int
Dbc::get(Dbt *key, Dbt *data, u_int32_t flags);
Description
The Dbc::get method retrieves key/data pairs from the database. The
address and length of the key
are returned in the object referenced by key (except for the case
of the DB_SET flag where the key object is unchanged),
and the address and length of
the data are returned in the object referenced by data.
Modifications to the database during a sequential scan will be reflected
in the scan, i.e. records inserted behind a cursor will not be returned
while records inserted in front of a cursor will be returned.
In Queue and Recno databases, missing entries (i.e., entries that were
never explicitly created or that were created and then deleted), will be
skipped during a sequential scan.
If multiple threads or processes insert items into the same database file
without using locking, the results are undefined.
For more detail,
see Cursor stability.
The flags parameter must be set to one of the following values:
The cursor is set to reference the first (last) key/data pair of the
database, and that pair is returned. In the presence of duplicate key
values, the first (last) data item in the set of duplicates is returned.
If the database is a Queue or Recno database, Dbc::get using the
DB_FIRST (DB_LAST) flags will ignore any keys that exist
but were never explicitly created by the application or were created and
later deleted.
If the database is empty, Dbc::get will return DB_NOTFOUND.
The DB_GET_BOTH flag is identical to the DB_SET flag,
except that both the key and the data arguments must be matched by the
key and data item in the database.
Do not use the data value found in all of the cursors as a lookup key for
the primary database, but simply return it in the key parameter instead.
The data parameter is left unchanged.
For DB_JOIN_ITEM to be specified, the underlying cursor must have
been returned from the Db::join method.
If the cursor is not yet initialized, DB_NEXT (DB_PREV)
is identical to DB_FIRST (DB_LAST). Otherwise, the cursor
is moved to the next (previous) key/data pair of the database, and that
pair is returned. In the presence of duplicate key values, the value of
the key may not change.
If the database is a Queue or Recno database, Dbc::get using the
DB_NEXT (DB_PREV) flag will skip any keys that exist but
were never explicitly created by the application or were created and later
deleted.
If the cursor is already on the last (first) record in the database,
Dbc::get will return DB_NOTFOUND.
If the next key/data pair of the database is a duplicate record for the
current key/data pair, the cursor is moved to the next key/data pair of
the database, and that pair is returned. Otherwise, Dbc::get will
return DB_NOTFOUND.
If the cursor is not yet initialized, the Dbc::get method either returns EINVAL or throws an exception that encapsulates EINVAL.
If the cursor is not yet initialized, DB_NEXT_NODUP
(DB_PREV_NODUP) is identical to DB_FIRST
(DB_LAST). Otherwise, the cursor is moved to the next (previous)
non-duplicate key/data pair of the database, and that pair is returned.
If the database is a Queue or Recno database, Dbc::get using the
DB_NEXT_NODUP (DB_PREV_NODUP) flags will ignore any keys
that exist but were never explicitly created by the application or were
created and later deleted.
If no non-duplicate key/data pairs occur after (before) the cursor
position in the database, Dbc::get will return DB_NOTFOUND.
Move the cursor to the specified key/data pair of the database, and
return the datum associated with the given key.
In the presence of duplicate key values, Dbc::get will return the
first data item for the given key.
If the database is a Queue or Recno database and the requested key exists,
but was never explicitly created by the application or was later deleted,
Dbc::get will return DB_KEYEMPTY.
If no matching keys are found, Dbc::get will return
DB_NOTFOUND.
The DB_SET_RANGE flag is identical to the DB_SET flag,
except that the key is returned as well as the data item, and, in the case
of the Btree access method, the returned key/data pair is the smallest
key greater than or equal to the specified key (as determined by the
comparison method), permitting partial key matches and range
searches.
Move the cursor to the specific numbered record of the database, and
return the associated key/data pair. The data field of the
specified key
must be a pointer to a memory location from which a db_recno_t
may be read, as described in Dbt. This memory location will be
read to determine the record to be retrieved.
For DB_SET_RECNO to be specified, the underlying database must be
of type Btree and it must have been created with the DB_RECNUM
flag.
In addition, the following flag may be set by bitwise inclusively OR'ing it into the
flags parameter:
Acquire write locks instead of read locks when doing the retrieval.
Setting this flag may decrease the likelihood of deadlock during a
read-modify-write cycle by immediately acquiring the write lock during
the read part of the cycle so that another thread of control acquiring
a read lock for the same item, in its own read-modify-write cycle, will
not result in deadlock.
Otherwise, the Dbc::get 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.
If Dbc::get fails for any reason, the state of the cursor will be
unchanged.
Errors
The Dbc::get method may fail and throw an exception or return a non-zero error for the following conditions:
DB_LOCK_DEADLOCK
The operation was selected to resolve a deadlock.
ENOMEM
There was insufficient memory to return the requested item.
EINVAL
An invalid flag value or parameter was specified.
The specified cursor was not currently initialized.
The Dbc::get 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 Dbc::get 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.