How can I change an SQLite database from read-only to read-write?
When I executed the update statement, I always got:
SQL error: attempt to write a readonly database
The SQLite file is a writeable file on the filesystem.
How can I change an SQLite database from read-only to read-write?
When I executed the update statement, I always got:
SQL error: attempt to write a readonly database
The SQLite file is a writeable file on the filesystem.
There can be several reasons for this error message:
Several processes have the database open at the same time (see the FAQ).
There is a plugin to compress and encrypt the database. It doesn't allow to modify the DB.
Lastly, another FAQ says: "Make sure that the directory containing the database file is also writable to the user executing the CGI script." I think this is because the engine needs to create more files in the directory.
The whole filesystem might be read only, for example after a crash.
On Unix systems, another process can replace the whole file.
If using Android.
Make sure you have added the permission to write to your EXTERNAL_STORAGE
to your AndroidManifest.xml
.
Add this line to your AndroidManifest.xml
file above and outside your <application>
tag.
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE"/>
This will allow your application to write to the sdcard. This will help if your EXTERNAL_STORAGE
is where you have stored your database on the device.
I solved this by changing owner from root to me on all files on /db dir.
Just do ls -l
on that folder, if any of the filer is owned by root
just change it to you, using: sudo chown user file
I had this problem today, too.
It was caused by ActiveSync on Windows Mobile - the folder I was working in was synced so the AS process grabbed the DB file from time to time causing this error.
In Linux command shell, I did:
chmod 777 <db_folder>
Where contains the database file.
It works. Now I can access my database and make insert queries.
This error usually happens when your database is accessed by one application already, and you're trying to access it with another database.
On Linux, give read/write permissions to the entire folder containing the database file.
Also, SELinux might be blocking the write. You need to set the correct permissions.
In my SELinux Management GUI (on Fedora 19), I checked the box on the line labelled httpd_unified (Unify HTTPD handling of all content files), and I was good to go.
To share personal experience I encountered with this error that eventually fix both. Might not necessarily be related to your issue but it appears this error is so generic that it can be attributed to gazillion things.
Database instance open in another application. My DB appeared to have been in a "locked" state so it transition to read only mode. I was able to track it down by stopping the a 2nd instance of the application sharing the DB.
Directory tree permission - please be sure to ensure user account has permission not just at the file level but at the entire upper directory level all the way to / level.
Thanks
From the command line, enter the folder where your database file is located and execute the following command:
chmod 777 databasefilename
This will grant all permissions to all users.
On Windows:
tl;dr: Try opening the file again.
Our system was suffering this problem, and it definitely wasn't a permissions issue, since the program itself would be able to open the database as writable from many threads most of the time, but occasionally (only on Windows, not on OSX), a thread would get these errors even though all the other threads in the program were having no difficulties.
We eventually discovered that the threads that were failing were only those that were trying to open the database immediately after another thread had closed it (within 3 ms). We speculated that the problem was due to the fact that Windows (or the sqlite implementation under windows) doesn't always immediately clean up up file resources upon closing of a file. We got around this by running a test write query against the db upon opening (e.g., creating then dropping a table with a silly name). If the create/drop failed, we waited for 50 ms and tried again, repeating until we succeeded or 5 seconds elapsed.
It worked; apparently there just needed to be enough time for the resources to flush out to disk.
In the project path Terminal django_project#
sudo chown django:django *
(this error message is typically misleading, and is usually a general permissions error)
On Windows
Edit the DB: I was having problems editing the db. I ended up having to
sudo chown 'non root username' ts3server.sqlitedb
as long as it wasn't root, i could edit the file. Username is the username of my non root account.
Auto start TeamSpeak: as your non root account
crontab -e
@reboot /path to ts3server/ aka /home/ts3server/ts3server_startscript.sh start
On Ubuntu, change the owner to the Apache group and grant the right permissions (no, it's not 777):
sudo chgrp www-data <path to db.sqlite3>
sudo chmod 664 <path to db.sqlite3>
Update
You can set the permissions for group and user as well.
sudo chown www-data:www-data <path to db.sqlite3>