| SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC(3) | Library Functions Manual | SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC(3) |
SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC,
SQLITE_DIRECTONLY,
SQLITE_SUBTYPE,
SQLITE_INNOCUOUS,
SQLITE_RESULT_SUBTYPE —
function flags
#include
<sqlite3.h>
#define SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC
#define SQLITE_DIRECTONLY
#define SQLITE_SUBTYPE
#define SQLITE_INNOCUOUS
#define SQLITE_RESULT_SUBTYPE
These constants may be ORed together with the preferred text
encoding as the fourth argument to
sqlite3_create_function(),
sqlite3_create_function16(),
or
sqlite3_create_function_v2().
The SQLITE_DIRECTONLY flag is recommended for any application-defined SQL function that has side-effects or that could potentially leak sensitive information. This will prevent attacks in which an application is tricked into using a database file that has had its schema surreptitiously modified to invoke the application-defined function in ways that are harmful.
Some people say it is good practice to set SQLITE_DIRECTONLY on all application-defined SQL functions, regardless of whether or not they are security sensitive, as doing so prevents those functions from being used inside of the database schema, and thus ensures that the database can be inspected and modified using generic tools (such as the CLI) that do not have access to the application-defined functions.
SQLITE_INNOCUOUS is similar to SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC, but is not exactly the same. The random() function is an example of a function that is innocuous but not deterministic.
Some heightened security settings (SQLITE_DBCONFIG_TRUSTED_SCHEMA and PRAGMA trusted_schema=OFF) disable the use of SQL functions inside views and triggers and in schema structures such as CHECK constraints, DEFAULT clauses, expression indexes, partial indexes, and generated columns unless the function is tagged with SQLITE_INNOCUOUS. Most built-in functions are innocuous. Developers are advised to avoid using the SQLITE_INNOCUOUS flag for application-defined functions unless the function has been carefully audited and found to be free of potentially security-adverse side-effects and information-leaks.
sqlite3_value_subtype()
to inspect the sub-types of its arguments. This flag instructs SQLite to
omit some corner-case optimizations that might disrupt the operation of
the sqlite3_value_subtype() function, causing it
to return zero rather than the correct subtype(). SQL functions that
invokes sqlite3_value_subtype() should have this
property. If the SQLITE_SUBTYPE property is omitted, then the return value
from sqlite3_value_subtype() might sometimes be
zero even though a non-zero subtype was specified by the function argument
expression.sqlite3_result_subtype()
to cause a sub-type to be associated with its result. Every function that
invokes sqlite3_result_subtype() should have this
property. If it does not, then the call to
sqlite3_result_subtype() might become a no-op if
the function is used as term in an expression index. On the other hand,
SQL functions that never invoke
sqlite3_result_subtype() should avoid setting this
property, as the purpose of this property is to disable certain
optimizations that are incompatible with subtypes.These declarations were extracted from the interface documentation at line 5513.
#define SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC 0x000000800 #define SQLITE_DIRECTONLY 0x000080000 #define SQLITE_SUBTYPE 0x000100000 #define SQLITE_INNOCUOUS 0x000200000 #define SQLITE_RESULT_SUBTYPE 0x001000000
sqlite3_create_function(3), sqlite3_result_subtype(3), sqlite3_value_subtype(3), SQLITE_DBCONFIG_MAINDBNAME(3), SQLITE_UTF8(3)
| January 24, 2024 | NetBSD 11.0 |