite3_bind_parameter_index(stmt.pointer, key); | |
| if(0===n || !util.isInt32(n)){ | |
| toss3("Invalid bind() parameter name: "+key); | |
| } | |
| else if(n<1 || n>stmt.parameterCount) toss3("Bind index",key,"is out of range."); | |
| return n; | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| If stmt._lockedByExec is truthy, this throws an exception | |
| complaining that the 2nd argument (an operation name, | |
| e.g. "bind()") is not legal while the statement is "locked". | |
| Locking happens before an exec()-like callback is passed a | |
| statement, to ensure that the callback does not mutate or | |
| finalize the statement. If it does not throw, it returns stmt. | |
| */ | |
| const affirmNotLockedByExec = function(stmt,currentOpName){ | |
| if(stmt._lockedByExec){ | |
| toss3("Operation is illegal when statement is locked:",currentOpName); | |
| } | |
| return stmt; | |
| }; | |
| /** | |
| Binds a single bound parameter value on the given stmt at the | |
| given index (numeric or named) using the given bindType (see | |
| the BindTypes enum) and value. Throws on error. Returns stmt on | |
| success. | |
| */ | |
| const bindOne = function f(stmt,ndx,bindType,val){ | |
| affirmNotLockedByExec(affirmStmtOpen(stmt), 'bind()'); | |
| if(!f._){ | |
| f._tooBigInt = (v)=>toss3( | |
| "BigInt value is too big to store without precision loss:", v | |
| ); | |
| f._ = { | |
| string: function(stmt, ndx, val, asBlob){ | |
| const [pStr, n] = wasm.allocCString(val, true); | |
| const f = asBlob ? capi.sqlite3_bind_blob : capi.sqlite3_bind_text; | |
| return f(stmt.pointer, ndx, pStr, n, capi.SQLITE_WASM_DEALLOC); | |
| } | |
| }; | |
| }/* static init */ | |
| affirmSupportedBindType(val); | |
| ndx = affirmParamIndex(stmt,ndx); | |
| let rc = 0; | |
| switch((null===val || undefined===val) ? BindTypes.null : bindType){ | |
| case BindTypes.null: | |
| rc = capi.sqlite3_bind_null(stmt.pointer, ndx); | |
| break; | |
| case BindTypes.string: | |
| rc = f._.string(stmt, ndx, val, false); | |
| break; | |
| case BindTypes.number: { | |
| let m; | |
| if(util.isInt32(val)) m = capi.sqlite3_bind_int; | |
| else if('bigint'===typeof val){ | |
| if(!util.bigIntFits64(val)){ | |
| f._tooBigInt(val); | |
| }else if(wasm.bigIntEnabled){ | |
| m = capi.sqlite3_bind_int64; | |
| }else if(util.bigIntFitsDouble(val)){ | |
| val = Number(val); | |
| m = capi.sqlite3_bind_double; | |
| }else{ | |
| f._tooBigInt(val); | |
| } | |
| }else{ // !int32, !bigint | |
| val = Number(val); | |
| if(wasm.bigIntEnabled && Number.isInteger(val)){ | |
| m = capi.sqlite3_bind_int64; | |
| }else{ | |
| m = capi.sqlite3_bind_double; | |
| } | |
| } | |
| rc = m(stmt.pointer, ndx, val); | |
| break; | |
| } | |
| case BindTypes.boolean: | |
| rc = capi.sqlite3_bind_int(stmt.pointer, ndx, val ? 1 : 0); | |
| break; | |
| case BindTypes.blob: { | |
| if('string'===typeof val){ | |
| rc = f._.string(stmt, ndx, val, true); | |
| break; | |
| }else if(val instanceof ArrayBuffer){ | |
| val = new Uint8Array(val); | |
| }else if(!util.isBindableTypedArray(val)){ | |
| toss3("Binding a value as a blob requires", | |
| "that it be a string, Uint8Array, Int8Array, or ArrayBuffer."); | |
| } | |
| const pBlob = wasm.alloc(val.byteLength || 1); | |
| wasm.heap8().set(val.byteLength ? val : [0], pBlob) | |
| rc = capi.sqlite3_bind_blob(stmt.pointer, ndx, pBlob, val.byteLength, | |
| capi.SQLITE_WASM_DEALLOC); | |
| break; | |
| } | |
| default: | |
| sqlite3.config.warn("Unsupported bind() argument type:",val); | |
| toss3("Unsupported bind() argument type: "+(typeof val)); | |
| } | |
| if(rc) DB.checkRc(stmt.db.pointer, rc); | |
| stmt._mayGet = false; | |
| return stmt; | |
| }; | |
| Stmt.prototype = { | |
| /** | |
| "Finalizes" this statement. This is a no-op if the statement | |
| has already been finalized. Returns the result of | |
| sqlite3_finalize() (0 on success, non-0 on error), or the | |
| undefined value if the statement has already been | |
| finalized. Regardless of success or failure, most methods in | |
| this class will throw if called after this is. | |
| This method always throws if called when it is illegal to do | |
| so. Namely, when triggered via a per-row callback handler of a | |
| DB.exec() call. | |
| */ | |
| finalize: function(){ | |
| if(this.pointer){ | |
| affirmNotLockedByExec(this,'finalize()'); | |
| const rc = capi.sqlite3_finalize(this.pointer); | |
| delete __stmtMap.get(this.db)[this.pointer]; | |
| __ptrMap.delete(this); | |
| delete this._mayGet; | |
| delete this.parameterCount; | |
| delete this._lockedByExec; | |
| delete this.db; | |
| return rc; | |
| } | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Clears all bound values. Returns this object. Throws if this | |
| statement has been finalized or if modification of the | |
| statement is currently illegal (e.g. in the per-row callback of | |
| a DB.exec() call). | |
| */ | |
| clearBindings: function(){ | |
| affirmNotLockedByExec(affirmStmtOpen(this), 'clearBindings()') | |
| capi.sqlite3_clear_bindings(this.pointer); | |
| this._mayGet = false; | |
| return this; | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Resets this statement so that it may be step()ed again from the | |
| beginning. Returns this object. Throws if this statement has | |
| been finalized, if it may not legally be reset because it is | |
| currently being used from a DB.exec() callback, or if the | |
| underlying call to sqlite3_reset() returns non-0. | |
| If passed a truthy argument then this.clearBindings() is | |
| also called, otherwise any existing bindings, along with | |
| any memory allocated for them, are retained. | |
| In versions 3.42.0 and earlier, this function did not throw if | |
| sqlite3_reset() returns non-0, but it was discovered that | |
| throwing (or significant extra client-side code) is necessary | |
| in order to avoid certain silent failure scenarios, as | |
| discussed at: | |
| https://sqlite.org/forum/forumpost/36f7a2e7494897df | |
| */ | |
| reset: function(alsoClearBinds){ | |
| affirmNotLockedByExec(this,'reset()'); | |
| if(alsoClearBinds) this.clearBindings(); | |
| const rc = capi.sqlite3_reset(affirmStmtOpen(this).pointer); | |
| this._mayGet = false; | |
| checkSqlite3Rc(this.db, rc); | |
| return this; | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Binds one or more values to its bindable parameters. It | |
| accepts 1 or 2 arguments: | |
| If passed a single argument, it must be either an array, an | |
| object, or a value of a bindable type (see below). | |
| If passed 2 arguments, the first one is the 1-based bind | |
| index or bindable parameter name and the second one must be | |
| a value of a bindable type. | |
| Bindable value types: | |
| - null is bound as NULL. | |
| - undefined as a standalone value is a no-op intended to | |
| simplify certain client-side use cases: passing undefined as | |
| a value to this function will not actually bind anything and | |
| this function will skip confirmation that binding is even | |
| legal. (Those semantics simplify certain client-side uses.) | |
| Conversely, a value of undefined as an array or object | |
| property when binding an array/object (see below) is treated | |
| the same as null. | |
| - Numbers are bound as either doubles or integers: doubles if | |
| they are larger than 32 bits, else double or int32, depending | |
| on whether they have a fractional part. Booleans are bound as | |
| integer 0 or 1. It is not expected the distinction of binding | |
| doubles which have no fractional parts and integers is | |
| significant for the majority of clients due to sqlite3's data | |
| typing model. If BigInt support is enabled then this routine | |
| will bind BigInt values as 64-bit integers if they'll fit in | |
| 64 bits. If that support disabled, it will store the BigInt | |
| as an int32 or a double if it can do so without loss of | |
| precision. If the BigInt is _too BigInt_ then it will throw. | |
| - Strings are bound as strings (use bindAsBlob() to force | |
| blob binding). | |
| - Uint8Array, Int8Array, and ArrayBuffer instances are bound as | |
| blobs. | |
| If passed an array, each element of the array is bound at | |
| the parameter index equal to the array index plus 1 | |
| (because arrays are 0-based but binding is 1-based). | |
| If passed an object, each object key is treated as a | |
| bindable parameter name. The object keys _must_ match any | |
| bindable parameter names, including any `$`, `@`, or `:` | |
| prefix. Because `$` is a legal identifier chararacter in | |
| JavaScript, that is the suggested prefix for bindable | |
| parameters: `stmt.bind({$a: 1, $b: 2})`. | |
| It returns this object on success and throws on | |
| error. Errors include: | |
| - Any bind index is out of range, a named bind parameter | |
| does not match, or this statement has no bindable | |
| parameters. | |
| - Any value to bind is of an unsupported type. | |
| - Passed no arguments or more than two. | |
| - The statement has been finalized. | |
| */ | |
| bind: function(/*[ndx,] arg*/){ | |
| affirmStmtOpen(this); | |
| let ndx, arg; | |
| switch(arguments.length){ | |
| case 1: ndx = 1; arg = arguments[0]; break; | |
| case 2: ndx = arguments[0]; arg = arguments[1]; break; | |
| default: toss3("Invalid bind() arguments."); | |
| } | |
| if(undefined===arg){ | |
| /* It might seem intuitive to bind undefined as NULL | |
| but this approach simplifies certain client-side | |
| uses when passing on arguments between 2+ levels of | |
| functions. */ | |
| return this; | |
| }else if(!this.parameterCount){ | |
| toss3("This statement has no bindable parameters."); | |
| } | |
| this._mayGet = false; | |
| if(null===arg){ | |
| /* bind NULL */ | |
| return bindOne(this, ndx, BindTypes.null, arg); | |
| } | |
| else if(Array.isArray(arg)){ | |
| /* bind each entry by index */ | |
| if(1!==arguments.length){ | |
| toss3("When binding an array, an index argument is not permitted."); | |
| } | |
| arg.forEach((v,i)=>bindOne(this, i+1, affirmSupportedBindType(v), v)); | |
| return this; | |
| }else if(arg instanceof ArrayBuffer){ | |
| arg = new Uint8Array(arg); | |
| } | |
| if('object'===typeof arg/*null was checked above*/ | |
| && !util.isBindableTypedArray(arg)){ | |
| /* Treat each property of arg as a named bound parameter. */ | |
| if(1!==arguments.length){ | |
| toss3("When binding an object, an index argument is not permitted."); | |
| } | |
| Object.keys(arg) | |
| .forEach(k=>bindOne(this, k, | |
| affirmSupportedBindType(arg[k]), | |
| arg[k])); | |
| return this; | |
| }else{ | |
| return bindOne(this, ndx, affirmSupportedBindType(arg), arg); | |
| } | |
| toss3("Should not reach this point."); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Special case of bind() which binds the given value using the | |
| BLOB binding mechanism instead of the default selected one for | |
| the value. The ndx may be a numbered or named bind index. The | |
| value must be of type string, null/undefined (both get treated | |
| as null), or a TypedArray of a type supported by the bind() | |
| API. This API cannot bind numbers as blobs. | |
| If passed a single argument, a bind index of 1 is assumed and | |
| the first argument is the value. | |
| */ | |
| bindAsBlob: function(ndx,arg){ | |
| affirmStmtOpen(this); | |
| if(1===arguments.length){ | |
| arg = ndx; | |
| ndx = 1; | |
| } | |
| const t = affirmSupportedBindType(arg); | |
| if(BindTypes.string !== t && BindTypes.blob !== t | |
| && BindTypes.null !== t){ | |
| toss3("Invalid value type for bindAsBlob()"); | |
| } | |
| return bindOne(this, ndx, BindTypes.blob, arg); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Steps the statement one time. If the result indicates that a | |
| row of data is available, a truthy value is returned. If no | |
| row of data is available, a falsy value is returned. Throws on | |
| error. | |
| */ | |
| step: function(){ | |
| affirmNotLockedByExec(this, 'step()'); | |
| const rc = capi.sqlite3_step(affirmStmtOpen(this).pointer); | |
| switch(rc){ | |
| case capi.SQLITE_DONE: return this._mayGet = false; | |
| case capi.SQLITE_ROW: return this._mayGet = true; | |
| default: | |
| this._mayGet = false; | |
| sqlite3.config.warn("sqlite3_step() rc=",rc, | |
| capi.sqlite3_js_rc_str(rc), | |
| "SQL =", capi.sqlite3_sql(this.pointer)); | |
| DB.checkRc(this.db.pointer, rc); | |
| } | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Functions exactly like step() except that... | |
| 1) On success, it calls this.reset() and returns this object. | |
| 2) On error, it throws and does not call reset(). | |
| This is intended to simplify constructs like: | |
| ``` | |
| for(...) { | |
| stmt.bind(...).stepReset(); | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| Note that the reset() call makes it illegal to call this.get() | |
| after the step. | |
| */ | |
| stepReset: function(){ | |
| this.step(); | |
| return this.reset(); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Functions like step() except that it calls finalize() on this | |
| statement immediately after stepping, even if the step() call | |
| throws. | |
| On success, it returns true if the step indicated that a row of | |
| data was available, else it returns a falsy value. | |
| This is intended to simplify use cases such as: | |
| ``` | |
| aDb.prepare("insert into foo(a) values(?)").bind(123).stepFinalize(); | |
| ``` | |
| */ | |
| stepFinalize: function(){ | |
| try{ | |
| const rc = this.step(); | |
| this.reset(/*for INSERT...RETURNING locking case*/); | |
| return rc; | |
| }finally{ | |
| try{this.finalize()} | |
| catch(e){/*ignored*/} | |
| } | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Fetches the value from the given 0-based column index of | |
| the current data row, throwing if index is out of range. | |
| Requires that step() has just returned a truthy value, else | |
| an exception is thrown. | |
| By default it will determine the data type of the result | |
| automatically. If passed a second argument, it must be one | |
| of the enumeration values for sqlite3 types, which are | |
| defined as members of the sqlite3 module: SQLITE_INTEGER, | |
| SQLITE_FLOAT, SQLITE_TEXT, SQLITE_BLOB. Any other value, | |
| except for undefined, will trigger an exception. Passing | |
| undefined is the same as not passing a value. It is legal | |
| to, e.g., fetch an integer value as a string, in which case | |
| sqlite3 will convert the value to a string. | |
| If ndx is an array, this function behaves a differently: it | |
| assigns the indexes of the array, from 0 to the number of | |
| result columns, to the values of the corresponding column, | |
| and returns that array. | |
| If ndx is a plain object, this function behaves even | |
| differentlier: it assigns the properties of the object to | |
| the values of their corresponding result columns and returns | |
| that object. | |
| Blobs are returned as Uint8Array instances. | |
| Potential TODO: add type ID SQLITE_JSON, which fetches the | |
| result as a string and passes it (if it's not null) to | |
| JSON.parse(), returning the result of that. Until then, | |
| getJSON() can be used for that. | |
| */ | |
| get: function(ndx,asType){ | |
| if(!affirmStmtOpen(this)._mayGet){ | |
| toss3("Stmt.step() has not (recently) returned true."); | |
| } | |
| if(Array.isArray(ndx)){ | |
| let i = 0; | |
| const n = this.columnCount; | |
| while(i<n){ | |
| ndx[i] = this.get(i++); | |
| } | |
| return ndx; | |
| }else if(ndx && 'object'===typeof ndx){ | |
| let i = 0; | |
| const n = this.columnCount; | |
| while(i<n){ | |
| ndx[capi.sqlite3_column_name(this.pointer,i)] = this.get(i++); | |
| } | |
| return ndx; | |
| } | |
| affirmColIndex(this, ndx); | |
| switch(undefined===asType | |
| ? capi.sqlite3_column_type(this.pointer, ndx) | |
| : asType){ | |
| case capi.SQLITE_NULL: return null; | |
| case capi.SQLITE_INTEGER:{ | |
| if(wasm.bigIntEnabled){ | |
| const rc = capi.sqlite3_column_int64(this.pointer, ndx); | |
| if(rc>=Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER && rc<=Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER){ | |
| /* Coerce "normal" number ranges to normal number values, | |
| and only return BigInt-type values for numbers out of this | |
| range. */ | |
| return Number(rc).valueOf(); | |
| } | |
| return rc; | |
| }else{ | |
| const rc = capi.sqlite3_column_double(this.pointer, ndx); | |
| if(rc>Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER || rc<Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER){ | |
| /* Throwing here is arguable but, since we're explicitly | |
| extracting an SQLITE_INTEGER-type value, it seems fair to throw | |
| if the extracted number is out of range for that type. | |
| This policy may be laxened to simply pass on the number and | |
| hope for the best, as the C API would do. */ | |
| toss3("Integer is out of range for JS integer range: "+rc); | |
| } | |
| //sqlite3.config.log("get integer rc=",rc,isInt32(rc)); | |
| return util.isInt32(rc) ? (rc | 0) : rc; | |
| } | |
| } | |
| case capi.SQLITE_FLOAT: | |
| return capi.sqlite3_column_double(this.pointer, ndx); | |
| case capi.SQLITE_TEXT: | |
| return capi.sqlite3_column_text(this.pointer, ndx); | |
| case capi.SQLITE_BLOB: { | |
| const n = capi.sqlite3_column_bytes(this.pointer, ndx), | |
| ptr = capi.sqlite3_column_blob(this.pointer, ndx), | |
| rc = new Uint8Array(n); | |
| //heap = n ? wasm.heap8() : false; | |
| if(n) rc.set(wasm.heap8u().slice(ptr, ptr+n), 0); | |
| //for(let i = 0; i < n; ++i) rc[i] = heap[ptr + i]; | |
| if(n && this.db._blobXfer instanceof Array){ | |
| /* This is an optimization soley for the | |
| Worker-based API. These values will be | |
| transfered to the main thread directly | |
| instead of being copied. */ | |
| this.db._blobXfer.push(rc.buffer); | |
| } | |
| return rc; | |
| } | |
| default: toss3("Don't know how to translate", | |
| "type of result column #"+ndx+"."); | |
| } | |
| toss3("Not reached."); | |
| }, | |
| /** Equivalent to get(ndx) but coerces the result to an | |
| integer. */ | |
| getInt: function(ndx){return this.get(ndx,capi.SQLITE_INTEGER)}, | |
| /** Equivalent to get(ndx) but coerces the result to a | |
| float. */ | |
| getFloat: function(ndx){return this.get(ndx,capi.SQLITE_FLOAT)}, | |
| /** Equivalent to get(ndx) but coerces the result to a | |
| string. */ | |
| getString: function(ndx){return this.get(ndx,capi.SQLITE_TEXT)}, | |
| /** Equivalent to get(ndx) but coerces the result to a | |
| Uint8Array. */ | |
| getBlob: function(ndx){return this.get(ndx,capi.SQLITE_BLOB)}, | |
| /** | |
| A convenience wrapper around get() which fetches the value | |
| as a string and then, if it is not null, passes it to | |
| JSON.parse(), returning that result. Throws if parsing | |
| fails. If the result is null, null is returned. An empty | |
| string, on the other hand, will trigger an exception. | |
| */ | |
| getJSON: function(ndx){ | |
| const s = this.get(ndx, capi.SQLITE_STRING); | |
| return null===s ? s : JSON.parse(s); | |
| }, | |
| // Design note: the only reason most of these getters have a 'get' | |
| // prefix is for consistency with getVALUE_TYPE(). The latter | |
| // arguably really need that prefix for API readability and the | |
| // rest arguably don't, but consistency is a powerful thing. | |
| /** | |
| Returns the result column name of the given index, or | |
| throws if index is out of bounds or this statement has been | |
| finalized. This can be used without having run step() | |
| first. | |
| */ | |
| getColumnName: function(ndx){ | |
| return capi.sqlite3_column_name( | |
| affirmColIndex(affirmStmtOpen(this),ndx).pointer, ndx | |
| ); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| If this statement potentially has result columns, this function | |
| returns an array of all such names. If passed an array, it is | |
| used as the target and all names are appended to it. Returns | |
| the target array. Throws if this statement cannot have result | |
| columns. This object's columnCount property holds the number of | |
| columns. | |
| */ | |
| getColumnNames: function(tgt=[]){ | |
| affirmColIndex(affirmStmtOpen(this),0); | |
| const n = this.columnCount; | |
| for(let i = 0; i < n; ++i){ | |
| tgt.push(capi.sqlite3_column_name(this.pointer, i)); | |
| } | |
| return tgt; | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| If this statement has named bindable parameters and the | |
| given name matches one, its 1-based bind index is | |
| returned. If no match is found, 0 is returned. If it has no | |
| bindable parameters, the undefined value is returned. | |
| */ | |
| getParamIndex: function(name){ | |
| return (affirmStmtOpen(this).parameterCount | |
| ? capi.sqlite3_bind_parameter_index(this.pointer, name) | |
| : undefined); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| If this statement has named bindable parameters and the given | |
| index refers to one, its name is returned, else null is | |
| returned. If this statement has no bound parameters, undefined | |
| is returned. | |
| Added in 3.47. | |
| */ | |
| getParamName: function(ndx){ | |
| return (affirmStmtOpen(this).parameterCount | |
| ? capi.sqlite3_bind_parameter_name(this.pointer, ndx) | |
| : undefined); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Behaves like sqlite3_stmt_busy() but throws if this statement | |
| is closed and returns a value of type boolean instead of integer. | |
| Added in 3.47. | |
| */ | |
| isBusy: function(){ | |
| return 0!==capi.sqlite3_stmt_busy(affirmStmtOpen(this)); | |
| }, | |
| /** | |
| Behaves like sqlite3_stmt_readonly() but throws if this statement | |
| is closed and returns a value of type boolean instead of integer. | |
| Added in 3.47. | |
| */ | |
| isReadOnly: function(){ | |
| return 0!==capi.sqlite3_stmt_readonly(affirmStmtOpen(this)); | |
| } | |
| }/*Stmt.prototype*/; | |
| {/* Add the `pointer` property to DB and Stmt. */ | |
| const prop = { | |
| enumerable: true, | |
| get: function(){return __ptrMap.get(this)}, | |
| set: ()=>toss3("The pointer property is read-only.") | |
| } | |
| Object.defineProperty(Stmt.prototype, 'pointer', prop); | |
| Object.defineProperty(DB.prototype, 'pointer', prop); | |
| } | |
| /** | |
| Stmt.columnCount is an interceptor for sqlite3_column_count(). | |
| This requires an unfortunate performance hit compared to caching | |
| columnCount when the Stmt is created/prepared (as was done in | |
| SQLite <=3.42.0), but is necessary in order to handle certain | |
| corner cases, as described in | |
| https://sqlite.org/forum/forumpost/7774b773937cbe0a. | |
| */ | |
| Object.defineProperty(Stmt.prototype, 'columnCount', { | |
| enumerable: false, | |
| get: function(){return capi.sqlite3_column_count(this.pointer)}, | |
| set: ()=>toss3("The columnCount property is read-only.") | |
| }); | |
| /** The OO API's public namespace. */ | |
| sqlite3.oo1 = { | |
| DB, | |
| Stmt | |
| }/*oo1 object*/; | |
| if(util.isUIThread()){ | |
| /** | |
| Functionally equivalent to DB(storageName,'c','kvvfs') except | |
| that it throws if the given storage name is not one of 'local' | |
| or 'session'. | |
| As of version 3.46, the argument may optionally be an options | |
| object in the form: | |
| { | |
| filename: 'session'|'local', | |
| ... etc. (all options supported by the DB ctor) | |
| } | |
| noting that the 'vfs' option supported by main DB | |
| constructor is ignored here: the vfs is always 'kvvfs'. | |
| */ | |
| sqlite3.oo1.JsStorageDb = function(storageName='session'){ | |
| const opt = dbCtorHelper.normalizeArgs(...arguments); | |
| storageName = opt.filename; | |
| if('session'!==storageName && 'local'!==storageName){ | |
| toss3("JsStorageDb db name must be one of 'session' or 'local'."); | |
| } | |
| opt.vfs = 'kvvfs'; | |
| dbCtorHelper.call(this, opt); | |
| }; | |
| const jdb = sqlite3.oo1.JsStorageDb; | |
| jdb.prototype = Object.create(DB.prototype); | |
| /** Equivalent to sqlite3_js_kvvfs_clear(). */ | |
| jdb.clearStorage = capi.sqlite3_js_kvvfs_clear; | |
| /** | |
| Clears this database instance's storage or throws if this | |
| instance has been closed. Returns the number of | |
| database blocks which were cleaned up. | |
| */ | |
| jdb.prototype.clearStorage = function(){ | |
| return jdb.clearStorage(affirmDbOpen(this).filename); | |
| }; | |
| /** Equivalent to sqlite3_js_kvvfs_size(). */ | |
| jdb.storageSize = capi.sqlite3_js_kvvfs_size; | |
| /** | |
| Returns the _approximate_ number of bytes this database takes | |
| up in its storage or throws if this instance has been closed. | |
| */ | |
| jdb.prototype.storageSize = function(){ | |
| return jdb.storageSize(affirmDbOpen(this).filename); | |
| }; | |
| }/*main-window-only bits*/ | |
| }); | |
| //#else | |
| /* Built with the omit-oo1 flag. */ | |
| //#endif ifnot omit-oo1 | |