From 986461b6be03eefd3bd9d9c5f5921e14189813b2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Volker Lendecke Date: Fri, 18 Aug 2006 16:25:09 +0000 Subject: r17607: Adapt the Samba4 directory structure for tdb. Makes it easier to diff. Let's see what it breaks. For me it works :-) Volker (This used to be commit 337be14b432e5dfd80c7418b2db4fe0087259b77) --- source3/tdb/docs/README | 235 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 235 insertions(+) create mode 100644 source3/tdb/docs/README (limited to 'source3/tdb/docs/README') diff --git a/source3/tdb/docs/README b/source3/tdb/docs/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..b31ce36ab1 --- /dev/null +++ b/source3/tdb/docs/README @@ -0,0 +1,235 @@ +tdb - a trivial database system +tridge@linuxcare.com December 1999 +================================== + +This is a simple database API. It was inspired by the realisation that +in Samba we have several ad-hoc bits of code that essentially +implement small databases for sharing structures between parts of +Samba. As I was about to add another I realised that a generic +database module was called for to replace all the ad-hoc bits. + +I based the interface on gdbm. I couldn't use gdbm as we need to be +able to have multiple writers to the databases at one time. + +Compilation +----------- + +add HAVE_MMAP=1 to use mmap instead of read/write +add NOLOCK=1 to disable locking code + +Testing +------- + +Compile tdbtest.c and link with gdbm for testing. tdbtest will perform +identical operations via tdb and gdbm then make sure the result is the +same + +Also included is tdbtool, which allows simple database manipulation +on the commandline. + +tdbtest and tdbtool are not built as part of Samba, but are included +for completeness. + +Interface +--------- + +The interface is very similar to gdbm except for the following: + +- different open interface. The tdb_open call is more similar to a + traditional open() +- no tdbm_reorganise() function +- no tdbm_sync() function. No operations are cached in the library anyway +- added a tdb_traverse() function for traversing the whole database +- added transactions support + +A general rule for using tdb is that the caller frees any returned +TDB_DATA structures. Just call free(p.dptr) to free a TDB_DATA +return value called p. This is the same as gdbm. + +here is a full list of tdb functions with brief descriptions. + + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +TDB_CONTEXT *tdb_open(char *name, int hash_size, int tdb_flags, + int open_flags, mode_t mode) + + open the database, creating it if necessary + + The open_flags and mode are passed straight to the open call on the database + file. A flags value of O_WRONLY is invalid + + The hash size is advisory, use zero for a default value. + + return is NULL on error + + possible tdb_flags are: + TDB_CLEAR_IF_FIRST - clear database if we are the only one with it open + TDB_INTERNAL - don't use a file, instaed store the data in + memory. The filename is ignored in this case. + TDB_NOLOCK - don't do any locking + TDB_NOMMAP - don't use mmap + TDB_NOSYNC - don't synchronise transactions to disk + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +TDB_CONTEXT *tdb_open_ex(char *name, int hash_size, int tdb_flags, + int open_flags, mode_t mode, + tdb_log_func log_fn, + tdb_hash_func hash_fn) + +This is like tdb_open(), but allows you to pass an initial logging and +hash function. Be careful when passing a hash function - all users of +the database must use the same hash function or you will get data +corruption. + + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +char *tdb_error(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb); + + return a error string for the last tdb error + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_close(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb); + + close a database + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_update(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, TDB_DATA key, TDB_DATA dbuf); + + update an entry in place - this only works if the new data size + is <= the old data size and the key exists. + on failure return -1 + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +TDB_DATA tdb_fetch(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, TDB_DATA key); + + fetch an entry in the database given a key + if the return value has a null dptr then a error occurred + + caller must free the resulting data + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_exists(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, TDB_DATA key); + + check if an entry in the database exists + + note that 1 is returned if the key is found and 0 is returned if not found + this doesn't match the conventions in the rest of this module, but is + compatible with gdbm + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_traverse(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, int (*fn)(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, + TDB_DATA key, TDB_DATA dbuf, void *state), void *state); + + traverse the entire database - calling fn(tdb, key, data, state) on each + element. + + return -1 on error or the record count traversed + + if fn is NULL then it is not called + + a non-zero return value from fn() indicates that the traversal + should stop. Traversal callbacks may not start transactions. + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_traverse_read(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, int (*fn)(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, + TDB_DATA key, TDB_DATA dbuf, void *state), void *state); + + traverse the entire database - calling fn(tdb, key, data, state) on + each element, but marking the database read only during the + traversal, so any write operations will fail. This allows tdb to + use read locks, which increases the parallelism possible during the + traversal. + + return -1 on error or the record count traversed + + if fn is NULL then it is not called + + a non-zero return value from fn() indicates that the traversal + should stop. Traversal callbacks may not start transactions. + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +TDB_DATA tdb_firstkey(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb); + + find the first entry in the database and return its key + + the caller must free the returned data + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +TDB_DATA tdb_nextkey(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, TDB_DATA key); + + find the next entry in the database, returning its key + + the caller must free the returned data + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_delete(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, TDB_DATA key); + + delete an entry in the database given a key + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_store(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, TDB_DATA key, TDB_DATA dbuf, int flag); + + store an element in the database, replacing any existing element + with the same key + + If flag==TDB_INSERT then don't overwrite an existing entry + If flag==TDB_MODIFY then don't create a new entry + + return 0 on success, -1 on failure + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_writelock(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb); + + lock the database. If we already have it locked then don't do anything + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_writeunlock(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb); + unlock the database + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_lockchain(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, TDB_DATA key); + + lock one hash chain. This is meant to be used to reduce locking + contention - it cannot guarantee how many records will be locked + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_unlockchain(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb, TDB_DATA key); + + unlock one hash chain + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_transaction_start(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb) + + start a transaction. All operations after the transaction start can + either be committed with tdb_transaction_commit() or cancelled with + tdb_transaction_cancel(). + + If you call tdb_transaction_start() again on the same tdb context + while a transaction is in progress, then the same transaction + buffer is re-used. The number of tdb_transaction_{commit,cancel} + operations must match the number of successful + tdb_transaction_start() calls. + + Note that transactions are by default disk synchronous, and use a + recover area in the database to automatically recover the database + on the next open if the system crashes during a transaction. You + can disable the synchronous transaction recovery setup using the + TDB_NOSYNC flag, which will greatly speed up operations at the risk + of corrupting your database if the system crashes. + + Operations made within a transaction are not visible to other users + of the database until a successful commit. + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_transaction_cancel(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb) + + cancel a current transaction, discarding all write and lock + operations that have been made since the transaction started. + + +---------------------------------------------------------------------- +int tdb_transaction_commit(TDB_CONTEXT *tdb) + + commit a current transaction, updating the database and releasing + the transaction locks. + -- cgit