dbopen — database access methods
#include <sys/types.h> #include <limits.h> #include <db.h> #include <fcntl.h>
DB
*dbopen( |
const char *file, |
int flags, | |
int mode, | |
DBTYPE type, | |
const void *openinfo) ; |
Note well: This
page documents interfaces provided in glibc up until version
2.1. Since version 2.2, glibc no longer provides these
interfaces. Probably, you are looking for the APIs provided
by the libdb
library
instead.
dbopen
() is the library
interface to database files. The supported file formats are
btree, hashed and UNIX file oriented. The btree format is a
representation of a sorted, balanced tree structure. The
hashed format is an extensible, dynamic hashing scheme. The
flat-file format is a byte stream file with fixed or variable
length records. The formats and file-format-specific
information are described in detail in their respective
manual pages btree(3), hash(3), and recno(3).
dbopen
() opens file
for reading and/or
writing. Files never intended to be preserved on disk may be
created by setting the file
argument to NULL.
The flags
and
mode
arguments are as
specified to the open(2) routine, however,
only the O_CREAT
, O_EXCL
, O_EXLOCK
, O_NONBLOCK
, O_RDONLY
, O_RDWR
, O_SHLOCK
, and O_TRUNC
flags are meaningful. (Note,
opening a database file O_WRONLY
is not possible.)
The type
argument
is of type DBTYPE
(as defined
in the <
db.h
>
include file) and may be set to DB_BTREE
, DB_HASH
, or DB_RECNO
.
The openinfo
argument is a pointer to an access-method-specific structure
described in the access method's manual page. If openinfo
is NULL, each access
method will use defaults appropriate for the system and the
access method.
dbopen
() returns a pointer
to a DB
structure on success
and NULL on error. The DB
structure is defined in the <
db.h
>
include file, and contains at least the following fields:
typedef struct { DBTYPE type
;int (* close
)(const DB *db);int (* del
)(const DB *db, const DBT *key, unsigned int flags);int (* fd
)(const DB *db);int (* get
)(const DB *db, DBT *key, DBT *data, unsigned int flags);int (* put
)(const DB *db, DBT *key, const DBT *data, unsigned int flags);int (* sync
)(const DB *db, unsigned int flags);int (* seq
)(const DB *db, DBT *key, DBT *data, unsigned int flags);} DB;
These elements describe a database type and a set of
functions performing various actions. These functions take a
pointer to a structure as returned by dbopen
(), and sometimes one or more
pointers to key/data structures and a flag value.
type
The type of the underlying access method (and file format).
close
A pointer to a routine to flush any cached
information to disk, free any allocated resources, and
close the underlying file(s). Since key/data pairs may
be cached in memory, failing to sync the file with a
close
or
sync
function
may result in inconsistent or lost information.
close
routines
return −1 on error (setting errno
) and 0 on success.
del
A pointer to a routine to remove key/data pairs from the database.
The argument flag
may be set to the
following value:
R_CURSOR
Delete the record referenced by the cursor. The cursor must have previously been initialized.
delete
routines return
−1 on error (setting errno
), 0 on success, and 1 if the
specified key
was not in the file.
fd
A pointer to a routine which returns a file
descriptor representative of the underlying database. A
file descriptor referencing the same file will be
returned to all processes which call dbopen
() with the same file
name. This file
descriptor may be safely used as an argument to the
fcntl(2) and
flock(2) locking
functions. The file descriptor is not necessarily
associated with any of the underlying files used by the
access method. No file descriptor is available for in
memory databases. fd
routines return
−1 on error (setting errno
), and the file descriptor on
success.
get
A pointer to a routine which is the interface for
keyed retrieval from the database. The address and
length of the data associated with the specified
key
are
returned in the structure referenced by data
. get
routines return
−1 on error (setting errno
), 0 on success, and 1 if the
key
was not in
the file.
put
A pointer to a routine to store key/data pairs in the database.
The argument flag
may be set to one of
the following values:
R_CURSOR
Replace the key/data pair referenced by the cursor. The cursor must have previously been initialized.
R_IAFTER
Append the data immediately after the data referenced by
key
, creating a new key/data pair. The record number of the appended key/data pair is returned in thekey
structure. (Applicable only to theDB_RECNO
access method.)R_IBEFORE
Insert the data immediately before the data referenced by
key
, creating a new key/data pair. The record number of the inserted key/data pair is returned in thekey
structure. (Applicable only to theDB_RECNO
access method.)R_NOOVERWRITE
Enter the new key/data pair only if the key does not previously exist.
R_SETCURSOR
Store the key/data pair, setting or initializing the position of the cursor to reference it. (Applicable only to the
DB_BTREE
andDB_RECNO
access methods.)
R_SETCURSOR
is
available only for the DB_BTREE
and DB_RECNO
access methods because it
implies that the keys have an inherent order which does
not change.
R_IAFTER
and
R_IBEFORE
are available
only for the DB_RECNO
access method because they each imply that the access
method is able to create new keys. This is true only if
the keys are ordered and independent, record numbers
for example.
The default behavior of the put
routines is to enter
the new key/data pair, replacing any previously
existing key.
put
routines
return −1 on error (setting errno
), 0 on success, and 1 if the
R_NOOVERWRITE
flag
was set and the key
already exists in the file.
seq
A pointer to a routine which is the interface for
sequential retrieval from the database. The address and
length of the key are returned in the structure
referenced by key
, and the address and
length of the data are returned in the structure
referenced by data
.
Sequential key/data pair retrieval may begin at any
time, and the position of the "cursor" is not affected
by calls to the del
, get
, put
, or sync
routines.
Modifications to the database during a sequential scan
will be reflected in the scan, that is, records
inserted behind the cursor will not be returned while
records inserted in front of the cursor will be
returned.
The flag value must be set to one of the following values:
R_CURSOR
The data associated with the specified key is returned. This differs from the
get
routines in that it sets or initializes the cursor to the location of the key as well. (Note, for theDB_BTREE
access method, the returned key is not necessarily an exact match for the specified key. The returned key is the smallest key greater than or equal to the specified key, permitting partial key matches and range searches.)R_FIRST
The first key/data pair of the database is returned, and the cursor is set or initialized to reference it.
R_LAST
The last key/data pair of the database is returned, and the cursor is set or initialized to reference it. (Applicable only to the
DB_BTREE
andDB_RECNO
access methods.)R_NEXT
Retrieve the key/data pair immediately after the cursor. If the cursor is not yet set, this is the same as the
R_FIRST
flag.R_PREV
Retrieve the key/data pair immediately before the cursor. If the cursor is not yet set, this is the same as the
R_LAST
flag. (Applicable only to theDB_BTREE
andDB_RECNO
access methods.)
R_LAST
and
R_PREV
are available only
for the DB_BTREE
and
DB_RECNO
access methods
because they each imply that the keys have an inherent
order which does not change.
seq
routines
return −1 on error (setting errno
), 0 on success and 1 if there
are no key/data pairs less than or greater than the
specified or current key. If the DB_RECNO
access method is being used,
and if the database file is a character special file
and no complete key/data pairs are currently available,
the seq
routines return 2.
sync
A pointer to a routine to flush any cached
information to disk. If the database is in memory only,
the sync
routine has no effect and will always succeed.
The flag value may be set to the following value:
R_RECNOSYNC
If the
DB_RECNO
access method is being used, this flag causes the sync routine to apply to the btree file which underlies the recno file, not the recno file itself. (See thebfname
field of the recno(3) manual page for more information.)
sync
routines return −1 on error (setting errno
) and 0 on success.
Access to all file types is based on key/data pairs. Both keys and data are represented by the following data structure:
typedef struct { void * data
;size_t size
;} DBT;
The elements of the DBT
structure are defined as follows:
data
A pointer to a byte string.
size
The length of the byte string.
Key and data byte strings may reference strings of essentially unlimited length although any two of them must fit into available memory at the same time. It should be noted that the access methods provide no guarantees about byte string alignment.
The dbopen
() routine may
fail and set errno
for any of
the errors specified for the library routines open(2) and malloc(3) or the
following:
EFTYPE
A file is incorrectly formatted.
A parameter has been specified (hash function, pad byte, etc.) that is incompatible with the current file specification or which is not meaningful for the function (for example, use of the cursor without prior initialization) or there is a mismatch between the version number of file and the software.
The close
routines
may fail and set errno
for any
of the errors specified for the library routines close(2), read(2), write(2), free(3), or fsync(2).
The del
,
get
, put
, and seq
routines may fail and set
errno
for any of the errors
specified for the library routines read(2), write(2), free(3) or malloc(3).
The fd
routines
will fail and set errno
to
ENOENT for in memory
databases.
The sync
routines
may fail and set errno
for any
of the errors specified for the library routine fsync(2).
The typedef DBT
is a
mnemonic for "data base thang", and was used because no-one
could think of a reasonable name that wasn't already
used.
The file descriptor interface is a kludge and will be deleted in a future version of the interface.
None of the access methods provide any form of concurrent access, locking, or transactions.
btree(3), hash(3), mpool(3), recno(3)
LIBTP: Portable, Modular Transactions for UNIX, Margo Seltzer, Michael Olson, USENIX proceedings, Winter 1992.
This page is part of release 4.07 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
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