1 /* 2 ** 2005 November 29 3 ** 4 ** The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of 5 ** a legal notice, here is a blessing: 6 ** 7 ** May you do good and not evil. 8 ** May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. 9 ** May you share freely, never taking more than you give. 10 ** 11 ****************************************************************************** 12 ** 13 ** This file contains OS interface code that is common to all 14 ** architectures. 15 */ 16 #include "sqliteInt.h" 17 18 /* 19 ** If we compile with the SQLITE_TEST macro set, then the following block 20 ** of code will give us the ability to simulate a disk I/O error. This 21 ** is used for testing the I/O recovery logic. 22 */ 23 #if defined(SQLITE_TEST) 24 int sqlite3_io_error_hit = 0; /* Total number of I/O Errors */ 25 int sqlite3_io_error_hardhit = 0; /* Number of non-benign errors */ 26 int sqlite3_io_error_pending = 0; /* Count down to first I/O error */ 27 int sqlite3_io_error_persist = 0; /* True if I/O errors persist */ 28 int sqlite3_io_error_benign = 0; /* True if errors are benign */ 29 int sqlite3_diskfull_pending = 0; 30 int sqlite3_diskfull = 0; 31 #endif /* defined(SQLITE_TEST) */ 32 33 /* 34 ** When testing, also keep a count of the number of open files. 35 */ 36 #if defined(SQLITE_TEST) 37 int sqlite3_open_file_count = 0; 38 #endif /* defined(SQLITE_TEST) */ 39 40 /* 41 ** The default SQLite sqlite3_vfs implementations do not allocate 42 ** memory (actually, os_unix.c allocates a small amount of memory 43 ** from within OsOpen()), but some third-party implementations may. 44 ** So we test the effects of a malloc() failing and the sqlite3OsXXX() 45 ** function returning SQLITE_IOERR_NOMEM using the DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST macro. 46 ** 47 ** The following functions are instrumented for malloc() failure 48 ** testing: 49 ** 50 ** sqlite3OsRead() 51 ** sqlite3OsWrite() 52 ** sqlite3OsSync() 53 ** sqlite3OsFileSize() 54 ** sqlite3OsLock() 55 ** sqlite3OsCheckReservedLock() 56 ** sqlite3OsFileControl() 57 ** sqlite3OsShmMap() 58 ** sqlite3OsOpen() 59 ** sqlite3OsDelete() 60 ** sqlite3OsAccess() 61 ** sqlite3OsFullPathname() 62 ** 63 */ 64 #if defined(SQLITE_TEST) 65 int sqlite3_memdebug_vfs_oom_test = 1; 66 #define DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(x) \ 67 if (sqlite3_memdebug_vfs_oom_test && (!x || !sqlite3JournalIsInMemory(x))) { \ 68 void *pTstAlloc = sqlite3Malloc(10); \ 69 if (!pTstAlloc) return SQLITE_IOERR_NOMEM_BKPT; \ 70 sqlite3_free(pTstAlloc); \ 71 } 72 #else 73 #define DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(x) 74 #endif 75 76 /* 77 ** The following routines are convenience wrappers around methods 78 ** of the sqlite3_file object. This is mostly just syntactic sugar. All 79 ** of this would be completely automatic if SQLite were coded using 80 ** C++ instead of plain old C. 81 */ 82 void sqlite3OsClose(sqlite3_file *pId){ 83 if( pId->pMethods ){ 84 pId->pMethods->xClose(pId); 85 pId->pMethods = 0; 86 } 87 } 88 int sqlite3OsRead(sqlite3_file *id, void *pBuf, int amt, i64 offset){ 89 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 90 return id->pMethods->xRead(id, pBuf, amt, offset); 91 } 92 int sqlite3OsWrite(sqlite3_file *id, const void *pBuf, int amt, i64 offset){ 93 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 94 return id->pMethods->xWrite(id, pBuf, amt, offset); 95 } 96 int sqlite3OsTruncate(sqlite3_file *id, i64 size){ 97 return id->pMethods->xTruncate(id, size); 98 } 99 int sqlite3OsSync(sqlite3_file *id, int flags){ 100 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 101 return flags ? id->pMethods->xSync(id, flags) : SQLITE_OK; 102 } 103 int sqlite3OsFileSize(sqlite3_file *id, i64 *pSize){ 104 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 105 return id->pMethods->xFileSize(id, pSize); 106 } 107 int sqlite3OsLock(sqlite3_file *id, int lockType){ 108 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 109 return id->pMethods->xLock(id, lockType); 110 } 111 int sqlite3OsUnlock(sqlite3_file *id, int lockType){ 112 return id->pMethods->xUnlock(id, lockType); 113 } 114 int sqlite3OsCheckReservedLock(sqlite3_file *id, int *pResOut){ 115 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 116 return id->pMethods->xCheckReservedLock(id, pResOut); 117 } 118 119 /* 120 ** Use sqlite3OsFileControl() when we are doing something that might fail 121 ** and we need to know about the failures. Use sqlite3OsFileControlHint() 122 ** when simply tossing information over the wall to the VFS and we do not 123 ** really care if the VFS receives and understands the information since it 124 ** is only a hint and can be safely ignored. The sqlite3OsFileControlHint() 125 ** routine has no return value since the return value would be meaningless. 126 */ 127 int sqlite3OsFileControl(sqlite3_file *id, int op, void *pArg){ 128 if( id->pMethods==0 ) return SQLITE_NOTFOUND; 129 #ifdef SQLITE_TEST 130 if( op!=SQLITE_FCNTL_COMMIT_PHASETWO 131 && op!=SQLITE_FCNTL_LOCK_TIMEOUT 132 && op!=SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_DONE 133 && op!=SQLITE_FCNTL_CKPT_START 134 ){ 135 /* Faults are not injected into COMMIT_PHASETWO because, assuming SQLite 136 ** is using a regular VFS, it is called after the corresponding 137 ** transaction has been committed. Injecting a fault at this point 138 ** confuses the test scripts - the COMMIT comand returns SQLITE_NOMEM 139 ** but the transaction is committed anyway. 140 ** 141 ** The core must call OsFileControl() though, not OsFileControlHint(), 142 ** as if a custom VFS (e.g. zipvfs) returns an error here, it probably 143 ** means the commit really has failed and an error should be returned 144 ** to the user. 145 ** 146 ** The CKPT_DONE and CKPT_START file-controls are write-only signals 147 ** to the cksumvfs. Their return code is meaningless and is ignored 148 ** by the SQLite core, so there is no point in simulating OOMs for them. 149 */ 150 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 151 } 152 #endif 153 return id->pMethods->xFileControl(id, op, pArg); 154 } 155 void sqlite3OsFileControlHint(sqlite3_file *id, int op, void *pArg){ 156 if( id->pMethods ) (void)id->pMethods->xFileControl(id, op, pArg); 157 } 158 159 int sqlite3OsSectorSize(sqlite3_file *id){ 160 int (*xSectorSize)(sqlite3_file*) = id->pMethods->xSectorSize; 161 return (xSectorSize ? xSectorSize(id) : SQLITE_DEFAULT_SECTOR_SIZE); 162 } 163 int sqlite3OsDeviceCharacteristics(sqlite3_file *id){ 164 return id->pMethods->xDeviceCharacteristics(id); 165 } 166 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_WAL 167 int sqlite3OsShmLock(sqlite3_file *id, int offset, int n, int flags){ 168 return id->pMethods->xShmLock(id, offset, n, flags); 169 } 170 void sqlite3OsShmBarrier(sqlite3_file *id){ 171 id->pMethods->xShmBarrier(id); 172 } 173 int sqlite3OsShmUnmap(sqlite3_file *id, int deleteFlag){ 174 return id->pMethods->xShmUnmap(id, deleteFlag); 175 } 176 int sqlite3OsShmMap( 177 sqlite3_file *id, /* Database file handle */ 178 int iPage, 179 int pgsz, 180 int bExtend, /* True to extend file if necessary */ 181 void volatile **pp /* OUT: Pointer to mapping */ 182 ){ 183 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 184 return id->pMethods->xShmMap(id, iPage, pgsz, bExtend, pp); 185 } 186 #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_WAL */ 187 188 #if SQLITE_MAX_MMAP_SIZE>0 189 /* The real implementation of xFetch and xUnfetch */ 190 int sqlite3OsFetch(sqlite3_file *id, i64 iOff, int iAmt, void **pp){ 191 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(id); 192 return id->pMethods->xFetch(id, iOff, iAmt, pp); 193 } 194 int sqlite3OsUnfetch(sqlite3_file *id, i64 iOff, void *p){ 195 return id->pMethods->xUnfetch(id, iOff, p); 196 } 197 #else 198 /* No-op stubs to use when memory-mapped I/O is disabled */ 199 int sqlite3OsFetch(sqlite3_file *id, i64 iOff, int iAmt, void **pp){ 200 *pp = 0; 201 return SQLITE_OK; 202 } 203 int sqlite3OsUnfetch(sqlite3_file *id, i64 iOff, void *p){ 204 return SQLITE_OK; 205 } 206 #endif 207 208 /* 209 ** The next group of routines are convenience wrappers around the 210 ** VFS methods. 211 */ 212 int sqlite3OsOpen( 213 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, 214 const char *zPath, 215 sqlite3_file *pFile, 216 int flags, 217 int *pFlagsOut 218 ){ 219 int rc; 220 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(0); 221 /* 0x87f7f is a mask of SQLITE_OPEN_ flags that are valid to be passed 222 ** down into the VFS layer. Some SQLITE_OPEN_ flags (for example, 223 ** SQLITE_OPEN_FULLMUTEX or SQLITE_OPEN_SHAREDCACHE) are blocked before 224 ** reaching the VFS. */ 225 rc = pVfs->xOpen(pVfs, zPath, pFile, flags & 0x1087f7f, pFlagsOut); 226 assert( rc==SQLITE_OK || pFile->pMethods==0 ); 227 return rc; 228 } 229 int sqlite3OsDelete(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, const char *zPath, int dirSync){ 230 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(0); 231 assert( dirSync==0 || dirSync==1 ); 232 return pVfs->xDelete!=0 ? pVfs->xDelete(pVfs, zPath, dirSync) : SQLITE_OK; 233 } 234 int sqlite3OsAccess( 235 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, 236 const char *zPath, 237 int flags, 238 int *pResOut 239 ){ 240 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(0); 241 return pVfs->xAccess(pVfs, zPath, flags, pResOut); 242 } 243 int sqlite3OsFullPathname( 244 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, 245 const char *zPath, 246 int nPathOut, 247 char *zPathOut 248 ){ 249 DO_OS_MALLOC_TEST(0); 250 zPathOut[0] = 0; 251 return pVfs->xFullPathname(pVfs, zPath, nPathOut, zPathOut); 252 } 253 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_LOAD_EXTENSION 254 void *sqlite3OsDlOpen(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, const char *zPath){ 255 return pVfs->xDlOpen(pVfs, zPath); 256 } 257 void sqlite3OsDlError(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, int nByte, char *zBufOut){ 258 pVfs->xDlError(pVfs, nByte, zBufOut); 259 } 260 void (*sqlite3OsDlSym(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, void *pHdle, const char *zSym))(void){ 261 return pVfs->xDlSym(pVfs, pHdle, zSym); 262 } 263 void sqlite3OsDlClose(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, void *pHandle){ 264 pVfs->xDlClose(pVfs, pHandle); 265 } 266 #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_LOAD_EXTENSION */ 267 int sqlite3OsRandomness(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, int nByte, char *zBufOut){ 268 if( sqlite3Config.iPrngSeed ){ 269 memset(zBufOut, 0, nByte); 270 if( ALWAYS(nByte>(signed)sizeof(unsigned)) ) nByte = sizeof(unsigned int); 271 memcpy(zBufOut, &sqlite3Config.iPrngSeed, nByte); 272 return SQLITE_OK; 273 }else{ 274 return pVfs->xRandomness(pVfs, nByte, zBufOut); 275 } 276 277 } 278 int sqlite3OsSleep(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, int nMicro){ 279 return pVfs->xSleep(pVfs, nMicro); 280 } 281 int sqlite3OsGetLastError(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs){ 282 return pVfs->xGetLastError ? pVfs->xGetLastError(pVfs, 0, 0) : 0; 283 } 284 int sqlite3OsCurrentTimeInt64(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, sqlite3_int64 *pTimeOut){ 285 int rc; 286 /* IMPLEMENTATION-OF: R-49045-42493 SQLite will use the xCurrentTimeInt64() 287 ** method to get the current date and time if that method is available 288 ** (if iVersion is 2 or greater and the function pointer is not NULL) and 289 ** will fall back to xCurrentTime() if xCurrentTimeInt64() is 290 ** unavailable. 291 */ 292 if( pVfs->iVersion>=2 && pVfs->xCurrentTimeInt64 ){ 293 rc = pVfs->xCurrentTimeInt64(pVfs, pTimeOut); 294 }else{ 295 double r; 296 rc = pVfs->xCurrentTime(pVfs, &r); 297 *pTimeOut = (sqlite3_int64)(r*86400000.0); 298 } 299 return rc; 300 } 301 302 int sqlite3OsOpenMalloc( 303 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, 304 const char *zFile, 305 sqlite3_file **ppFile, 306 int flags, 307 int *pOutFlags 308 ){ 309 int rc; 310 sqlite3_file *pFile; 311 pFile = (sqlite3_file *)sqlite3MallocZero(pVfs->szOsFile); 312 if( pFile ){ 313 rc = sqlite3OsOpen(pVfs, zFile, pFile, flags, pOutFlags); 314 if( rc!=SQLITE_OK ){ 315 sqlite3_free(pFile); 316 }else{ 317 *ppFile = pFile; 318 } 319 }else{ 320 rc = SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT; 321 } 322 return rc; 323 } 324 void sqlite3OsCloseFree(sqlite3_file *pFile){ 325 assert( pFile ); 326 sqlite3OsClose(pFile); 327 sqlite3_free(pFile); 328 } 329 330 /* 331 ** This function is a wrapper around the OS specific implementation of 332 ** sqlite3_os_init(). The purpose of the wrapper is to provide the 333 ** ability to simulate a malloc failure, so that the handling of an 334 ** error in sqlite3_os_init() by the upper layers can be tested. 335 */ 336 int sqlite3OsInit(void){ 337 void *p = sqlite3_malloc(10); 338 if( p==0 ) return SQLITE_NOMEM_BKPT; 339 sqlite3_free(p); 340 return sqlite3_os_init(); 341 } 342 343 /* 344 ** The list of all registered VFS implementations. 345 */ 346 static sqlite3_vfs * SQLITE_WSD vfsList = 0; 347 #define vfsList GLOBAL(sqlite3_vfs *, vfsList) 348 349 /* 350 ** Locate a VFS by name. If no name is given, simply return the 351 ** first VFS on the list. 352 */ 353 sqlite3_vfs *sqlite3_vfs_find(const char *zVfs){ 354 sqlite3_vfs *pVfs = 0; 355 #if SQLITE_THREADSAFE 356 sqlite3_mutex *mutex; 357 #endif 358 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOINIT 359 int rc = sqlite3_initialize(); 360 if( rc ) return 0; 361 #endif 362 #if SQLITE_THREADSAFE 363 mutex = sqlite3MutexAlloc(SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MAIN); 364 #endif 365 sqlite3_mutex_enter(mutex); 366 for(pVfs = vfsList; pVfs; pVfs=pVfs->pNext){ 367 if( zVfs==0 ) break; 368 if( strcmp(zVfs, pVfs->zName)==0 ) break; 369 } 370 sqlite3_mutex_leave(mutex); 371 return pVfs; 372 } 373 374 /* 375 ** Unlink a VFS from the linked list 376 */ 377 static void vfsUnlink(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs){ 378 assert( sqlite3_mutex_held(sqlite3MutexAlloc(SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MAIN)) ); 379 if( pVfs==0 ){ 380 /* No-op */ 381 }else if( vfsList==pVfs ){ 382 vfsList = pVfs->pNext; 383 }else if( vfsList ){ 384 sqlite3_vfs *p = vfsList; 385 while( p->pNext && p->pNext!=pVfs ){ 386 p = p->pNext; 387 } 388 if( p->pNext==pVfs ){ 389 p->pNext = pVfs->pNext; 390 } 391 } 392 } 393 394 /* 395 ** Register a VFS with the system. It is harmless to register the same 396 ** VFS multiple times. The new VFS becomes the default if makeDflt is 397 ** true. 398 */ 399 int sqlite3_vfs_register(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs, int makeDflt){ 400 MUTEX_LOGIC(sqlite3_mutex *mutex;) 401 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOINIT 402 int rc = sqlite3_initialize(); 403 if( rc ) return rc; 404 #endif 405 #ifdef SQLITE_ENABLE_API_ARMOR 406 if( pVfs==0 ) return SQLITE_MISUSE_BKPT; 407 #endif 408 409 MUTEX_LOGIC( mutex = sqlite3MutexAlloc(SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MAIN); ) 410 sqlite3_mutex_enter(mutex); 411 vfsUnlink(pVfs); 412 if( makeDflt || vfsList==0 ){ 413 pVfs->pNext = vfsList; 414 vfsList = pVfs; 415 }else{ 416 pVfs->pNext = vfsList->pNext; 417 vfsList->pNext = pVfs; 418 } 419 assert(vfsList); 420 sqlite3_mutex_leave(mutex); 421 return SQLITE_OK; 422 } 423 424 /* 425 ** Unregister a VFS so that it is no longer accessible. 426 */ 427 int sqlite3_vfs_unregister(sqlite3_vfs *pVfs){ 428 MUTEX_LOGIC(sqlite3_mutex *mutex;) 429 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_AUTOINIT 430 int rc = sqlite3_initialize(); 431 if( rc ) return rc; 432 #endif 433 MUTEX_LOGIC( mutex = sqlite3MutexAlloc(SQLITE_MUTEX_STATIC_MAIN); ) 434 sqlite3_mutex_enter(mutex); 435 vfsUnlink(pVfs); 436 sqlite3_mutex_leave(mutex); 437 return SQLITE_OK; 438 } 439