#include <db_cxx.h> int DbEnv::remove(const char *db_home, u_int32_t flags);
The DbEnv::remove()
method destroys a Berkeley DB environment if it
is not currently in use. The environment regions, including any
backing files, are removed. Any log or database files and the
environment directory are not removed.
If there are processes that have called
DbEnv::open()
without calling
DbEnv::close()
(that
is, there are processes currently using the environment),
DbEnv::remove()
will fail without further action unless the
DB_FORCE flag is set,
in which case DbEnv::remove()
will attempt to remove the
environment, regardless of any processes still using it.
The result of attempting to forcibly destroy the environment when it is in use is unspecified. Processes using an environment often maintain open file descriptors for shared regions within it. On UNIX systems, the environment removal will usually succeed, and processes that have already joined the region will continue to run in that region without change. However, processes attempting to join the environment will either fail or create new regions. On other systems in which the unlink(2) system call will fail if any process has an open file descriptor for the file (for example Windows/NT), the region removal will fail.
Calling DbEnv::remove()
should not be necessary for most
applications because the Berkeley DB environment is cleaned up as part
of normal database recovery procedures. However, applications may want
to call DbEnv::remove()
as part of application shut down to free up
system resources. For example, if the
DB_SYSTEM_MEM flag
was specified to
DbEnv::open()
,
it may be useful to call DbEnv::remove()
in order to release system shared memory
segments that have been allocated. Or, on architectures in which
mutexes require allocation of underlying system resources, it may be
useful to call DbEnv::remove()
in order to release those resources.
Alternatively, if recovery is not required because no database state
is maintained across failures, and no system resources need to be
released, it is possible to clean up an environment by simply removing
all the Berkeley DB files in the database environment's directories.
In multithreaded applications, only a single thread may call the
DbEnv::remove()
method.
A DbEnv handle that has
already been used to open an environment should not be used to call
the DbEnv::remove()
method; a new DbEnv
handle should be created for that purpose.
After DbEnv::remove()
has been called, regardless of its return, the
Berkeley DB environment handle may not be accessed again.
The DbEnv::remove()
method either returns a non-zero error value or throws an
exception that encapsulates a non-zero error value on
failure, and returns 0 on success.
The db_home parameter names the database environment to be removed.
When using a Unicode build on Windows (the default), the db_home argument will be interpreted as a UTF-8 string, which is equivalent to ASCII for Latin characters.
The flags parameter must be set to 0 or by bitwise inclusively OR'ing together one or more of the following values:
If set, the environment is removed, regardless of any processes that may still using it, and no locks are acquired during this process. (Generally, this flag is specified only when applications were unable to shut down cleanly, and there is a risk that an application may have died holding a Berkeley DB lock.)
The Berkeley DB process' environment may be permitted to specify information to
be used when naming files; see
Berkeley DB File Naming.
Because permitting users to specify which files are used can create security
problems, environment information will be used in file naming for all users
only if the DB_USE_ENVIRON
flag is set.
The Berkeley DB process' environment may be permitted to specify information to
be used when naming files; see
Berkeley DB File Naming.
Because permitting users to specify which files are used can create security
problems, if the DB_USE_ENVIRON_ROOT
flag is set, environment
information will be used in file naming only for users with appropriate
permissions (for example, users with a user-ID of 0 on UNIX
systems).
The DbEnv::remove()
method may fail and throw a DbException
exception, encapsulating one of the following non-zero errors, or return one
of the following non-zero errors: