int
Db::open(const char *file,
const char *database, DBTYPE type, u_int32_t flags, int mode);
Description
The currently supported Berkeley DB file formats (or access methods)
are Btree, Hash, Queue and Recno. The Btree format is a representation
of a sorted, balanced tree structure. The Hash format is an extensible,
dynamic hashing scheme. The Queue format supports fast access to
fixed-length records accessed by sequentially or logical record number.
The Recno format supports fixed- or variable-length records, accessed
sequentially or by logical record number, and optionally retrieved from
a flat text file.
Storage and retrieval for the Berkeley DB access methods are based on key/data
pairs, see Dbt for more information.
The Db::open interface opens the database represented by the
file and database arguments for both reading and writing.
The file argument is used as the name of a physical file on disk
that will be used to back the database. The database argument is
optional and allows applications to have multiple logical databases in a
single physical file. While no database argument needs to be
specified, it is an error to attempt to open a second database in a
file that was not initially created using a database name.
In-memory databases never intended to be preserved on disk may
be created by setting both the file and database arguments
to NULL. Note that in-memory databases can only ever be shared by
sharing the single database handle that created them, in circumstances
where doing so is safe.
The type argument is of type DBTYPE
and must be set to one of DB_BTREE, DB_HASH,
DB_QUEUE, DB_RECNO or DB_UNKNOWN, except
that databases of type DB_QUEUE are restricted to one per
file. If type is DB_UNKNOWN, the database must
already exist and Db::open will automatically determine its type.
The Db::get_type method may be used to determine the underlying type of
databases opened using DB_UNKNOWN.
The flags and mode arguments specify how files will be opened
and/or created if they do not already exist.
The flags value must be set to 0 or by bitwise inclusively OR'ing together one or more
of the following values.
Return an error if the file already exists. Underlying filesystem
primitives are used to implement this flag. For this reason it is only
applicable to the physical file and cannot be used to test if a database
in a file already exists.
The DB_EXCL flag is only meaningful when specified with the
DB_CREATE flag.
Open the database for reading only. Any attempt to modify items in the
database will fail regardless of the actual permissions of any underlying
files.
Physically truncate the underlying file, discarding all previous databases
it might have held. Underlying filesystem primitives are used to
implement this flag. For this reason it is only applicable to the
physical file and cannot be used to discard databases within a file.
The DB_TRUNCATE flag cannot be transaction protected, and it is
an error to specify it in a transaction protected environment.
On UNIX systems, or in IEEE/ANSI Std 1003.1 (POSIX) environments, all files created by the access methods
are created with mode mode (as described in chmod(2)) and
modified by the process' umask value at the time of creation (see
umask(2)). The group ownership of created files is based on
the system and directory defaults, and is not further specified by Berkeley DB.
If mode is 0, files are created readable and writeable by both
owner and group. On Windows systems, the mode argument is ignored.
Calling Db::open is a reasonably expensive operation, and
maintaining a set of open databases will normally be preferable to
repeatedly open and closing the database for each new query.
The Db::open method either returns a non-zero error value or throws an exception that
encapsulates a non-zero error value on failure, and returns 0 on success.
Environment Variables
DB_HOME
If the dbenv argument to db_create was initialized using
DbEnv::open the environment variable DB_HOME may be used
as the path of the database environment home. Specifically, Db::open
is affected by the configuration value DB_DATA_DIR.
TMPDIR
If the file and dbenv arguments to Db::open are
NULL, the environment variable TMPDIR may be used as a
directory in which to create a temporary backing file.
Errors
The Db::open method may fail and throw an exception or return a non-zero error for the following conditions:
The database cannot be opened without being first upgraded.
EEXIST
DB_CREATE and DB_EXCL were specified and the file exists.
EINVAL
An invalid flag value or parameter was specified (e.g., unknown database
type, page size, hash function, pad byte, byte order) or a flag value
or parameter that is incompatible with the specified database.
The DB_THREAD flag was specified and spinlocks are not
implemented for this architecture.
The DB_THREAD flag was specified to Db::open, but was not
specified to the DbEnv::open call for the environment in which the
Db handle was created.
A re_source file was specified with either the DB_THREAD
flag or the provided database environment supports transaction
processing.
ENOENT
A non-existent re_source file was specified.
The Db::open method may fail and throw an exception or return a non-zero error for errors specified for other Berkeley DB and C library or system methods.
If a catastrophic error has occurred, the Db::open method may fail and either
return DB_RUNRECOVERY or throw an exception encapsulating
DB_RUNRECOVERY, in which case all subsequent Berkeley DB calls will fail
in the same way.