####################################################################### # # # Please, DO NOT TOUCH this file as well as the innodb.result file. # # These files are to be modified ONLY BY INNOBASE guys. # # # # Use innodb_mysql.[test|result] files instead. # # # # If nevertheless you need to make some changes here, please, forward # # your commit message # # To: innodb_dev_ww@oracle.com # # Cc: dev-innodb@mysql.com # # (otherwise your changes may be erased). # # # ####################################################################### -- source include/have_innodb.inc -- source include/have_innodb_16k.inc let $MYSQLD_DATADIR= `select @@datadir`; let collation=utf8_unicode_ci; --source include/have_collation.inc set optimizer_switch = 'mrr=on,mrr_sort_keys=on,index_condition_pushdown=on'; # Save the original values of some variables in order to be able to # estimate how much they have changed during the tests. Previously this # test assumed that e.g. rows_deleted is 0 here and after deleting 23 # rows it expected that rows_deleted will be 23. Now we do not make # assumptions about the values of the variables at the beginning, e.g. # rows_deleted should be 23 + "rows_deleted before the test". This allows # the test to be run multiple times without restarting the mysqld server. # See Bug#43309 Test main.innodb can't be run twice -- disable_query_log SET @innodb_thread_concurrency_orig = @@innodb_thread_concurrency; SET @innodb_rows_deleted_orig = (SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_rows_deleted'); SET @innodb_rows_inserted_orig = (SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_rows_inserted'); SET @innodb_rows_updated_orig = (SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_rows_updated'); SET @innodb_row_lock_waits_orig = (SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_waits'); SET @innodb_row_lock_current_waits_orig = (SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_current_waits'); SET @innodb_row_lock_time_orig = (SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_time'); SET @innodb_row_lock_time_max_orig = (SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_time_max'); SET @innodb_row_lock_time_avg_orig = (SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_time_avg'); -- enable_query_log --disable_warnings drop table if exists t1,t2,t3,t4; drop database if exists mysqltest; --enable_warnings # Bug#58912 InnoDB unnecessarily avoids update-in-place on column prefixes CREATE TABLE bug58912 (a BLOB, b TEXT, PRIMARY KEY(a(1))) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO bug58912 VALUES(REPEAT('a',8000),REPEAT('b',8000)); UPDATE bug58912 SET a=REPEAT('a',7999); # The above statements used to trigger a failure during purge when # Bug#55284 was fixed while Bug#58912 was not. Defer the DROP TABLE, # so that purge gets a chance to run (and a double free of the # off-page column can be detected, if one is to occur.) # # Small basic test with ignore # create table t1 (id int unsigned not null auto_increment, code tinyint unsigned not null, name char(20) not null, primary key (id), key (code), unique (name)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 (code, name) values (1, 'Tim'), (1, 'Monty'), (2, 'David'), (2, 'Erik'), (3, 'Sasha'), (3, 'Jeremy'), (4, 'Matt'); select id, code, name from t1 order by id; update ignore t1 set id = 8, name = 'Sinisa' where id < 3; select id, code, name from t1 order by id; update ignore t1 set id = id + 10, name = 'Ralph' where id < 4; select id, code, name from t1 order by id; drop table t1; # # A bit bigger test # The 'replace_column' statements are needed because the cardinality calculated # by innodb is not always the same between runs # CREATE TABLE t1 ( id int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment, parent_id int(11) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, level tinyint(4) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id), KEY parent_id (parent_id), KEY level (level) ) engine=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,0,0),(3,1,1),(4,1,1),(8,2,2),(9,2,2),(17,3,2),(22,4,2),(24,4,2),(28,5,2),(29,5,2),(30,5,2),(31,6,2),(32,6,2),(33,6,2),(203,7,2),(202,7,2),(20,3,2),(157,0,0),(193,5,2),(40,7,2),(2,1,1),(15,2,2),(6,1,1),(34,6,2),(35,6,2),(16,3,2),(7,1,1),(36,7,2),(18,3,2),(26,5,2),(27,5,2),(183,4,2),(38,7,2),(25,5,2),(37,7,2),(21,4,2),(19,3,2),(5,1,1),(179,5,2); update t1 set parent_id=parent_id+100; select * from t1 where parent_id=102; update t1 set id=id+1000; -- error ER_DUP_ENTRY,1022 update t1 set id=1024 where id=1009; select * from t1; update ignore t1 set id=id+1; # This will change all rows select * from t1; update ignore t1 set id=1023 where id=1010; select * from t1 where parent_id=102; --replace_column 9 # explain select level from t1 where level=1; --replace_column 9 # explain select level,id from t1 where level=1; --replace_column 9 # explain select level,id,parent_id from t1 where level=1; select level,id from t1 where level=1; select level,id,parent_id from t1 where level=1; optimize table t1; --replace_column 7 # show keys from t1; drop table t1; # # Test replace # CREATE TABLE t1 ( gesuchnr int(11) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, benutzer_id int(11) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (gesuchnr,benutzer_id) ) engine=innodb; replace into t1 (gesuchnr,benutzer_id) values (2,1); replace into t1 (gesuchnr,benutzer_id) values (1,1); replace into t1 (gesuchnr,benutzer_id) values (1,1); select * from t1; drop table t1; # # test delete using hidden_primary_key # create table t1 (a int) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (1), (2); optimize table t1; delete from t1 where a = 1; select * from t1; check table t1; drop table t1; create table t1 (a int,b varchar(20)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (1,""), (2,"testing"); delete from t1 where a = 1; select * from t1; create index skr on t1 (a); insert into t1 values (3,""), (4,"testing"); analyze table t1; --replace_column 7 # show keys from t1; drop table t1; # Test of reading on secondary key with may be null create table t1 (a int,b varchar(20),key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (1,""), (2,"testing"); select * from t1 where a = 1; drop table t1; # # Test rollback # create table t1 (n int not null primary key) engine=innodb; set autocommit=0; insert into t1 values (4); rollback; select n, "after rollback" from t1; insert into t1 values (4); commit; select n, "after commit" from t1; commit; insert into t1 values (5); -- error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t1 values (4); commit; select n, "after commit" from t1; set autocommit=1; insert into t1 values (6); -- error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t1 values (4); select n from t1; set autocommit=0; # # savepoints # begin; savepoint `my_savepoint`; insert into t1 values (7); savepoint `savept2`; insert into t1 values (3); select n from t1; savepoint savept3; rollback to savepoint savept2; --error 1305 rollback to savepoint savept3; rollback to savepoint savept2; release savepoint `my_savepoint`; select n from t1; -- error 1305 rollback to savepoint `my_savepoint`; --error 1305 rollback to savepoint savept2; insert into t1 values (8); savepoint sv; commit; savepoint sv; set autocommit=1; # nop rollback; drop table t1; # # Test for commit and FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK # create table t1 (n int not null primary key) engine=innodb; start transaction; insert into t1 values (4); flush tables with read lock; # # Current code can't handle a read lock in middle of transaction #--error 1223; commit; unlock tables; commit; select * from t1; drop table t1; # # Testing transactions # create table t1 ( id int NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, nom varchar(64)) engine=innodb; begin; insert into t1 values(1,'hamdouni'); select id as afterbegin_id,nom as afterbegin_nom from t1; rollback; select id as afterrollback_id,nom as afterrollback_nom from t1; set autocommit=0; insert into t1 values(2,'mysql'); select id as afterautocommit0_id,nom as afterautocommit0_nom from t1; rollback; select id as afterrollback_id,nom as afterrollback_nom from t1; set autocommit=1; drop table t1; # # Simple not autocommit test # CREATE TABLE t1 (id char(8) not null primary key, val int not null) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values ('pippo', 12); -- error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t1 values ('pippo', 12); # Gives error delete from t1; delete from t1 where id = 'pippo'; select * from t1; insert into t1 values ('pippo', 12); set autocommit=0; delete from t1; rollback; select * from t1; delete from t1; commit; select * from t1; drop table t1; # # Test of active transactions # create table t1 (a integer) engine=innodb; start transaction; rename table t1 to t2; create table t1 (b integer) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (1); rollback; drop table t1; rename table t2 to t1; drop table t1; set autocommit=1; # # The following simple tests failed at some point # CREATE TABLE t1 (ID INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, NAME VARCHAR(64)) ENGINE=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 'Jochen'); select * from t1; drop table t1; CREATE TABLE t1 ( _userid VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=innodb; set autocommit=0; INSERT INTO t1 SET _userid='marc@anyware.co.uk'; COMMIT; SELECT * FROM t1; SELECT _userid FROM t1 WHERE _userid='marc@anyware.co.uk'; drop table t1; set autocommit=1; # # Test when reading on part of unique key # CREATE TABLE t1 ( user_id int(10) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, name varchar(100), phone varchar(100), ref_email varchar(100) DEFAULT '' NOT NULL, detail varchar(200), PRIMARY KEY (user_id,ref_email) )engine=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (10292,'sanjeev','29153373','sansh777@hotmail.com','xxx'),(10292,'shirish','2333604','shirish@yahoo.com','ddsds'),(10292,'sonali','323232','sonali@bolly.com','filmstar'); select * from t1 where user_id=10292; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (10291,'sanjeev','29153373','sansh777@hotmail.com','xxx'),(10293,'shirish','2333604','shirish@yahoo.com','ddsds'); select * from t1 where user_id=10292; select * from t1 where user_id>=10292; select * from t1 where user_id>10292; select * from t1 where user_id<10292; drop table t1; # # Test that keys are created in right order # CREATE TABLE t1 (a int not null, b int not null,c int not null, key(a),primary key(a,b), unique(c),key(a),unique(b)); --replace_column 7 # show index from t1; drop table t1; # # Test of ALTER TABLE and innodb tables # create table t1 (col1 int not null, col2 char(4) not null, primary key(col1)); alter table t1 engine=innodb; insert into t1 values ('1','1'),('5','2'),('2','3'),('3','4'),('4','4'); select * from t1; update t1 set col2='7' where col1='4'; select * from t1; alter table t1 add co3 int not null; select * from t1; update t1 set col2='9' where col1='2'; select * from t1; drop table t1; # # INSERT INTO innodb tables # create table t1 (a int not null , b int, primary key (a)) engine = innodb; create table t2 (a int not null , b int, primary key (a)) engine = myisam; insert into t1 VALUES (1,3) , (2,3), (3,3); select * from t1; insert into t2 select * from t1; select * from t2; delete from t1 where b = 3; select * from t1; insert into t1 select * from t2; select * from t1; select * from t2; drop table t1,t2; # # ORDER BY on not primary key # CREATE TABLE t1 ( user_name varchar(12), password text, subscribed char(1), user_id int(11) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, quota bigint(20), weight double, access_date date, access_time time, approved datetime, dummy_primary_key int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment, PRIMARY KEY (dummy_primary_key) ) ENGINE=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('user_0','somepassword','N',0,0,0,'2000-09-07','23:06:59','2000-09-07 23:06:59',1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('user_1','somepassword','Y',1,1,1,'2000-09-07','23:06:59','2000-09-07 23:06:59',2); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('user_2','somepassword','N',2,2,1.4142135623731,'2000-09-07','23:06:59','2000-09-07 23:06:59',3); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('user_3','somepassword','Y',3,3,1.7320508075689,'2000-09-07','23:06:59','2000-09-07 23:06:59',4); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('user_4','somepassword','N',4,4,2,'2000-09-07','23:06:59','2000-09-07 23:06:59',5); select user_name, password , subscribed, user_id, quota, weight, access_date, access_time, approved, dummy_primary_key from t1 order by user_name; drop table t1; # # Testing of tables without primary keys # CREATE TABLE t1 ( id int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment, parent_id int(11) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, level tinyint(4) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, KEY (id), KEY parent_id (parent_id), KEY level (level) ) engine=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,0,0),(3,1,1),(4,1,1),(8,2,2),(9,2,2),(17,3,2),(22,4,2),(24,4,2),(28,5,2),(29,5,2),(30,5,2),(31,6,2),(32,6,2),(33,6,2),(203,7,2),(202,7,2),(20,3,2),(157,0,0),(193,5,2),(40,7,2),(2,1,1),(15,2,2),(6,1,1),(34,6,2),(35,6,2),(16,3,2),(7,1,1),(36,7,2),(18,3,2),(26,5,2),(27,5,2),(183,4,2),(38,7,2),(25,5,2),(37,7,2),(21,4,2),(19,3,2),(5,1,1); INSERT INTO t1 values (179,5,2); update t1 set parent_id=parent_id+100; select * from t1 where parent_id=102; update t1 set id=id+1000; update t1 set id=1024 where id=1009; select * from t1; update ignore t1 set id=id+1; # This will change all rows select * from t1; update ignore t1 set id=1023 where id=1010; select * from t1 where parent_id=102; --replace_column 9 # explain select level from t1 where level=1; select level,id from t1 where level=1; select level,id,parent_id from t1 where level=1; select level,id from t1 where level=1 order by id; delete from t1 where level=1; select * from t1; drop table t1; # # Test of index only reads # CREATE TABLE t1 ( sca_code char(6) NOT NULL, cat_code char(6) NOT NULL, sca_desc varchar(50), lan_code char(2) NOT NULL, sca_pic varchar(100), sca_sdesc varchar(50), sca_sch_desc varchar(16), PRIMARY KEY (sca_code, cat_code, lan_code), INDEX sca_pic (sca_pic) ) engine = innodb ; INSERT INTO t1 ( sca_code, cat_code, sca_desc, lan_code, sca_pic, sca_sdesc, sca_sch_desc) VALUES ( 'PD', 'J', 'PENDANT', 'EN', NULL, NULL, 'PENDANT'),( 'RI', 'J', 'RING', 'EN', NULL, NULL, 'RING'),( 'QQ', 'N', 'RING', 'EN', 'not null', NULL, 'RING'); select count(*) from t1 where sca_code = 'PD'; select count(*) from t1 where sca_code <= 'PD'; select count(*) from t1 where sca_pic is null; alter table t1 drop index sca_pic, add index sca_pic (cat_code, sca_pic); select count(*) from t1 where sca_code='PD' and sca_pic is null; select count(*) from t1 where cat_code='E'; alter table t1 drop index sca_pic, add index (sca_pic, cat_code); select count(*) from t1 where sca_code='PD' and sca_pic is null; select count(*) from t1 where sca_pic >= 'n'; select sca_pic from t1 where sca_pic is null; update t1 set sca_pic="test" where sca_pic is null; delete from t1 where sca_code='pd'; drop table t1; # # Test of opening table twice and timestamps # set @a:=now(); CREATE TABLE t1 (a int not null, b timestamp not null default current_timestamp on update current_timestamp, primary key (a)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 (a) values(1),(2),(3); select t1.a from t1 natural join t1 as t2 where t1.b >= @a order by t1.a; select a from t1 natural join t1 as t2 where b >= @a order by a; update t1 set a=5 where a=1; select a from t1; drop table t1; # # Test with variable length primary key # create table t1 (a varchar(100) not null, primary key(a), b int not null) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values("hello",1),("world",2); select * from t1 order by b desc; optimize table t1; --replace_column 7 # show keys from t1; drop table t1; # # Test of create index with NULL columns # create table t1 (i int, j int ) ENGINE=innodb; insert into t1 values (1,2); select * from t1 where i=1 and j=2; create index ax1 on t1 (i,j); select * from t1 where i=1 and j=2; drop table t1; # # Test min-max optimization # CREATE TABLE t1 ( a int3 unsigned NOT NULL, b int1 unsigned NOT NULL, UNIQUE (a, b) ) ENGINE = innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 1); SELECT MIN(B),MAX(b) FROM t1 WHERE t1.a = 1; drop table t1; # # Test INSERT DELAYED # CREATE TABLE t1 (a int unsigned NOT NULL) engine=innodb; # Can't test this in 3.23 # INSERT DELAYED INTO t1 VALUES (1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1); SELECT * FROM t1; DROP TABLE t1; # # Crash when using many tables (Test case by Jeremy D Zawodny) # create table t1 (a int primary key,b int, c int, d int, e int, f int, g int, h int, i int, j int, k int, l int, m int, n int, o int, p int, q int, r int, s int, t int, u int, v int, w int, x int, y int, z int, a1 int, a2 int, a3 int, a4 int, a5 int, a6 int, a7 int, a8 int, a9 int, b1 int, b2 int, b3 int, b4 int, b5 int, b6 int) engine = innodb; insert into t1 values (1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1); --replace_column 9 # --replace_result "Using where" "Using index condition" explain select * from t1 where a > 0 and a < 50; drop table t1; # # Test lock tables # create table t1 (id int NOT NULL,id2 int NOT NULL,id3 int NOT NULL,dummy1 char(30),primary key (id,id2),index index_id3 (id3)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (0,0,0,'ABCDEFGHIJ'),(2,2,2,'BCDEFGHIJK'),(1,1,1,'CDEFGHIJKL'); LOCK TABLES t1 WRITE; --error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t1 values (99,1,2,'D'),(1,1,2,'D'); select id from t1; select id from t1; UNLOCK TABLES; DROP TABLE t1; create table t1 (id int NOT NULL,id2 int NOT NULL,id3 int NOT NULL,dummy1 char(30),primary key (id,id2),index index_id3 (id3)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (0,0,0,'ABCDEFGHIJ'),(2,2,2,'BCDEFGHIJK'),(1,1,1,'CDEFGHIJKL'); LOCK TABLES t1 WRITE; begin; --error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t1 values (99,1,2,'D'),(1,1,2,'D'); select id from t1; insert ignore into t1 values (100,1,2,'D'),(1,1,99,'D'); commit; select id,id3 from t1; UNLOCK TABLES; DROP TABLE t1; # # Test prefix key # create table t1 (a char(20), unique (a(5))) engine=innodb; drop table t1; create table t1 (a char(20), index (a(5))) engine=innodb; show create table t1; drop table t1; # # Test using temporary table and auto_increment # create temporary table t1 (a int not null auto_increment, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (NULL),(NULL),(NULL); delete from t1 where a=3; insert into t1 values (NULL); select * from t1; alter table t1 add b int; select * from t1; drop table t1; #Slashdot bug create table t1 ( id int auto_increment primary key, name varchar(32) not null, value text not null, uid int not null, unique key(name,uid) ) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (1,'one','one value',101), (2,'two','two value',102),(3,'three','three value',103); set insert_id=5; replace into t1 (value,name,uid) values ('other value','two',102); delete from t1 where uid=102; set insert_id=5; replace into t1 (value,name,uid) values ('other value','two',102); set insert_id=6; replace into t1 (value,name,uid) values ('other value','two',102); select * from t1; drop table t1; # # Test DROP DATABASE # create database mysqltest; create table mysqltest.t1 (a int not null) engine= innodb; insert into mysqltest.t1 values(1); create table mysqltest.t2 (a int not null) engine= myisam; insert into mysqltest.t2 values(1); create table mysqltest.t3 (a int not null) engine= heap; insert into mysqltest.t3 values(1); commit; drop database mysqltest; # Don't check error message --error 1049 show tables from mysqltest; # # Test truncate table with and without auto_commit # set autocommit=0; create table t1 (a int not null) engine= innodb; insert into t1 values(1),(2); truncate table t1; commit; truncate table t1; truncate table t1; select * from t1; insert into t1 values(1),(2); delete from t1; select * from t1; commit; drop table t1; set autocommit=1; create table t1 (a int not null) engine= innodb; insert into t1 values(1),(2); truncate table t1; insert into t1 values(1),(2); select * from t1; truncate table t1; insert into t1 values(1),(2); delete from t1; select * from t1; drop table t1; # # Test of how ORDER BY works when doing it on the whole table # create table t1 (a int not null, b int not null, c int not null, primary key (a),key(b)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (3,3,3),(1,1,1),(2,2,2),(4,4,4); --replace_column 9 # explain select * from t1 order by a; --replace_column 9 # explain select * from t1 order by b; --replace_column 9 # explain select * from t1 order by c; --replace_column 9 # explain select a from t1 order by a; --replace_column 9 # explain select b from t1 order by b; --replace_column 9 # explain select a,b from t1 order by b; --replace_column 9 # explain select a,b from t1; --replace_column 9 # explain select a,b,c from t1; drop table t1; # # Check describe # create table t1 (t int not null default 1, key (t)) engine=innodb; desc t1; drop table t1; # # Test of multi-table-delete # CREATE TABLE t1 ( number bigint(20) NOT NULL default '0', cname char(15) NOT NULL default '', carrier_id smallint(6) NOT NULL default '0', privacy tinyint(4) NOT NULL default '0', last_mod_date timestamp NOT NULL, last_mod_id smallint(6) NOT NULL default '0', last_app_date timestamp NOT NULL, last_app_id smallint(6) default '-1', version smallint(6) NOT NULL default '0', assigned_scps int(11) default '0', status tinyint(4) default '0' ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (4077711111,'SeanWheeler',90,2,20020111112846,500,00000000000000,-1,2,3,1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (9197722223,'berry',90,3,20020111112809,500,20020102114532,501,4,10,0); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (650,'San Francisco',0,0,20011227111336,342,00000000000000,-1,1,24,1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (302467,'Sue\'s Subshop',90,3,20020109113241,500,20020102115111,501,7,24,0); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (6014911113,'SudzCarwash',520,1,20020102115234,500,20020102115259,501,33,32768,0); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (333,'tubs',99,2,20020109113440,501,20020109113440,500,3,10,0); CREATE TABLE t2 ( number bigint(20) NOT NULL default '0', cname char(15) NOT NULL default '', carrier_id smallint(6) NOT NULL default '0', privacy tinyint(4) NOT NULL default '0', last_mod_date timestamp NOT NULL, last_mod_id smallint(6) NOT NULL default '0', last_app_date timestamp NOT NULL, last_app_id smallint(6) default '-1', version smallint(6) NOT NULL default '0', assigned_scps int(11) default '0', status tinyint(4) default '0' ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (4077711111,'SeanWheeler',0,2,20020111112853,500,00000000000000,-1,2,3,1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (9197722223,'berry',90,3,20020111112818,500,20020102114532,501,4,10,0); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (650,'San Francisco',90,0,20020109113158,342,00000000000000,-1,1,24,1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (333,'tubs',99,2,20020109113453,501,20020109113453,500,3,10,0); select * from t1; select * from t2; delete t1, t2 from t1 left join t2 on t1.number=t2.number where (t1.carrier_id=90 and t1.number=t2.number) or (t2.carrier_id=90 and t1.number=t2.number) or (t1.carrier_id=90 and t2.number is null); select * from t1; select * from t2; select * from t2; drop table t1,t2; # # A simple test with some isolation levels # TODO: Make this into a test using replication to really test how # this works. # create table t1 (id int unsigned not null auto_increment, code tinyint unsigned not null, name char(20) not null, primary key (id), key (code), unique (name)) engine=innodb; BEGIN; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE; SELECT @@tx_isolation,@@global.tx_isolation; insert into t1 (code, name) values (1, 'Tim'), (1, 'Monty'), (2, 'David'); select id, code, name from t1 order by id; COMMIT; BEGIN; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL REPEATABLE READ; insert into t1 (code, name) values (2, 'Erik'), (3, 'Sasha'); select id, code, name from t1 order by id; COMMIT; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; BEGIN; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ UNCOMMITTED; insert into t1 (code, name) values (3, 'Jeremy'), (4, 'Matt'); select id, code, name from t1 order by id; COMMIT; DROP TABLE t1; # # Test of multi-table-update # create table t1 (n int(10), d int(10)) engine=innodb; create table t2 (n int(10), d int(10)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(1,1),(1,2); insert into t2 values(1,10),(2,20); UPDATE t1,t2 SET t1.d=t2.d,t2.d=30 WHERE t1.n=t2.n; select * from t1; select * from t2; drop table t1,t2; # # Bug #29136 erred multi-delete on trans table does not rollback # # prepare --disable_warnings drop table if exists t1, t2; --enable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1 (a int, PRIMARY KEY (a)); CREATE TABLE t2 (a int, PRIMARY KEY (a)) ENGINE=InnoDB; create trigger trg_del_t2 after delete on t2 for each row insert into t1 values (1); insert into t1 values (1); insert into t2 values (1),(2); # exec cases A, B - see multi_update.test # A. send_error() w/o send_eof() branch --error ER_DUP_ENTRY delete t2 from t2; # check select count(*) from t2 /* must be 2 as restored after rollback caused by the error */; # cleanup bug#29136 drop table t1, t2; # # Bug #29136 erred multi-delete on trans table does not rollback # # prepare --disable_warnings drop table if exists t1, t2; --enable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1 (a int, PRIMARY KEY (a)); CREATE TABLE t2 (a int, PRIMARY KEY (a)) ENGINE=InnoDB; create trigger trg_del_t2 after delete on t2 for each row insert into t1 values (1); insert into t1 values (1); insert into t2 values (1),(2); # exec cases A, B - see multi_update.test # A. send_error() w/o send_eof() branch --error ER_DUP_ENTRY delete t2 from t2; # check select count(*) from t2 /* must be 2 as restored after rollback caused by the error */; # cleanup bug#29136 drop table t1, t2; # # Testing of IFNULL # create table t1 (a int, b int) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(20,null); select t2.b, ifnull(t2.b,"this is null") from t1 as t2 left join t1 as t3 on t2.b=t3.a; select t2.b, ifnull(t2.b,"this is null") from t1 as t2 left join t1 as t3 on t2.b=t3.a order by 1; insert into t1 values(10,null); select t2.b, ifnull(t2.b,"this is null") from t1 as t2 left join t1 as t3 on t2.b=t3.a order by 1; drop table t1; # # Test of read_through not existing const_table # create table t1 (a varchar(10) not null) engine=myisam; create table t2 (b varchar(10) not null unique) engine=innodb; select t1.a from t1,t2 where t1.a=t2.b; drop table t1,t2; create table t1 (a int not null, b int, primary key (a)) engine = innodb; create table t2 (a int not null, b int, primary key (a)) engine = innodb; insert into t1 values (10, 20); insert into t2 values (10, 20); update t1, t2 set t1.b = 150, t2.b = t1.b where t2.a = t1.a and t1.a = 10; drop table t1,t2; # # Test of multi-table-delete with foreign key constraints # CREATE TABLE t1 (id INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id)) ENGINE=INNODB; CREATE TABLE t2 (id INT PRIMARY KEY, t1_id INT, INDEX par_ind (t1_id), FOREIGN KEY (t1_id) REFERENCES t1(id) ON DELETE CASCADE ) ENGINE=INNODB; insert into t1 set id=1; insert into t2 set id=1, t1_id=1; delete t1,t2 from t1,t2 where t1.id=t2.t1_id; select * from t1; select * from t2; drop table t2,t1; CREATE TABLE t1(id INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id)) ENGINE=INNODB; CREATE TABLE t2(id INT PRIMARY KEY, t1_id INT, INDEX par_ind (t1_id) ) ENGINE=INNODB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(1, 1); SELECT * from t1; UPDATE t1,t2 SET t1.id=t1.id+1, t2.t1_id=t1.id+1; SELECT * from t1; UPDATE t1,t2 SET t1.id=t1.id+1 where t1.id!=t2.id; SELECT * from t1; DROP TABLE t1,t2; # # Test of range_optimizer # set autocommit=0; CREATE TABLE t1 (id CHAR(15) NOT NULL, value CHAR(40) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(id)) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 (id CHAR(15) NOT NULL, value CHAR(40) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(id)) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t3 (id1 CHAR(15) NOT NULL, id2 CHAR(15) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(id1, id2)) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t3 VALUES("my-test-1", "my-test-2"); COMMIT; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES("this-key", "will disappear"); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES("this-key", "will also disappear"); DELETE FROM t3 WHERE id1="my-test-1"; SELECT * FROM t1; SELECT * FROM t2; SELECT * FROM t3; ROLLBACK; SELECT * FROM t1; SELECT * FROM t2; SELECT * FROM t3; SELECT * FROM t3 WHERE id1="my-test-1" LOCK IN SHARE MODE; COMMIT; set autocommit=1; DROP TABLE t1,t2,t3; # # Check update with conflicting key # CREATE TABLE t1 (a int not null primary key, b int not null, unique (b)) engine=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 values (1,1),(2,2),(3,3),(4,4),(5,5),(6,6),(7,7),(8,8),(9,9); # We need the a < 1000 test here to quard against the halloween problems UPDATE t1 set a=a+100 where b between 2 and 3 and a < 1000; SELECT * from t1; drop table t1; CREATE TABLE t2 ( NEXT_T BIGINT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=MyISAM; CREATE TABLE t1 ( B_ID INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB; SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; INSERT INTO t1 ( B_ID ) VALUES ( 1 ); INSERT INTO t2 ( NEXT_T ) VALUES ( 1 ); ROLLBACK; SELECT * FROM t1; drop table t1,t2; create table t1 ( pk int primary key, parent int not null, child int not null, index (parent) ) engine = innodb; insert into t1 values (1,0,4), (2,1,3), (3,2,1), (4,1,2); select distinct parent,child from t1 order by parent; drop table t1; # # Test that MySQL priorities clustered indexes # create table t1 (a int not null auto_increment primary key, b int, c int, key(c)) engine=innodb; create table t2 (a int not null auto_increment primary key, b int); insert into t1 (b) values (null),(null),(null),(null),(null),(null),(null); insert into t2 (a) select b from t1; insert into t1 (b) select b from t2; insert into t2 (a) select b from t1; insert into t1 (a) select b from t2; insert into t2 (a) select b from t1; insert into t1 (a) select b from t2; insert into t2 (a) select b from t1; insert into t1 (a) select b from t2; insert into t2 (a) select b from t1; insert into t1 (a) select b from t2; select count(*) from t1; --replace_column 9 # 10 # explain select * from t1 where c between 1 and 2500; update t1 set c=a; --replace_column 9 # 10 # explain select * from t1 where c between 1 and 2500; drop table t1,t2; # # Test of UPDATE ... ORDER BY # create table t1 (id int primary key auto_increment, fk int, index index_fk (fk)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 (id) values (null),(null),(null),(null),(null); update t1 set fk=69 where fk is null order by id limit 1; SELECT * from t1; drop table t1; create table t1 (a int not null, b int not null, key (a)); insert into t1 values (1,1),(1,2),(1,3),(3,1),(3,2),(3,3),(3,1),(3,2),(3,3),(2,1),(2,2),(2,3); SET @tmp=0; update t1 set b=(@tmp:=@tmp+1) order by a; update t1 set b=99 where a=1 order by b asc limit 1; update t1 set b=100 where a=1 order by b desc limit 2; update t1 set a=a+10+b where a=1 order by b; select * from t1 order by a,b; drop table t1; # # Test of multi-table-updates (bug #1980). # create table t1 ( c char(8) not null ) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values ('0'),('1'),('2'),('3'),('4'),('5'),('6'),('7'),('8'),('9'); insert into t1 values ('A'),('B'),('C'),('D'),('E'),('F'); alter table t1 add b char(8) not null; alter table t1 add a char(8) not null; alter table t1 add primary key (a,b,c); update t1 set a=c, b=c; create table t2 (c char(8) not null, b char(8) not null, a char(8) not null, primary key(a,b,c)) engine=innodb; insert into t2 select * from t1; delete t1,t2 from t2,t1 where t1.a<'B' and t2.b=t1.b; drop table t1,t2; # # test autoincrement with TRUNCATE # SET AUTOCOMMIT=1; create table t1 (a integer auto_increment primary key) engine=innodb; insert into t1 (a) values (NULL),(NULL); truncate table t1; insert into t1 (a) values (NULL),(NULL); SELECT * from t1; drop table t1; # # Test dictionary handling with spaceand quoting # CREATE TABLE t1 (`id 1` INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`id 1`)) ENGINE=INNODB; CREATE TABLE t2 (id INT PRIMARY KEY, t1_id INT, INDEX par_ind (t1_id), FOREIGN KEY (`t1_id`) REFERENCES `t1`(`id 1`) ON DELETE CASCADE ) ENGINE=INNODB; #show create table t2; drop table t2,t1; # # Test of multi updated and foreign keys # create table `t1` (`id` int( 11 ) not null ,primary key ( `id` )) engine = innodb; insert into `t1`values ( 1 ) ; create table `t2` (`id` int( 11 ) not null default '0',unique key `id` ( `id` ) ,constraint `t1_id_fk` foreign key ( `id` ) references `t1` (`id` )) engine = innodb; insert into `t2`values ( 1 ) ; create table `t3` (`id` int( 11 ) not null default '0',key `id` ( `id` ) ,constraint `t2_id_fk` foreign key ( `id` ) references `t2` (`id` )) engine = innodb; insert into `t3`values ( 1 ) ; --error ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED_2 delete t3,t2,t1 from t1,t2,t3 where t1.id =1 and t2.id = t1.id and t3.id = t2.id; --error ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED_2 update t1,t2,t3 set t3.id=5, t2.id=6, t1.id=7 where t1.id =1 and t2.id = t1.id and t3.id = t2.id; --error ER_BAD_FIELD_ERROR update t3 set t3.id=7 where t1.id =1 and t2.id = t1.id and t3.id = t2.id; drop table t3,t2,t1; # test ON UPDATE CASCADE CREATE TABLE t1 ( c1 VARCHAR(8), c2 VARCHAR(8), PRIMARY KEY (c1, c2) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 ( c0 INT PRIMARY KEY, c1 VARCHAR(8) UNIQUE, FOREIGN KEY (c1) REFERENCES t1 (c1) ON UPDATE CASCADE ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('old', 'somevalu'), ('other', 'anyvalue'); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (10, 'old'), (20, 'other'); --error ER_FOREIGN_DUPLICATE_KEY_WITH_CHILD_INFO UPDATE t1 SET c1 = 'other' WHERE c1 = 'old'; DROP TABLE t2,t1; # # test for recursion depth limit # create table t1( id int primary key, pid int, index(pid), foreign key(pid) references t1(id) on delete cascade) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(0,0),(1,0),(2,1),(3,2),(4,3),(5,4),(6,5),(7,6), (8,7),(9,8),(10,9),(11,10),(12,11),(13,12),(14,13),(15,14); -- error 1451 delete from t1 where id=0; delete from t1 where id=15; delete from t1 where id=0; drop table t1; # # Test timestamps # CREATE TABLE t1 (col1 int(1))ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 (col1 int(1),stamp TIMESTAMP,INDEX stamp_idx (stamp))ENGINE=InnoDB; insert into t1 values (1),(2),(3); # Note that timestamp 3 is wrong insert into t2 values (1, 20020204130000),(2, 20020204130000),(4,20020204310000 ),(5,20020204230000); SELECT col1 FROM t1 UNION SELECT col1 FROM t2 WHERE stamp < '20020204120000' GROUP BY col1; drop table t1,t2; # # Test by Francois MASUREL # CREATE TABLE t1 ( `id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL auto_increment, `id_object` int(10) unsigned default '0', `id_version` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL default '1', `label` varchar(100) NOT NULL default '', `description` text, PRIMARY KEY (`id`), KEY `id_object` (`id_object`), KEY `id_version` (`id_version`) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES("6", "3382", "9", "Test", NULL), ("7", "102", "5", "Le Pekin (Test)", NULL),("584", "1794", "4", "Test de resto", NULL),("837", "1822", "6", "Test 3", NULL),("1119", "3524", "1", "Societe Test", NULL),("1122", "3525", "1", "Fournisseur Test", NULL); CREATE TABLE t2 ( `id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL auto_increment, `id_version` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL default '1', PRIMARY KEY (`id`), KEY `id_version` (`id_version`) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t2 VALUES("3524", "1"),("3525", "1"),("1794", "4"),("102", "5"),("1822", "6"),("3382", "9"); SELECT t2.id, t1.`label` FROM t2 INNER JOIN (SELECT t1.id_object as id_object FROM t1 WHERE t1.`label` LIKE '%test%') AS lbl ON (t2.id = lbl.id_object) INNER JOIN t1 ON (t2.id = t1.id_object); drop table t1,t2; create table t1 (a int, b varchar(200), c text not null) checksum=1 engine=myisam; create table t2 (a int, b varchar(200), c text not null) checksum=0 engine=innodb; create table t3 (a int, b varchar(200), c text not null) checksum=1 engine=innodb; insert t1 values (1, "aaa", "bbb"), (NULL, "", "ccccc"), (0, NULL, ""); insert t2 select * from t1; insert t3 select * from t1; checksum table t1, t2, t3, t4 quick; checksum table t1, t2, t3, t4; checksum table t1, t2, t3, t4 extended; #show table status; drop table t1,t2,t3; # # Test problem with refering to different fields in same table in UNION # (Bug #2552) # create table t1 (id int, name char(10) not null, name2 char(10) not null) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(1,'first','fff'),(2,'second','sss'),(3,'third','ttt'); select trim(name2) from t1 union all select trim(name) from t1 union all select trim(id) from t1; drop table t1; # # Bug2160 # create table t1 (a int) engine=innodb; create table t2 like t1; drop table t1,t2; # # Test of automaticly created foreign keys # create table t1 (id int(11) not null, id2 int(11) not null, unique (id,id2)) engine=innodb; create table t2 (id int(11) not null, constraint t1_id_fk foreign key ( id ) references t1 (id)) engine = innodb; show create table t1; show create table t2; create index id on t2 (id); show create table t2; create index id2 on t2 (id); show create table t2; drop index id2 on t2; --error ER_DROP_INDEX_FK drop index id on t2; show create table t2; drop table t2; create table t2 (id int(11) not null, id2 int(11) not null, constraint t1_id_fk foreign key (id,id2) references t1 (id,id2)) engine = innodb; show create table t2; create unique index id on t2 (id,id2); show create table t2; drop table t2; # Check foreign key columns created in different order than key columns create table t2 (id int(11) not null, id2 int(11) not null, unique (id,id2),constraint t1_id_fk foreign key (id2,id) references t1 (id,id2)) engine = innodb; show create table t2; drop table t2; create table t2 (id int(11) not null, id2 int(11) not null, unique (id,id2), constraint t1_id_fk foreign key (id) references t1 (id)) engine = innodb; show create table t2; drop table t2; create table t2 (id int(11) not null, id2 int(11) not null, unique (id,id2),constraint t1_id_fk foreign key (id2,id) references t1 (id,id2)) engine = innodb; show create table t2; drop table t2; create table t2 (id int(11) not null auto_increment, id2 int(11) not null, constraint t1_id_fk foreign key (id) references t1 (id), primary key (id), index (id,id2)) engine = innodb; show create table t2; drop table t2; create table t2 (id int(11) not null auto_increment, id2 int(11) not null, constraint t1_id_fk foreign key (id) references t1 (id)) engine= innodb; show create table t2; alter table t2 add index id_test (id), add index id_test2 (id,id2); show create table t2; drop table t2; # Test error handling # Embedded server doesn't chdir to data directory --replace_result $MYSQLTEST_VARDIR . master-data/ '' --error ER_WRONG_FK_DEF create table t2 (id int(11) not null, id2 int(11) not null, constraint t1_id_fk foreign key (id2,id) references t1 (id)) engine = innodb; # bug#3749 create table t2 (a int auto_increment primary key, b int, index(b), foreign key (b) references t1(id), unique(b)) engine=innodb; show create table t2; drop table t2; create table t2 (a int auto_increment primary key, b int, foreign key (b) references t1(id), foreign key (b) references t1(id), unique(b)) engine=innodb; show create table t2; drop table t2, t1; # # Bug #6126: Duplicate columns in keys gives misleading error message # --error 1060 create table t1 (c char(10), index (c,c)) engine=innodb; --error 1060 create table t1 (c1 char(10), c2 char(10), index (c1,c2,c1)) engine=innodb; --error 1060 create table t1 (c1 char(10), c2 char(10), index (c1,c1,c2)) engine=innodb; --error 1060 create table t1 (c1 char(10), c2 char(10), index (c2,c1,c1)) engine=innodb; create table t1 (c1 char(10), c2 char(10)) engine=innodb; --error 1060 alter table t1 add key (c1,c1); --error 1060 alter table t1 add key (c2,c1,c1); --error 1060 alter table t1 add key (c1,c2,c1); --error 1060 alter table t1 add key (c1,c1,c2); drop table t1; # # Bug #4082: integer truncation # create table t1(a int(1) , b int(1)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values ('1111', '3333'); select distinct concat(a, b) from t1; drop table t1; # # check null values #1 # --disable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1 (a_id tinyint(4) NOT NULL default '0', PRIMARY KEY (a_id)) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1),(2),(3); CREATE TABLE t2 (b_id tinyint(4) NOT NULL default '0',b_a tinyint(4) NOT NULL default '0', PRIMARY KEY (b_id), KEY (b_a), CONSTRAINT fk_b_a FOREIGN KEY (b_a) REFERENCES t1 (a_id) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE NO ACTION) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; --enable_warnings INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1,1),(2,1),(3,1),(4,2),(5,2); SELECT * FROM (SELECT t1.*,GROUP_CONCAT(t2.b_id SEPARATOR ',') as b_list FROM (t1 LEFT JOIN (t2) on t1.a_id = t2.b_a) GROUP BY t1.a_id ) AS xyz; DROP TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t1; # # Bug#11816 - Truncate table doesn't work with temporary innodb tables # This is not an innodb bug, but we test it using innodb. # create temporary table t1 (a int) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (4711); truncate t1; insert into t1 values (42); select * from t1; drop table t1; # Show that it works with permanent tables too. create table t1 (a int) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (4711); truncate t1; insert into t1 values (42); select * from t1; drop table t1; # # Bug #13025 Server crash during filesort # create table t1 (a int not null, b int not null, c blob not null, d int not null, e int, primary key (a,b,c(255),d)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (2,2,"b",2,2),(1,1,"a",1,1),(3,3,"ab",3,3); select * from t1 order by a,b,c,d; explain select * from t1 order by a,b,c,d; drop table t1; # # BUG#11039,#13218 Wrong key length in min() # create table t1 (a char(1), b char(1), key(a, b)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values ('8', '6'), ('4', '7'); select min(a) from t1; select min(b) from t1 where a='8'; drop table t1; # End of 4.1 tests # # range optimizer problem # create table t1 (x bigint unsigned not null primary key) engine=innodb; insert into t1(x) values (0xfffffffffffffff0),(0xfffffffffffffff1); select * from t1; select count(*) from t1 where x>0; select count(*) from t1 where x=0; select count(*) from t1 where x<0; select count(*) from t1 where x < -16; select count(*) from t1 where x = -16; explain select count(*) from t1 where x > -16; select count(*) from t1 where x > -16; select * from t1 where x > -16; select count(*) from t1 where x = 18446744073709551601; drop table t1; # Test for testable InnoDB status variables. This test # uses previous ones(pages_created, rows_deleted, ...). --replace_result 511 ok 512 ok 2047 ok 513 ok 514 ok 515 ok SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_buffer_pool_pages_total'; SELECT variable_value FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_page_size'; SELECT variable_value - @innodb_rows_deleted_orig FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_rows_deleted'; SELECT variable_value - @innodb_rows_inserted_orig FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_rows_inserted'; SELECT variable_value - @innodb_rows_updated_orig FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_rows_updated'; # Test for row locks InnoDB status variables. SELECT variable_value - @innodb_row_lock_waits_orig FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_waits'; SELECT variable_value - @innodb_row_lock_current_waits_orig FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_current_waits'; SELECT variable_value - @innodb_row_lock_time_orig FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_time'; SELECT variable_value - @innodb_row_lock_time_max_orig FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_time_max'; SELECT variable_value - @innodb_row_lock_time_avg_orig FROM information_schema.global_status WHERE LOWER(variable_name) = 'innodb_row_lock_time_avg'; # # Test varchar # let $default=`select @@storage_engine`; set storage_engine=INNODB; source include/varchar.inc; # # Some errors/warnings on create # # Embedded server doesn't chdir to data directory --replace_result $MYSQLTEST_VARDIR . master-data/ '' create table t1 (v varchar(65530), key(v)); drop table t1; create table t1 (v varchar(65536)); show create table t1; drop table t1; create table t1 (v varchar(65530) character set utf8); show create table t1; drop table t1; eval set storage_engine=$default; # InnoDB specific varchar tests create table t1 (v varchar(16384)) engine=innodb; drop table t1; # # BUG#11039 Wrong key length in min() # create table t1 (a char(1), b char(1), key(a, b)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values ('8', '6'), ('4', '7'); select min(a) from t1; select min(b) from t1 where a='8'; drop table t1; # # Bug #11080 & #11005 Multi-row REPLACE fails on a duplicate key error # CREATE TABLE t1 ( `a` int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment, `b` int(11) default NULL,PRIMARY KEY (`a`),UNIQUE KEY `b` (`b`)) ENGINE=innodb; insert into t1 (b) values (1); replace into t1 (b) values (2), (1), (3); select * from t1; truncate table t1; insert into t1 (b) values (1); replace into t1 (b) values (2); replace into t1 (b) values (1); replace into t1 (b) values (3); select * from t1; drop table t1; create table t1 (rowid int not null auto_increment, val int not null,primary key (rowid), unique(val)) engine=innodb; replace into t1 (val) values ('1'),('2'); replace into t1 (val) values ('1'),('2'); --error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t1 (val) values ('1'),('2'); select * from t1; drop table t1; # # Test that update does not change internal auto-increment value # create table t1 (a int not null auto_increment primary key, val int) engine=InnoDB; insert into t1 (val) values (1); update t1 set a=2 where a=1; # We should get the following error because InnoDB does not update the counter --error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t1 (val) values (1); select * from t1; drop table t1; # # Bug #10465 # --disable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1 (GRADE DECIMAL(4) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (GRADE)) ENGINE=INNODB; --enable_warnings INSERT INTO t1 (GRADE) VALUES (151),(252),(343); SELECT GRADE FROM t1 WHERE GRADE > 160 AND GRADE < 300; SELECT GRADE FROM t1 WHERE GRADE= 151; DROP TABLE t1; # # Bug #12340 multitable delete deletes only one record # create table t1 (f1 varchar(10), f2 varchar(10), primary key (f1,f2)) engine=innodb; create table t2 (f3 varchar(10), f4 varchar(10), key (f4)) engine=innodb; insert into t2 values ('aa','cc'); insert into t1 values ('aa','bb'),('aa','cc'); delete t1 from t1,t2 where f1=f3 and f4='cc'; select * from t1; drop table t1,t2; # # Test that the slow TRUNCATE implementation resets autoincrement columns # (bug #11946) # CREATE TABLE t1 ( id INTEGER NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, PRIMARY KEY (id) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 (id) VALUES (NULL); SELECT * FROM t1; TRUNCATE t1; INSERT INTO t1 (id) VALUES (NULL); SELECT * FROM t1; # continued from above; test that doing a slow TRUNCATE on a table with 0 # rows resets autoincrement columns DELETE FROM t1; TRUNCATE t1; INSERT INTO t1 (id) VALUES (NULL); SELECT * FROM t1; DROP TABLE t1; # Test that foreign keys in temporary tables are not accepted (bug #12084) CREATE TABLE t1 ( id INT PRIMARY KEY ) ENGINE=InnoDB; --error 1005,1005 CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t2 ( id INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, b INT, FOREIGN KEY (b) REFERENCES test.t1(id) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; DROP TABLE t1; # # Test that index column max sizes are honored (bug #13315) # # prefix index create table t1 (col1 varchar(2000), index (col1(767))) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; # normal indexes create table t2 (col1 char(255), index (col1)) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t3 (col1 binary(255), index (col1)) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t4 (col1 varchar(767), index (col1)) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t5 (col1 varchar(767) primary key) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t6 (col1 varbinary(767) primary key) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t7 (col1 text, index(col1(767))) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t8 (col1 blob, index(col1(767))) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; # multi-column indexes are allowed to be longer create table t9 (col1 varchar(512), col2 varchar(512), index(col1, col2)) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; show create table t9; drop table t1, t2, t3, t4, t5, t6, t7, t8, t9; # these should have their index length trimmed create table t1 (col1 varchar(768), index(col1)) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t2 (col1 varbinary(768), index(col1)) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t3 (col1 text, index(col1(768))) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; create table t4 (col1 blob, index(col1(768))) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; show create table t1; drop table t1, t2, t3, t4; # these should be refused --error 1071 create table t1 (col1 varchar(768) primary key) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; --error 1071 create table t2 (col1 varbinary(768) primary key) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; --error 1071 create table t3 (col1 text, primary key(col1(768))) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; --error 1071 create table t4 (col1 blob, primary key(col1(768))) character set = latin1 engine = innodb; # # Test improved foreign key error messages (bug #3443) # CREATE TABLE t1 ( id INT PRIMARY KEY ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 ( v INT, CONSTRAINT c1 FOREIGN KEY (v) REFERENCES t1(id) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; --error 1452 INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(2); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(1); --error 1451 DELETE FROM t1 WHERE id = 1; --error 1451 DROP TABLE t1; SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0; DROP TABLE t1; SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1; --error 1452 INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(3); DROP TABLE t2; # # Test that checksum table uses a consistent read Bug #12669 # connect (a,localhost,root,,); connect (b,localhost,root,,); connection a; create table t1(a int not null) engine=innodb DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; insert into t1 values (1),(2); set autocommit=0; checksum table t1; connection b; insert into t1 values(3); connection a; # # Here checksum should not see insert # checksum table t1; connection a; commit; checksum table t1; commit; drop table t1; # # autocommit = 1 # connection a; create table t1(a int not null) engine=innodb DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; insert into t1 values (1),(2); set autocommit=1; checksum table t1; connection b; set autocommit=1; insert into t1 values(3); connection a; # # Here checksum sees insert # checksum table t1; drop table t1; connection default; disconnect a; disconnect b; # tests for bugs #9802 and #13778 # test that FKs between invalid types are not accepted set foreign_key_checks=0; create table t2 (a int primary key, b int, foreign key (b) references t1(a)) engine = innodb; # Embedded server doesn't chdir to data directory --replace_result $MYSQLTEST_VARDIR . master-data/ '' -- error 1005 create table t1(a char(10) primary key, b varchar(20)) engine = innodb; set foreign_key_checks=1; drop table t2; # test that FKs between different charsets are not accepted in CREATE even # when f_k_c is 0 set foreign_key_checks=0; create table t1(a varchar(10) primary key) engine = innodb DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; # Embedded server doesn't chdir to data directory --replace_result $MYSQLTEST_VARDIR . master-data/ '' -- error 1005 create table t2 (a varchar(10), foreign key (a) references t1(a)) engine = innodb DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8; set foreign_key_checks=1; drop table t1; # test that invalid datatype conversions with ALTER are not allowed set foreign_key_checks=0; create table t2 (a varchar(10), foreign key (a) references t1(a)) engine = innodb; create table t1(a varchar(10) primary key) engine = innodb; -- error 1025,1025 alter table t1 modify column a int; set foreign_key_checks=1; drop table t2,t1; # test that charset conversions with ALTER are allowed when f_k_c is 0 set foreign_key_checks=0; create table t2 (a varchar(10), foreign key (a) references t1(a)) engine = innodb DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; create table t1(a varchar(10) primary key) engine = innodb DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; alter table t1 convert to character set utf8; set foreign_key_checks=1; drop table t2,t1; # test that RENAME does not allow invalid charsets when f_k_c is 0 set foreign_key_checks=0; create table t2 (a varchar(10), foreign key (a) references t1(a)) engine = innodb DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; create table t3(a varchar(10) primary key) engine = innodb DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8; # Embedded server doesn't chdir to data directory --replace_result $MYSQLD_DATADIR ./ master-data/ '' -- error 1025 rename table t3 to t1; set foreign_key_checks=1; drop table t2,t3; # test that foreign key errors are reported correctly (Bug #15550) create table t1(a int primary key) row_format=redundant engine=innodb; create table t2(a int primary key,constraint foreign key(a)references t1(a)) row_format=compact engine=innodb; create table t3(a int primary key) row_format=compact engine=innodb; create table t4(a int primary key,constraint foreign key(a)references t3(a)) row_format=redundant engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(1); insert into t3 values(1); -- error 1452 insert into t2 values(2); -- error 1452 insert into t4 values(2); insert into t2 values(1); insert into t4 values(1); -- error 1451 update t1 set a=2; -- error 1452 update t2 set a=2; -- error 1451 update t3 set a=2; -- error 1452 update t4 set a=2; -- error ER_TRUNCATE_ILLEGAL_FK truncate t1; -- error ER_TRUNCATE_ILLEGAL_FK truncate t3; truncate t2; truncate t4; -- error ER_TRUNCATE_ILLEGAL_FK truncate t1; -- error ER_TRUNCATE_ILLEGAL_FK truncate t3; drop table t4,t3,t2,t1; # # Test that we can create a large (>1K) key # create table t1 (a varchar(255) character set utf8, b varchar(255) character set utf8, c varchar(255) character set utf8, d varchar(255) character set utf8, key (a,b,c,d)) engine=innodb; drop table t1; --error ER_TOO_LONG_KEY create table t1 (a varchar(255) character set utf8, b varchar(255) character set utf8, c varchar(255) character set utf8, d varchar(255) character set utf8, e varchar(255) character set utf8, key (a,b,c,d,e)) engine=innodb; # test the padding of BINARY types and collations (Bug #14189) create table t1 (s1 varbinary(2),primary key (s1)) engine=innodb; create table t2 (s1 binary(2),primary key (s1)) engine=innodb; create table t3 (s1 varchar(2) binary,primary key (s1)) engine=innodb; create table t4 (s1 char(2) binary,primary key (s1)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (0x41),(0x4120),(0x4100); -- error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t2 values (0x41),(0x4120),(0x4100); insert into t2 values (0x41),(0x4120); -- error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t3 values (0x41),(0x4120),(0x4100); insert into t3 values (0x41),(0x4100); -- error ER_DUP_ENTRY insert into t4 values (0x41),(0x4120),(0x4100); insert into t4 values (0x41),(0x4100); select hex(s1) from t1; select hex(s1) from t2; select hex(s1) from t3; select hex(s1) from t4; drop table t1,t2,t3,t4; create table t1 (a int primary key,s1 varbinary(3) not null unique) engine=innodb; create table t2 (s1 binary(2) not null, constraint c foreign key(s1) references t1(s1) on update cascade) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(1,0x4100),(2,0x41),(3,0x4120),(4,0x42); -- error 1452 insert into t2 values(0x42); insert into t2 values(0x41); select hex(s1) from t2; update t1 set s1=0x123456 where a=2; select hex(s1) from t2; -- error 1451 update t1 set s1=0x12 where a=1; -- error 1451 update t1 set s1=0x12345678 where a=1; -- error 1451 update t1 set s1=0x123457 where a=1; update t1 set s1=0x1220 where a=1; select hex(s1) from t2; update t1 set s1=0x1200 where a=1; select hex(s1) from t2; update t1 set s1=0x4200 where a=1; select hex(s1) from t2; -- error 1451 delete from t1 where a=1; delete from t1 where a=2; update t2 set s1=0x4120; -- error 1451 delete from t1; delete from t1 where a!=3; select a,hex(s1) from t1; select hex(s1) from t2; drop table t2,t1; create table t1 (a int primary key,s1 varchar(2) binary not null unique) engine=innodb; create table t2 (s1 char(2) binary not null, constraint c foreign key(s1) references t1(s1) on update cascade) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(1,0x4100),(2,0x41); insert into t2 values(0x41); select hex(s1) from t2; update t1 set s1=0x1234 where a=1; select hex(s1) from t2; update t1 set s1=0x12 where a=2; select hex(s1) from t2; delete from t1 where a=1; -- error 1451 delete from t1 where a=2; select a,hex(s1) from t1; select hex(s1) from t2; drop table t2,t1; # Ensure that _ibfk_0 is not mistreated as a # generated foreign key identifier. (Bug #16387) CREATE TABLE t1(a INT, PRIMARY KEY(a)) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2(a INT) ENGINE=InnoDB; ALTER TABLE t2 ADD FOREIGN KEY (a) REFERENCES t1(a); ALTER TABLE t2 DROP FOREIGN KEY t2_ibfk_1; ALTER TABLE t2 ADD CONSTRAINT t2_ibfk_0 FOREIGN KEY (a) REFERENCES t1(a); ALTER TABLE t2 DROP FOREIGN KEY t2_ibfk_0; SHOW CREATE TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t2,t1; # # Test case for bug #16229: MySQL/InnoDB uses full explicit table locks in trigger processing # ## the following cannot be tested after the introduction of metadata locks ## because the create trigger command blocks and waits for connection b to ## commit ## begin disabled_mdl #connect (a,localhost,root,,); #connect (b,localhost,root,,); #connection a; #create table t1(a int not null, b int, c int, d int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; #insert into t1(a) values (1),(2),(3); #commit; #connection b; #set autocommit = 0; #update t1 set b = 5 where a = 2; #connection a; #delimiter |; #create trigger t1t before insert on t1 for each row begin set NEW.b = NEW.a * 10 + 5, NEW.c = NEW.a / 10; end | #delimiter ;| #set autocommit = 0; #connection a; #insert into t1(a) values (10),(20),(30),(40),(50),(60),(70),(80),(90),(100), #(11),(21),(31),(41),(51),(61),(71),(81),(91),(101), #(12),(22),(32),(42),(52),(62),(72),(82),(92),(102), #(13),(23),(33),(43),(53),(63),(73),(83),(93),(103), #(14),(24),(34),(44),(54),(64),(74),(84),(94),(104); #connection b; #commit; #connection a; #commit; #drop trigger t1t; #drop table t1; #disconnect a; #disconnect b; ## ## Another trigger test ## #connect (a,localhost,root,,); #connect (b,localhost,root,,); #connection a; #create table t1(a int not null, b int, c int, d int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; #create table t2(a int not null, b int, c int, d int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; #create table t3(a int not null, b int, c int, d int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; #create table t4(a int not null, b int, c int, d int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; #create table t5(a int not null, b int, c int, d int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; #insert into t1(a) values (1),(2),(3); #insert into t2(a) values (1),(2),(3); #insert into t3(a) values (1),(2),(3); #insert into t4(a) values (1),(2),(3); #insert into t3(a) values (5),(7),(8); #insert into t4(a) values (5),(7),(8); #insert into t5(a) values (1),(2),(3),(4),(5),(6),(7),(8),(9),(10),(11),(12); # #delimiter |; #create trigger t1t before insert on t1 for each row begin # INSERT INTO t2 SET a = NEW.a; #end | # #create trigger t2t before insert on t2 for each row begin # DELETE FROM t3 WHERE a = NEW.a; #end | # #create trigger t3t before delete on t3 for each row begin # UPDATE t4 SET b = b + 1 WHERE a = OLD.a; #end | # #create trigger t4t before update on t4 for each row begin # UPDATE t5 SET b = b + 1 where a = NEW.a; #end | #delimiter ;| #commit; #set autocommit = 0; #update t1 set b = b + 5 where a = 1; #update t2 set b = b + 5 where a = 1; #update t3 set b = b + 5 where a = 1; #update t4 set b = b + 5 where a = 1; #insert into t5(a) values(20); #connection b; #set autocommit = 0; #insert into t1(a) values(7); #insert into t2(a) values(8); #delete from t2 where a = 3; #update t4 set b = b + 1 where a = 3; #commit; #drop trigger t1t; #drop trigger t2t; #drop trigger t3t; #drop trigger t4t; #drop table t1, t2, t3, t4, t5; #connection default; #disconnect a; #disconnect b; ## end disabled_mdl # # Test that cascading updates leading to duplicate keys give the correct # error message (bug #9680) # CREATE TABLE t1 ( field1 varchar(8) NOT NULL DEFAULT '', field2 varchar(8) NOT NULL DEFAULT '', PRIMARY KEY (field1, field2) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 ( field1 varchar(8) NOT NULL DEFAULT '' PRIMARY KEY, FOREIGN KEY (field1) REFERENCES t1 (field1) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('old', 'somevalu'); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('other', 'anyvalue'); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES ('old'); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES ('other'); --error ER_FOREIGN_DUPLICATE_KEY_WITH_CHILD_INFO UPDATE t1 SET field1 = 'other' WHERE field2 = 'somevalu'; DROP TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t1; # # Bug#18477 - MySQL/InnoDB Ignoring Foreign Keys in ALTER TABLE # create table t1 ( c1 bigint not null, c2 bigint not null, primary key (c1), unique key (c2) ) engine=innodb; # create table t2 ( c1 bigint not null, primary key (c1) ) engine=innodb; # alter table t1 add constraint c2_fk foreign key (c2) references t2(c1) on delete cascade; show create table t1; # alter table t1 drop foreign key c2_fk; show create table t1; # drop table t1, t2; # # Bug #14360: problem with intervals # create table t1(a date) engine=innodb; create table t2(a date, key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values('2005-10-01'); insert into t2 values('2005-10-01'); select * from t1, t2 where t2.a between t1.a - interval 2 day and t1.a + interval 2 day; drop table t1, t2; create table t1 (id int not null, f_id int not null, f int not null, primary key(f_id, id)) engine=innodb; create table t2 (id int not null,s_id int not null,s varchar(200), primary key(id)) engine=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (8, 1, 3); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 2, 1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1, 0, ''); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (8, 1, ''); commit; DELETE ml.* FROM t1 AS ml LEFT JOIN t2 AS mm ON (mm.id=ml.id) WHERE mm.id IS NULL; select ml.* from t1 as ml left join t2 as mm on (mm.id=ml.id) where mm.id is null lock in share mode; drop table t1,t2; # # Test case where X-locks on unused rows should be released in a # update (because READ COMMITTED isolation level) # connect (a,localhost,root,,); connect (b,localhost,root,,); connection a; create table t1(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(1,1),(2,2),(3,1),(4,2),(5,1),(6,2),(7,3); commit; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; update t1 set b = 5 where b = 1; connection b; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; # # X-lock to record (7,3) should be released in a update # select * from t1 where a = 7 and b = 3 for update; connection a; commit; connection b; commit; drop table t1; connection default; disconnect a; disconnect b; # # Test case where no locks should be released (because we are not # using READ COMMITTED isolation level) # connect (a,localhost,root,,); connect (b,localhost,root,,); connection a; create table t1(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values(1,1),(2,2),(3,1),(4,2),(5,1),(6,2); commit; set autocommit = 0; select * from t1 lock in share mode; update t1 set b = 5 where b = 1; connection b; set autocommit = 0; # # S-lock to records (2,2),(4,2), and (6,2) should not be released in a update # --error 1205 select * from t1 where a = 2 and b = 2 for update; # # X-lock to record (1,1),(3,1),(5,1) should not be released in a update # --error 1205 connection a; commit; connection b; commit; connection default; disconnect a; disconnect b; drop table t1; # # Consistent read should be used in following selects # # 1) INSERT INTO ... SELECT # 2) UPDATE ... = ( SELECT ...) # 3) CREATE ... SELECT connect (a,localhost,root,,); connect (b,localhost,root,,); connection a; create table t1(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (1,2),(5,3),(4,2); create table t2(d int not null, e int, primary key(d)) engine=innodb; insert into t2 values (8,6),(12,1),(3,1); commit; set autocommit = 0; select * from t2 for update; connection b; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; insert into t1 select * from t2; update t1 set b = (select e from t2 where a = d); create table t3(d int not null, e int, primary key(d)) engine=innodb select * from t2; commit; connection a; commit; connection default; disconnect a; disconnect b; drop table t1, t2, t3; # # Consistent read should not be used if # # (a) isolation level is serializable OR # (b) select ... lock in share mode OR # (c) select ... for update # # in following queries: # # 1) INSERT INTO ... SELECT # 2) UPDATE ... = ( SELECT ...) # 3) CREATE ... SELECT connect (a,localhost,root,,); connect (b,localhost,root,,); connect (c,localhost,root,,); connect (d,localhost,root,,); connect (e,localhost,root,,); connect (f,localhost,root,,); connect (g,localhost,root,,); connect (h,localhost,root,,); connect (i,localhost,root,,); connect (j,localhost,root,,); connection a; create table t1(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (1,2),(5,3),(4,2); create table t2(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t2 values (8,6),(12,1),(3,1); create table t3(d int not null, b int, primary key(d)) engine=innodb; insert into t3 values (8,6),(12,1),(3,1); create table t5(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t5 values (1,2),(5,3),(4,2); create table t6(d int not null, e int, primary key(d)) engine=innodb; insert into t6 values (8,6),(12,1),(3,1); create table t8(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb; insert into t8 values (1,2),(5,3),(4,2); create table t9(d int not null, e int, primary key(d)) engine=innodb; insert into t9 values (8,6),(12,1),(3,1); commit; set autocommit = 0; select * from t2 for update; connection b; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE; --send insert into t1 select * from t2; connection c; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE; --send update t3 set b = (select b from t2 where a = d); connection d; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE; --send create table t4(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb select * from t2; connection e; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; --send insert into t5 (select * from t2 lock in share mode); connection f; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; --send update t6 set e = (select b from t2 where a = d lock in share mode); connection g; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; --send create table t7(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb select * from t2 lock in share mode; connection h; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; --send insert into t8 (select * from t2 for update); connection i; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; --send update t9 set e = (select b from t2 where a = d for update); connection j; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; set autocommit = 0; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; --send create table t10(a int not null, b int, primary key(a)) engine=innodb select * from t2 for update; connection b; --error 1205 reap; connection c; --error 1205 reap; connection d; --error 1205 reap; connection e; --error 1205 reap; connection f; --error 1205 reap; connection g; --error 1205 reap; connection h; --error 1205 reap; connection i; --error 1205 reap; connection j; --error 1205 reap; connection a; commit; connection default; disconnect a; disconnect b; disconnect c; disconnect d; disconnect e; disconnect f; disconnect g; disconnect h; disconnect i; disconnect j; drop table t1, t2, t3, t5, t6, t8, t9; # bug 18934, "InnoDB crashes when table uses column names like DB_ROW_ID" --error ER_WRONG_COLUMN_NAME CREATE TABLE t1 (DB_ROW_ID int) engine=innodb; # # Bug #17152: Wrong result with BINARY comparison on aliased column # CREATE TABLE t1 ( a BIGINT(20) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (a) ) ENGINE=INNODB DEFAULT CHARSET=UTF8; CREATE TABLE t2 ( a BIGINT(20) NOT NULL, b VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL, c TEXT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (a,b), KEY idx_t2_b_c (b,c(200)), CONSTRAINT t_fk FOREIGN KEY (a) REFERENCES t1 (a) ON DELETE CASCADE ) ENGINE=INNODB DEFAULT CHARSET=UTF8; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1, 'bar', 'vbar'); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1, 'BAR2', 'VBAR'); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1, 'bar_bar', 'bibi'); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1, 'customer_over', '1'); SELECT * FROM t2 WHERE b = 'customer_over'; SELECT * FROM t2 WHERE BINARY b = 'customer_over'; SELECT DISTINCT p0.a FROM t2 p0 WHERE p0.b = 'customer_over'; /* Bang: Empty result set, above was expected: */ SELECT DISTINCT p0.a FROM t2 p0 WHERE BINARY p0.b = 'customer_over'; SELECT p0.a FROM t2 p0 WHERE BINARY p0.b = 'customer_over'; drop table t2, t1; # # Test optimize on table with open transaction # CREATE TABLE t1 ( a int ) ENGINE=innodb; BEGIN; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1); OPTIMIZE TABLE t1; DROP TABLE t1; # # Bug #24741 (existing cascade clauses disappear when adding foreign keys) # CREATE TABLE t1 (id int PRIMARY KEY, f int NOT NULL, INDEX(f)) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 (id int PRIMARY KEY, f INT NOT NULL, CONSTRAINT t2_t1 FOREIGN KEY (id) REFERENCES t1 (id) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE) ENGINE=InnoDB; ALTER TABLE t2 ADD FOREIGN KEY (f) REFERENCES t1 (f) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE; SHOW CREATE TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t2, t1; # # Bug #25927: Prevent ALTER TABLE ... MODIFY ... NOT NULL on columns # for which there is a foreign key constraint ON ... SET NULL. # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, INDEX(a)) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 (a INT, INDEX(a)) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1); ALTER TABLE t2 ADD FOREIGN KEY (a) REFERENCES t1 (a) ON DELETE SET NULL; # NULL -> NOT NULL only allowed INPLACE if strict sql_mode is on. set @old_sql_mode = @@sql_mode; set @@sql_mode = 'STRICT_TRANS_TABLES'; --error ER_FK_COLUMN_NOT_NULL ALTER TABLE t2 MODIFY a INT NOT NULL; set @@sql_mode = @old_sql_mode; DELETE FROM t1; DROP TABLE t2,t1; # # Bug #26835: table corruption after delete+insert # CREATE TABLE t1 (a VARCHAR(5) COLLATE utf8_unicode_ci PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (0xEFBCA4EFBCA4EFBCA4); DELETE FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('DDD'); SELECT * FROM t1; DROP TABLE t1; # # Bug #23313 (AUTO_INCREMENT=# not reported back for InnoDB tables) # Bug #21404 (AUTO_INCREMENT value reset when Adding FKEY (or ALTER?)) # CREATE TABLE t1 (id int PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=42; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (0),(347),(0); SELECT * FROM t1; SHOW CREATE TABLE t1; CREATE TABLE t2 (id int PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(42),(347),(348); ALTER TABLE t1 ADD CONSTRAINT t1_t2 FOREIGN KEY (id) REFERENCES t2(id); SHOW CREATE TABLE t1; DROP TABLE t1,t2; # # Bug #21101 (Prints wrong error message if max row size is too large) # set innodb_strict_mode=on; --error 1118 CREATE TABLE t1 ( c01 CHAR(255), c02 CHAR(255), c03 CHAR(255), c04 CHAR(255), c05 CHAR(255), c06 CHAR(255), c07 CHAR(255), c08 CHAR(255), c09 CHAR(255), c10 CHAR(255), c11 CHAR(255), c12 CHAR(255), c13 CHAR(255), c14 CHAR(255), c15 CHAR(255), c16 CHAR(255), c17 CHAR(255), c18 CHAR(255), c19 CHAR(255), c20 CHAR(255), c21 CHAR(255), c22 CHAR(255), c23 CHAR(255), c24 CHAR(255), c25 CHAR(255), c26 CHAR(255), c27 CHAR(255), c28 CHAR(255), c29 CHAR(255), c30 CHAR(255), c31 CHAR(255), c32 CHAR(255) ) ENGINE = InnoDB; # # Bug #31860 InnoDB assumes AUTOINC values can only be positive. # DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; CREATE TABLE t1( id BIGINT(20) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(-10); SELECT * FROM t1; # # NOTE: The server really needs to be restarted at this point # for the test to be useful. # # Without the fix InnoDB would trip over an assertion here. INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(NULL); # The next value should be 1 and not -9 or a -ve number SELECT * FROM t1; DROP TABLE t1; # # Bug #21409 Incorrect result returned when in READ-COMMITTED with # query_cache ON # CONNECT (c1,localhost,root,,); CONNECT (c2,localhost,root,,); CONNECTION c1; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; SET TX_ISOLATION='read-committed'; SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1, t2; CREATE TABLE t1 ( a int ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 LIKE t1; SELECT * FROM t2; CONNECTION c2; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; SET TX_ISOLATION='read-committed'; SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1); COMMIT; CONNECTION c1; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a=1; DISCONNECT c1; DISCONNECT c2; CONNECT (c1,localhost,root,,); CONNECT (c2,localhost,root,,); CONNECTION c1; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; SET TX_ISOLATION='read-committed'; SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; SELECT * FROM t2; CONNECTION c2; SET binlog_format='MIXED'; SET TX_ISOLATION='read-committed'; SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (2); COMMIT; CONNECTION c1; # The result set below should be the same for both selects SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a=2; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a=2; DROP TABLE t1; DROP TABLE t2; DISCONNECT c1; DISCONNECT c2; CONNECTION default; # # Bug #29157 UPDATE, changed rows incorrect # create table t1 (i int, j int) engine=innodb; insert into t1 (i, j) values (1, 1), (2, 2); --enable_info update t1 set j = 2; --disable_info drop table t1; # # Bug #32440 InnoDB free space info does not appear in SHOW TABLE STATUS or # I_S # create table t1 (id int) comment='this is a comment' engine=innodb; select table_comment, data_free > 0 as data_free_is_set from information_schema.tables where table_schema='test' and table_name = 't1'; drop table t1; # # Bug 34920 test # CONNECTION default; CREATE TABLE t1 ( c1 INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, c2 VARCHAR(128) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(c1) ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 AUTO_INCREMENT=100; CREATE TABLE t2 ( c1 INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, c2 INT(10) UNSIGNED DEFAULT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(c1) ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 AUTO_INCREMENT=200; SELECT AUTO_INCREMENT FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE table_name = 't2'; ALTER TABLE t2 ADD CONSTRAINT t1_t2_1 FOREIGN KEY(c1) REFERENCES t1(c1); SELECT AUTO_INCREMENT FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE table_name = 't2'; DROP TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t1; # End 34920 test # # Bug #29507 TRUNCATE shows to many rows effected # CONNECTION default; CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 int default NULL, c2 int default NULL ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; --enable_info TRUNCATE TABLE t1; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), (4, 4), (5, 5); TRUNCATE TABLE t1; --disable_info DROP TABLE t1; # # Bug#35537 Innodb doesn't increment handler_update and handler_delete. # -- disable_query_log -- disable_result_log CONNECT (c1,localhost,root,,); DROP TABLE IF EXISTS bug35537; CREATE TABLE bug35537 ( c1 int ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO bug35537 VALUES (1); -- enable_result_log SHOW SESSION STATUS LIKE 'Handler_update%'; SHOW SESSION STATUS LIKE 'Handler_delete%'; UPDATE bug35537 SET c1 = 2 WHERE c1 = 1; DELETE FROM bug35537 WHERE c1 = 2; SHOW SESSION STATUS LIKE 'Handler_update%'; SHOW SESSION STATUS LIKE 'Handler_delete%'; DROP TABLE bug35537; DISCONNECT c1; CONNECTION default; SET GLOBAL innodb_thread_concurrency = @innodb_thread_concurrency_orig; -- enable_query_log # Clean up after the Bug#55284/Bug#58912 test case. DROP TABLE bug58912; # # Test fix for bug 13117023. InnoDB increments HA_READ_KEY_COUNT (aka # HANDLER_READ_KEY) when it should not. # create table t1 (f1 integer primary key) engine=innodb; flush status; show status like "handler_read_key"; select f1 from t1; show status like "handler_read_key"; drop table t1; ####################################################################### # # # Please, DO NOT TOUCH this file as well as the innodb.result file. # # These files are to be modified ONLY BY INNOBASE guys. # # # # Use innodb_mysql.[test|result] files instead. # # # # If nevertheless you need to make some changes here, please, forward # # your commit message # # To: innodb_dev_ww@oracle.com # # Cc: dev-innodb@mysql.com # # (otherwise your changes may be erased). # # # #######################################################################