| /* |
| ** 2004 May 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 code that is specific to Unix systems. |
| */ |
| #include "sqliteInt.h" |
| #include "os.h" |
| #if OS_UNIX /* This file is used on unix only */ |
| |
| /* |
| ** These #defines should enable >2GB file support on Posix if the |
| ** underlying operating system supports it. If the OS lacks |
| ** large file support, or if the OS is windows, these should be no-ops. |
| ** |
| ** Large file support can be disabled using the -DSQLITE_DISABLE_LFS switch |
| ** on the compiler command line. This is necessary if you are compiling |
| ** on a recent machine (ex: RedHat 7.2) but you want your code to work |
| ** on an older machine (ex: RedHat 6.0). If you compile on RedHat 7.2 |
| ** without this option, LFS is enable. But LFS does not exist in the kernel |
| ** in RedHat 6.0, so the code won't work. Hence, for maximum binary |
| ** portability you should omit LFS. |
| ** |
| ** Similar is true for MacOS. LFS is only supported on MacOS 9 and later. |
| */ |
| #ifndef SQLITE_DISABLE_LFS |
| # define _LARGE_FILE 1 |
| # ifndef _FILE_OFFSET_BITS |
| # define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64 |
| # endif |
| # define _LARGEFILE_SOURCE 1 |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** standard include files. |
| */ |
| #include <sys/types.h> |
| #include <sys/stat.h> |
| #include <fcntl.h> |
| #include <unistd.h> |
| #include <time.h> |
| #include <sys/time.h> |
| #include <errno.h> |
| |
| /* |
| ** Macros used to determine whether or not to use threads. The |
| ** SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS macro is defined if we are synchronizing for |
| ** Posix threads and SQLITE_W32_THREADS is defined if we are |
| ** synchronizing using Win32 threads. |
| */ |
| #if defined(THREADSAFE) && THREADSAFE |
| # include <pthread.h> |
| # define SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS 1 |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** Default permissions when creating a new file |
| */ |
| #ifndef SQLITE_DEFAULT_FILE_PERMISSIONS |
| # define SQLITE_DEFAULT_FILE_PERMISSIONS 0644 |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| |
| /* |
| ** The unixFile structure is subclass of OsFile specific for the unix |
| ** protability layer. |
| */ |
| typedef struct unixFile unixFile; |
| struct unixFile { |
| IoMethod const *pMethod; /* Always the first entry */ |
| struct openCnt *pOpen; /* Info about all open fd's on this inode */ |
| struct lockInfo *pLock; /* Info about locks on this inode */ |
| int h; /* The file descriptor */ |
| unsigned char locktype; /* The type of lock held on this fd */ |
| unsigned char isOpen; /* True if needs to be closed */ |
| unsigned char fullSync; /* Use F_FULLSYNC if available */ |
| int dirfd; /* File descriptor for the directory */ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| pthread_t tid; /* The thread authorized to use this OsFile */ |
| #endif |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| ** Provide the ability to override some OS-layer functions during |
| ** testing. This is used to simulate OS crashes to verify that |
| ** commits are atomic even in the event of an OS crash. |
| */ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_CRASH_TEST |
| extern int sqlite3CrashTestEnable; |
| extern int sqlite3CrashOpenReadWrite(const char*, OsFile**, int*); |
| extern int sqlite3CrashOpenExclusive(const char*, OsFile**, int); |
| extern int sqlite3CrashOpenReadOnly(const char*, OsFile**, int); |
| # define CRASH_TEST_OVERRIDE(X,A,B,C) \ |
| if(sqlite3CrashTestEnable){ return X(A,B,C); } |
| #else |
| # define CRASH_TEST_OVERRIDE(X,A,B,C) /* no-op */ |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| /* |
| ** Include code that is common to all os_*.c files |
| */ |
| #include "os_common.h" |
| |
| /* |
| ** Do not include any of the File I/O interface procedures if the |
| ** SQLITE_OMIT_DISKIO macro is defined (indicating that there database |
| ** will be in-memory only) |
| */ |
| #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_DISKIO |
| |
| |
| /* |
| ** Define various macros that are missing from some systems. |
| */ |
| #ifndef O_LARGEFILE |
| # define O_LARGEFILE 0 |
| #endif |
| #ifdef SQLITE_DISABLE_LFS |
| # undef O_LARGEFILE |
| # define O_LARGEFILE 0 |
| #endif |
| #ifndef O_NOFOLLOW |
| # define O_NOFOLLOW 0 |
| #endif |
| #ifndef O_BINARY |
| # define O_BINARY 0 |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** The DJGPP compiler environment looks mostly like Unix, but it |
| ** lacks the fcntl() system call. So redefine fcntl() to be something |
| ** that always succeeds. This means that locking does not occur under |
| ** DJGPP. But it's DOS - what did you expect? |
| */ |
| #ifdef __DJGPP__ |
| # define fcntl(A,B,C) 0 |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** The threadid macro resolves to the thread-id or to 0. Used for |
| ** testing and debugging only. |
| */ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| #define threadid pthread_self() |
| #else |
| #define threadid 0 |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** Set or check the OsFile.tid field. This field is set when an OsFile |
| ** is first opened. All subsequent uses of the OsFile verify that the |
| ** same thread is operating on the OsFile. Some operating systems do |
| ** not allow locks to be overridden by other threads and that restriction |
| ** means that sqlite3* database handles cannot be moved from one thread |
| ** to another. This logic makes sure a user does not try to do that |
| ** by mistake. |
| */ |
| #if defined(SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS) && !defined(SQLITE_ALLOW_XTHREAD_CONNECTIONS) |
| # define SET_THREADID(X) (X)->tid = pthread_self() |
| # define CHECK_THREADID(X) (!pthread_equal((X)->tid, pthread_self())) |
| #else |
| # define SET_THREADID(X) |
| # define CHECK_THREADID(X) 0 |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** Here is the dirt on POSIX advisory locks: ANSI STD 1003.1 (1996) |
| ** section 6.5.2.2 lines 483 through 490 specify that when a process |
| ** sets or clears a lock, that operation overrides any prior locks set |
| ** by the same process. It does not explicitly say so, but this implies |
| ** that it overrides locks set by the same process using a different |
| ** file descriptor. Consider this test case: |
| ** |
| ** int fd1 = open("./file1", O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0644); |
| ** int fd2 = open("./file2", O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0644); |
| ** |
| ** Suppose ./file1 and ./file2 are really the same file (because |
| ** one is a hard or symbolic link to the other) then if you set |
| ** an exclusive lock on fd1, then try to get an exclusive lock |
| ** on fd2, it works. I would have expected the second lock to |
| ** fail since there was already a lock on the file due to fd1. |
| ** But not so. Since both locks came from the same process, the |
| ** second overrides the first, even though they were on different |
| ** file descriptors opened on different file names. |
| ** |
| ** Bummer. If you ask me, this is broken. Badly broken. It means |
| ** that we cannot use POSIX locks to synchronize file access among |
| ** competing threads of the same process. POSIX locks will work fine |
| ** to synchronize access for threads in separate processes, but not |
| ** threads within the same process. |
| ** |
| ** To work around the problem, SQLite has to manage file locks internally |
| ** on its own. Whenever a new database is opened, we have to find the |
| ** specific inode of the database file (the inode is determined by the |
| ** st_dev and st_ino fields of the stat structure that fstat() fills in) |
| ** and check for locks already existing on that inode. When locks are |
| ** created or removed, we have to look at our own internal record of the |
| ** locks to see if another thread has previously set a lock on that same |
| ** inode. |
| ** |
| ** The OsFile structure for POSIX is no longer just an integer file |
| ** descriptor. It is now a structure that holds the integer file |
| ** descriptor and a pointer to a structure that describes the internal |
| ** locks on the corresponding inode. There is one locking structure |
| ** per inode, so if the same inode is opened twice, both OsFile structures |
| ** point to the same locking structure. The locking structure keeps |
| ** a reference count (so we will know when to delete it) and a "cnt" |
| ** field that tells us its internal lock status. cnt==0 means the |
| ** file is unlocked. cnt==-1 means the file has an exclusive lock. |
| ** cnt>0 means there are cnt shared locks on the file. |
| ** |
| ** Any attempt to lock or unlock a file first checks the locking |
| ** structure. The fcntl() system call is only invoked to set a |
| ** POSIX lock if the internal lock structure transitions between |
| ** a locked and an unlocked state. |
| ** |
| ** 2004-Jan-11: |
| ** More recent discoveries about POSIX advisory locks. (The more |
| ** I discover, the more I realize the a POSIX advisory locks are |
| ** an abomination.) |
| ** |
| ** If you close a file descriptor that points to a file that has locks, |
| ** all locks on that file that are owned by the current process are |
| ** released. To work around this problem, each OsFile structure contains |
| ** a pointer to an openCnt structure. There is one openCnt structure |
| ** per open inode, which means that multiple OsFiles can point to a single |
| ** openCnt. When an attempt is made to close an OsFile, if there are |
| ** other OsFiles open on the same inode that are holding locks, the call |
| ** to close() the file descriptor is deferred until all of the locks clear. |
| ** The openCnt structure keeps a list of file descriptors that need to |
| ** be closed and that list is walked (and cleared) when the last lock |
| ** clears. |
| ** |
| ** First, under Linux threads, because each thread has a separate |
| ** process ID, lock operations in one thread do not override locks |
| ** to the same file in other threads. Linux threads behave like |
| ** separate processes in this respect. But, if you close a file |
| ** descriptor in linux threads, all locks are cleared, even locks |
| ** on other threads and even though the other threads have different |
| ** process IDs. Linux threads is inconsistent in this respect. |
| ** (I'm beginning to think that linux threads is an abomination too.) |
| ** The consequence of this all is that the hash table for the lockInfo |
| ** structure has to include the process id as part of its key because |
| ** locks in different threads are treated as distinct. But the |
| ** openCnt structure should not include the process id in its |
| ** key because close() clears lock on all threads, not just the current |
| ** thread. Were it not for this goofiness in linux threads, we could |
| ** combine the lockInfo and openCnt structures into a single structure. |
| ** |
| ** 2004-Jun-28: |
| ** On some versions of linux, threads can override each others locks. |
| ** On others not. Sometimes you can change the behavior on the same |
| ** system by setting the LD_ASSUME_KERNEL environment variable. The |
| ** POSIX standard is silent as to which behavior is correct, as far |
| ** as I can tell, so other versions of unix might show the same |
| ** inconsistency. There is no little doubt in my mind that posix |
| ** advisory locks and linux threads are profoundly broken. |
| ** |
| ** To work around the inconsistencies, we have to test at runtime |
| ** whether or not threads can override each others locks. This test |
| ** is run once, the first time any lock is attempted. A static |
| ** variable is set to record the results of this test for future |
| ** use. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| ** An instance of the following structure serves as the key used |
| ** to locate a particular lockInfo structure given its inode. |
| ** |
| ** If threads cannot override each others locks, then we set the |
| ** lockKey.tid field to the thread ID. If threads can override |
| ** each others locks then tid is always set to zero. tid is also |
| ** set to zero if we compile without threading support. |
| */ |
| struct lockKey { |
| dev_t dev; /* Device number */ |
| ino_t ino; /* Inode number */ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| pthread_t tid; /* Thread ID or zero if threads can override each other */ |
| #endif |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| ** An instance of the following structure is allocated for each open |
| ** inode on each thread with a different process ID. (Threads have |
| ** different process IDs on linux, but not on most other unixes.) |
| ** |
| ** A single inode can have multiple file descriptors, so each OsFile |
| ** structure contains a pointer to an instance of this object and this |
| ** object keeps a count of the number of OsFiles pointing to it. |
| */ |
| struct lockInfo { |
| struct lockKey key; /* The lookup key */ |
| int cnt; /* Number of SHARED locks held */ |
| int locktype; /* One of SHARED_LOCK, RESERVED_LOCK etc. */ |
| int nRef; /* Number of pointers to this structure */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| ** An instance of the following structure serves as the key used |
| ** to locate a particular openCnt structure given its inode. This |
| ** is the same as the lockKey except that the thread ID is omitted. |
| */ |
| struct openKey { |
| dev_t dev; /* Device number */ |
| ino_t ino; /* Inode number */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| ** An instance of the following structure is allocated for each open |
| ** inode. This structure keeps track of the number of locks on that |
| ** inode. If a close is attempted against an inode that is holding |
| ** locks, the close is deferred until all locks clear by adding the |
| ** file descriptor to be closed to the pending list. |
| */ |
| struct openCnt { |
| struct openKey key; /* The lookup key */ |
| int nRef; /* Number of pointers to this structure */ |
| int nLock; /* Number of outstanding locks */ |
| int nPending; /* Number of pending close() operations */ |
| int *aPending; /* Malloced space holding fd's awaiting a close() */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| ** These hash table maps inodes and process IDs into lockInfo and openCnt |
| ** structures. Access to these hash tables must be protected by a mutex. |
| */ |
| static Hash lockHash = { SQLITE_HASH_BINARY, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 }; |
| static Hash openHash = { SQLITE_HASH_BINARY, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 }; |
| |
| |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| /* |
| ** This variable records whether or not threads can override each others |
| ** locks. |
| ** |
| ** 0: No. Threads cannot override each others locks. |
| ** 1: Yes. Threads can override each others locks. |
| ** -1: We don't know yet. |
| */ |
| static int threadsOverrideEachOthersLocks = -1; |
| |
| /* |
| ** This structure holds information passed into individual test |
| ** threads by the testThreadLockingBehavior() routine. |
| */ |
| struct threadTestData { |
| int fd; /* File to be locked */ |
| struct flock lock; /* The locking operation */ |
| int result; /* Result of the locking operation */ |
| }; |
| |
| #ifdef SQLITE_LOCK_TRACE |
| /* |
| ** Print out information about all locking operations. |
| ** |
| ** This routine is used for troubleshooting locks on multithreaded |
| ** platforms. Enable by compiling with the -DSQLITE_LOCK_TRACE |
| ** command-line option on the compiler. This code is normally |
| ** turnned off. |
| */ |
| static int lockTrace(int fd, int op, struct flock *p){ |
| char *zOpName, *zType; |
| int s; |
| int savedErrno; |
| if( op==F_GETLK ){ |
| zOpName = "GETLK"; |
| }else if( op==F_SETLK ){ |
| zOpName = "SETLK"; |
| }else{ |
| s = fcntl(fd, op, p); |
| sqlite3DebugPrintf("fcntl unknown %d %d %d\n", fd, op, s); |
| return s; |
| } |
| if( p->l_type==F_RDLCK ){ |
| zType = "RDLCK"; |
| }else if( p->l_type==F_WRLCK ){ |
| zType = "WRLCK"; |
| }else if( p->l_type==F_UNLCK ){ |
| zType = "UNLCK"; |
| }else{ |
| assert( 0 ); |
| } |
| assert( p->l_whence==SEEK_SET ); |
| s = fcntl(fd, op, p); |
| savedErrno = errno; |
| sqlite3DebugPrintf("fcntl %d %d %s %s %d %d %d %d\n", |
| threadid, fd, zOpName, zType, (int)p->l_start, (int)p->l_len, |
| (int)p->l_pid, s); |
| if( s && op==F_SETLK && (p->l_type==F_RDLCK || p->l_type==F_WRLCK) ){ |
| struct flock l2; |
| l2 = *p; |
| fcntl(fd, F_GETLK, &l2); |
| if( l2.l_type==F_RDLCK ){ |
| zType = "RDLCK"; |
| }else if( l2.l_type==F_WRLCK ){ |
| zType = "WRLCK"; |
| }else if( l2.l_type==F_UNLCK ){ |
| zType = "UNLCK"; |
| }else{ |
| assert( 0 ); |
| } |
| sqlite3DebugPrintf("fcntl-failure-reason: %s %d %d %d\n", |
| zType, (int)l2.l_start, (int)l2.l_len, (int)l2.l_pid); |
| } |
| errno = savedErrno; |
| return s; |
| } |
| #define fcntl lockTrace |
| #endif /* SQLITE_LOCK_TRACE */ |
| |
| /* |
| ** The testThreadLockingBehavior() routine launches two separate |
| ** threads on this routine. This routine attempts to lock a file |
| ** descriptor then returns. The success or failure of that attempt |
| ** allows the testThreadLockingBehavior() procedure to determine |
| ** whether or not threads can override each others locks. |
| */ |
| static void *threadLockingTest(void *pArg){ |
| struct threadTestData *pData = (struct threadTestData*)pArg; |
| pData->result = fcntl(pData->fd, F_SETLK, &pData->lock); |
| return pArg; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** This procedure attempts to determine whether or not threads |
| ** can override each others locks then sets the |
| ** threadsOverrideEachOthersLocks variable appropriately. |
| */ |
| static void testThreadLockingBehavior(fd_orig){ |
| int fd; |
| struct threadTestData d[2]; |
| pthread_t t[2]; |
| |
| fd = dup(fd_orig); |
| if( fd<0 ) return; |
| memset(d, 0, sizeof(d)); |
| d[0].fd = fd; |
| d[0].lock.l_type = F_RDLCK; |
| d[0].lock.l_len = 1; |
| d[0].lock.l_start = 0; |
| d[0].lock.l_whence = SEEK_SET; |
| d[1] = d[0]; |
| d[1].lock.l_type = F_WRLCK; |
| pthread_create(&t[0], 0, threadLockingTest, &d[0]); |
| pthread_create(&t[1], 0, threadLockingTest, &d[1]); |
| pthread_join(t[0], 0); |
| pthread_join(t[1], 0); |
| close(fd); |
| threadsOverrideEachOthersLocks = d[0].result==0 && d[1].result==0; |
| } |
| #endif /* SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS */ |
| |
| /* |
| ** Release a lockInfo structure previously allocated by findLockInfo(). |
| */ |
| static void releaseLockInfo(struct lockInfo *pLock){ |
| pLock->nRef--; |
| if( pLock->nRef==0 ){ |
| sqlite3HashInsert(&lockHash, &pLock->key, sizeof(pLock->key), 0); |
| sqliteFree(pLock); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Release a openCnt structure previously allocated by findLockInfo(). |
| */ |
| static void releaseOpenCnt(struct openCnt *pOpen){ |
| pOpen->nRef--; |
| if( pOpen->nRef==0 ){ |
| sqlite3HashInsert(&openHash, &pOpen->key, sizeof(pOpen->key), 0); |
| sqliteFree(pOpen->aPending); |
| sqliteFree(pOpen); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Given a file descriptor, locate lockInfo and openCnt structures that |
| ** describes that file descriptor. Create a new ones if necessary. The |
| ** return values might be unset if an error occurs. |
| ** |
| ** Return the number of errors. |
| */ |
| static int findLockInfo( |
| int fd, /* The file descriptor used in the key */ |
| struct lockInfo **ppLock, /* Return the lockInfo structure here */ |
| struct openCnt **ppOpen /* Return the openCnt structure here */ |
| ){ |
| int rc; |
| struct lockKey key1; |
| struct openKey key2; |
| struct stat statbuf; |
| struct lockInfo *pLock; |
| struct openCnt *pOpen; |
| rc = fstat(fd, &statbuf); |
| if( rc!=0 ) return 1; |
| |
| memset(&key1, 0, sizeof(key1)); |
| key1.dev = statbuf.st_dev; |
| key1.ino = statbuf.st_ino; |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| if( threadsOverrideEachOthersLocks<0 ){ |
| testThreadLockingBehavior(fd); |
| } |
| key1.tid = threadsOverrideEachOthersLocks ? 0 : pthread_self(); |
| #endif |
| memset(&key2, 0, sizeof(key2)); |
| key2.dev = statbuf.st_dev; |
| key2.ino = statbuf.st_ino; |
| pLock = (struct lockInfo*)sqlite3HashFind(&lockHash, &key1, sizeof(key1)); |
| if( pLock==0 ){ |
| struct lockInfo *pOld; |
| pLock = sqliteMallocRaw( sizeof(*pLock) ); |
| if( pLock==0 ){ |
| rc = 1; |
| goto exit_findlockinfo; |
| } |
| pLock->key = key1; |
| pLock->nRef = 1; |
| pLock->cnt = 0; |
| pLock->locktype = 0; |
| pOld = sqlite3HashInsert(&lockHash, &pLock->key, sizeof(key1), pLock); |
| if( pOld!=0 ){ |
| assert( pOld==pLock ); |
| sqliteFree(pLock); |
| rc = 1; |
| goto exit_findlockinfo; |
| } |
| }else{ |
| pLock->nRef++; |
| } |
| *ppLock = pLock; |
| pOpen = (struct openCnt*)sqlite3HashFind(&openHash, &key2, sizeof(key2)); |
| if( pOpen==0 ){ |
| struct openCnt *pOld; |
| pOpen = sqliteMallocRaw( sizeof(*pOpen) ); |
| if( pOpen==0 ){ |
| releaseLockInfo(pLock); |
| rc = 1; |
| goto exit_findlockinfo; |
| } |
| pOpen->key = key2; |
| pOpen->nRef = 1; |
| pOpen->nLock = 0; |
| pOpen->nPending = 0; |
| pOpen->aPending = 0; |
| pOld = sqlite3HashInsert(&openHash, &pOpen->key, sizeof(key2), pOpen); |
| if( pOld!=0 ){ |
| assert( pOld==pOpen ); |
| sqliteFree(pOpen); |
| releaseLockInfo(pLock); |
| rc = 1; |
| goto exit_findlockinfo; |
| } |
| }else{ |
| pOpen->nRef++; |
| } |
| *ppOpen = pOpen; |
| |
| exit_findlockinfo: |
| return rc; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Delete the named file |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixDelete(const char *zFilename){ |
| unlink(zFilename); |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Return TRUE if the named file exists. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixFileExists(const char *zFilename){ |
| return access(zFilename, 0)==0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Forward declaration */ |
| static int allocateUnixFile(unixFile *pInit, OsFile **pId); |
| |
| /* |
| ** Attempt to open a file for both reading and writing. If that |
| ** fails, try opening it read-only. If the file does not exist, |
| ** try to create it. |
| ** |
| ** On success, a handle for the open file is written to *id |
| ** and *pReadonly is set to 0 if the file was opened for reading and |
| ** writing or 1 if the file was opened read-only. The function returns |
| ** SQLITE_OK. |
| ** |
| ** On failure, the function returns SQLITE_CANTOPEN and leaves |
| ** *id and *pReadonly unchanged. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixOpenReadWrite( |
| const char *zFilename, |
| OsFile **pId, |
| int *pReadonly |
| ){ |
| int rc; |
| unixFile f; |
| |
| CRASH_TEST_OVERRIDE(sqlite3CrashOpenReadWrite, zFilename, pId, pReadonly); |
| assert( 0==*pId ); |
| f.dirfd = -1; |
| SET_THREADID(&f); |
| f.h = open(zFilename, O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_LARGEFILE|O_BINARY, |
| SQLITE_DEFAULT_FILE_PERMISSIONS); |
| if( f.h<0 ){ |
| #ifdef EISDIR |
| if( errno==EISDIR ){ |
| return SQLITE_CANTOPEN; |
| } |
| #endif |
| f.h = open(zFilename, O_RDONLY|O_LARGEFILE|O_BINARY); |
| if( f.h<0 ){ |
| return SQLITE_CANTOPEN; |
| } |
| *pReadonly = 1; |
| }else{ |
| *pReadonly = 0; |
| } |
| sqlite3OsEnterMutex(); |
| rc = findLockInfo(f.h, &f.pLock, &f.pOpen); |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| if( rc ){ |
| close(f.h); |
| return SQLITE_NOMEM; |
| } |
| f.locktype = 0; |
| TRACE3("OPEN %-3d %s\n", f.h, zFilename); |
| return allocateUnixFile(&f, pId); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* |
| ** Attempt to open a new file for exclusive access by this process. |
| ** The file will be opened for both reading and writing. To avoid |
| ** a potential security problem, we do not allow the file to have |
| ** previously existed. Nor do we allow the file to be a symbolic |
| ** link. |
| ** |
| ** If delFlag is true, then make arrangements to automatically delete |
| ** the file when it is closed. |
| ** |
| ** On success, write the file handle into *id and return SQLITE_OK. |
| ** |
| ** On failure, return SQLITE_CANTOPEN. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixOpenExclusive(const char *zFilename, OsFile **pId, int delFlag){ |
| int rc; |
| unixFile f; |
| |
| CRASH_TEST_OVERRIDE(sqlite3CrashOpenExclusive, zFilename, pId, delFlag); |
| assert( 0==*pId ); |
| if( access(zFilename, 0)==0 ){ |
| return SQLITE_CANTOPEN; |
| } |
| SET_THREADID(&f); |
| f.dirfd = -1; |
| f.h = open(zFilename, |
| O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL|O_NOFOLLOW|O_LARGEFILE|O_BINARY, |
| SQLITE_DEFAULT_FILE_PERMISSIONS); |
| if( f.h<0 ){ |
| return SQLITE_CANTOPEN; |
| } |
| sqlite3OsEnterMutex(); |
| rc = findLockInfo(f.h, &f.pLock, &f.pOpen); |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| if( rc ){ |
| close(f.h); |
| unlink(zFilename); |
| return SQLITE_NOMEM; |
| } |
| f.locktype = 0; |
| if( delFlag ){ |
| unlink(zFilename); |
| } |
| TRACE3("OPEN-EX %-3d %s\n", f.h, zFilename); |
| return allocateUnixFile(&f, pId); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Attempt to open a new file for read-only access. |
| ** |
| ** On success, write the file handle into *id and return SQLITE_OK. |
| ** |
| ** On failure, return SQLITE_CANTOPEN. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixOpenReadOnly(const char *zFilename, OsFile **pId){ |
| int rc; |
| unixFile f; |
| |
| CRASH_TEST_OVERRIDE(sqlite3CrashOpenReadOnly, zFilename, pId, 0); |
| assert( 0==*pId ); |
| SET_THREADID(&f); |
| f.dirfd = -1; |
| f.h = open(zFilename, O_RDONLY|O_LARGEFILE|O_BINARY); |
| if( f.h<0 ){ |
| return SQLITE_CANTOPEN; |
| } |
| sqlite3OsEnterMutex(); |
| rc = findLockInfo(f.h, &f.pLock, &f.pOpen); |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| if( rc ){ |
| close(f.h); |
| return SQLITE_NOMEM; |
| } |
| f.locktype = 0; |
| TRACE3("OPEN-RO %-3d %s\n", f.h, zFilename); |
| |
| return allocateUnixFile(&f, pId); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Attempt to open a file descriptor for the directory that contains a |
| ** file. This file descriptor can be used to fsync() the directory |
| ** in order to make sure the creation of a new file is actually written |
| ** to disk. |
| ** |
| ** This routine is only meaningful for Unix. It is a no-op under |
| ** windows since windows does not support hard links. |
| ** |
| ** On success, a handle for a previously open file at *id is |
| ** updated with the new directory file descriptor and SQLITE_OK is |
| ** returned. |
| ** |
| ** On failure, the function returns SQLITE_CANTOPEN and leaves |
| ** *id unchanged. |
| */ |
| static int unixOpenDirectory( |
| OsFile *id, |
| const char *zDirname |
| ){ |
| unixFile *pFile = (unixFile*)id; |
| if( pFile==0 ){ |
| /* Do not open the directory if the corresponding file is not already |
| ** open. */ |
| return SQLITE_CANTOPEN; |
| } |
| SET_THREADID(pFile); |
| assert( pFile->dirfd<0 ); |
| pFile->dirfd = open(zDirname, O_RDONLY|O_BINARY, 0); |
| if( pFile->dirfd<0 ){ |
| return SQLITE_CANTOPEN; |
| } |
| TRACE3("OPENDIR %-3d %s\n", pFile->dirfd, zDirname); |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** If the following global variable points to a string which is the |
| ** name of a directory, then that directory will be used to store |
| ** temporary files. |
| */ |
| char *sqlite3_temp_directory = 0; |
| |
| /* |
| ** Create a temporary file name in zBuf. zBuf must be big enough to |
| ** hold at least SQLITE_TEMPNAME_SIZE characters. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixTempFileName(char *zBuf){ |
| static const char *azDirs[] = { |
| 0, |
| "/var/tmp", |
| "/usr/tmp", |
| "/tmp", |
| ".", |
| }; |
| static const unsigned char zChars[] = |
| "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" |
| "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" |
| "0123456789"; |
| int i, j; |
| struct stat buf; |
| const char *zDir = "."; |
| azDirs[0] = sqlite3_temp_directory; |
| for(i=0; i<sizeof(azDirs)/sizeof(azDirs[0]); i++){ |
| if( azDirs[i]==0 ) continue; |
| if( stat(azDirs[i], &buf) ) continue; |
| if( !S_ISDIR(buf.st_mode) ) continue; |
| if( access(azDirs[i], 07) ) continue; |
| zDir = azDirs[i]; |
| break; |
| } |
| do{ |
| sprintf(zBuf, "%s/"TEMP_FILE_PREFIX, zDir); |
| j = strlen(zBuf); |
| sqlite3Randomness(15, &zBuf[j]); |
| for(i=0; i<15; i++, j++){ |
| zBuf[j] = (char)zChars[ ((unsigned char)zBuf[j])%(sizeof(zChars)-1) ]; |
| } |
| zBuf[j] = 0; |
| }while( access(zBuf,0)==0 ); |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Check that a given pathname is a directory and is writable |
| ** |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixIsDirWritable(char *zBuf){ |
| #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_PAGER_PRAGMAS |
| struct stat buf; |
| if( zBuf==0 ) return 0; |
| if( zBuf[0]==0 ) return 0; |
| if( stat(zBuf, &buf) ) return 0; |
| if( !S_ISDIR(buf.st_mode) ) return 0; |
| if( access(zBuf, 07) ) return 0; |
| #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_PAGER_PRAGMAS */ |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Read data from a file into a buffer. Return SQLITE_OK if all |
| ** bytes were read successfully and SQLITE_IOERR if anything goes |
| ** wrong. |
| */ |
| static int unixRead(OsFile *id, void *pBuf, int amt){ |
| int got; |
| assert( id ); |
| SimulateIOError(SQLITE_IOERR); |
| TIMER_START; |
| got = read(((unixFile*)id)->h, pBuf, amt); |
| TIMER_END; |
| TRACE5("READ %-3d %5d %7d %d\n", ((unixFile*)id)->h, got, |
| last_page, TIMER_ELAPSED); |
| SEEK(0); |
| /* if( got<0 ) got = 0; */ |
| if( got==amt ){ |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| }else{ |
| return SQLITE_IOERR; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Write data from a buffer into a file. Return SQLITE_OK on success |
| ** or some other error code on failure. |
| */ |
| static int unixWrite(OsFile *id, const void *pBuf, int amt){ |
| int wrote = 0; |
| assert( id ); |
| assert( amt>0 ); |
| SimulateIOError(SQLITE_IOERR); |
| SimulateDiskfullError; |
| TIMER_START; |
| while( amt>0 && (wrote = write(((unixFile*)id)->h, pBuf, amt))>0 ){ |
| amt -= wrote; |
| pBuf = &((char*)pBuf)[wrote]; |
| } |
| TIMER_END; |
| TRACE5("WRITE %-3d %5d %7d %d\n", ((unixFile*)id)->h, wrote, |
| last_page, TIMER_ELAPSED); |
| SEEK(0); |
| if( amt>0 ){ |
| return SQLITE_FULL; |
| } |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Move the read/write pointer in a file. |
| */ |
| static int unixSeek(OsFile *id, i64 offset){ |
| assert( id ); |
| SEEK(offset/1024 + 1); |
| #ifdef SQLITE_TEST |
| if( offset ) SimulateDiskfullError |
| #endif |
| lseek(((unixFile*)id)->h, offset, SEEK_SET); |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef SQLITE_TEST |
| /* |
| ** Count the number of fullsyncs and normal syncs. This is used to test |
| ** that syncs and fullsyncs are occuring at the right times. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3_sync_count = 0; |
| int sqlite3_fullsync_count = 0; |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** Use the fdatasync() API only if the HAVE_FDATASYNC macro is defined. |
| ** Otherwise use fsync() in its place. |
| */ |
| #ifndef HAVE_FDATASYNC |
| # define fdatasync fsync |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| /* |
| ** The fsync() system call does not work as advertised on many |
| ** unix systems. The following procedure is an attempt to make |
| ** it work better. |
| ** |
| ** The SQLITE_NO_SYNC macro disables all fsync()s. This is useful |
| ** for testing when we want to run through the test suite quickly. |
| ** You are strongly advised *not* to deploy with SQLITE_NO_SYNC |
| ** enabled, however, since with SQLITE_NO_SYNC enabled, an OS crash |
| ** or power failure will likely corrupt the database file. |
| */ |
| static int full_fsync(int fd, int fullSync, int dataOnly){ |
| int rc; |
| |
| /* Record the number of times that we do a normal fsync() and |
| ** FULLSYNC. This is used during testing to verify that this procedure |
| ** gets called with the correct arguments. |
| */ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_TEST |
| if( fullSync ) sqlite3_fullsync_count++; |
| sqlite3_sync_count++; |
| #endif |
| |
| /* If we compiled with the SQLITE_NO_SYNC flag, then syncing is a |
| ** no-op |
| */ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_NO_SYNC |
| rc = SQLITE_OK; |
| #else |
| |
| #ifdef F_FULLFSYNC |
| if( fullSync ){ |
| rc = fcntl(fd, F_FULLFSYNC, 0); |
| }else{ |
| rc = 1; |
| } |
| /* If the FULLSYNC failed, try to do a normal fsync() */ |
| if( rc ) rc = fsync(fd); |
| |
| #else /* if !defined(F_FULLSYNC) */ |
| if( dataOnly ){ |
| rc = fdatasync(fd); |
| }else{ |
| rc = fsync(fd); |
| } |
| #endif /* defined(F_FULLFSYNC) */ |
| #endif /* defined(SQLITE_NO_SYNC) */ |
| |
| return rc; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Make sure all writes to a particular file are committed to disk. |
| ** |
| ** If dataOnly==0 then both the file itself and its metadata (file |
| ** size, access time, etc) are synced. If dataOnly!=0 then only the |
| ** file data is synced. |
| ** |
| ** Under Unix, also make sure that the directory entry for the file |
| ** has been created by fsync-ing the directory that contains the file. |
| ** If we do not do this and we encounter a power failure, the directory |
| ** entry for the journal might not exist after we reboot. The next |
| ** SQLite to access the file will not know that the journal exists (because |
| ** the directory entry for the journal was never created) and the transaction |
| ** will not roll back - possibly leading to database corruption. |
| */ |
| static int unixSync(OsFile *id, int dataOnly){ |
| unixFile *pFile = (unixFile*)id; |
| assert( pFile ); |
| SimulateIOError(SQLITE_IOERR); |
| TRACE2("SYNC %-3d\n", pFile->h); |
| if( full_fsync(pFile->h, pFile->fullSync, dataOnly) ){ |
| return SQLITE_IOERR; |
| } |
| if( pFile->dirfd>=0 ){ |
| TRACE2("DIRSYNC %-3d\n", pFile->dirfd); |
| #ifndef SQLITE_DISABLE_DIRSYNC |
| if( full_fsync(pFile->dirfd, pFile->fullSync, 0) ){ |
| return SQLITE_IOERR; |
| } |
| #endif |
| close(pFile->dirfd); /* Only need to sync once, so close the directory */ |
| pFile->dirfd = -1; /* when we are done. */ |
| } |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Sync the directory zDirname. This is a no-op on operating systems other |
| ** than UNIX. |
| ** |
| ** This is used to make sure the master journal file has truely been deleted |
| ** before making changes to individual journals on a multi-database commit. |
| ** The F_FULLFSYNC option is not needed here. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixSyncDirectory(const char *zDirname){ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_DISABLE_DIRSYNC |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| #else |
| int fd; |
| int r; |
| SimulateIOError(SQLITE_IOERR); |
| fd = open(zDirname, O_RDONLY|O_BINARY, 0); |
| TRACE3("DIRSYNC %-3d (%s)\n", fd, zDirname); |
| if( fd<0 ){ |
| return SQLITE_CANTOPEN; |
| } |
| r = fsync(fd); |
| close(fd); |
| return ((r==0)?SQLITE_OK:SQLITE_IOERR); |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Truncate an open file to a specified size |
| */ |
| static int unixTruncate(OsFile *id, i64 nByte){ |
| assert( id ); |
| SimulateIOError(SQLITE_IOERR); |
| return ftruncate(((unixFile*)id)->h, nByte)==0 ? SQLITE_OK : SQLITE_IOERR; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Determine the current size of a file in bytes |
| */ |
| static int unixFileSize(OsFile *id, i64 *pSize){ |
| struct stat buf; |
| assert( id ); |
| SimulateIOError(SQLITE_IOERR); |
| if( fstat(((unixFile*)id)->h, &buf)!=0 ){ |
| return SQLITE_IOERR; |
| } |
| *pSize = buf.st_size; |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** This routine checks if there is a RESERVED lock held on the specified |
| ** file by this or any other process. If such a lock is held, return |
| ** non-zero. If the file is unlocked or holds only SHARED locks, then |
| ** return zero. |
| */ |
| static int unixCheckReservedLock(OsFile *id){ |
| int r = 0; |
| unixFile *pFile = (unixFile*)id; |
| |
| assert( pFile ); |
| if( CHECK_THREADID(pFile) ) return SQLITE_MISUSE; |
| sqlite3OsEnterMutex(); /* Because pFile->pLock is shared across threads */ |
| |
| /* Check if a thread in this process holds such a lock */ |
| if( pFile->pLock->locktype>SHARED_LOCK ){ |
| r = 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* Otherwise see if some other process holds it. |
| */ |
| if( !r ){ |
| struct flock lock; |
| lock.l_whence = SEEK_SET; |
| lock.l_start = RESERVED_BYTE; |
| lock.l_len = 1; |
| lock.l_type = F_WRLCK; |
| fcntl(pFile->h, F_GETLK, &lock); |
| if( lock.l_type!=F_UNLCK ){ |
| r = 1; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| TRACE3("TEST WR-LOCK %d %d\n", pFile->h, r); |
| |
| return r; |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef SQLITE_DEBUG |
| /* |
| ** Helper function for printing out trace information from debugging |
| ** binaries. This returns the string represetation of the supplied |
| ** integer lock-type. |
| */ |
| static const char *locktypeName(int locktype){ |
| switch( locktype ){ |
| case NO_LOCK: return "NONE"; |
| case SHARED_LOCK: return "SHARED"; |
| case RESERVED_LOCK: return "RESERVED"; |
| case PENDING_LOCK: return "PENDING"; |
| case EXCLUSIVE_LOCK: return "EXCLUSIVE"; |
| } |
| return "ERROR"; |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** Lock the file with the lock specified by parameter locktype - one |
| ** of the following: |
| ** |
| ** (1) SHARED_LOCK |
| ** (2) RESERVED_LOCK |
| ** (3) PENDING_LOCK |
| ** (4) EXCLUSIVE_LOCK |
| ** |
| ** Sometimes when requesting one lock state, additional lock states |
| ** are inserted in between. The locking might fail on one of the later |
| ** transitions leaving the lock state different from what it started but |
| ** still short of its goal. The following chart shows the allowed |
| ** transitions and the inserted intermediate states: |
| ** |
| ** UNLOCKED -> SHARED |
| ** SHARED -> RESERVED |
| ** SHARED -> (PENDING) -> EXCLUSIVE |
| ** RESERVED -> (PENDING) -> EXCLUSIVE |
| ** PENDING -> EXCLUSIVE |
| ** |
| ** This routine will only increase a lock. Use the sqlite3OsUnlock() |
| ** routine to lower a locking level. |
| */ |
| static int unixLock(OsFile *id, int locktype){ |
| /* The following describes the implementation of the various locks and |
| ** lock transitions in terms of the POSIX advisory shared and exclusive |
| ** lock primitives (called read-locks and write-locks below, to avoid |
| ** confusion with SQLite lock names). The algorithms are complicated |
| ** slightly in order to be compatible with windows systems simultaneously |
| ** accessing the same database file, in case that is ever required. |
| ** |
| ** Symbols defined in os.h indentify the 'pending byte' and the 'reserved |
| ** byte', each single bytes at well known offsets, and the 'shared byte |
| ** range', a range of 510 bytes at a well known offset. |
| ** |
| ** To obtain a SHARED lock, a read-lock is obtained on the 'pending |
| ** byte'. If this is successful, a random byte from the 'shared byte |
| ** range' is read-locked and the lock on the 'pending byte' released. |
| ** |
| ** A process may only obtain a RESERVED lock after it has a SHARED lock. |
| ** A RESERVED lock is implemented by grabbing a write-lock on the |
| ** 'reserved byte'. |
| ** |
| ** A process may only obtain a PENDING lock after it has obtained a |
| ** SHARED lock. A PENDING lock is implemented by obtaining a write-lock |
| ** on the 'pending byte'. This ensures that no new SHARED locks can be |
| ** obtained, but existing SHARED locks are allowed to persist. A process |
| ** does not have to obtain a RESERVED lock on the way to a PENDING lock. |
| ** This property is used by the algorithm for rolling back a journal file |
| ** after a crash. |
| ** |
| ** An EXCLUSIVE lock, obtained after a PENDING lock is held, is |
| ** implemented by obtaining a write-lock on the entire 'shared byte |
| ** range'. Since all other locks require a read-lock on one of the bytes |
| ** within this range, this ensures that no other locks are held on the |
| ** database. |
| ** |
| ** The reason a single byte cannot be used instead of the 'shared byte |
| ** range' is that some versions of windows do not support read-locks. By |
| ** locking a random byte from a range, concurrent SHARED locks may exist |
| ** even if the locking primitive used is always a write-lock. |
| */ |
| int rc = SQLITE_OK; |
| unixFile *pFile = (unixFile*)id; |
| struct lockInfo *pLock = pFile->pLock; |
| struct flock lock; |
| int s; |
| |
| assert( pFile ); |
| TRACE7("LOCK %d %s was %s(%s,%d) pid=%d\n", pFile->h, |
| locktypeName(locktype), locktypeName(pFile->locktype), |
| locktypeName(pLock->locktype), pLock->cnt , getpid()); |
| if( CHECK_THREADID(pFile) ) return SQLITE_MISUSE; |
| |
| /* If there is already a lock of this type or more restrictive on the |
| ** OsFile, do nothing. Don't use the end_lock: exit path, as |
| ** sqlite3OsEnterMutex() hasn't been called yet. |
| */ |
| if( pFile->locktype>=locktype ){ |
| TRACE3("LOCK %d %s ok (already held)\n", pFile->h, |
| locktypeName(locktype)); |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* Make sure the locking sequence is correct |
| */ |
| assert( pFile->locktype!=NO_LOCK || locktype==SHARED_LOCK ); |
| assert( locktype!=PENDING_LOCK ); |
| assert( locktype!=RESERVED_LOCK || pFile->locktype==SHARED_LOCK ); |
| |
| /* This mutex is needed because pFile->pLock is shared across threads |
| */ |
| sqlite3OsEnterMutex(); |
| |
| /* If some thread using this PID has a lock via a different OsFile* |
| ** handle that precludes the requested lock, return BUSY. |
| */ |
| if( (pFile->locktype!=pLock->locktype && |
| (pLock->locktype>=PENDING_LOCK || locktype>SHARED_LOCK)) |
| ){ |
| rc = SQLITE_BUSY; |
| goto end_lock; |
| } |
| |
| /* If a SHARED lock is requested, and some thread using this PID already |
| ** has a SHARED or RESERVED lock, then increment reference counts and |
| ** return SQLITE_OK. |
| */ |
| if( locktype==SHARED_LOCK && |
| (pLock->locktype==SHARED_LOCK || pLock->locktype==RESERVED_LOCK) ){ |
| assert( locktype==SHARED_LOCK ); |
| assert( pFile->locktype==0 ); |
| assert( pLock->cnt>0 ); |
| pFile->locktype = SHARED_LOCK; |
| pLock->cnt++; |
| pFile->pOpen->nLock++; |
| goto end_lock; |
| } |
| |
| lock.l_len = 1L; |
| |
| lock.l_whence = SEEK_SET; |
| |
| /* A PENDING lock is needed before acquiring a SHARED lock and before |
| ** acquiring an EXCLUSIVE lock. For the SHARED lock, the PENDING will |
| ** be released. |
| */ |
| if( locktype==SHARED_LOCK |
| || (locktype==EXCLUSIVE_LOCK && pFile->locktype<PENDING_LOCK) |
| ){ |
| lock.l_type = (locktype==SHARED_LOCK?F_RDLCK:F_WRLCK); |
| lock.l_start = PENDING_BYTE; |
| s = fcntl(pFile->h, F_SETLK, &lock); |
| if( s ){ |
| rc = (errno==EINVAL) ? SQLITE_NOLFS : SQLITE_BUSY; |
| goto end_lock; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* If control gets to this point, then actually go ahead and make |
| ** operating system calls for the specified lock. |
| */ |
| if( locktype==SHARED_LOCK ){ |
| assert( pLock->cnt==0 ); |
| assert( pLock->locktype==0 ); |
| |
| /* Now get the read-lock */ |
| lock.l_start = SHARED_FIRST; |
| lock.l_len = SHARED_SIZE; |
| s = fcntl(pFile->h, F_SETLK, &lock); |
| |
| /* Drop the temporary PENDING lock */ |
| lock.l_start = PENDING_BYTE; |
| lock.l_len = 1L; |
| lock.l_type = F_UNLCK; |
| if( fcntl(pFile->h, F_SETLK, &lock)!=0 ){ |
| rc = SQLITE_IOERR; /* This should never happen */ |
| goto end_lock; |
| } |
| if( s ){ |
| rc = (errno==EINVAL) ? SQLITE_NOLFS : SQLITE_BUSY; |
| }else{ |
| pFile->locktype = SHARED_LOCK; |
| pFile->pOpen->nLock++; |
| pLock->cnt = 1; |
| } |
| }else if( locktype==EXCLUSIVE_LOCK && pLock->cnt>1 ){ |
| /* We are trying for an exclusive lock but another thread in this |
| ** same process is still holding a shared lock. */ |
| rc = SQLITE_BUSY; |
| }else{ |
| /* The request was for a RESERVED or EXCLUSIVE lock. It is |
| ** assumed that there is a SHARED or greater lock on the file |
| ** already. |
| */ |
| assert( 0!=pFile->locktype ); |
| lock.l_type = F_WRLCK; |
| switch( locktype ){ |
| case RESERVED_LOCK: |
| lock.l_start = RESERVED_BYTE; |
| break; |
| case EXCLUSIVE_LOCK: |
| lock.l_start = SHARED_FIRST; |
| lock.l_len = SHARED_SIZE; |
| break; |
| default: |
| assert(0); |
| } |
| s = fcntl(pFile->h, F_SETLK, &lock); |
| if( s ){ |
| rc = (errno==EINVAL) ? SQLITE_NOLFS : SQLITE_BUSY; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if( rc==SQLITE_OK ){ |
| pFile->locktype = locktype; |
| pLock->locktype = locktype; |
| }else if( locktype==EXCLUSIVE_LOCK ){ |
| pFile->locktype = PENDING_LOCK; |
| pLock->locktype = PENDING_LOCK; |
| } |
| |
| end_lock: |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| TRACE4("LOCK %d %s %s\n", pFile->h, locktypeName(locktype), |
| rc==SQLITE_OK ? "ok" : "failed"); |
| return rc; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Lower the locking level on file descriptor pFile to locktype. locktype |
| ** must be either NO_LOCK or SHARED_LOCK. |
| ** |
| ** If the locking level of the file descriptor is already at or below |
| ** the requested locking level, this routine is a no-op. |
| ** |
| ** It is not possible for this routine to fail if the second argument |
| ** is NO_LOCK. If the second argument is SHARED_LOCK, this routine |
| ** might return SQLITE_IOERR instead of SQLITE_OK. |
| */ |
| static int unixUnlock(OsFile *id, int locktype){ |
| struct lockInfo *pLock; |
| struct flock lock; |
| int rc = SQLITE_OK; |
| unixFile *pFile = (unixFile*)id; |
| |
| assert( pFile ); |
| TRACE7("UNLOCK %d %d was %d(%d,%d) pid=%d\n", pFile->h, locktype, |
| pFile->locktype, pFile->pLock->locktype, pFile->pLock->cnt, getpid()); |
| if( CHECK_THREADID(pFile) ) return SQLITE_MISUSE; |
| |
| assert( locktype<=SHARED_LOCK ); |
| if( pFile->locktype<=locktype ){ |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| sqlite3OsEnterMutex(); |
| pLock = pFile->pLock; |
| assert( pLock->cnt!=0 ); |
| if( pFile->locktype>SHARED_LOCK ){ |
| assert( pLock->locktype==pFile->locktype ); |
| if( locktype==SHARED_LOCK ){ |
| lock.l_type = F_RDLCK; |
| lock.l_whence = SEEK_SET; |
| lock.l_start = SHARED_FIRST; |
| lock.l_len = SHARED_SIZE; |
| if( fcntl(pFile->h, F_SETLK, &lock)!=0 ){ |
| /* This should never happen */ |
| rc = SQLITE_IOERR; |
| } |
| } |
| lock.l_type = F_UNLCK; |
| lock.l_whence = SEEK_SET; |
| lock.l_start = PENDING_BYTE; |
| lock.l_len = 2L; assert( PENDING_BYTE+1==RESERVED_BYTE ); |
| if( fcntl(pFile->h, F_SETLK, &lock)==0 ){ |
| pLock->locktype = SHARED_LOCK; |
| }else{ |
| rc = SQLITE_IOERR; /* This should never happen */ |
| } |
| } |
| if( locktype==NO_LOCK ){ |
| struct openCnt *pOpen; |
| |
| /* Decrement the shared lock counter. Release the lock using an |
| ** OS call only when all threads in this same process have released |
| ** the lock. |
| */ |
| pLock->cnt--; |
| if( pLock->cnt==0 ){ |
| lock.l_type = F_UNLCK; |
| lock.l_whence = SEEK_SET; |
| lock.l_start = lock.l_len = 0L; |
| if( fcntl(pFile->h, F_SETLK, &lock)==0 ){ |
| pLock->locktype = NO_LOCK; |
| }else{ |
| rc = SQLITE_IOERR; /* This should never happen */ |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Decrement the count of locks against this same file. When the |
| ** count reaches zero, close any other file descriptors whose close |
| ** was deferred because of outstanding locks. |
| */ |
| pOpen = pFile->pOpen; |
| pOpen->nLock--; |
| assert( pOpen->nLock>=0 ); |
| if( pOpen->nLock==0 && pOpen->nPending>0 ){ |
| int i; |
| for(i=0; i<pOpen->nPending; i++){ |
| close(pOpen->aPending[i]); |
| } |
| sqliteFree(pOpen->aPending); |
| pOpen->nPending = 0; |
| pOpen->aPending = 0; |
| } |
| } |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| pFile->locktype = locktype; |
| return rc; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Close a file. |
| */ |
| static int unixClose(OsFile **pId){ |
| unixFile *id = (unixFile*)*pId; |
| if( !id ) return SQLITE_OK; |
| if( CHECK_THREADID(id) ) return SQLITE_MISUSE; |
| unixUnlock(*pId, NO_LOCK); |
| if( id->dirfd>=0 ) close(id->dirfd); |
| id->dirfd = -1; |
| sqlite3OsEnterMutex(); |
| |
| if( id->pOpen->nLock ){ |
| /* If there are outstanding locks, do not actually close the file just |
| ** yet because that would clear those locks. Instead, add the file |
| ** descriptor to pOpen->aPending. It will be automatically closed when |
| ** the last lock is cleared. |
| */ |
| int *aNew; |
| struct openCnt *pOpen = id->pOpen; |
| aNew = sqliteRealloc( pOpen->aPending, (pOpen->nPending+1)*sizeof(int) ); |
| if( aNew==0 ){ |
| /* If a malloc fails, just leak the file descriptor */ |
| }else{ |
| pOpen->aPending = aNew; |
| pOpen->aPending[pOpen->nPending] = id->h; |
| pOpen->nPending++; |
| } |
| }else{ |
| /* There are no outstanding locks so we can close the file immediately */ |
| close(id->h); |
| } |
| releaseLockInfo(id->pLock); |
| releaseOpenCnt(id->pOpen); |
| |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| id->isOpen = 0; |
| TRACE2("CLOSE %-3d\n", id->h); |
| OpenCounter(-1); |
| sqliteFree(id); |
| *pId = 0; |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Turn a relative pathname into a full pathname. Return a pointer |
| ** to the full pathname stored in space obtained from sqliteMalloc(). |
| ** The calling function is responsible for freeing this space once it |
| ** is no longer needed. |
| */ |
| char *sqlite3UnixFullPathname(const char *zRelative){ |
| char *zFull = 0; |
| if( zRelative[0]=='/' ){ |
| sqlite3SetString(&zFull, zRelative, (char*)0); |
| }else{ |
| char *zBuf = sqliteMalloc(5000); |
| if( zBuf==0 ){ |
| return 0; |
| } |
| zBuf[0] = 0; |
| sqlite3SetString(&zFull, getcwd(zBuf, 5000), "/", zRelative, |
| (char*)0); |
| sqliteFree(zBuf); |
| } |
| return zFull; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Change the value of the fullsync flag in the given file descriptor. |
| */ |
| static void unixSetFullSync(OsFile *id, int v){ |
| ((unixFile*)id)->fullSync = v; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Return the underlying file handle for an OsFile |
| */ |
| static int unixFileHandle(OsFile *id){ |
| return ((unixFile*)id)->h; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Return an integer that indices the type of lock currently held |
| ** by this handle. (Used for testing and analysis only.) |
| */ |
| static int unixLockState(OsFile *id){ |
| return ((unixFile*)id)->locktype; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** This vector defines all the methods that can operate on an OsFile |
| ** for unix. |
| */ |
| static const IoMethod sqlite3UnixIoMethod = { |
| unixClose, |
| unixOpenDirectory, |
| unixRead, |
| unixWrite, |
| unixSeek, |
| unixTruncate, |
| unixSync, |
| unixSetFullSync, |
| unixFileHandle, |
| unixFileSize, |
| unixLock, |
| unixUnlock, |
| unixLockState, |
| unixCheckReservedLock, |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| ** Allocate memory for a unixFile. Initialize the new unixFile |
| ** to the value given in pInit and return a pointer to the new |
| ** OsFile. If we run out of memory, close the file and return NULL. |
| */ |
| static int allocateUnixFile(unixFile *pInit, OsFile **pId){ |
| unixFile *pNew; |
| pNew = sqliteMalloc( sizeof(unixFile) ); |
| if( pNew==0 ){ |
| close(pInit->h); |
| releaseLockInfo(pInit->pLock); |
| releaseOpenCnt(pInit->pOpen); |
| *pId = 0; |
| return SQLITE_NOMEM; |
| }else{ |
| *pNew = *pInit; |
| pNew->pMethod = &sqlite3UnixIoMethod; |
| *pId = (OsFile*)pNew; |
| OpenCounter(+1); |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_DISKIO */ |
| /*************************************************************************** |
| ** Everything above deals with file I/O. Everything that follows deals |
| ** with other miscellanous aspects of the operating system interface |
| ****************************************************************************/ |
| |
| |
| /* |
| ** Get information to seed the random number generator. The seed |
| ** is written into the buffer zBuf[256]. The calling function must |
| ** supply a sufficiently large buffer. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixRandomSeed(char *zBuf){ |
| /* We have to initialize zBuf to prevent valgrind from reporting |
| ** errors. The reports issued by valgrind are incorrect - we would |
| ** prefer that the randomness be increased by making use of the |
| ** uninitialized space in zBuf - but valgrind errors tend to worry |
| ** some users. Rather than argue, it seems easier just to initialize |
| ** the whole array and silence valgrind, even if that means less randomness |
| ** in the random seed. |
| ** |
| ** When testing, initializing zBuf[] to zero is all we do. That means |
| ** that we always use the same random number sequence.* This makes the |
| ** tests repeatable. |
| */ |
| memset(zBuf, 0, 256); |
| #if !defined(SQLITE_TEST) |
| { |
| int pid, fd; |
| fd = open("/dev/urandom", O_RDONLY); |
| if( fd<0 ){ |
| time_t t; |
| time(&t); |
| memcpy(zBuf, &t, sizeof(t)); |
| pid = getpid(); |
| memcpy(&zBuf[sizeof(time_t)], &pid, sizeof(pid)); |
| }else{ |
| read(fd, zBuf, 256); |
| close(fd); |
| } |
| } |
| #endif |
| return SQLITE_OK; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Sleep for a little while. Return the amount of time slept. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixSleep(int ms){ |
| #if defined(HAVE_USLEEP) && HAVE_USLEEP |
| usleep(ms*1000); |
| return ms; |
| #else |
| sleep((ms+999)/1000); |
| return 1000*((ms+999)/1000); |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Static variables used for thread synchronization |
| */ |
| static int inMutex = 0; |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| static pthread_mutex_t mutex = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER; |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** The following pair of routine implement mutual exclusion for |
| ** multi-threaded processes. Only a single thread is allowed to |
| ** executed code that is surrounded by EnterMutex() and LeaveMutex(). |
| ** |
| ** SQLite uses only a single Mutex. There is not much critical |
| ** code and what little there is executes quickly and without blocking. |
| */ |
| void sqlite3UnixEnterMutex(){ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| pthread_mutex_lock(&mutex); |
| #endif |
| assert( !inMutex ); |
| inMutex = 1; |
| } |
| void sqlite3UnixLeaveMutex(){ |
| assert( inMutex ); |
| inMutex = 0; |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex); |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** Return TRUE if we are currently within the mutex and FALSE if not. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixInMutex(){ |
| return inMutex; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** This function is called automatically when a thread exists to delete |
| ** the threads ThreadData structure. |
| ** |
| ** Because the ThreadData structure is required by higher level routines |
| ** such as sqliteMalloc() we use OsFree() and OsMalloc() directly to |
| ** allocate the thread specific data. |
| */ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| static void deleteTsd(void *pTsd){ |
| sqlite3OsFree(pTsd); |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** The first time this function is called from a specific thread, nByte |
| ** bytes of data area are allocated and zeroed. A pointer to the new |
| ** allocation is returned to the caller. |
| ** |
| ** Each subsequent call to this function from the thread returns the same |
| ** pointer. The argument is ignored in this case. |
| */ |
| void *sqlite3UnixThreadSpecificData(int nByte){ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_UNIX_THREADS |
| static pthread_key_t key; |
| static int keyInit = 0; |
| void *pTsd; |
| |
| if( !keyInit ){ |
| sqlite3OsEnterMutex(); |
| if( !keyInit ){ |
| int rc; |
| rc = pthread_key_create(&key, deleteTsd); |
| if( rc ){ |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| keyInit = 1; |
| } |
| sqlite3OsLeaveMutex(); |
| } |
| |
| pTsd = pthread_getspecific(key); |
| if( !pTsd ){ |
| pTsd = sqlite3OsMalloc(nByte); |
| if( pTsd ){ |
| memset(pTsd, 0, nByte); |
| pthread_setspecific(key, pTsd); |
| } |
| } |
| return pTsd; |
| #else |
| static void *pTsd = 0; |
| if( !pTsd ){ |
| pTsd = sqlite3OsMalloc(nByte); |
| if( pTsd ){ |
| memset(pTsd, 0, nByte); |
| } |
| } |
| return pTsd; |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| ** The following variable, if set to a non-zero value, becomes the result |
| ** returned from sqlite3OsCurrentTime(). This is used for testing. |
| */ |
| #ifdef SQLITE_TEST |
| int sqlite3_current_time = 0; |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| ** Find the current time (in Universal Coordinated Time). Write the |
| ** current time and date as a Julian Day number into *prNow and |
| ** return 0. Return 1 if the time and date cannot be found. |
| */ |
| int sqlite3UnixCurrentTime(double *prNow){ |
| #ifdef NO_GETTOD |
| time_t t; |
| time(&t); |
| *prNow = t/86400.0 + 2440587.5; |
| #else |
| struct timeval sNow; |
| struct timezone sTz; /* Not used */ |
| gettimeofday(&sNow, &sTz); |
| *prNow = 2440587.5 + sNow.tv_sec/86400.0 + sNow.tv_usec/86400000000.0; |
| #endif |
| #ifdef SQLITE_TEST |
| if( sqlite3_current_time ){ |
| *prNow = sqlite3_current_time/86400.0 + 2440587.5; |
| } |
| #endif |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| #endif /* OS_UNIX */ |