This library allows Ruby programs to use the SQLite3 database engine (http://www.sqlite.org).
Note that this module is only compatible with SQLite 3.6.16 or newer.
- Source code: https://github.com/sparklemotion/sqlite3-ruby
- Mailing list: http://groups.google.com/group/sqlite3-ruby
- Download: http://rubygems.org/gems/sqlite3
- Documentation: http://www.rubydoc.info/gems/sqlite3
For help understanding the SQLite3 Ruby API, please read the FAQ and the full API documentation.
A few key classes whose APIs are often-used are:
If you have any questions that you feel should be addressed in the FAQ, please send them to the mailing list or open a discussion thread.
require "sqlite3"
# Open a database
db = SQLite3::Database.new "test.db"
# Create a table
rows = db.execute <<-SQL
create table numbers (
name varchar(30),
val int
);
SQL
# Execute a few inserts
{
"one" => 1,
"two" => 2,
}.each do |pair|
db.execute "insert into numbers values ( ?, ? )", pair
end
# Find a few rows
db.execute( "select * from numbers" ) do |row|
p row
end
# => ["one", 1]
# ["two", 2]
# Create another table with multiple columns
db.execute <<-SQL
create table students (
name varchar(50),
email varchar(50),
grade varchar(5),
blog varchar(50)
);
SQL
# Execute inserts with parameter markers
db.execute("INSERT INTO students (name, email, grade, blog)
VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)", ["Jane", "[email protected]", "A", "http://blog.janedoe.com"])
db.execute( "select * from students" ) do |row|
p row
end
# => ["Jane", "[email protected]", "A", "http://blog.janedoe.com"]
When SQLite3.threadsafe?
returns true
, then SQLite3 has been compiled to
support running in a multithreaded environment. However, this doesn't mean
that all classes in the SQLite3 gem can be considered "thread safe".
When SQLite3.threadsafe?
returns true
, it is safe to share only
SQLite3::Database
instances among threads without providing your own locking
mechanism. For example, the following code is fine because only the database
instance is shared among threads:
require 'sqlite3'
db = SQLite3::Database.new ":memory:"
latch = Queue.new
ts = 10.times.map {
Thread.new {
latch.pop
db.execute "SELECT '#{Thread.current.inspect}'"
}
}
10.times { latch << nil }
p ts.map(&:value)
Other instances can be shared among threads, but they require that you provide
your own locking for thread safety. For example, SQLite3::Statement
objects
(prepared statements) are mutable, so applications must take care to add
appropriate locks to avoid data race conditions when sharing these objects
among threads.
Lets rewrite the above example but use a prepared statement and safely share the prepared statement among threads:
db = SQLite3::Database.new ":memory:"
# Prepare a statement
stmt = db.prepare "SELECT :inspect"
stmt_lock = Mutex.new
latch = Queue.new
ts = 10.times.map {
Thread.new {
latch.pop
# Add a lock when using the prepared statement.
# Binding values, and walking over results will mutate the statement, so
# in order to prevent other threads from "seeing" this thread's data, we
# must lock when using the statement object
stmt_lock.synchronize do
stmt.execute(Thread.current.inspect).to_a
end
}
}
10.times { latch << nil }
p ts.map(&:value)
stmt.close
It is generally recommended that if applications want to share a database among threads, they only share the database instance object. Other objects are fine to share, but may require manual locking for thread safety.
Sqlite is not fork
safe
and instructs users to not carry an open writable database connection across a fork()
. Using an inherited
connection in the child may corrupt your database, leak memory, or cause other undefined behavior.
To help protect users of this gem from accidental corruption due to this lack of fork safety, the gem will immediately close any open writable databases in the child after a fork. Discarding writable connections in the child will incur a small one-time memory leak per connection, but that's preferable to potentially corrupting your database.
Whenever possible, close writable connections in the parent before forking. If absolutely necessary (and you know what you're doing), you may suppress the fork safety warnings by calling SQLite3::ForkSafety.suppress_warnings!
.
See ./adr/2024-09-fork-safety.md for more information and context.
If you're having trouble with installation, please first read INSTALLATION.md
.
You can ask for help or support:
- by emailing the sqlite3-ruby mailing list
- by opening a discussion thread on Github
You can file the bug at the github issues page.
See CONTRIBUTING.md
.
This library is licensed under BSD-3-Clause
, see LICENSE
.
The source code of sqlite
is distributed in the "ruby platform" gem. This code is public domain,
see https://www.sqlite.org/copyright.html for details.