&reftitle.setup;
&reftitle.required; The SQLite extension is enabled by default as of PHP 5.0. Beginning with PHP 5.4, the SQLite extension is available only via PECL.
&reftitle.install; Since PHP 5.0 this extension was bundled with PHP. Beginning with PHP 5.4, this extension is available only via PECL. Windows users must enable php_sqlite.dll inside of &php.ini; in order to use these functions. &pecl.windows.download; Windows builds must also enable PDO because as of PHP 5.1.0 it depends on it. So, &php.ini; will end up with something like this: On Linux or Unix operating systems, if you build PDO as a shared extension, you must build SQLite as a shared extension using the --with-sqlite=shared configure option. The PHP 5.0.x series of Windows builds enabled this extension by default, where no DLL file is necessary. SQLite 3 is supported through PDO SQLite. Windows installation for unprivileged accounts On Windows operating systems, unprivileged accounts don't have the TMP environment variable set by default. This will make sqlite create temporary files in the windows directory, which is not desirable. So, you should set the TMP environment variable for the web server or the user account the web server is running under. If Apache is your web server, you can accomplish this via a SetEnv directive in your &httpd.conf; file. For example: If you are unable to establish this setting at the server level, you can implement the setting in your script: ]]> The setting must refer to a directory that the web server has permission to create files in and subsequently write to and delete the files it created. Otherwise, you may receive the following error message: malformed database schema - unable to open a temporary database file for storing temporary tables
&reference.sqlite.ini;
&reftitle.resources; There are two resources used in the SQLite Interface. The first one is the database connection, the second one the result set.