# PURPOSE. Test that blackhole works with replication in all three # modes: STATEMENT, MIXED, and ROW. # # METHOD. We start by creating a table on the master and then change # the engine to use blackhole on the slave. # # After insert/update/delete of one or more rows, the test the # proceeds to check that replication is running after replicating an # change, that the blackhole engine does not contain anything (which # is just a check that the correct engine is used), and that something # is written to the binary log. # # Whe check INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE statement for tables with no # key (forcing a range search on the slave), primary keys (using a # primary key lookup), and index/key with multiple matches (forcing an # index search). # We start with no primary key CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b INT, c INT); CREATE TABLE t2 (a INT, b INT, c INT); sync_slave_with_master; ALTER TABLE t1 ENGINE=BLACKHOLE; connection master; INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1,9,1), (2,9,2), (3,9,3), (4,9,4); sync_slave_with_master; # Test insert, no primary key let $statement = INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,1,1),(2,1,2),(3,1,3),(4,1,4); source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # Test update, no primary key let $statement = UPDATE t1 SET c = 2*c WHERE a % 2 = 0 AND b = 1; source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # Test delete, no primary key let $statement = DELETE FROM t1 WHERE a % 2 = 0 AND b = 1; source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # Test INSERT-SELECT into Blackhole, no primary key let $statement = INSERT INTO t1 SELECT * FROM t2; source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # # The MASTER has MyISAM as the engine for both tables. The SLAVE has Blackhole # on t1 (transactional engine) and MyISAM on t2 (non-transactional engine). # # In MIXED mode, the command "INSERT INTO t2 SELECT * FROM t1" is logged as # statement on the master. On the slave, it is tagged as unsafe because the # statement mixes both transactional and non-transactional engines and as such # its changes are logged as rows. However, due to the nature of the blackhole # engine, no rows are returned and thus any chain replication would make the # next master on the chain diverge. # # Fo this reason, we have disabled the statement. # # Test INSERT-SELECT from Blackhole, no primary key # let $statement = INSERT INTO t2 SELECT * FROM t1; # source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # connection master; ALTER TABLE t1 ADD PRIMARY KEY pk_t1 (a,b); sync_slave_with_master; # Test insert, primary key let $statement = INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,2,1),(2,2,2),(3,2,3),(4,2,4); source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # Test update, primary key let $statement = UPDATE t1 SET c = 2*c WHERE a % 2 = 0 AND b = 2; source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # Test delete, primary key let $statement = DELETE FROM t1 WHERE a % 2 = 0 AND b = 2; source include/rpl_blackhole.test; connection master; ALTER TABLE t1 DROP PRIMARY KEY, ADD KEY key_t1 (a); sync_slave_with_master; # Test insert, key let $statement = INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,3,1),(2,3,2),(3,3,3),(4,3,4); source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # Test update, key let $statement = UPDATE t1 SET c = 2*c WHERE a % 2 = 0 AND b = 3; source include/rpl_blackhole.test; # Test delete, key let $statement = DELETE FROM t1 WHERE a % 2 = 0 AND b = 3; source include/rpl_blackhole.test; connection master; DROP TABLE t1,t2; sync_slave_with_master;