In my application, I use SQLiteOpenHelper class and it has insertOrThrow method. I want to learn that will this method close my connection before throw an exception? And it is written on definition of method that "the row ID of the newly inserted row, or -1 if an error occurred "
When throw an exception how it has a return value? Something is wrong. Explanation or throw ?
This is how I use InsertOrThrow.
I want to know when I declare throws Exception to my method, is it necessary to use try-catch (If I don't have any special thing to do in catch like my exp.)?
public long insert(ContentValues cv) throws Exception {
try
{
long rowId = getWritableDatabase().insertOrThrow(_tableName, null, cv);
return rowId;
}
catch (Exception ex) {
throw ex;
}
finally{
Close();
}
}
It depends; if this.Close() can throw an exception, then it still needs to be declared as being thrown, or caught. Often times this is wrapped up in a small utility method.
It's not mandatory to use a catch, you can simply try/finally.
Regarding return values: methods that exit due to an exception don't have a return value.
Exceptions should encapsulate enough information to either:
allow the caller to do something useful with the exception, e.g., retry the operation, or
assist the developer in understanding the problem and lead him/her to a resolution.
I'd encourage you to follow standard Java naming conventions to avoid confusing readers of your code: non-final variables should begin with a lower-case letter. Method names should also begin with lower-case letters.
Also, you do not need to preface methods (or variables) with this when there is no need to disambiguate the property you're accessing.
When throw an exception how it has a return value? Something is wrong.
Yes, you're right. The documentation seems wrong.
insertOrThrow doesn't return -1 , instead, it will throw SQLException if the query failed. There's a another method called insert which would return -1 if the query failed, and newly created rowID if success.
Related
I've read the greendao documentation and didn't find any clue about a way to be warned if, for some reason, an update fails for an entity...
the update(T entity) neither returns anything nor throws any error...
so is there any way to know if the update process has failed?
thank you.
If the update doesn't work you are getting a SQLException. Since SQLException extends [RuntimeException][2] it doesn't have to be handled and thus doesn't have to be declared withthrows`.
The only reasons for updatefailure I can think of at the moment:
The primary key in your update-object is empty.
The primary key of your update-object isn't found in your db.
The update violates some constraints (i.e. unique).
The database or filesystem is corrupted.
So normally, if you are sure you won't violate constraints and if you are careful with primary key your updates won't fail.
If you are not sure you can surround your update with try-catch-block.
try {
myEntityDao.update(myObj);
} catch (SQLException ex) {
// handle the failure here
}
I'm getting an NullPointerException when I insert values into to my SQLite table on Android and I don't understand why. I'm testing ContentValues and the database instance for null.
This is the insertion code:
public void insertOrIgnore(ContentValues values) {
SQLiteDatabase db = this.dbHelper.getWritableDatabase();
try {
//I added these null value checks to stop NPE, but doesn't help.
if (values != null && db != null) {
db.insertWithOnConflict(TABLE, null, values, SQLiteDatabase.CONFLICT_IGNORE);
}
} catch (SQLiteException e) {
} finally {
if (db != null) {
db.close();
}
}
}
where
public static final String TABLE = "albums";
Most of the time this code works with the data added to the database as expected. However, it sometimes and rarely generates the below error. The stack trace is from ACRA and I have not been able to isolate under what conditions this error occurs. I'm looking for pointers as to why this happens and what the conditions are. My knowledge of SQLite is beginner level.
java.lang.NullPointerException
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteStatement.releaseAndUnlock(SQLiteStatement.java:290)
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteStatement.executeUpdateDelete(SQLiteStatement.java:96)
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase.executeSql(SQLiteDatabase.java:2025)
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase.execSQL(SQLiteDatabase.java:1965)
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase.beginTransaction(SQLiteDatabase.java:690)
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase.beginTransactionNonExclusive(SQLiteDatabase.java:605)
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteStatement.acquireAndLock(SQLiteStatement.java:247)
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteStatement.executeInsert(SQLiteStatement.java:112)
at android.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase.insertWithOnConflict(SQLiteDatabase.java:1844)
at com.mydomain.myapp.albums.AlbumsData.insertOrIgnore(AlbumsData.java:89)
Line 89 is the db.insertWithOnConflict(...) call shown above.
I'm not looking for an answer with complete code necessarily but rather a pointer and explanation as to what's going wrong so I can begin to fix it myself.
EDIT:
The stack trace shows the NPE originates from line 290 of SQLiteStatement (v 4.03):
setNativeHandle(mDatabase.mNativeHandle);
So it seems the database instance is null. How can it become null during a transaction when I tested for null at the beginning of the transaction?
As mentioned here SQLiteDatabase close() function causing NullPointerException when multiple threads
The reason for your bug could be that you close the database at some point. Probably concurrently while the task that fails was not finished.
I've followed the stacktrace a bit and this is what roughly happens:
AlbumsData.insertOrIgnore(AlbumsData.java:89)
You call insertWithOnConflict, which builds the resulting sql string ("INSERT OR IGNORE INTO...") then wraps that together with the values from your ContentValues into a SQLiteStatement.
SQLiteDatabase.insertWithOnConflict(SQLiteDatabase.java:1844) - The resulting statement is to be executed now
SQLiteStatement.executeInsert(SQLiteStatement.java:112) - before the actual insert can happen, the database needs to acquire a lock.
SQLiteStatement.acquireAndLock(SQLiteStatement.java:247) - some checks happen here, the database object is as far as I can see not null at that point. Code decides that it has to start a transaction. The database object itself is as far as I can see not locked at that point.
SQLiteDatabase.beginTransactionNonExclusive(SQLiteDatabase.java:605) - just forwarding
SQLiteDatabase.beginTransaction(SQLiteDatabase.java:690) - after some checks (not sure if database has to exist here) it will try to execute execSQL("BEGIN IMMEDIATE;")
SQLiteDatabase.execSQL(SQLiteDatabase.java:1965) - just forward
SQLiteDatabase.executeSql(SQLiteDatabase.java:2025) - builds another SQLiteStatement out of "BEGIN IMMEDIATE;. This one should be executed now
SQLiteStatement.executeUpdateDelete(SQLiteStatement.java:96) - starts with checking the database lock, this seems to be okay and the database should not be null here. The statement is then executed and finally the database is to be unlocked again.
SQLiteStatement.releaseAndUnlock(SQLiteStatement.java:290) - cleans up some stuff and in the end fails with NPE because the database is null.
Line numbers don't match so there are probably vendor modifications / additions in that code.
As you can see, the code crashes before actually using the data you supplied. It was about to do
BEGIN TRANSACTION IMMEDIATE; -- crash
INSERT INTO table (...) VALUES (...);
-- (end transaction)
That makes it in my opinion a framework bug. The database object that is internally handled there should not be able to be null somewhere down the line, especially when it seems that it was not null further up in the stack.
I also think that it is possible that another hidden exception could be the root cause for this. There are a lot of try { /* do stuff */ } finally { /* clean up */ } blocks within the code and the finally part will be executed even if the try part throws an exception. Now the finally block could cause another exception and the result is AFAIK that the original exception is replaced by the new exception from the finally block.
Especially executeUpdateDelete() is like
try {
acquireAndLock(WRITE);
// actual statement execution
} finally {
releaseAndUnlock();
}
if the database is closed at that point, acquireAndLock or any code in the try part could fail and that could leave the database object at null which causes releaseAndUnlock to fail again. You should get the same stacktrace.
Apart from that, don't do empty catch blocks like catch (SQLiteException e) { /* empty */ }. Log them with ACRA if possible / you don't do that already.
This NPE appears to be from a custom ROM as the Android source code is pointing to different Methods than the ones you receive in the LogCat. What I do for such cases is that: if the rate of these exceptions is very rare, I ignore them as it is difficult to know what custom ROM is running on the phone and more difficult to get the source code of this custom ROM to know where the problem is.
Not many users are using custom ROMs, so if you extensively tested your App on different phones with different SDKs and the rate of the Exceptions you get is not that significant, you can ignore them. Otherwise, you can take a shoot in the dark and speculate what can be in this custom ROM that is causing NPE (personally, I think it is not worth the effort).
I am looking at how to handle exceptions in Android.
In the update() function in the sample code for the Notepad Content Provider, it calls getWriteableDatabase(), which can potentially throw an SQLiteException.
I notice that the NoteEditor Activity saveNote() function has the following code:
// Commit all of our changes to persistent storage. When the update completes
// the content provider will notify the cursor of the change, which will
// cause the UI to be updated.
try {
getContentResolver().update(mUri, values, null, null);
} catch (NullPointerException e) {
Log.e(TAG, e.getMessage());
}
What happens if an SQLiteException occurs?. I want to be able to catch this exception in the Activity and display an appropriate message to the user (via a toast or something similar).
I thought I could do by adding an extra catch for SQLiteException. However, I read the following info in the Google docs:
"Remember that the Android system must be able to communicate the Exception across process boundaries. Android can do this for the following exceptions that may be useful in >handling query errors:
IllegalArgumentException (You may choose to throw this if your provider receives an >invalid content URI)
NullPointerException"
So I am now confused - can I catch the SQLiteException or not?
Whenever possible, you should catch the Exception in the class or component in which the Exception occurred. Use some sort of broadcast mechanism or return value semantics to report errors across processes.
It's admittedly a tricky situation. Some people say that if an SQLite (or other Exception) occurs in a ContentProvider, the provider should propagate the exception upwards instead of returning null in the Cursor. However, this generally won't work across processes! On the other hand, returning null doesn't give you a lot of information.
A limited set of Exceptions do traverse process boundaries, but SQLiteException isn't among them - still they might be useful/appropriate.
Can someone tell me, why this code:
Boolean done = db.delete(ACCOUNTS_TABLE, KEY_ROWID, getIds(accounts)) > 0;
return this exception?
05-08 10:09:36.074: E/AndroidRuntime(1955): java.lang.NullPointerException
function return array of strings, so everything should be OK
Solution
before delete a called close() on db
But now it return this exception:
android.database.sqlite.SQLiteBindOrColumnIndexOutOfRangeException: bind or column index out of range: handle 0x1eef920
If that is indeed the problematic line referred to in the exception, it's almost certainly because db is a null reference, or possibly because getIds throws the exception.
It's a little difficult to tell without more information but, as a start, I'd be putting in something to dump the db variable out, either beforehaned or as part of an try/catch block around the call.
i have a try/catch in a function that returns a value. if all goes well the return statement in the try block works fine. but what am i supposed to do if theres an exception? what do i return in the catch and finally blocks? the return statement has to be there or the code doesnt compile.
edit: in 1 function i connect to a URL, read a file, and return a string. in another function i open an image from the internet and return a bitmap. so in both of these cases, what am i supposed to have in the return statement at the catch and finally blocks?
One of the following:
Return a special value that indicates an error to the calling code.
Return a default value (depending on your context, there may not be a good one).
Don't catch the exception, instead add a throws to the header.
Catch the exception, do the cleanup, and rethrow the exception.
In general, there's no escaping the fact that the function can error out. The calling code must either be notified of that, or the function must effectively swallow an error and pretend nothing bad happened; that involves returning something. The specifics depend on your context...
The value you return should be able to represent an error, for example, null should mean the function didn't work. So, in the catch block, the function would return null, for example. In the finally block, you should free any resource you used (for example, close any files you opened, etc).
You put those things in the finally block because it's guaranteed that it will be ran sometime, even if the code in your catch block throws an unhandled exception or anything. And it will also run if the function worked just as wanted.
Use return null; this statement outside your try/catch block. If the things work, your try block will execute and will return , if it fails because of exception, it will be caught and you will see error.