334 lines
		
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			334 lines
		
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
	
	
<!DOCTYPE html>
 | 
						|
<html><head>
 | 
						|
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
 | 
						|
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
 | 
						|
<link href="sqlite.css" rel="stylesheet">
 | 
						|
<title>Distinctive Features Of SQLite</title>
 | 
						|
<!-- path= -->
 | 
						|
</head>
 | 
						|
<body>
 | 
						|
<div class=nosearch>
 | 
						|
<a href="index.html">
 | 
						|
<img class="logo" src="images/sqlite370_banner.gif" alt="SQLite" border="0">
 | 
						|
</a>
 | 
						|
<div><!-- IE hack to prevent disappearing logo --></div>
 | 
						|
<div class="tagline desktoponly">
 | 
						|
Small. Fast. Reliable.<br>Choose any three.
 | 
						|
</div>
 | 
						|
<div class="menu mainmenu">
 | 
						|
<ul>
 | 
						|
<li><a href="index.html">Home</a>
 | 
						|
<li class='mobileonly'><a href="javascript:void(0)" onclick='toggle_div("submenu")'>Menu</a>
 | 
						|
<li class='wideonly'><a href='about.html'>About</a>
 | 
						|
<li class='desktoponly'><a href="docs.html">Documentation</a>
 | 
						|
<li class='desktoponly'><a href="download.html">Download</a>
 | 
						|
<li class='wideonly'><a href='copyright.html'>License</a>
 | 
						|
<li class='desktoponly'><a href="support.html">Support</a>
 | 
						|
<li class='desktoponly'><a href="prosupport.html">Purchase</a>
 | 
						|
<li class='search' id='search_menubutton'>
 | 
						|
<a href="javascript:void(0)" onclick='toggle_search()'>Search</a>
 | 
						|
</ul>
 | 
						|
</div>
 | 
						|
<div class="menu submenu" id="submenu">
 | 
						|
<ul>
 | 
						|
<li><a href='about.html'>About</a>
 | 
						|
<li><a href='docs.html'>Documentation</a>
 | 
						|
<li><a href='download.html'>Download</a>
 | 
						|
<li><a href='support.html'>Support</a>
 | 
						|
<li><a href='prosupport.html'>Purchase</a>
 | 
						|
</ul>
 | 
						|
</div>
 | 
						|
<div class="searchmenu" id="searchmenu">
 | 
						|
<form method="GET" action="search">
 | 
						|
<select name="s" id="searchtype">
 | 
						|
<option value="d">Search Documentation</option>
 | 
						|
<option value="c">Search Changelog</option>
 | 
						|
</select>
 | 
						|
<input type="text" name="q" id="searchbox" value="">
 | 
						|
<input type="submit" value="Go">
 | 
						|
</form>
 | 
						|
</div>
 | 
						|
</div>
 | 
						|
<script>
 | 
						|
function toggle_div(nm) {
 | 
						|
var w = document.getElementById(nm);
 | 
						|
if( w.style.display=="block" ){
 | 
						|
w.style.display = "none";
 | 
						|
}else{
 | 
						|
w.style.display = "block";
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
function toggle_search() {
 | 
						|
var w = document.getElementById("searchmenu");
 | 
						|
if( w.style.display=="block" ){
 | 
						|
w.style.display = "none";
 | 
						|
} else {
 | 
						|
w.style.display = "block";
 | 
						|
setTimeout(function(){
 | 
						|
document.getElementById("searchbox").focus()
 | 
						|
}, 30);
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
function div_off(nm){document.getElementById(nm).style.display="none";}
 | 
						|
window.onbeforeunload = function(e){div_off("submenu");}
 | 
						|
/* Disable the Search feature if we are not operating from CGI, since */
 | 
						|
/* Search is accomplished using CGI and will not work without it. */
 | 
						|
if( !location.origin || !location.origin.match || !location.origin.match(/http/) ){
 | 
						|
document.getElementById("search_menubutton").style.display = "none";
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
/* Used by the Hide/Show button beside syntax diagrams, to toggle the */
 | 
						|
function hideorshow(btn,obj){
 | 
						|
var x = document.getElementById(obj);
 | 
						|
var b = document.getElementById(btn);
 | 
						|
if( x.style.display!='none' ){
 | 
						|
x.style.display = 'none';
 | 
						|
b.innerHTML='show';
 | 
						|
}else{
 | 
						|
x.style.display = '';
 | 
						|
b.innerHTML='hide';
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
return false;
 | 
						|
}
 | 
						|
</script>
 | 
						|
</div>
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
<h1 align=center>Distinctive Features Of SQLite</h1>
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
<p>
 | 
						|
This page highlights some of the characteristics of SQLite that are
 | 
						|
unusual and which make SQLite different from many other SQL
 | 
						|
database engines.
 | 
						|
</p>
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
<a name="zeroconfig"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Zero-Configuration</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  SQLite does not need to be "installed" before it is used. 
 | 
						|
  There is no "setup" procedure.  There is no
 | 
						|
  server process that needs to be started, stopped, or configured.
 | 
						|
  There is
 | 
						|
  no need for an administrator to create a new database instance or assign
 | 
						|
  access permissions to users.
 | 
						|
  SQLite uses no configuration files.
 | 
						|
  Nothing needs to be done to tell the system that SQLite is running.
 | 
						|
  No actions are required to recover after a system crash or power failure.
 | 
						|
  There is nothing to troubleshoot.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  SQLite just works.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  Other more familiar database engines run great once you get them going.
 | 
						|
  But doing the initial installation and configuration can be
 | 
						|
  intimidatingly complex.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="serverless"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Serverless</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  <i>(See also the <a href="serverless.html">serverless</a> documentation page.)</i>
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  Most SQL database engines are implemented as a separate server
 | 
						|
  process.  Programs that want to access the database communicate
 | 
						|
  with the server using some kind of interprocess communication
 | 
						|
  (typically TCP/IP) to send requests to the server and to receive
 | 
						|
  back results.  SQLite does not work this way.  With SQLite, the
 | 
						|
  process that wants to access the database reads and writes
 | 
						|
  directly from the database files on disk.  There is no intermediary
 | 
						|
  server process.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  There are advantages and disadvantages to being serverless.  The
 | 
						|
  main advantage is that there is no separate server process
 | 
						|
  to install, setup, configure, initialize, manage, and troubleshoot.
 | 
						|
  This is one reason why SQLite is a "zero-configuration" database
 | 
						|
  engine.  Programs that use SQLite require no administrative support
 | 
						|
  for setting up the database engine before they are run.  Any program
 | 
						|
  that is able to access the disk is able to use an SQLite database.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  On the other hand, a database engine that uses a server can provide
 | 
						|
  better protection from bugs in the client application - stray pointers
 | 
						|
  in a client cannot corrupt memory on the server.  And because a server
 | 
						|
  is a single persistent process, it is able control database access with
 | 
						|
  more precision, allowing for finer grain locking and better concurrency.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  Most SQL database engines are client/server based.  Of those that are
 | 
						|
  serverless, SQLite is the only one that this author knows of that
 | 
						|
  allows multiple applications to access the same database at the same time.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="onefile"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Single Database File</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  An SQLite database is a single ordinary disk file that can be located
 | 
						|
  anywhere in the directory hierarchy.  If SQLite can read
 | 
						|
  the disk file then it can read anything in the database.  If the disk
 | 
						|
  file and its directory are writable, then SQLite can change anything
 | 
						|
  in the database.   Database files can easily be copied onto a USB
 | 
						|
  memory stick or emailed for sharing.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  Other SQL database engines tend to store data as a large collection of
 | 
						|
  files.  Often these files are in a standard location that only the
 | 
						|
  database engine itself can access.  This makes the data more secure,
 | 
						|
  but also makes it harder to access.  Some SQL database engines provide
 | 
						|
  the option of writing directly to disk and bypassing the filesystem
 | 
						|
  all together.  This provides added performance, but at the cost of
 | 
						|
  considerable setup and maintenance complexity.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="onefile"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Stable Cross-Platform Database File</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  The SQLite file format is cross-platform.  A database file written
 | 
						|
  on one machine can be copied to and used on a different machine with
 | 
						|
  a different architecture.  Big-endian or little-endian, 32-bit or
 | 
						|
  64-bit does not matter.  All machines use the same file format.
 | 
						|
  Furthermore, the developers have pledged to keep the file format
 | 
						|
  stable and backwards compatible, so newer versions of SQLite can
 | 
						|
  read and write older database files.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  Most other SQL database engines require you to dump and restore
 | 
						|
  the database when moving from one platform to another and often
 | 
						|
  when upgrading to a newer version of the software.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="small"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Compact</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  When optimized for size, the whole SQLite library with everything enabled
 | 
						|
  is <a href="footprint.html">less than 500KiB in size</a>
 | 
						|
  (as measured on an ix86 using the "size"
 | 
						|
  utility from the GNU compiler suite.)  Unneeded features can be disabled
 | 
						|
  at compile-time to further reduce the size of the library to under
 | 
						|
  300KiB if desired.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  Most other SQL database engines are much larger than this.  IBM boasts
 | 
						|
  that its recently released CloudScape database engine is "only" a 2MiB
 | 
						|
  jar file - an order of magnitude larger than SQLite even after it is
 | 
						|
  compressed!
 | 
						|
  Firebird boasts that its client-side library is only 350KiB.  That's
 | 
						|
  as big as SQLite and does not even contain the database engine.
 | 
						|
  The Berkeley DB library from Oracle is 450KiB and it omits SQL
 | 
						|
  support, providing the programmer with only simple key/value pairs.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="typing"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Manifest typing</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  Most SQL database engines use static typing.  A datatype is associated
 | 
						|
  with each column in a table and only values of that particular datatype
 | 
						|
  are allowed to be stored in that column.  SQLite relaxes this restriction
 | 
						|
  by using manifest typing.
 | 
						|
  In manifest typing, the datatype is a property of the value itself, not 
 | 
						|
  of the column in which the value is stored.
 | 
						|
  SQLite thus allows the user to store
 | 
						|
  any value of any datatype into any column regardless of the declared type
 | 
						|
  of that column.  (There are some exceptions to this rule: An INTEGER
 | 
						|
  PRIMARY KEY column may only store integers.  And SQLite attempts to coerce
 | 
						|
  values into the declared datatype of the column when it can.)
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  As far as we can tell, the SQL language specification allows the use
 | 
						|
  of manifest typing.   Nevertheless, most other SQL database engines are
 | 
						|
  statically typed and so some people
 | 
						|
  feel that the use of manifest typing is a bug in SQLite.  But the authors
 | 
						|
  of SQLite feel very strongly that this is a feature.  The use of manifest
 | 
						|
  typing in SQLite is a deliberate design decision which has proven in practice
 | 
						|
  to make SQLite more reliable and easier to use, especially when used in
 | 
						|
  combination with dynamically typed programming languages such as Tcl and
 | 
						|
  Python.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="flex"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Variable-length records</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  Most other SQL database engines allocated a fixed amount of disk space
 | 
						|
  for each row in most tables.  They play special tricks for handling
 | 
						|
  BLOBs and CLOBs which can be of wildly varying length.  But for most
 | 
						|
  tables, if you declare a column to be a VARCHAR(100) then the database
 | 
						|
  engine will allocate
 | 
						|
  100 bytes of disk space regardless of how much information you actually
 | 
						|
  store in that column.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  SQLite, in contrast, use only the amount of disk space actually
 | 
						|
  needed to store the information in a row.  If you store a single
 | 
						|
  character in a VARCHAR(100) column, then only a single byte of disk
 | 
						|
  space is consumed.  (Actually two bytes - there is some overhead at
 | 
						|
  the beginning of each column to record its datatype and length.)
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  The use of variable-length records by SQLite has a number of advantages.
 | 
						|
  It results in smaller database files, obviously.  It also makes the
 | 
						|
  database run faster, since there is less information to move to and from
 | 
						|
  disk.  And, the use of variable-length records makes it possible for
 | 
						|
  SQLite to employ manifest typing instead of static typing.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="readable"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Readable source code</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  The source code to SQLite is designed to be readable and accessible to
 | 
						|
  the average programmer.  All procedures and data structures and many
 | 
						|
  automatic variables are carefully commented with useful information about
 | 
						|
  what they do.  Boilerplate commenting is omitted.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="vdbe"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>SQL statements compile into virtual machine code</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  Every SQL database engine compiles each SQL statement into some kind of
 | 
						|
  internal data structure which is then used to carry out the work of the
 | 
						|
  statement.  But in most SQL engines that internal data structure is a
 | 
						|
  complex web of interlinked structures and objects.  In SQLite, the compiled
 | 
						|
  form of statements is a short program in a machine-language like
 | 
						|
  representation.  Users of the database can view this 
 | 
						|
  <a href="opcode.html">virtual machine language</a>
 | 
						|
  by prepending the <a href="lang_explain.html">EXPLAIN</a> keyword
 | 
						|
  to a query.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  The use of a virtual machine in SQLite has been a great benefit to the
 | 
						|
  library's development.  The virtual machine provides a crisp, well-defined
 | 
						|
  junction between the front-end of SQLite (the part that parses SQL
 | 
						|
  statements and generates virtual machine code) and the back-end (the
 | 
						|
  part that executes the virtual machine code and computes a result.)
 | 
						|
  The virtual machine allows the developers to see clearly and in an
 | 
						|
  easily readable form what SQLite is trying to do with each statement
 | 
						|
  it compiles, which is a tremendous help in debugging.
 | 
						|
  Depending on how it is compiled, SQLite also has the capability of
 | 
						|
  tracing the execution of the virtual machine - printing each
 | 
						|
  virtual machine instruction and its result as it executes.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="license"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>Public domain</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  The source code for SQLite is in the public domain.  No claim of copyright
 | 
						|
  is made on any part of the core source code.  (The documentation and test
 | 
						|
  code is a different matter - some sections of documentation and test logic
 | 
						|
  are governed by open-source licenses.)  All contributors to the
 | 
						|
  SQLite core software have signed affidavits specifically disavowing any
 | 
						|
  copyright interest in the code.  This means that anybody is able to legally
 | 
						|
  do anything they want with the SQLite source code.
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  There are other SQL database engines with liberal licenses that allow
 | 
						|
  the code to be broadly and freely used.  But those other engines are
 | 
						|
  still governed by copyright law.  SQLite is different in that copyright
 | 
						|
  law simply does not apply.  
 | 
						|
  <p>
 | 
						|
  The source code files for other SQL database engines typically begin
 | 
						|
  with a comment describing your legal rights to view and copy that file.
 | 
						|
  The SQLite source code contains no license since it is not governed by
 | 
						|
  copyright.  Instead of a license, the SQLite source code offers a blessing:
 | 
						|
  <blockquote>
 | 
						|
  <i>May you do good and not evil<br>
 | 
						|
  May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others<br>
 | 
						|
  May you share freely, never taking more than you give.</i>
 | 
						|
  </blockquote>
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
<a name="extensions"></a>
 | 
						|
<p><b>SQL language extensions</b></p>
 | 
						|
<blockquote>
 | 
						|
  SQLite provides a number of enhancements to the SQL language 
 | 
						|
  not normally found in other database engines.
 | 
						|
  The EXPLAIN keyword and manifest typing have already been mentioned
 | 
						|
  above.  SQLite also provides statements such as 
 | 
						|
  <a href="lang_replace.html">REPLACE</a> and the
 | 
						|
  <a href="lang_conflict.html">ON CONFLICT</a> clause that allow for
 | 
						|
  added control over the resolution of constraint conflicts.
 | 
						|
  SQLite supports <a href="lang_attach.html">ATTACH</a> and
 | 
						|
  <a href="lang_detach.html">DETACH</a> commands that allow multiple
 | 
						|
  independent databases to be used together in the same query.
 | 
						|
  And SQLite defines APIs that allows the user to add new
 | 
						|
  <a href="c3ref/create_function.html">SQL functions</a>
 | 
						|
  and <a href="c3ref/create_collation.html">collating sequences</a>.
 | 
						|
</blockquote>
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
 |