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*
* FILE
* pqxx/cursor.hxx
*
* DESCRIPTION
* definition of the iterator/container-style cursor classes
* C++-style wrappers for SQL cursors
* DO NOT INCLUDE THIS FILE DIRECTLY; include pqxx/cursor instead.
*
* Copyright (c) 2004-2011, Jeroen T. Vermeulen <jtv@xs4all.nl>
*
* See COPYING for copyright license. If you did not receive a file called
* COPYING with this source code, please notify the distributor of this mistake,
* or contact the author.
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef PQXX_H_CURSOR
#define PQXX_H_CURSOR
#include "pqxx/compiler-public.hxx"
#include "pqxx/compiler-internal-pre.hxx"
#include <stdexcept>
#ifdef PQXX_HAVE_LIMITS
#include <limits>
#endif
#include "pqxx/result"
#include "pqxx/transaction_base"
namespace pqxx
{
class dbtransaction;
/// Common definitions for cursor types
/** In C++ terms, fetches are always done in pre-increment or pre-decrement
* fashion--i.e. the result does not include the row the cursor is on at the
* beginning of the fetch, and the cursor ends up being positioned on the last
* row in the result.
*
* There are singular positions akin to @c end() at both the beginning and the
* end of the cursor's range of movement, although these fit in so naturally
* with the semantics that one rarely notices them. The cursor begins at the
* first of these, but any fetch in the forward direction will move the cursor
* off this position and onto the first row before returning anything.
*/
class PQXX_LIBEXPORT cursor_base
{
public:
typedef result::size_type size_type;
typedef result::difference_type difference_type;
/// Cursor access-pattern policy
/** Allowing a cursor to move forward only can result in better performance,
* so use this access policy whenever possible.
*/
enum accesspolicy
{
/// Cursor can move forward only
forward_only,
/// Cursor can move back and forth
random_access
};
/// Cursor update policy
/**
* @warning Not all PostgreSQL versions support updatable cursors.
*/
enum updatepolicy
{
/// Cursor can be used to read data but not to write
read_only,
/// Cursor can be used to update data as well as read it
update
};
/// Cursor destruction policy
/** The normal thing to do is to make a cursor object the owner of the SQL
* cursor it represents. There may be cases, however, where a cursor needs to
* persist beyond the end of the current transaction (and thus also beyond the
* lifetime of the cursor object that created it!), where it can be "adopted"
* into a new cursor object. See the basic_cursor documentation for an
* explanation of cursor adoption.
*
* If a cursor is created with "loose" ownership policy, the object
* representing the underlying SQL cursor will not take the latter with it
* when its own lifetime ends, nor will its originating transaction.
*
* @warning Use this feature with care and moderation. Only one cursor object
* should be responsible for any one underlying SQL cursor at any given time.
*
* @warning Don't "leak" cursors! As long as any "loose" cursor exists,
* any attempts to deactivate or reactivate the connection, implicitly or
* explicitly, are quietly ignored.
*/
enum ownershippolicy
{
/// Destroy SQL cursor when cursor object is closed at end of transaction
owned,
/// Leave SQL cursor in existence after close of object and transaction
loose
};
/**
* @name Special movement distances
*/
//@{
/// Special value: read until end
/** @return Maximum value for result::difference_type, so the cursor will
* attempt to read the largest possible result set.
*/
static difference_type all() throw (); //[t81]
/// Special value: read one row only
/** @return Unsurprisingly, 1
*/
static difference_type next() throw () { return 1; } //[t81]
/// Special value: read backwards, one row only
/** @return Unsurprisingly, -1
*/
static difference_type prior() throw () { return -1; } //[t0]
/// Special value: read backwards from current position back to origin
/** @return Minimum value for result::difference_type
*/
static difference_type backward_all() throw (); //[t0]
//@}
/// Name of underlying SQL cursor
/**
* @returns Name of SQL cursor, which may differ from original given name.
* @warning Don't use this to access the SQL cursor directly without going
* through the provided wrapper classes!
*/
const PGSTD::string &name() const throw () { return m_name; } //[t81]
protected:
cursor_base(connection_base &,
const PGSTD::string &Name,
bool embellish_name=true);
const PGSTD::string m_name;
private:
/// Not allowed
cursor_base();
/// Not allowed
cursor_base(const cursor_base &);
/// Not allowed
cursor_base &operator=(const cursor_base &);
};
inline cursor_base::difference_type cursor_base::all() throw ()
{
#ifdef PQXX_HAVE_LIMITS
return PGSTD::numeric_limits<int>::max()-1;
#else
return INT_MAX-1;
#endif
}
inline cursor_base::difference_type cursor_base::backward_all() throw ()
{
#ifdef PQXX_HAVE_LIMITS
return PGSTD::numeric_limits<int>::min()+1;
#else
return INT_MIN+1;
#endif
}
namespace internal
{
/// Cursor with SQL positioning semantics
/** Thin wrapper around an SQL cursor, with SQL's ideas of positioning.
*
* SQL cursors have pre-increment/pre-decrement semantics, with on either end of
* the result set a special position that does not repesent a row. This class
* models SQL cursors for the purpose of implementing more C++-like semantics on
* top.
*
* Positions of actual rows are numbered starting at 1. Position 0 exists but
* does not refer to a row. There is a similar non-row position at the end of
* the result set.
*
* Don't use this at home. You deserve better. Use the stateles_cursor
* instead.
*/
class PQXX_LIBEXPORT sql_cursor : public cursor_base
{
public:
sql_cursor(transaction_base &t,
const PGSTD::string &query,
const PGSTD::string &cname,
cursor_base::accesspolicy ap,
cursor_base::updatepolicy up,
cursor_base::ownershippolicy op,
bool hold);
sql_cursor(transaction_base &t,
const PGSTD::string &cname,
cursor_base::ownershippolicy op);
~sql_cursor() throw () { close(); }
result fetch(difference_type rows, difference_type &displacement);
result fetch(difference_type rows)
{ difference_type d=0; return fetch(rows, d); }
difference_type move(difference_type rows, difference_type &displacement);
difference_type move(difference_type rows)
{ difference_type d=0; return move(rows, d); }
/// Current position, or -1 for unknown
/**
* The starting position, just before the first row, counts as position zero.
*
* Position may be unknown if (and only if) this cursor was adopted, and has
* never hit its starting position (position zero).
*/
difference_type pos() const throw () { return m_pos; }
/// End position, or -1 for unknown
/**
* Returns the final position, just after the last row in the result set. The
* starting position, just before the first row, counts as position zero.
*
* End position is unknown until it is encountered during use.
*/
difference_type endpos() const throw () { return m_endpos; }
/// Return zero-row result for this cursor
const result &empty_result() const throw () { return m_empty_result; }
void close() throw ();
private:
difference_type adjust(difference_type hoped, difference_type actual);
static PGSTD::string stridestring(difference_type);
/// Initialize cached empty result. Call only at beginning or end!
void init_empty_result(transaction_base &);
/// Connection this cursor lives in
connection_base &m_home;
/// Zero-row result from this cursor (or plain empty one if cursor is adopted)
result m_empty_result;
result m_cached_current_row;
/// Is this cursor adopted (as opposed to created by this cursor object)?
bool m_adopted;
/// Will this cursor object destroy its SQL cursor when it dies?
cursor_base::ownershippolicy m_ownership;
/// At starting position (-1), somewhere in the middle (0), or past end (1)
int m_at_end;
/// Position, or -1 for unknown
difference_type m_pos;
/// End position, or -1 for unknown
difference_type m_endpos;
};
result::size_type PQXX_LIBEXPORT obtain_stateless_cursor_size(sql_cursor &);
result PQXX_LIBEXPORT stateless_cursor_retrieve(
sql_cursor &,
result::difference_type size,
result::difference_type begin_pos,
result::difference_type end_pos);
} // namespace internal
/// "Stateless cursor" class: easy API for retrieving parts of result sets
/** This is a front-end for SQL cursors, but with a more C++-like API.
*
* Actually, stateless_cursor feels entirely different from SQL cursors. You
* don't keep track of positions, fetches, and moves; you just say which rows
* you want. See the retrieve() member function.
*/
template<cursor_base::updatepolicy up, cursor_base::ownershippolicy op>
class stateless_cursor
{
public:
typedef result::size_type size_type;
typedef result::difference_type difference_type;
/// Create cursor.
stateless_cursor(
transaction_base &trans,
const PGSTD::string &query,
const PGSTD::string &cname,
bool hold) :
m_cur(trans, query, cname, cursor_base::random_access, up, op, hold)
{
}
/// Adopt existing scrolling SQL cursor.
stateless_cursor(
transaction_base &trans,
const PGSTD::string adopted_cursor) :
m_cur(trans, adopted_cursor, op)
{
// Put cursor in known position
m_cur.move(cursor_base::backward_all());
}
void close() throw () { m_cur.close(); }
/// Number of rows in cursor's result set
/** @note This function is not const; it may need to scroll to find the size
* of the result set.
*/
size_type size() { return internal::obtain_stateless_cursor_size(m_cur); }
/// Retrieve rows from begin_pos (inclusive) to end_pos (exclusive)
/** Rows are numbered starting from 0 to size()-1.
*
* @param begin_pos First row to retrieve. May be one row beyond the end of
* the result set, to avoid errors for empty result sets. Otherwise, must be
* a valid row number in the result set.
* @param end_pos Row up to which to fetch. Rows are returned ordered from
* begin_pos to end_pos, i.e. in ascending order if begin_pos < end_pos but
* in descending order if begin_pos > end_pos. The end_pos may be arbitrarily
* inside or outside the result set; only existing rows are included in the
* result.
*/
result retrieve(difference_type begin_pos, difference_type end_pos)
{
return internal::stateless_cursor_retrieve(
m_cur,
result::difference_type(size()),
begin_pos,
end_pos);
}
const PGSTD::string &name() const throw () { return m_cur.name(); }
private:
internal::sql_cursor m_cur;
};
class icursor_iterator;
namespace internal
{
namespace gate
{
class icursor_iterator_icursorstream;
class icursorstream_icursor_iterator;
} // namespace internal::gate
} // namespace internal
/// Simple read-only cursor represented as a stream of results
/** SQL cursors can be tricky, especially in C++ since the two languages seem to
* have been designed on different planets. An SQL cursor has two singular
* positions akin to @c end() on either side of the underlying result set.
*
* These cultural differences are hidden from view somewhat by libpqxx, which
* tries to make SQL cursors behave more like familiar C++ entities such as
* iterators, sequences, streams, and containers.
*
* Data is fetched from the cursor as a sequence of result objects. Each of
* these will contain the number of rows defined as the stream's stride, except
* of course the last block of data which may contain fewer rows.
*
* This class can create or adopt cursors that live outside any backend
* transaction, which your backend version may not support.
*/
class PQXX_LIBEXPORT icursorstream
{
public:
typedef cursor_base::size_type size_type;
typedef cursor_base::difference_type difference_type;
/// Set up a read-only, forward-only cursor
/** Roughly equivalent to a C++ Standard Library istream, this cursor type
* supports only two operations: reading a block of rows while moving forward,
* and moving forward without reading any data.
*
* @param context Transaction context that this cursor will be active in
* @param query SQL query whose results this cursor shall iterate
* @param basename Suggested name for the SQL cursor; a unique code will be
* appended by the library to ensure its uniqueness
* @param sstride Number of rows to fetch per read operation; must be a
* positive number
*/
icursorstream(transaction_base &context,
const PGSTD::string &query,
const PGSTD::string &basename,
difference_type sstride=1); //[t81]
/// Adopt existing SQL cursor. Use with care.
/** Forms a cursor stream around an existing SQL cursor, as returned by e.g. a
* server-side function. The SQL cursor will be cleaned up by the stream's
* destructor as if it had been created by the stream; cleaning it up by hand
* or adopting the same cursor twice is an error.
*
* Passing the name of the cursor as a string is not allowed, both to avoid
* confusion with the other constructor and to discourage unnecessary use of
* adopted cursors.
*
* @warning It is technically possible to adopt a "WITH HOLD" cursor, i.e. a
* cursor that stays alive outside its creating transaction. However, any
* cursor stream (including the underlying SQL cursor, naturally) must be
* destroyed before its transaction context object is destroyed. Therefore
* the only way to use SQL's WITH HOLD feature is to adopt the cursor, but
* defer doing so until after entering the transaction context that will
* eventually destroy it.
*
* @param context Transaction context that this cursor will be active in.
* @param cname Result field containing the name of the SQL cursor to adopt.
* @param sstride Number of rows to fetch per read operation; must be a
* positive number.
* @param op Ownership policy. Determines whether the cursor underlying this
* stream will be destroyed when the stream is closed.
*/
icursorstream(transaction_base &context,
const field &cname,
difference_type sstride=1,
cursor_base::ownershippolicy op=cursor_base::owned); //[t84]
operator bool() const throw () { return !m_done; }
/// Read new value into given result object; same as operator >>
/** The result set may continue any number of rows from zero to the chosen
* stride, inclusive. An empty result will only be returned if there are no
* more rows to retrieve.
* @return Reference to this very stream, to facilitate "chained" invocations
* ("C.get(r1).get(r2);")
*/
icursorstream &get(result &res) { res = fetchblock(); return *this; } //[t81]
/// Read new value into given result object; same as get(result &)
/** The result set may continue any number of rows from zero to the chosen
* stride, inclusive. An empty result will only be returned if there are no
* more rows to retrieve.
* @return Reference to this very stream, to facilitate "chained" invocations
* ("C >> r1 >> r2;")
*/
icursorstream &operator>>(result &res) { return get(res); } //[t81]
/// Move given number of rows forward (ignoring stride) without reading data
/**
* @return Reference to this very stream, to facilitate "chained" invocations
* ("C.ignore(2).get(r).ignore(4);")
*/
icursorstream &ignore(PGSTD::streamsize n=1); //[t81]
/// Change stride, i.e. the number of rows to fetch per read operation
/**
* @param stride Must be a positive number
*/
void set_stride(difference_type stride); //[t81]
difference_type stride() const throw () { return m_stride; } //[t81]
private:
result fetchblock();
friend class internal::gate::icursorstream_icursor_iterator;
size_type forward(size_type n=1);
void insert_iterator(icursor_iterator *) throw ();
void remove_iterator(icursor_iterator *) const throw ();
void service_iterators(difference_type);
internal::sql_cursor m_cur;
difference_type m_stride;
difference_type m_realpos, m_reqpos;
mutable icursor_iterator *m_iterators;
bool m_done;
};
/// Approximate istream_iterator for icursorstream
/** Intended as an implementation of an input_iterator (as defined by the C++
* Standard Library), this class supports only two basic operations: reading the
* current element, and moving forward. In addition to the minimal guarantees
* for istream_iterators, this class supports multiple successive reads of the
* same position (the current result set is cached in the iterator) even after
* copying and even after new data have been read from the stream. This appears
* to be a requirement for input_iterators. Comparisons are also supported in
* the general case.
*
* The iterator does not care about its own position, however. Moving an
* iterator forward moves the underlying stream forward and reads the data from
* the new stream position, regardless of the iterator's old position in the
* stream.
*
* The stream's stride defines the granularity for all iterator movement or
* access operations, i.e. "ici += 1" advances the stream by one stride's worth
* of tuples, and "*ici++" reads one stride's worth of tuples from the stream.
*
* @warning Do not read from the underlying stream or its cursor, move its read
* position, or change its stride, between the time the first icursor_iterator
* on it is created and the time its last icursor_iterator is destroyed.
*
* @warning Manipulating these iterators within the context of a single cursor
* stream is <em>not thread-safe</em>. Creating a new iterator, copying one, or
* destroying one affects the stream as a whole.
*/
class PQXX_LIBEXPORT icursor_iterator :
public PGSTD::iterator<PGSTD::input_iterator_tag,
result,
cursor_base::size_type,
const result *,
const result &>
{
public:
typedef icursorstream istream_type;
typedef istream_type::size_type size_type;
typedef istream_type::difference_type difference_type;
icursor_iterator() throw (); //[t84]
explicit icursor_iterator(istream_type &) throw (); //[t84]
icursor_iterator(const icursor_iterator &) throw (); //[t84]
~icursor_iterator() throw ();
const result &operator*() const { refresh(); return m_here; } //[t84]
const result *operator->() const { refresh(); return &m_here; } //[t84]
icursor_iterator &operator++(); //[t84]
icursor_iterator operator++(int); //[t84]
icursor_iterator &operator+=(difference_type); //[t84]
icursor_iterator &operator=(const icursor_iterator &) throw (); //[t84]
bool operator==(const icursor_iterator &rhs) const; //[t84]
bool operator!=(const icursor_iterator &rhs) const throw () //[t84]
{ return !operator==(rhs); }
bool operator<(const icursor_iterator &rhs) const; //[t84]
bool operator>(const icursor_iterator &rhs) const //[t84]
{ return rhs < *this; }
bool operator<=(const icursor_iterator &rhs) const //[t84]
{ return !(*this > rhs); }
bool operator>=(const icursor_iterator &rhs) const //[t84]
{ return !(*this < rhs); }
private:
void refresh() const;
friend class internal::gate::icursor_iterator_icursorstream;
difference_type pos() const throw () { return m_pos; }
void fill(const result &);
icursorstream *m_stream;
result m_here;
difference_type m_pos;
icursor_iterator *m_prev, *m_next;
};
} // namespace pqxx
#include "pqxx/compiler-internal-post.hxx"
#endif
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