1 /* 2 ** 2001 September 15 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 ** Utility functions used throughout sqlite. 13 ** 14 ** This file contains functions for allocating memory, comparing 15 ** strings, and stuff like that. 16 ** 17 ** $Id: util.c,v 1.213 2007/10/23 15:39:45 drh Exp $ 18 */ 19 #include "sqliteInt.h" 20 #include <stdarg.h> 21 #include <ctype.h> 22 23 24 /* 25 ** Set the most recent error code and error string for the sqlite 26 ** handle "db". The error code is set to "err_code". 27 ** 28 ** If it is not NULL, string zFormat specifies the format of the 29 ** error string in the style of the printf functions: The following 30 ** format characters are allowed: 31 ** 32 ** %s Insert a string 33 ** %z A string that should be freed after use 34 ** %d Insert an integer 35 ** %T Insert a token 36 ** %S Insert the first element of a SrcList 37 ** 38 ** zFormat and any string tokens that follow it are assumed to be 39 ** encoded in UTF-8. 40 ** 41 ** To clear the most recent error for sqlite handle "db", sqlite3Error 42 ** should be called with err_code set to SQLITE_OK and zFormat set 43 ** to NULL. 44 */ 45 void sqlite3Error(sqlite3 *db, int err_code, const char *zFormat, ...){ 46 if( db && (db->pErr || (db->pErr = sqlite3ValueNew(db))!=0) ){ 47 db->errCode = err_code; 48 if( zFormat ){ 49 char *z; 50 va_list ap; 51 va_start(ap, zFormat); 52 z = sqlite3VMPrintf(db, zFormat, ap); 53 va_end(ap); 54 sqlite3ValueSetStr(db->pErr, -1, z, SQLITE_UTF8, sqlite3_free); 55 }else{ 56 sqlite3ValueSetStr(db->pErr, 0, 0, SQLITE_UTF8, SQLITE_STATIC); 57 } 58 } 59 } 60 61 /* 62 ** Add an error message to pParse->zErrMsg and increment pParse->nErr. 63 ** The following formatting characters are allowed: 64 ** 65 ** %s Insert a string 66 ** %z A string that should be freed after use 67 ** %d Insert an integer 68 ** %T Insert a token 69 ** %S Insert the first element of a SrcList 70 ** 71 ** This function should be used to report any error that occurs whilst 72 ** compiling an SQL statement (i.e. within sqlite3_prepare()). The 73 ** last thing the sqlite3_prepare() function does is copy the error 74 ** stored by this function into the database handle using sqlite3Error(). 75 ** Function sqlite3Error() should be used during statement execution 76 ** (sqlite3_step() etc.). 77 */ 78 void sqlite3ErrorMsg(Parse *pParse, const char *zFormat, ...){ 79 va_list ap; 80 pParse->nErr++; 81 sqlite3_free(pParse->zErrMsg); 82 va_start(ap, zFormat); 83 pParse->zErrMsg = sqlite3VMPrintf(pParse->db, zFormat, ap); 84 va_end(ap); 85 if( pParse->rc==SQLITE_OK ){ 86 pParse->rc = SQLITE_ERROR; 87 } 88 } 89 90 /* 91 ** Clear the error message in pParse, if any 92 */ 93 void sqlite3ErrorClear(Parse *pParse){ 94 sqlite3_free(pParse->zErrMsg); 95 pParse->zErrMsg = 0; 96 pParse->nErr = 0; 97 } 98 99 /* 100 ** Convert an SQL-style quoted string into a normal string by removing 101 ** the quote characters. The conversion is done in-place. If the 102 ** input does not begin with a quote character, then this routine 103 ** is a no-op. 104 ** 105 ** 2002-Feb-14: This routine is extended to remove MS-Access style 106 ** brackets from around identifers. For example: "[a-b-c]" becomes 107 ** "a-b-c". 108 */ 109 void sqlite3Dequote(char *z){ 110 int quote; 111 int i, j; 112 if( z==0 ) return; 113 quote = z[0]; 114 switch( quote ){ 115 case '\'': break; 116 case '"': break; 117 case '`': break; /* For MySQL compatibility */ 118 case '[': quote = ']'; break; /* For MS SqlServer compatibility */ 119 default: return; 120 } 121 for(i=1, j=0; z[i]; i++){ 122 if( z[i]==quote ){ 123 if( z[i+1]==quote ){ 124 z[j++] = quote; 125 i++; 126 }else{ 127 z[j++] = 0; 128 break; 129 } 130 }else{ 131 z[j++] = z[i]; 132 } 133 } 134 } 135 136 /* An array to map all upper-case characters into their corresponding 137 ** lower-case character. 138 */ 139 const unsigned char sqlite3UpperToLower[] = { 140 #ifdef SQLITE_ASCII 141 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 142 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 143 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 144 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 97, 98, 99,100,101,102,103, 145 104,105,106,107,108,109,110,111,112,113,114,115,116,117,118,119,120,121, 146 122, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99,100,101,102,103,104,105,106,107, 147 108,109,110,111,112,113,114,115,116,117,118,119,120,121,122,123,124,125, 148 126,127,128,129,130,131,132,133,134,135,136,137,138,139,140,141,142,143, 149 144,145,146,147,148,149,150,151,152,153,154,155,156,157,158,159,160,161, 150 162,163,164,165,166,167,168,169,170,171,172,173,174,175,176,177,178,179, 151 180,181,182,183,184,185,186,187,188,189,190,191,192,193,194,195,196,197, 152 198,199,200,201,202,203,204,205,206,207,208,209,210,211,212,213,214,215, 153 216,217,218,219,220,221,222,223,224,225,226,227,228,229,230,231,232,233, 154 234,235,236,237,238,239,240,241,242,243,244,245,246,247,248,249,250,251, 155 252,253,254,255 156 #endif 157 #ifdef SQLITE_EBCDIC 158 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, /* 0x */ 159 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, /* 1x */ 160 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, /* 2x */ 161 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, /* 3x */ 162 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, /* 4x */ 163 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, /* 5x */ 164 96, 97, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73,106,107,108,109,110,111, /* 6x */ 165 112, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89,122,123,124,125,126,127, /* 7x */ 166 128,129,130,131,132,133,134,135,136,137,138,139,140,141,142,143, /* 8x */ 167 144,145,146,147,148,149,150,151,152,153,154,155,156,157,156,159, /* 9x */ 168 160,161,162,163,164,165,166,167,168,169,170,171,140,141,142,175, /* Ax */ 169 176,177,178,179,180,181,182,183,184,185,186,187,188,189,190,191, /* Bx */ 170 192,129,130,131,132,133,134,135,136,137,202,203,204,205,206,207, /* Cx */ 171 208,145,146,147,148,149,150,151,152,153,218,219,220,221,222,223, /* Dx */ 172 224,225,162,163,164,165,166,167,168,169,232,203,204,205,206,207, /* Ex */ 173 239,240,241,242,243,244,245,246,247,248,249,219,220,221,222,255, /* Fx */ 174 #endif 175 }; 176 #define UpperToLower sqlite3UpperToLower 177 178 /* 179 ** Some systems have stricmp(). Others have strcasecmp(). Because 180 ** there is no consistency, we will define our own. 181 */ 182 int sqlite3StrICmp(const char *zLeft, const char *zRight){ 183 register unsigned char *a, *b; 184 a = (unsigned char *)zLeft; 185 b = (unsigned char *)zRight; 186 while( *a!=0 && UpperToLower[*a]==UpperToLower[*b]){ a++; b++; } 187 return UpperToLower[*a] - UpperToLower[*b]; 188 } 189 int sqlite3StrNICmp(const char *zLeft, const char *zRight, int N){ 190 register unsigned char *a, *b; 191 a = (unsigned char *)zLeft; 192 b = (unsigned char *)zRight; 193 while( N-- > 0 && *a!=0 && UpperToLower[*a]==UpperToLower[*b]){ a++; b++; } 194 return N<0 ? 0 : UpperToLower[*a] - UpperToLower[*b]; 195 } 196 197 /* 198 ** Return TRUE if z is a pure numeric string. Return FALSE if the 199 ** string contains any character which is not part of a number. If 200 ** the string is numeric and contains the '.' character, set *realnum 201 ** to TRUE (otherwise FALSE). 202 ** 203 ** An empty string is considered non-numeric. 204 */ 205 int sqlite3IsNumber(const char *z, int *realnum, u8 enc){ 206 int incr = (enc==SQLITE_UTF8?1:2); 207 if( enc==SQLITE_UTF16BE ) z++; 208 if( *z=='-' || *z=='+' ) z += incr; 209 if( !isdigit(*(u8*)z) ){ 210 return 0; 211 } 212 z += incr; 213 if( realnum ) *realnum = 0; 214 while( isdigit(*(u8*)z) ){ z += incr; } 215 if( *z=='.' ){ 216 z += incr; 217 if( !isdigit(*(u8*)z) ) return 0; 218 while( isdigit(*(u8*)z) ){ z += incr; } 219 if( realnum ) *realnum = 1; 220 } 221 if( *z=='e' || *z=='E' ){ 222 z += incr; 223 if( *z=='+' || *z=='-' ) z += incr; 224 if( !isdigit(*(u8*)z) ) return 0; 225 while( isdigit(*(u8*)z) ){ z += incr; } 226 if( realnum ) *realnum = 1; 227 } 228 return *z==0; 229 } 230 231 /* 232 ** The string z[] is an ascii representation of a real number. 233 ** Convert this string to a double. 234 ** 235 ** This routine assumes that z[] really is a valid number. If it 236 ** is not, the result is undefined. 237 ** 238 ** This routine is used instead of the library atof() function because 239 ** the library atof() might want to use "," as the decimal point instead 240 ** of "." depending on how locale is set. But that would cause problems 241 ** for SQL. So this routine always uses "." regardless of locale. 242 */ 243 int sqlite3AtoF(const char *z, double *pResult){ 244 #ifndef SQLITE_OMIT_FLOATING_POINT 245 int sign = 1; 246 const char *zBegin = z; 247 LONGDOUBLE_TYPE v1 = 0.0; 248 while( isspace(*(u8*)z) ) z++; 249 if( *z=='-' ){ 250 sign = -1; 251 z++; 252 }else if( *z=='+' ){ 253 z++; 254 } 255 while( isdigit(*(u8*)z) ){ 256 v1 = v1*10.0 + (*z - '0'); 257 z++; 258 } 259 if( *z=='.' ){ 260 LONGDOUBLE_TYPE divisor = 1.0; 261 z++; 262 while( isdigit(*(u8*)z) ){ 263 v1 = v1*10.0 + (*z - '0'); 264 divisor *= 10.0; 265 z++; 266 } 267 v1 /= divisor; 268 } 269 if( *z=='e' || *z=='E' ){ 270 int esign = 1; 271 int eval = 0; 272 LONGDOUBLE_TYPE scale = 1.0; 273 z++; 274 if( *z=='-' ){ 275 esign = -1; 276 z++; 277 }else if( *z=='+' ){ 278 z++; 279 } 280 while( isdigit(*(u8*)z) ){ 281 eval = eval*10 + *z - '0'; 282 z++; 283 } 284 while( eval>=64 ){ scale *= 1.0e+64; eval -= 64; } 285 while( eval>=16 ){ scale *= 1.0e+16; eval -= 16; } 286 while( eval>=4 ){ scale *= 1.0e+4; eval -= 4; } 287 while( eval>=1 ){ scale *= 1.0e+1; eval -= 1; } 288 if( esign<0 ){ 289 v1 /= scale; 290 }else{ 291 v1 *= scale; 292 } 293 } 294 *pResult = sign<0 ? -v1 : v1; 295 return z - zBegin; 296 #else 297 return sqlite3Atoi64(z, pResult); 298 #endif /* SQLITE_OMIT_FLOATING_POINT */ 299 } 300 301 /* 302 ** Compare the 19-character string zNum against the text representation 303 ** value 2^63: 9223372036854775808. Return negative, zero, or positive 304 ** if zNum is less than, equal to, or greater than the string. 305 ** 306 ** Unlike memcmp() this routine is guaranteed to return the difference 307 ** in the values of the last digit if the only difference is in the 308 ** last digit. So, for example, 309 ** 310 ** compare2pow63("9223372036854775800") 311 ** 312 ** will return -8. 313 */ 314 static int compare2pow63(const char *zNum){ 315 int c; 316 c = memcmp(zNum,"922337203685477580",18); 317 if( c==0 ){ 318 c = zNum[18] - '8'; 319 } 320 return c; 321 } 322 323 324 /* 325 ** Return TRUE if zNum is a 64-bit signed integer and write 326 ** the value of the integer into *pNum. If zNum is not an integer 327 ** or is an integer that is too large to be expressed with 64 bits, 328 ** then return false. 329 ** 330 ** When this routine was originally written it dealt with only 331 ** 32-bit numbers. At that time, it was much faster than the 332 ** atoi() library routine in RedHat 7.2. 333 */ 334 int sqlite3Atoi64(const char *zNum, i64 *pNum){ 335 i64 v = 0; 336 int neg; 337 int i, c; 338 while( isspace(*(u8*)zNum) ) zNum++; 339 if( *zNum=='-' ){ 340 neg = 1; 341 zNum++; 342 }else if( *zNum=='+' ){ 343 neg = 0; 344 zNum++; 345 }else{ 346 neg = 0; 347 } 348 while( zNum[0]=='0' ){ zNum++; } /* Skip over leading zeros. Ticket #2454 */ 349 for(i=0; (c=zNum[i])>='0' && c<='9'; i++){ 350 v = v*10 + c - '0'; 351 } 352 *pNum = neg ? -v : v; 353 if( c!=0 || i==0 || i>19 ){ 354 /* zNum is empty or contains non-numeric text or is longer 355 ** than 19 digits (thus guaranting that it is too large) */ 356 return 0; 357 }else if( i<19 ){ 358 /* Less than 19 digits, so we know that it fits in 64 bits */ 359 return 1; 360 }else{ 361 /* 19-digit numbers must be no larger than 9223372036854775807 if positive 362 ** or 9223372036854775808 if negative. Note that 9223372036854665808 363 ** is 2^63. */ 364 return compare2pow63(zNum)<neg; 365 } 366 } 367 368 /* 369 ** The string zNum represents an integer. There might be some other 370 ** information following the integer too, but that part is ignored. 371 ** If the integer that the prefix of zNum represents will fit in a 372 ** 64-bit signed integer, return TRUE. Otherwise return FALSE. 373 ** 374 ** This routine returns FALSE for the string -9223372036854775808 even that 375 ** that number will, in theory fit in a 64-bit integer. Positive 376 ** 9223373036854775808 will not fit in 64 bits. So it seems safer to return 377 ** false. 378 */ 379 int sqlite3FitsIn64Bits(const char *zNum, int negFlag){ 380 int i, c; 381 int neg = 0; 382 if( *zNum=='-' ){ 383 neg = 1; 384 zNum++; 385 }else if( *zNum=='+' ){ 386 zNum++; 387 } 388 if( negFlag ) neg = 1-neg; 389 while( *zNum=='0' ){ 390 zNum++; /* Skip leading zeros. Ticket #2454 */ 391 } 392 for(i=0; (c=zNum[i])>='0' && c<='9'; i++){} 393 if( i<19 ){ 394 /* Guaranteed to fit if less than 19 digits */ 395 return 1; 396 }else if( i>19 ){ 397 /* Guaranteed to be too big if greater than 19 digits */ 398 return 0; 399 }else{ 400 /* Compare against 2^63. */ 401 return compare2pow63(zNum)<neg; 402 } 403 } 404 405 /* 406 ** If zNum represents an integer that will fit in 32-bits, then set 407 ** *pValue to that integer and return true. Otherwise return false. 408 ** 409 ** Any non-numeric characters that following zNum are ignored. 410 ** This is different from sqlite3Atoi64() which requires the 411 ** input number to be zero-terminated. 412 */ 413 int sqlite3GetInt32(const char *zNum, int *pValue){ 414 sqlite_int64 v = 0; 415 int i, c; 416 int neg = 0; 417 if( zNum[0]=='-' ){ 418 neg = 1; 419 zNum++; 420 }else if( zNum[0]=='+' ){ 421 zNum++; 422 } 423 while( zNum[0]=='0' ) zNum++; 424 for(i=0; i<11 && (c = zNum[i] - '0')>=0 && c<=9; i++){ 425 v = v*10 + c; 426 } 427 428 /* The longest decimal representation of a 32 bit integer is 10 digits: 429 ** 430 ** 1234567890 431 ** 2^31 -> 2147483648 432 */ 433 if( i>10 ){ 434 return 0; 435 } 436 if( v-neg>2147483647 ){ 437 return 0; 438 } 439 if( neg ){ 440 v = -v; 441 } 442 *pValue = (int)v; 443 return 1; 444 } 445 446 /* 447 ** Check to make sure we have a valid db pointer. This test is not 448 ** foolproof but it does provide some measure of protection against 449 ** misuse of the interface such as passing in db pointers that are 450 ** NULL or which have been previously closed. If this routine returns 451 ** TRUE it means that the db pointer is invalid and should not be 452 ** dereferenced for any reason. The calling function should invoke 453 ** SQLITE_MISUSE immediately. 454 */ 455 int sqlite3SafetyCheck(sqlite3 *db){ 456 int magic; 457 if( db==0 ) return 1; 458 magic = db->magic; 459 if( magic!=SQLITE_MAGIC_CLOSED && 460 magic!=SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN && 461 magic!=SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY ) return 1; 462 return 0; 463 } 464 465 /* 466 ** The variable-length integer encoding is as follows: 467 ** 468 ** KEY: 469 ** A = 0xxxxxxx 7 bits of data and one flag bit 470 ** B = 1xxxxxxx 7 bits of data and one flag bit 471 ** C = xxxxxxxx 8 bits of data 472 ** 473 ** 7 bits - A 474 ** 14 bits - BA 475 ** 21 bits - BBA 476 ** 28 bits - BBBA 477 ** 35 bits - BBBBA 478 ** 42 bits - BBBBBA 479 ** 49 bits - BBBBBBA 480 ** 56 bits - BBBBBBBA 481 ** 64 bits - BBBBBBBBC 482 */ 483 484 /* 485 ** Write a 64-bit variable-length integer to memory starting at p[0]. 486 ** The length of data write will be between 1 and 9 bytes. The number 487 ** of bytes written is returned. 488 ** 489 ** A variable-length integer consists of the lower 7 bits of each byte 490 ** for all bytes that have the 8th bit set and one byte with the 8th 491 ** bit clear. Except, if we get to the 9th byte, it stores the full 492 ** 8 bits and is the last byte. 493 */ 494 int sqlite3PutVarint(unsigned char *p, u64 v){ 495 int i, j, n; 496 u8 buf[10]; 497 if( v & (((u64)0xff000000)<<32) ){ 498 p[8] = v; 499 v >>= 8; 500 for(i=7; i>=0; i--){ 501 p[i] = (v & 0x7f) | 0x80; 502 v >>= 7; 503 } 504 return 9; 505 } 506 n = 0; 507 do{ 508 buf[n++] = (v & 0x7f) | 0x80; 509 v >>= 7; 510 }while( v!=0 ); 511 buf[0] &= 0x7f; 512 assert( n<=9 ); 513 for(i=0, j=n-1; j>=0; j--, i++){ 514 p[i] = buf[j]; 515 } 516 return n; 517 } 518 519 /* 520 ** Read a 64-bit variable-length integer from memory starting at p[0]. 521 ** Return the number of bytes read. The value is stored in *v. 522 */ 523 int sqlite3GetVarint(const unsigned char *p, u64 *v){ 524 u32 x; 525 u64 x64; 526 int n; 527 unsigned char c; 528 if( ((c = p[0]) & 0x80)==0 ){ 529 *v = c; 530 return 1; 531 } 532 x = c & 0x7f; 533 if( ((c = p[1]) & 0x80)==0 ){ 534 *v = (x<<7) | c; 535 return 2; 536 } 537 x = (x<<7) | (c&0x7f); 538 if( ((c = p[2]) & 0x80)==0 ){ 539 *v = (x<<7) | c; 540 return 3; 541 } 542 x = (x<<7) | (c&0x7f); 543 if( ((c = p[3]) & 0x80)==0 ){ 544 *v = (x<<7) | c; 545 return 4; 546 } 547 x64 = (x<<7) | (c&0x7f); 548 n = 4; 549 do{ 550 c = p[n++]; 551 if( n==9 ){ 552 x64 = (x64<<8) | c; 553 break; 554 } 555 x64 = (x64<<7) | (c&0x7f); 556 }while( (c & 0x80)!=0 ); 557 *v = x64; 558 return n; 559 } 560 561 /* 562 ** Read a 32-bit variable-length integer from memory starting at p[0]. 563 ** Return the number of bytes read. The value is stored in *v. 564 */ 565 int sqlite3GetVarint32(const unsigned char *p, u32 *v){ 566 u32 x; 567 int n; 568 unsigned char c; 569 if( ((signed char*)p)[0]>=0 ){ 570 *v = p[0]; 571 return 1; 572 } 573 x = p[0] & 0x7f; 574 if( ((signed char*)p)[1]>=0 ){ 575 *v = (x<<7) | p[1]; 576 return 2; 577 } 578 x = (x<<7) | (p[1] & 0x7f); 579 n = 2; 580 do{ 581 x = (x<<7) | ((c = p[n++])&0x7f); 582 }while( (c & 0x80)!=0 && n<9 ); 583 *v = x; 584 return n; 585 } 586 587 /* 588 ** Return the number of bytes that will be needed to store the given 589 ** 64-bit integer. 590 */ 591 int sqlite3VarintLen(u64 v){ 592 int i = 0; 593 do{ 594 i++; 595 v >>= 7; 596 }while( v!=0 && i<9 ); 597 return i; 598 } 599 600 601 /* 602 ** Read or write a four-byte big-endian integer value. 603 */ 604 u32 sqlite3Get4byte(const u8 *p){ 605 return (p[0]<<24) | (p[1]<<16) | (p[2]<<8) | p[3]; 606 } 607 void sqlite3Put4byte(unsigned char *p, u32 v){ 608 p[0] = v>>24; 609 p[1] = v>>16; 610 p[2] = v>>8; 611 p[3] = v; 612 } 613 614 615 616 #if !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_BLOB_LITERAL) || defined(SQLITE_HAS_CODEC) \ 617 || defined(SQLITE_TEST) 618 /* 619 ** Translate a single byte of Hex into an integer. 620 */ 621 static int hexToInt(int h){ 622 if( h>='0' && h<='9' ){ 623 return h - '0'; 624 }else if( h>='a' && h<='f' ){ 625 return h - 'a' + 10; 626 }else{ 627 assert( h>='A' && h<='F' ); 628 return h - 'A' + 10; 629 } 630 } 631 #endif /* !SQLITE_OMIT_BLOB_LITERAL || SQLITE_HAS_CODEC || SQLITE_TEST */ 632 633 #if !defined(SQLITE_OMIT_BLOB_LITERAL) || defined(SQLITE_HAS_CODEC) 634 /* 635 ** Convert a BLOB literal of the form "x'hhhhhh'" into its binary 636 ** value. Return a pointer to its binary value. Space to hold the 637 ** binary value has been obtained from malloc and must be freed by 638 ** the calling routine. 639 */ 640 void *sqlite3HexToBlob(sqlite3 *db, const char *z){ 641 char *zBlob; 642 int i; 643 int n = strlen(z); 644 if( n%2 ) return 0; 645 646 zBlob = (char *)sqlite3DbMallocRaw(db, n/2); 647 if( zBlob ){ 648 for(i=0; i<n; i+=2){ 649 zBlob[i/2] = (hexToInt(z[i])<<4) | hexToInt(z[i+1]); 650 } 651 } 652 return zBlob; 653 } 654 #endif /* !SQLITE_OMIT_BLOB_LITERAL || SQLITE_HAS_CODEC */ 655 656 657 /* 658 ** Change the sqlite.magic from SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN to SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY. 659 ** Return an error (non-zero) if the magic was not SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN 660 ** when this routine is called. 661 ** 662 ** This routine is called when entering an SQLite API. The SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN 663 ** value indicates that the database connection passed into the API is 664 ** open and is not being used by another thread. By changing the value 665 ** to SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY we indicate that the connection is in use. 666 ** sqlite3SafetyOff() below will change the value back to SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN 667 ** when the API exits. 668 ** 669 ** This routine is a attempt to detect if two threads use the 670 ** same sqlite* pointer at the same time. There is a race 671 ** condition so it is possible that the error is not detected. 672 ** But usually the problem will be seen. The result will be an 673 ** error which can be used to debug the application that is 674 ** using SQLite incorrectly. 675 ** 676 ** Ticket #202: If db->magic is not a valid open value, take care not 677 ** to modify the db structure at all. It could be that db is a stale 678 ** pointer. In other words, it could be that there has been a prior 679 ** call to sqlite3_close(db) and db has been deallocated. And we do 680 ** not want to write into deallocated memory. 681 */ 682 int sqlite3SafetyOn(sqlite3 *db){ 683 if( db->magic==SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN ){ 684 db->magic = SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY; 685 return 0; 686 }else if( db->magic==SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY ){ 687 db->magic = SQLITE_MAGIC_ERROR; 688 db->u1.isInterrupted = 1; 689 } 690 return 1; 691 } 692 693 /* 694 ** Change the magic from SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY to SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN. 695 ** Return an error (non-zero) if the magic was not SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY 696 ** when this routine is called. 697 */ 698 int sqlite3SafetyOff(sqlite3 *db){ 699 if( db->magic==SQLITE_MAGIC_BUSY ){ 700 db->magic = SQLITE_MAGIC_OPEN; 701 return 0; 702 }else { 703 db->magic = SQLITE_MAGIC_ERROR; 704 db->u1.isInterrupted = 1; 705 return 1; 706 } 707 } 708