/*- * See the file LICENSE for redistribution information. * * Copyright (c) 2000, 2012 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * * $Id$ */ /* * Do some regression tests for constructors. * Run normally (without arguments) it is a simple regression test. * Run with a numeric argument, it repeats the regression a number * of times, to try to determine if there are memory leaks. */ #include #include using namespace std; int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { try { Db *db = new Db(NULL, 0); db->open(NULL, "my.db", NULL, DB_BTREE, DB_CREATE, 0644); // populate our massive database. // all our strings include null for convenience. // Note we have to cast for idiomatic // usage, since newer gcc requires it. Dbt *keydbt = new Dbt((char*)"key", 4); Dbt *datadbt = new Dbt((char*)"data", 5); db->put(NULL, keydbt, datadbt, 0); // Now, retrieve. We could use keydbt over again, // but that wouldn't be typical in an application. Dbt *goodkeydbt = new Dbt((char*)"key", 4); Dbt *badkeydbt = new Dbt((char*)"badkey", 7); Dbt *resultdbt = new Dbt(); resultdbt->set_flags(DB_DBT_MALLOC); int ret; if ((ret = db->get(NULL, goodkeydbt, resultdbt, 0)) != 0) { cout << "get: " << DbEnv::strerror(ret) << "\n"; } else { char *result = (char *)resultdbt->get_data(); cout << "got data: " << result << "\n"; } if ((ret = db->get(NULL, badkeydbt, resultdbt, 0)) != 0) { // We expect this... cout << "get using bad key: " << DbEnv::strerror(ret) << "\n"; } else { char *result = (char *)resultdbt->get_data(); cout << "*** got data using bad key!!: " << result << "\n"; } // Now, truncate and make sure that it's really gone. cout << "truncating data...\n"; u_int32_t nrecords; db->truncate(NULL, &nrecords, 0); cout << "truncate returns " << nrecords << "\n"; if ((ret = db->get(NULL, goodkeydbt, resultdbt, 0)) != 0) { // We expect this... cout << "after truncate get: " << DbEnv::strerror(ret) << "\n"; } else { char *result = (char *)resultdbt->get_data(); cout << "got data: " << result << "\n"; } db->close(0); cout << "finished test\n"; } catch (DbException &dbe) { cerr << "Db Exception: " << dbe.what(); } return 0; }