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The PRAGMA command is a special command used to modify the operation of the SQLite library or to query the library for internal (non-table) data. The PRAGMA command is issued using the same interface as other SQLite commands (e.g. SELECT, INSERT) but is different different in the following important respects:
The available pragmas fall into four basic categories:
sql-statement ::= | PRAGMA name [= value] | PRAGMA function(arg) |
The pragmas that take an integer value also accept symbolic names. The strings "on", "true", and "yes" are equivalent to 1. The strings "off", "false", and "no" are equivalent to 0. These strings are case- insensitive, and do not require quotes. An unrecognized string will be treated as 1, and will not generate an error. When the value is returned it is as an integer.
PRAGMA auto_vacuum;
PRAGMA auto_vacuum = 0 | 1;
Query or set the auto-vacuum flag in the database.
Normally, when a transaction that deletes data from a database is committed, the database file remains the same size. Unused database file pages are marked as such and reused later on, when data is inserted into the database. In this mode the VACUUM command is used to reclaim unused space.
When the auto-vacuum flag is set, the database file shrinks when a transaction that deletes data is committed (The VACUUM command is not useful in a database with the auto-vacuum flag set). To support this functionality the database stores extra information internally, resulting in slightly larger database files than would otherwise be possible.
It is only possible to modify the value of the auto-vacuum flag before any tables have been created in the database. No error message is returned if an attempt to modify the auto-vacuum flag is made after one or more tables have been created.
PRAGMA cache_size;
PRAGMA cache_size = Number-of-pages;
Query or change the maximum number of database disk pages that SQLite will hold in memory at once. Each page uses about 1.5K of memory. The default cache size is 2000. If you are doing UPDATEs or DELETEs that change many rows of a database and you do not mind if SQLite uses more memory, you can increase the cache size for a possible speed improvement.
When you change the cache size using the cache_size pragma, the change only endures for the current session. The cache size reverts to the default value when the database is closed and reopened. Use the default_cache_size pragma to check the cache size permanently.
PRAGMA count_changes;
PRAGMA count_changes = 0 | 1;
Query or change the count-changes flag. Normally, when the count-changes flag is not set, INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE statements return no data. When count-changes is set, each of these commands returns a single row of data consisting of one integer value - the number of rows inserted, modified or deleted by the command. The returned change count does not include any insertions, modifications or deletions performed by triggers.
PRAGMA default_cache_size;
PRAGMA default_cache_size = Number-of-pages;
Query or change the maximum number of database disk pages that SQLite will hold in memory at once. Each page uses 1K on disk and about 1.5K in memory. This pragma works like the cache_size pragma with the additional feature that it changes the cache size persistently. With this pragma, you can set the cache size once and that setting is retained and reused every time you reopen the database.
PRAGMA empty_result_callbacks;
PRAGMA empty_result_callbacks = 0 | 1;
Query or change the empty-result-callbacks flag.
The empty-result-callbacks flag affects the sqlite3_exec API only. Normally, when the empty-result-callbacks flag is cleared, the callback function supplied to the sqlite3_exec() call is not invoked for commands that return zero rows of data. When empty-result-callbacks is set in this situation, the callback function is invoked exactly once, with the third parameter set to 0 (NULL). This is to enable programs that use the sqlite3_exec() API to retrieve column-names even when a query returns no data.
PRAGMA encoding;
PRAGMA encoding = "UTF-8";
PRAGMA encoding = "UTF-16";
PRAGMA encoding = "UTF-16le";
PRAGMA encoding = "UTF-16be";
In it's first form, if the main database has already been created, then this pragma returns the text encoding used by the main database, one of "UTF-8", "UTF-16le" (little-endian UTF-16 encoding) or "UTF-16be" (big-endian UTF-16 encoding). If the main database has not already been created, then the value returned is the text encoding that will be used to create the main database, if it is created by this session.
The second and subsequent forms of this pragma are only useful if the main database has not already been created. In this case the pragma sets the encoding that the main database will be created with if it is created by this session. The string "UTF-16" is interpreted as "UTF-16 encoding using native machine byte-ordering".
Databases created by the ATTACH command always use the same encoding as the main database.
PRAGMA full_column_names;
PRAGMA full_column_names = 0 | 1;
Query or change the full-column-names flag. This flag affects
the way SQLite names columns of data returned by SELECT statements
when the expression for the column is a table-column name or the
wildcard "*". Normally, such result columns are named
If both the short-column-names and full-column-names are set, then the behaviour associated with the full-column-names flag is exhibited.
PRAGMA page_size;
PRAGMA page_size = bytes;
Query or set the page-size of the database. The page-size may only be set if the database has not yet been created. The page size must be a power of two greater than or equal to 512 and less than or equal to 8192. The upper limit may be modified by setting the value of macro SQLITE_MAX_PAGE_SIZE during compilation.
PRAGMA full_column_names;
PRAGMA full_column_names = 0 | 1;
Query or change the short-column-names flag. This flag affects
the way SQLite names columns of data returned by SELECT statements
when the expression for the column is a table-column name or the
wildcard "*". Normally, such result columns are named
If both the short-column-names and full-column-names are set, then the behaviour associated with the full-column-names flag is exhibited.
PRAGMA synchronous;
PRAGMA synchronous = FULL; (2)
PRAGMA synchronous = NORMAL; (1)
PRAGMA synchronous = OFF; (0)
Query or change the setting of the "synchronous" flag. The first (query) form will return the setting as an integer. When synchronous is FULL (2), the SQLite database engine will pause at critical moments to make sure that data has actually been written to the disk surface before continuing. This ensures that if the operating system crashes or if there is a power failure, the database will be uncorrupted after rebooting. FULL synchronous is very safe, but it is also slow. When synchronous is NORMAL (1, the default), the SQLite database engine will still pause at the most critical moments, but less often than in FULL mode. There is a very small (though non-zero) chance that a power failure at just the wrong time could corrupt the database in NORMAL mode. But in practice, you are more likely to suffer a catastrophic disk failure or some other unrecoverable hardware fault. So NORMAL is the default mode. With synchronous OFF (0), SQLite continues without pausing as soon as it has handed data off to the operating system. If the application running SQLite crashes, the data will be safe, but the database might become corrupted if the operating system crashes or the computer loses power before that data has been written to the disk surface. On the other hand, some operations are as much as 50 or more times faster with synchronous OFF.
PRAGMA temp_store;
PRAGMA temp_store = DEFAULT; (0)
PRAGMA temp_store = MEMORY; (2)
PRAGMA temp_store = FILE; (1)
Query or change the setting of the "temp_store" flag affecting the database for the duration of the current database connection. The temp_store flag reverts to its default value when the database is closed and reopened. For additional information on the temp_store flag, see the description of the default_temp_store pragma. Note that it is possible for the library compile-time options to override this setting.
PRAGMA temp_store;
PRAGMA temp_store = DEFAULT; (0)
PRAGMA temp_store = MEMORY; (2)
PRAGMA temp_store = FILE; (1)
Query or change the setting of the "temp_store" parameter. When temp_store is DEFAULT (0), the compile-time value of the symbol TEMP_STORE is used for the temporary database. When temp_store is MEMORY (2), an in-memory database is used. When temp_store is FILE (1), a temporary database file on disk will be used. See PRAGMA temp_store_directory for further temporary storage options when FILE is specified. When the temp_store setting is changed, all existing temporary tables, indices, triggers, and viewers are immediately deleted.
It is possible for the library compile-time symbol TEMP_STORE to override this setting. The following table summarizes this:
TEMP_STORE | temp_store | temp database location |
---|---|---|
0 | any | file |
1 | 0 | file |
1 | 1 | file |
1 | 2 | memory |
2 | 0 | memory |
2 | 1 | file |
2 | 2 | memory |
3 | any | memory |
PRAGMA temp_store_directory;
PRAGMA temp_store_directory = 'directory-name';
Query or change the setting of the "temp_store_directory" flag affecting the database for the duration of the current database connection. The temp_store_directory flag reverts to its default value when the database is closed and reopened. Setting temp_store_directory allows control of the placement of temporary files created by SQLite when PRAGMA temp_store is FILE (1), or when the compile time default temporary store is FILE. Otherwise, when the temp_store (or default) setting is MEMORY (2), setting temp_store_directory has no effect.
When the temp_store_directory setting is changed, all existing temporary tables, indices, triggers, and viewers are immediately deleted. In practice, temp_store_directory should be set immediately after the database is opened.
The value directory-name should be enclosed in single quotes. To revert the directory to the default, set the directory-name to a null string, e.g., PRAGMA temp_store_directory = ''. An error is raised if directory-name is not found or is not writable.
The default directory for temporary files depends on the OS. For Unix/Linux/OSX, the default is the is the first writable directory found in the list of: /var/tmp, /usr/tmp, /tmp, and current-directory. For Windows NT, the default directory is determined by Windows, generally C:\Documents and Settings\user-name\Local Settings\Temp\. Temporary files created by SQLite are unlinked immediately after opening, so that the operating system can automatically delete the files when the SQLite process exits. Thus, temporary files are not normally visible through ls or dir commands.
PRAGMA database_list;
For each open database, invoke the callback function once with information about that database. Arguments include the index and the name the database was attached with. The first row will be for the main database. The second row will be for the database used to store temporary tables.
PRAGMA foreign_key_list(table-name);
For each foreign key that references a column in the argument table, invoke the callback function with information about that foreign key. The callback function will be invoked once for each column in each foreign key.
PRAGMA index_info(index-name);
For each column that the named index references, invoke the callback function once with information about that column, including the column name, and the column number.
PRAGMA index_list(table-name);
For each index on the named table, invoke the callback function once with information about that index. Arguments include the index name and a flag to indicate whether or not the index must be unique.
PRAGMA table_info(table-name);
For each column in the named table, invoke the callback function once with information about that column, including the column name, data type, whether or not the column can be NULL, and the default value for the column.
PRAGMA [database.]schema_version;
PRAGMA [database.]schema_version = integer ;
PRAGMA [database.]user_version;
PRAGMA [database.]user_version = integer ;
The pragmas schema_version and user_version are used to set or get the value of the schema-version and user-version, respectively. Both the schema-version and the user-version are 32-bit signed integers stored in the database header.
The schema-version is usually only manipulated internally by SQLite. It is incremented by SQLite whenever the database schema is modified (by creating or dropping a table or index). The schema version is used by SQLite each time a query is executed to ensure that the internal cache of the schema used when compiling the SQL query matches the schema of the database against which the compiled query is actually executed. Subverting this mechanism by using "PRAGMA schema_version" to modify the schema-version is potentially dangerous and may lead to program crashes or database corruption. Use with caution!
The user-version is not used internally by SQLite. It may be used by applications for any purpose.
PRAGMA integrity_check;
The command does an integrity check of the entire database. It looks for out-of-order records, missing pages, malformed records, and corrupt indices. If any problems are found, then a single string is returned which is a description of all problems. If everything is in order, "ok" is returned.
PRAGMA parser_trace = ON; (1)
PRAGMA parser_trace = OFF; (0)
Turn tracing of the SQL parser inside of the SQLite library on and off. This is used for debugging. This only works if the library is compiled without the NDEBUG macro.
PRAGMA vdbe_trace = ON; (1)
PRAGMA vdbe_trace = OFF; (0)
Turn tracing of the virtual database engine inside of the SQLite library on and off. This is used for debugging. See the VDBE documentation for more information.