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I'd like to open the chromium site data (in ~/.config/chromium/Default) with python-sqlite3 but it gets locked whenever chromium is running, which is understandable since transactions may be made. Is there a way to open it in read-only mode, ensuring that I can't corrupt the integrity of the db while chromium is using it?

3 Answers 3

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It seems we can bypass the lock by opening the database in immutable mode, e.g.:

sqlite3 'file:places.sqlite?immutable=1'

As explained here https://www.sqlite.org/c3ref/open.html

This can cause querying errors if the underlying database file changes, or obviously not seeing updates that are made to the file, but I found that re-opening the connection on each new query helps with that.

To achieve the same thing with most SQLite drivers, because we can't directly set SQLITE_IOCAP_IMMUTABLE, the best way is to open the connection with the flag SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY | SQLITE_OPEN_URI to allow passing the file:...?immutable=1 URI as filename.

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  • Nice! echo "SELECT ..." | sqlite3 'file:///home/my_user/.mozilla/firefox/12wh3gmq.work/cookies.sqlite?immutable=1' worked for me! Other ways of sqllite3 -readonly ... or sqlite3 ...?mode=ro were not helping. Also sqlite3 'file://~/.mozilla/firefox/12wh3gmq.work/cookies.sqlite?immutable=1' is not working.
    – jhutar
    Oct 27, 2021 at 9:19
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I believe it depends on the lock set by the transaction.

https://www.sqlite.org/lockingv3.html#shared_lock
https://www.sqlite.org/lang_transaction.html

SQLite exclusive transactions lock both read and write where immediate and deferred transactions will still allow readers.

So it really depends on the transactions used by Chromium.

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Chromium is holding a database lock for long periods of time? Yuck! That's really not a very good idea at all. Still, not your fault…

You could try just copying the database file (e.g., with the system utility cp) and using that snapshot for reading purposes; SQLite keeps all its committed state in a single file per database. Yes, there's a chance of seeing a partial transaction, but you will definitely not have lock problems on Unix as SQLite definitely doesn't use mandatory locks. (This might well not work on Windows due to the different locking scheme there.)

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    It's not necessarily chromium's fault. Snooping around, I found this helpful message that pointed out that the pysqlite library doesn't provide an interface to all of sqlite's features because it's DB-API compliant. So it could be that when I open the db with pysqlite, I'm doing so without say in read-write mode. He pointed to APSW to use the SQLITE_OPEN_READONLY flag when starting a connection. I'll check it out now.
    – ladaghini
    Oct 22, 2011 at 6:56
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    This is the workaround I used, because I got lost in like 15 browser tabs trying to figure out the "correct" solution for concurrent access to Firefox's places.sqlite. It's the same deal with Firefox, same error message. Just alter your program to work on a copy and enjoy more of your life, without worrying about PRAGMA main.journal_mode=WALs and SQLITE_OPEN_READONLYs and poring over the C API documentation, only to find out you can't do this or that with Python's sqlite3 library.
    – Kevin E
    Jun 21, 2019 at 22:40

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