> I've run into exactly the same thing on both version 2 and 3,
commented
> on it here before too. What Someone suggested here and it works, is to
> initially open and read the file as if it were a data file. I do it
64K at a time.
> Then close it and open with sqlite, in my case that took the 30 s
On 5/1/06, Mats Gefvert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
However, we noticed an interesting thing. When we first open the SQLite
database and start running queries on it, the first query always takes
an enormous time to complete: up to 30-45 seconds. It's not a really
complex query, mainly just a looku
Mats Gefvert wrote:
Usually Windows XP/SP2.
The file name of the database is usually "vision8020" with no
extension.
That couldn't be a problem, could it?
Shut down system restore
Pardon?
/ Mats
System restore feature of Windows XP.
I'm guessing now...
Regards
Boguslaw
Hello Mats,
I've run into exactly the same thing on both version 2 and 3,
commented on it here before too. What Someone suggested here and it
works, is to initially open and read the file as if it were a data
file. I do it 64K at a time. Then close it and open with sqlite, in my
case that took the
> > Usually Windows XP/SP2.
> >
> > The file name of the database is usually "vision8020" with no
extension.
> > That couldn't be a problem, could it?
>
> Shut down system restore
Pardon?
/ Mats
Mats Gefvert wrote:
What system you are using ?
If this is Windows XP or 2003, then what is the name of this sqlite
database ?
Usually Windows XP/SP2.
The file name of the database is usually "vision8020" with no extension.
That couldn't be a problem, could it?
/ Mats
Shut down system re
> What system you are using ?
>
> If this is Windows XP or 2003, then what is the name of this sqlite
database ?
Usually Windows XP/SP2.
The file name of the database is usually "vision8020" with no extension.
That couldn't be a problem, could it?
/ Mats
Mats Gefvert wrote:
Hi,
We ran into an interesting "feature" with SQLite recently. We're
building a large and complex system which uses a MySQL database; but in
case of a network failure we also build a backup SQLite database every
night and transfer to the client. So when the network goes kaboo
Hi,
We ran into an interesting "feature" with SQLite recently. We're
building a large and complex system which uses a MySQL database; but in
case of a network failure we also build a backup SQLite database every
night and transfer to the client. So when the network goes kaboom
(which, unfortunatel
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