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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-04-03 20:13:55 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 2000-04-03 20:13:55 (GMT) |
commit | 38e5d27caee56b6958e0034e342abb48e6100390 (patch) | |
tree | 6a0c853da853123dd2e628e8ec187517250c2530 /Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex | |
parent | 659ebfa79e891fc5e2480cd66c157970df57c451 (diff) | |
download | cpython-38e5d27caee56b6958e0034e342abb48e6100390.zip cpython-38e5d27caee56b6958e0034e342abb48e6100390.tar.gz cpython-38e5d27caee56b6958e0034e342abb48e6100390.tar.bz2 |
Merged changes from the 1.5.2p2 release.
(Very rough.)
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex | 92 |
1 files changed, 52 insertions, 40 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex b/Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex index cd0dc07..6a27a3b 100644 --- a/Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex +++ b/Doc/lib/libbsddb.tex @@ -7,59 +7,71 @@ \sectionauthor{Skip Montanaro}{skip@mojam.com} -The \module{bsddb} module provides an interface to the Berkeley DB library. -Users can create hash, btree or record based library files using the -appropriate open call. Bsddb objects behave generally like dictionaries. -Keys and values must be strings, however, so to use other objects as keys or -to store other kinds of objects the user must serialize them somehow, -typically using marshal.dumps or pickle.dumps. - -The \module{bsddb} module is only available on \UNIX{} systems, so it is not -built by default in the standard Python distribution. Also, there are two -incompatible versions of the underlying library. Version 1.85 is widely -available, but has some known bugs. Version 2 is not quite as widely used, -but does offer some improvements. The \module{bsddb} module uses the 1.85 -interface. Users wishing to use version 2 of the Berkeley DB library will -have to modify the source for the module to include db_185.h instead of -db.h. +The \module{bsddb} module provides an interface to the Berkeley DB +library. Users can create hash, btree or record based library files +using the appropriate open call. Bsddb objects behave generally like +dictionaries. Keys and values must be strings, however, so to use +other objects as keys or to store other kinds of objects the user must +serialize them somehow, typically using marshal.dumps or pickle.dumps. + +The \module{bsddb} module is only available on \UNIX{} systems, so it +is not built by default in the standard Python distribution. Also, +there are two incompatible versions of the underlying library. +Version 1.85 is widely available, but has some known bugs. Version 2 +is not quite as widely used, but does offer some improvements. The +\module{bsddb} module uses the 1.85 interface. Users wishing to use +version 2 of the Berkeley DB library will have to modify the source +for the module to include \file{db_185.h} instead of +\file{db.h} (\file{db_185.h} contains the version 1.85 compatibility +interface). The \module{bsddb} module defines the following functions that create -objects that access the appropriate type of Berkeley DB file. The first two -arguments of each function are the same. For ease of portability, only the -first two arguments should be used in most instances. +objects that access the appropriate type of Berkeley DB file. The +first two arguments of each function are the same. For ease of +portability, only the first two arguments should be used in most +instances. \begin{funcdesc}{hashopen}{filename\optional{, flag\optional{, -mode\optional{, bsize\optional{, ffactor\optional{, nelem\optional{, -cachesize\optional{, hash\optional{, lorder}}}}}}}}} -Open the hash format file named \var{filename}. The optional \var{flag} -identifies the mode used to open the file. It may be ``r'' (read only), -``w'' (read-write), ``c'' (read-write - create if necessary) or ``n'' -(read-write - truncate to zero length). The other arguments are rarely used -and are just passed to the low-level dbopen function. Consult the -Berkeley DB documentation for their use and interpretation. + mode\optional{, bsize\optional{, + ffactor\optional{, nelem\optional{, + cachesize\optional{, hash\optional{, + lorder}}}}}}}}} +Open the hash format file named \var{filename}. The optional +\var{flag} identifies the mode used to open the file. It may be +\character{r} (read only), \character{w} (read-write), +\character{c} (read-write - create if necessary) or +\character{n} (read-write - truncate to zero length). The other +arguments are rarely used and are just passed to the low-level +\cfunction{dbopen()} function. Consult the Berkeley DB documentation +for their use and interpretation. \end{funcdesc} - \begin{funcdesc}{btopen}{filename\optional{, flag\optional{, mode\optional{, btflags\optional{, cachesize\optional{, maxkeypage\optional{, minkeypage\optional{, psize\optional{, lorder}}}}}}}}} -Open the btree format file named \var{filename}. The optional \var{flag} -identifies the mode used to open the file. It may be ``r'' (read only), -``w'' (read-write), ``c'' (read-write - create if necessary) or ``n'' -(read-write - truncate to zero length). The other arguments are rarely used -and are just passed to the low-level dbopen function. Consult the -Berkeley DB documentation for their use and interpretation. + +Open the btree format file named \var{filename}. The optional +\var{flag} identifies the mode used to open the file. It may be +\character{r} (read only), \character{w} (read-write), +\character{c} (read-write - create if necessary) or +\character{n} (read-write - truncate to zero length). The other +arguments are rarely used and are just passed to the low-level dbopen +function. Consult the Berkeley DB documentation for their use and +interpretation. \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{rnopen}{filename\optional{, flag\optional{, mode\optional{, rnflags\optional{, cachesize\optional{, psize\optional{, lorder\optional{, reclen\optional{, bval\optional{, bfname}}}}}}}}}} -Open a DB record format file named \var{filename}. The optional \var{flag} -identifies the mode used to open the file. It may be ``r'' (read only), -``w'' (read-write), ``c'' (read-write - create if necessary) or ``n'' -(read-write - truncate to zero length). The other arguments are rarely used -and are just passed to the low-level dbopen function. Consult the -Berkeley DB documentation for their use and interpretation. + +Open a DB record format file named \var{filename}. The optional +\var{flag} identifies the mode used to open the file. It may be +\character{r} (read only), \character{w} (read-write), +\character{c} (read-write - create if necessary) or +\character{n} (read-write - truncate to zero length). The other +arguments are rarely used and are just passed to the low-level dbopen +function. Consult the Berkeley DB documentation for their use and +interpretation. \end{funcdesc} @@ -86,7 +98,7 @@ list returned is different for different file formats. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{has_key}{key} -Return 1 if the DB file contains the argument as a key. +Return \code{1} if the DB file contains the argument as a key. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{set_location}{key} |