rse e21733baa5 Fix ticket #2439: the FTS1 and FTS2 extensions use the non-standard,
unportable and highly deprecated <malloc.h> header on all platforms
except Apple Mac OS X. The <malloc.h> actually is never required on
any OS with an at least partly POSIX-conforming API as the malloc(3) &
friends functions officially live in <stdlib.h> since over 10 years.
Under some platform like FreeBSD the inclusion of <malloc.h> since a few
years even causes an "#error" and this way a build failure. So, just get
rid of the bad <malloc.h> usage in FTS1 and FTS2 extensions at all and
stick with <stdlib.h> there only. (CVS 4191)

FossilOrigin-Name: 3f9a666143a8aafa0b1a5d56ec68f69f2b3d6a21
2007-07-30 18:55:36 +00:00

This directory contains source code to 

    SQLite: An Embeddable SQL Database Engine

To compile the project, first create a directory in which to place
the build products.  It is recommended, but not required, that the
build directory be separate from the source directory.  Cd into the
build directory and then from the build directory run the configure
script found at the root of the source tree.  Then run "make".

For example:

    tar xzf sqlite.tar.gz    ;#  Unpack the source tree into "sqlite"
    mkdir bld                ;#  Build will occur in a sibling directory
    cd bld                   ;#  Change to the build directory
    ../sqlite/configure      ;#  Run the configure script
    make                     ;#  Run the makefile.
    make install             ;#  (Optional) Install the build products

The configure script uses autoconf 2.50 and libtool.  If the configure
script does not work out for you, there is a generic makefile named
"Makefile.linux-gcc" in the top directory of the source tree that you
can copy and edit to suite your needs.  Comments on the generic makefile
show what changes are needed.

The linux binaries on the website are created using the generic makefile,
not the configure script.  The configure script is unmaintained.  (You
can volunteer to take over maintenance of the configure script, if you want!)
The windows binaries on the website are created using MinGW32 configured
as a cross-compiler running under Linux.  For details, see the ./publish.sh
script at the top-level of the source tree.

Contacts:

   http://www.sqlite.org/
Description
No description provided
Readme 416 MiB
Languages
C 81.2%
Tcl 6.4%
JavaScript 5.1%
Java 2.7%
Makefile 1.5%
Other 3%