Viewing file: txn_checkpoint.html (3.79 KB) -rw-r--r-- Select action/file-type: (+) | (+) | (+) | Code (+) | Session (+) | (+) | SDB (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) |
Berkeley DB: txn_checkpoint
txn_checkpoint
|

|
#include <db.h>
int
txn_checkpoint(const DB_ENV *env,
u_int32_t kbyte, u_int32_t min, u_int32_t flags);
Description
The txn_checkpoint function flushes the underlying memory pool,
writes a checkpoint record to the log, and then flushes the log.
If either kbyte or min is non-zero, the checkpoint is
done only if there has been activity since the last checkpoint, and
either more than min minutes have passed since the last
checkpoint or if more than kbyte kilobytes of log data have been
written since the last checkpoint.
The flags value must be set to 0 or
the following value:
- DB_FORCE
- Force a checkpoint record, even if there has been no activity since the
last checkpoint.
The txn_checkpoint function returns a non-zero error value on failure, 0 on success, and returns DB_INCOMPLETE if there were pages that needed to be
written to complete the checkpoint but that memp_sync was unable
to write immediately.
The txn_checkpoint function is the underlying function used by the db_checkpoint utility.
See the db_checkpoint utility source code for an example of using txn_checkpoint
in a IEEE/ANSI Std 1003.1 (POSIX) environment.
Errors
The txn_checkpoint function may fail and return a non-zero error for the following conditions:
- EINVAL
- An invalid flag value or parameter was specified.
The txn_checkpoint function may fail and return a non-zero error for errors specified for other Berkeley DB and C library or system functions.
If a catastrophic error has occurred, the txn_checkpoint function may fail and return
DB_RUNRECOVERY, in which case all subsequent Berkeley DB calls will fail
in the same way.
See Also
DB_ENV->set_tx_max,
DB_ENV->set_tx_recover,
DB_ENV->set_tx_timestamp,
txn_abort,
txn_begin,
txn_checkpoint,
txn_commit,
txn_discard,
txn_id,
txn_prepare,
txn_recover,
and
txn_stat.
Copyright Sleepycat Software
|