PhoneGap-SQLitePlugin-Android/README.md
2012-05-05 23:31:32 +02:00

9.1 KiB

Cordova/PhoneGap SQLitePlugin

Native interface to sqlite in a Cordova/PhoneGap plugin, working to follow the HTML5 Web SQL API as close as possible. NOTE that the API is now different from https://github.com/davibe/Phonegap-SQLitePlugin.

Created by @joenoon and @davibe

Adapted to Cordova 1.5+ by @coomsie, Cordova 1.6 bugfix by @mineshaftgap

Android version by @marcucio and @chbrody

API changes by @chbrody

Highlights

  • Keeps sqlite database in a known user data location that will be backed up by iCloud on iOS
  • Drop-in replacement for HTML5 SQL API, the only change is window.openDatabase() --> sqlitePlugin.openDatabase()
  • Both Android and iOS versions are designed with batch processing optimizations
  • Future: API to configure the desired database location

Usage

The idea is to emulate the HTML5 SQL API as closely as possible. The only major change is to use window.sqlitePlugin.openDatabase() (or sqlitePlugin.openDatabase()) instead of window.openDatabase(). If you see any other major change please report it, it is probably a bug.

Sample

This is a pretty strong test: first we create a table and add a single entry, then query the count to check if the item was inserted as expected. Note that a new transaction is created in the middle of the first callback.

// Wait for Cordova to load
//
document.addEventListener("deviceready", onDeviceReady, false);

// Cordova is ready
//
function onDeviceReady() {
  var db = window.sqlitePlugin.openDatabase("Database", "1.0", "PhoneGap Demo", 200000);

  db.transaction(function(tx) {
    tx.executeSql('DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test_table');
    tx.executeSql('CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS test_table (id integer primary key, data text, data_num integer)');

    tx.executeSql("INSERT INTO test_table (data, data_num) VALUES (?,?)", ["test", 100], function(tx, res) {
      console.log("insertId: " + res.insertId + " -- probably 1");
      console.log("rowsAffected: " + res.rowsAffected + " -- should be 1");
      db.transaction(function(tx) {
        tx.executeSql("select count(id) as cnt from test_table;", [], function(tx, res) {
          console.log("res.rows.length: " + res.rows.length + " -- should be 1");
          console.log("res.rows.item(0).cnt: " + res.rows.item(0).cnt + " -- should be 1");
        });
      });

    }, function(e) {
      console.log("ERROR: " + e.message);
    });
  });
}

Sample with transaction-level nesting

Android version only: In this case, the same transaction in the first executeSql() callback is being reused to run executeSql() again. This version will only work on the Android version and only if you make the following patch:

diff --git a/Android/assets/www/SQLitePlugin.js b/Android/assets/www/SQLitePlugin.js
index 51761ea..10b7595 100755
--- a/Android/assets/www/SQLitePlugin.js
+++ b/Android/assets/www/SQLitePlugin.js
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@
     this.trans_id = get_unique_id();
     this.__completed = false;
     this.__submitted = false;
-    this.optimization_no_nested_callbacks = true;
+    this.optimization_no_nested_callbacks = false;
     console.log("SQLitePluginTransaction - this.trans_id:" + this.trans_id);
     transaction_queue[this.trans_id] = [];
     transaction_callback_queue[this.trans_id] = new Object();

This case is (currently) not supported by the iOS version

// Wait for Cordova to load
//
document.addEventListener("deviceready", onDeviceReady, false);

// Cordova is ready
//
function onDeviceReady() {
  var db = window.sqlitePlugin.openDatabase("Database", "1.0", "PhoneGap Demo", 200000);

  db.transaction(function(tx) {
    tx.executeSql('DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test_table');
    tx.executeSql('CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS test_table (id integer primary key, data text, data_num integer)');

    tx.executeSql("INSERT INTO test_table (data, data_num) VALUES (?,?)", ["test", 100], function(tx, res) {
      console.log("insertId: " + res.insertId + " -- probably 1");
      console.log("rowsAffected: " + res.rowsAffected + " -- should be 1");

      tx.executeSql("select count(id) as cnt from test_table;", [], function(tx, res) {
        console.log("res.rows.length: " + res.rows.length + " -- should be 1");
        console.log("res.rows.item(0).cnt: " + res.rows.item(0).cnt + " -- should be 1");
      });

    }, function(e) {
      console.log("ERROR: " + e.message);
    });
  });
}

This case will also works with Safari (WebKit), assuming you replace window.sqlitePlugin.openDatabase with window.openDatabase.

Installing

NOTE: There are now the following trees:

  • iOS for Cordova 1.5/1.6 iOS
  • Android: new version by @marcucio, with improvements for batch transaction processing, testing seems OK
  • Lawnchair-adapter: Lawnchair adaptor for both iOS and Android, based on the version from the Lawnchair repository, with the basic Lawnchair test suite in test-www subdirectory
  • test-www: simple testing in index.html using qunit 1.5.0
  • xtra-DroidGap-test: old DroidGap version, no improvements for batch processing, simple version to test some fixes before adding to Android version

SQLite library

In the Project "Build Phases" tab, select the first "Link Binary with Libraries" dropdown menu and add the library libsqlite3.dylib or libsqlite3.0.dylib.

NOTE: In the "Build Phases" there can be multiple "Link Binary with Libraries" dropdown menus. Please select the first one otherwise it will not work.

SQLite Plugin

Drag .h and .m files into your project's Plugins folder (in xcode) -- I always just have "Create references" as the option selected.

Take the precompiled javascript file from build/, or compile the coffeescript file in src/ to javascript WITH the top-level function wrapper option (default).

Use the resulting javascript file in your HTML.

Look for the following to your project's Cordova.plist or PhoneGap.plist:

<key>Plugins</key>
<dict>
  ...
</dict>

Insert this in there:

<key>SQLitePlugin</key>
<string>SQLitePlugin</string>

Unit test(s)

For issue #4, unit testing is done in test-www/index.html. To run the test(s) yourself please copy test-www/index.html along with the test-www/lib subdirectory into the www directory of your iOS or Android Cordova project and make sure you have SQLitePlugin completely installed (JS, Objective-C or Java, and plugin registered).

In case problems I hope the unit tests can help us to reproduce, demonstrate, and verify the solution of these problems.

Extra Usage

iOS

NOTE: This is from an old sample, old API which is hereby deprecated and going away.

var db = sqlitePlugin.openDatabase("my_sqlite_database.sqlite3");

db.executeSql('DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test_table');
db.executeSql('CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS test_table (id integer primary key, data text, data_num integer)');
db.transaction(function(tx) {
  return tx.executeSql("INSERT INTO test_table (data, data_num) VALUES (?,?)", ["test", 100], function(res) {
    console.log("insertId: " + res.insertId + " -- probably 1");
    console.log("rowsAffected: " + res.rowsAffected + " -- should be 1");
    return db.executeSql("select count(id) as cnt from test_table;", [], function(res) {
      console.log("rows.length: " + res.rows.length + " -- should be 1");
      return console.log("rows[0].cnt: " + res.rows[0].cnt + " -- should be 1");
    });
  }, function(e) {
    return console.log("ERROR: " + e.message);
  });
});

Lawnchair Adapter Usage

Common adapter

Please look at the Lawnchair-adapter tree that contains a common adapter, working for both Android and iOS, along with a test-www directory.

Included files

Include the following js files in your html:

  • lawnchair.js (you provide)
  • SQLitePlugin.js
  • Lawnchair-sqlitePlugin.js (must come after SQLitePlugin.js)

Sample

The name option will determine the sqlite filename. Optionally, you can change it using the db option.

In this example, you would be using/creating the database at: Documents/kvstore.sqlite3 (all db's in SQLitePlugin are in the Documents folder)

kvstore = new Lawnchair { name: "kvstore", adapter: SQLitePlugin.lawnchair_adapter }, () ->
  # do stuff

Using the db option you can create multiple stores in one sqlite file. (There will be one table per store.)

recipes = new Lawnchair {db: "cookbook", name: "recipes", ...}
ingredients = new Lawnchair {db: "cookbook", name: "ingredients", ...}

Extra notes

Other notes from @Joenoon - iOS batching:

I played with the idea of batching responses into larger sets of writeJavascript on a timer, however there was only a barely noticeable performance gain. So I took it out, not worth it. However there is a massive performance gain by batching on the client-side to minimize PhoneGap.exec calls using the transaction support.