On 24 Aug 2011, at 3:07pm, Richard Hipp wrote:
> You've run up against limitations of AFP. Or, more precisely, you've run up
> against the performance/concurrency tradeoffs that are inherent in any
> network filesystem.
>
> Apple has contributed working (though wildly complex) code that allows
On Wed, Aug 24, 2011 at 6:14 PM, Pavel Ivanov wrote:
> This is completely unrelated because Oracle works differently.
>
Regardless of the reason for the specific behaviours, the symptoms are
similar, and they are both locking-related problems. Maybe off-topic,
admittedly,
> i saw the same behaviour with Oracle's CLI client
> ("sqlplus") - as long as i had sqlplus opened and connected, my PHP pages
> couldn't insert any data.
>
> i.e. this type of problem isn't limited to sqlite3.
This is completely unrelated because Oracle works differently. And if
you saw this
On Wed, Aug 24, 2011 at 3:51 PM, Simon Slavin wrote:
> SQLite3::query(): Unable to execute statement: database is locked in
> [...]readrec.php
>
For what it's worth: while porting a customer's PHP app from MySQL to Oracle
early this year, i saw the same behaviour with
On Wed, Aug 24, 2011 at 9:51 AM, Simon Slavin wrote:
> On a Mac running OS X 10.6.8 Server. Being accessed by another Mac running
> 10.6.8 Client.
>
> The shell tool I'm using is the one found on a standard installation of OS
> X 10.6.8. It accesses the database by
On a Mac running OS X 10.6.8 Server. Being accessed by another Mac running
10.6.8 Client.
The shell tool I'm using is the one found on a standard installation of OS X
10.6.8. It accesses the database by opening the file across an AFP connection
to the server. The shell tool can read and
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