The behavior of Fcntl might have changed in red hat 9 because of the change
in thread library. (I have a Enterprise version of Redhat (V3) if you want
me to test something)
Google the comp.programming.threads linux.kernal groups.
You can specify that you want to use the older LinuxThreads
Try this
char * EscapedQuery = sqlite3_mprintf(%q,MyQuery);
///.. Do some Stuff .. execute query..etc..
sqlite3_free(EscapedQuery);
--
JB
-Original Message-
From: Sergey Startsev [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 11:45 AM
To: Sankara Narayanan
Subject: Re:
Jay Sprenkle wrote:
The transaction doesn't seem any different than a snapshot of the
database that you can restore to. I just wondered why there were two
methods of doing the same thing.
Only in a single user/single thread case are they the same thing. With
Sqlite that might always be the
Any return other then 0 from the API function you use to exec your SQL
statement is a fail.
--
JB
-Original Message-
From: Vladimir Zelinski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2005 10:31 AM
To: sqlite-users@sqlite.org
Subject: Re: [sqlite] Does sqlite really support
I can think of no way to implement complex atomic transactions with
rollbacks in a flat SQL script. You need some sort of higher level
language to make decisions about results .. IE C++ etc..
--
JB
-Original Message-
From: Vladimir Zelinski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday,
A transactions is exactly like the original poster stated it.
Assuming all Update, Select, Insert Commands are Atomic. A transaction
allows the user to group a bunch of commands together and state they should
be considered atomic, whereas if there is a failure, then none of them are
committed.
Yes. I needed it to work as an operator in the form: FIELD REGEXP .*, not
regexp(FIELD,.*)
-Original Message-
From: Jay Sprenkle [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2005 10:32 PM
To: sqlite-users@sqlite.org
Subject: Re: [sqlite] REGEXP as an operator
On 5/10/05, John
REGEXP is used as an operator. (IE: Field REGEXP '.*10$'
).
The changes are simple enough that maybe they can be added to the next
release.
--
John Buck
[EMAIL PROTECTED]