Difference between revisions of "OpenDBX/C API/odbx init"
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= Errors = | = Errors = | ||
| − | + | ; -ODBX_ERR_BACKEND : Any error returned by the backend | |
| − | + | ; -ODBX_ERR_PARAM : "handle" is NULL | |
| − | + | ; -ODBX_ERR_NOMEM : Allocating new memory failed | |
| − | + | ; -ODBX_ERR_TOOLONG : The length of a string exceeded the buffer size | |
| − | + | ; -ODBX_ERR_NOTEXIST : Backend library was not found | |
| − | + | ; -ODBX_ERR_NOOP : A function does not exist in the backend | |
= See also = | = See also = | ||
Revision as of 20:34, 17 February 2007
#include <odbx.h>
int odbx_init(
odbx_t** handle,
const char* backend,
const char* host,
const char* port )
Description
odbx_init() allocates and initializes an opaque object required for all further operations within the OpenDBX library used to identify the connection and to maintain per connection information. Depending on the backend it can open a connection to the database server but often this is done not until performing authentication through odbx_bind().
The pointer of the newly allocated connection object is stored in handle if odbx_init() completes successfully. Otherwise, the value of the odbx_t* variable will be undefined and must not be used as input for other functions of the library. The returned connection object should be freed by odbx_finish() to avoid memory leaks if it will be no longer used by the application.
The OpenDBX library provides access to several different database implementations through a single interface and therefore has to know which one of the available backend modules it should use for all operations. The backend parameter will be used to perform the lookup of the requested module. It has to be a zero-terminated ASCII string with all characters in in lower case. Currently, these backend modules are available:
- firebird (Firebird/Interbase)
- mssql (MS SQL Server via FreeTDS)
- mysql (MySQL)
- oracle (Oracle 8i/9i/10g)
- pgsql (PostgreSQL)
- sqlite (SQLite v2)
- sqlite3 (SQLite v3)
- sybase (Sybase ASE)
Connecting to a database server requires at least an identifier to know where the database is located. There are several kinds of identifiers like host names, IP addresses, named pipes, etc. which could be used. One of them can be provided via the host parameter and it is up to the native database library what it will accept. Most native libraries accept at least host names and IP addresses and also use the provided port in this case. PostgreSQL supports an absolute path to its Unix domain socket located in the file system too, whereas SQLite needs the path to its database file.
Return value
odbx_init() returns ODBX_ERR_SUCCESS, or an error code whose value is less than zero if one of the operations couldn't be completed successfully. Possible error codes are listed in the error section and they can be used by odbx_error() and odbx_error_type() to get further details.
Errors
- -ODBX_ERR_BACKEND
- Any error returned by the backend
- -ODBX_ERR_PARAM
- "handle" is NULL
- -ODBX_ERR_NOMEM
- Allocating new memory failed
- -ODBX_ERR_TOOLONG
- The length of a string exceeded the buffer size
- -ODBX_ERR_NOTEXIST
- Backend library was not found
- -ODBX_ERR_NOOP
- A function does not exist in the backend
See also
- OpenDBX_capabilities
- OpenDBX_error
- OpenDBX_error_type
- OpenDBX_finish
- OpenDBX_get_option
- OpenDBX_set_option
- OpenDBX_bind
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