PHP 8.4.0 RC4 available for testing

SQLite3::busyTimeout

(PHP 5 >= 5.3.3, PHP 7, PHP 8)

SQLite3::busyTimeoutEstablecer el gestor de conexión ocupado

Descripción

public SQLite3::busyTimeout(int $msecs): bool

Establece un gestor ocupado que estará dormido hasta que la base de datos no esté bloqueada o se alcance el tiempo de espera.

Parámetros

msecs

Los milisegundos a dormir. Establecer este valor a un valor menor o igual a cero desactivará un gestor de tiempo de espera ya establecido.

Valores devueltos

Devuelve true en caso de éxito,false en case de fallo.

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User Contributed Notes 3 notes

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10
ppryor63 at gmail dot com
10 years ago
The busyTimeout() method and related API sqlite3_busy_timeout() is a connection level attribute and affects whole connection and should be set once after opening connection. Do not set to zero or you will encounter "Database is busy" error message when calling query, querySingle, prepare, or execute methods. Also ensure that sqlite3 library is compiled with HAVE_USLEEP defined, otherwise busyTimeout() can only time out in seconds. It is very highly recommended to call busyTimeout() with non-zero timeout for reliability in concurrent environment.
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3
dkarnout at gmail dot com
9 years ago
For SQLite2 (http://php.net/manual/en/function.sqlite-busy-timeout.php), PHP sets the default busy timeout to be 60 seconds when the database is opened.
However, this does not happen for v3 and it has to be done manually.

My personal experience is that the default value of SQLite3, which is 0, is not enough when you have to do consecutive read/write commits and the file has not been accessed for long time.
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1
anthony at domps dot fr
3 years ago
It's possible to use PRAGMA to set busyTimeout (milliseconds) :

<?php

$db
= new SQLite3('my.db');
$db->exec("PRAGMA busy_timeout=5000");

?>
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