In general, you will not modify a secondary database directly. In order to modify a secondary database, you should modify the primary database and simply allow DB to manage the secondary modifications for you.
However, as a convenience, you can delete
SecondaryDatabase
records directly. Doing so causes the associated primary key/data pair to be deleted.
This in turn causes DB to delete all
SecondaryDatabase
records that reference the primary record.
You can use the
SecondaryDatabase.delete()
method to delete a secondary database record.
Note that if your
SecondaryDatabase
contains duplicate records, then deleting a record from the set of
duplicates causes all of the duplicates to be deleted as well.
SecondaryDatabase.delete()
causes the
previously described delete operations to occur
only if the primary database is opened for write access.
For example:
package db.GettingStarted; import com.sleepycat.db.DatabaseEntry; import com.sleepycat.db.DatabaseException; import com.sleepycat.db.OperationStatus; import com.sleepycat.db.SecondaryDatabase; ... try { SecondaryDatabase mySecondaryDatabase = null; // Omitting all database opens ... String searchName = "John Doe"; DatabaseEntry searchKey = new DatabaseEntry(searchName.getBytes("UTF-8")); // Delete the first secondary record that uses "John Doe" as // a key. This causes the primary record referenced by this secondary // record to be deleted. OperationStatus retVal = mySecondaryDatabase.delete(null, searchKey); } catch (Exception e) { // Exception handling goes here }