Symbian3/SDK/Source/GUID-49A3419F-D20A-5C5D-B2FF-51724EF37704.dita
author Dominic Pinkman <dominic.pinkman@nokia.com>
Tue, 20 Jul 2010 12:00:49 +0100
changeset 13 48780e181b38
parent 7 51a74ef9ed63
permissions -rw-r--r--
Week 28 contribution of SDK documentation content. See release notes for details. Fixes bugs Bug 1897 and Bug 1522.

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<concept id="GUID-49A3419F-D20A-5C5D-B2FF-51724EF37704" xml:lang="en"><title>Prevent
Database File Corruption</title><prolog><metadata><keywords/></metadata></prolog><conbody>
<p>This guide describes how databases might be corrupted. </p>
<section id="GUID-5C9649BC-EB5A-4528-87AA-ECAB64D62467"><title>Introduction</title> <p>Although SQLite is very resistant
to database corruption, thanks to the atomic features, it is still possible
for a database file to become corrupt. By understanding the known ways of
corrupting a SQLite database, you can make sure you avoid them. </p> <p><b>Intended
audience:</b> </p> <p>This document is intended to be used by Symbian platform
licensees and third party application developers. </p> </section>
<section id="GUID-E921DD90-259E-5843-80FF-C5D85BB7545C"><title>Avoid Corrupting
your Database Files</title> <p>One of the key benefits of using an atomic
and durable database engine is that you can be responsibly confident that
the database will not be corrupted by application crashes or power failures.
SQLite is very resistant to database corruption but it is possible to corrupt
a database. This section will describe all of the known techniques for corrupting
a SQLite database so that you can make sure you avoid them. </p> <p>The following
database corruption situations will be discussed here: </p> <ul>
<li id="GUID-952C9192-E349-5B34-860C-A19B874BFC0F"><p>Hardware failure --
beyond the control of SQLite </p> </li>
<li id="GUID-55D027FD-912D-5114-8E85-2AEC56CCBC4E"><p>System Crash -- when
rollback journal exists </p> </li>
<li id="GUID-7070E8B3-C218-5E6F-AAAB-7EE4479C196E"><p>post crash application
recovery </p> </li>
<li id="GUID-5D2454C9-075B-5A15-B736-94F1E9188D03"><p>hot journal name conflict </p> </li>
</ul> <p>A SQLite database is just an ordinary file in the file system. If
the database is placed in a publicly accessible location then any process
can open that file and write nonsense into the middle of it, corrupting the
database. Similarly, an operating system malfunction or a hardware fault can
cause invalid data to be written into the database file. Both of these issues
are beyond the control of SQLite or of application developers. We only mention
them here for completeness. </p> <p>After a power loss or system crash and
subsequent system reboot, a rollback journal file will be found in the same
directory as the original database. The presence of this rollback journal
file is the signal to subsequent users that the database is in an inconsistent
state and needs to be restored (by playing back the journal) before it is
used. A rollback journal file that is left over after a crash is called a
“hot journal”. </p> <p>If after a post-crash reboot some kind application
recovery occurs which deletes, renames, or moves a hot journal, then SQLite
will have no way of knowing that a hot journal existed. It will not know that
the database is in an inconsistent state and will have no way to restore it.
Deleting or renaming a hot journal will result in a corrupted database nearly
every time. </p> <p>The name of the hot journal is related to the name of
the original database file. If the database file is renamed this means that
SQLite will not see the hot journal based on the original name, no database
recovery will be undertaken and the database will become corrupt. </p> <p>These
are all of the known ways for corrupting a SQLite database file, and as you
can see, none of these ways are easy to achieve. SQLite databases have proven
to be remarkably reliable and trouble-free. By avoiding the above situations
you can ensure that your databases will be safe and intact even after system
crashes and untimely power failures. </p> </section>
</conbody><related-links>
<link href="GUID-22844C28-AB5B-5A6F-8863-7269464684B4.dita"><linktext>SQL Overview</linktext>
</link>
<link href="GUID-78773BCA-ADF6-53E6-AC80-5CB2AE1F8BCC.dita"><linktext>SQL Server
Guide</linktext></link>
<link href="GUID-E51836E1-D33E-506C-B75B-19B8E3CC313A.dita"><linktext>SQLite</linktext>
</link>
<link href="GUID-1F12E3F5-45B2-55EC-B021-00338277C608.dita"><linktext>SQL DB Overview</linktext>
</link>
<link href="GUID-43CA02E7-0101-5824-B91B-E15EE20C829A.dita"><linktext>Avoid Transient
Tables</linktext></link>
<link href="GUID-C2FAEBB2-4A1A-5BB0-9670-4801525CBC6A.dita"><linktext>SQL Index
Tips</linktext></link>
<link href="GUID-B994E6F7-228A-5433-B87F-91857C5D93D6.dita"><linktext>SQL Insertion
Tips</linktext></link>
<link href="GUID-4FC23DB7-4758-5DA4-81FF-0DAB169E2757.dita"><linktext>SQL Schema
Tips</linktext></link>
<link href="GUID-2A2920E0-5D40-5358-BC0C-8572CEFE078C.dita"><linktext>SQL Expressions</linktext>
</link>
<link href="GUID-126FCCCC-0E7D-59AE-959A-2F94A7319C4B.dita"><linktext>SQL Statement
Tips</linktext></link>
<link href="GUID-ACCCB148-DAF9-59EC-B585-8EF632B9BF04.dita"><linktext>SQL Joins</linktext>
</link>
<link href="GUID-B7E978C1-45CA-554C-8028-D901B97BA2E0.dita"><linktext> ANALYZE
Command</linktext></link>
<link href="GUID-AF5A75D7-0687-546C-87B2-0B7DF7D33217.dita"><linktext> SQL WHERE
CLause Tips</linktext></link>
</related-links></concept>