1
- check that the fix for in-progress queries during rollback is threadsafe. In
2
particular, we shouldn't be resetting queries from another thread! Does
3
sqlite3_next_stmt() only return statements from this thread?
1
- add columns() to row that returns a boost::tuple of various types so multple columns can be fetched at once
2
- look in to using BOOST_PP_ITERATE macro
3
- make basic_statement and database keep a shared pointer to the database handle so the classes can be made copyable. Also:
4
- the wrappers around the handle can clean them up after use
5
- the actual wrappers wround the handles can be made in sqlite::detail
6
- this will also make the implementation od rows (to get round the forced non-dependency of rows on querys) a little easier to swallow.
7
- move _null_t, _exec_t and _set_index_t to sqlite::detail. Only the named instantiations of these structs need be in the sqlite namespace.
8
- add immediate_transaction
9
- committing a transaction during a query (i.e., when sqlite3_step() has returned SQLITE_ROW) causes an error. To counter this:
10
- calling query.reset() before the commit fixes the issue
11
- need to check it's not fixed in latest sqlite
12
- will need to keep a list of querys that need resetting in the database :o(
5
13
- turn on extended errcodes in open() and handle them in sqlite_error
7
- make basic_statement and database keep a shared pointer to the database handle
8
so the classes can be made copyable. The wrappers around the handle
9
(implemented in sqlite::detail) can clean them up after use. This will also
10
make the implementation of rows (to get round the forced non-dependency of
11
rows on querys) a little easier to swallow.
12
- A similar wrapper should be created for statement handles, making
13
basic_statements, querys and commands copyable. Could weak_ptrs to these
14
also be used in the database's list active querys?
16
- add columns() to row that returns a boost::tuple of various types so multple
17
columns can be fetched at once (look in to using BOOST_PP_ITERATE macro)
19
- use sqlite3_db_mutex() to provide extended error information during
20
sqlite_error construction. The general procedure would be to lock the db
21
mutex, perform some sqlite3 command, check the error code, throw an
22
sqlite_error (whilst obtaining extended error info) and then unlock the db
24
- a macro would be simple
25
- a templated safe-calling object (passing the comman's arg types as
26
template params) may be overkill
28
- expand sqlite_error - perhaps use boost::system_error (see
29
boost/asio/error.hpp for an example of extending system_error)
14
- use sqlite3_db_mutex() to provide extended error information during sqlite_error construction - see sqlite::query::step() for example
15
- expand sqlite_error - perhaps use boost::system_error (see boost/asio/error.hpp for an example of extending system_error)
31
16
- see if we can #include "sqlite.h" in to a namespace.
33
18
we better encapsulate the library
34
19
we can reuse "sqlite3" as a namespace
36
makes access to real sqlite stuff awkward to sqlite3cc users, but does
37
this matter? they can't access database._handle anyway!
38
potential incompatibility when linking to libraries that also link
21
makes access to real sqlite stuff awkward to sqlite3cc users, but does this matter? they can't access database._handle anyway!
22
potential incompatibility when linking to libraries that also link against sqlite
23
- fix step() inconsistency - query::step() returns a row, whereas basic_statement::step() and command::step() return an int return code
41
24
- query::prepare() isn't being called during construction (form
42
25
basic_statement's constructor)