sqlite/test/wal4.test

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# 2010 July 1
#
# The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of
# a legal notice, here is a blessing:
#
# May you do good and not evil.
# May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
# May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
#
#***********************************************************************
# Verify that an empty database and a non-empty WAL file do not
# result in database corruption
#
set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
source $testdir/tester.tcl
source $testdir/malloc_common.tcl
ifcapable !wal {finish_test ; return }
do_test wal4-1.1 {
execsql {
PRAGMA journal_mode=WAL;
CREATE TABLE t1(x);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(2);
SELECT x FROM t1 ORDER BY x;
}
} {wal 1 2}
do_test wal4-1.2 {
# Save a copy of the file-system containing the wal and wal-index files
# only (no database file).
faultsim_save_and_close
forcedelete sv_test.db
} {}
do_test wal4-1.3 {
faultsim_restore_and_reopen
catchsql { SELECT * FROM t1 }
} {1 {no such table: t1}}
do_faultsim_test wal4-2 -prep {
faultsim_restore_and_reopen
} -body {
execsql { SELECT name FROM sqlite_master }
} -test {
# Result should be zero rows (empty db file).
#
faultsim_test_result {0 {}}
# If the SELECT finished successfully, the WAL file should have been
# deleted. In no case should the database file have been written, so
# it should still be zero bytes in size regardless of whether or not
# a fault was injected. Test these assertions:
#
if { $testrc==0 && [file exists test.db-wal] } {
error "Wal file was not deleted"
}
if { [file size test.db]!=0 } {
error "Db file grew to [file size test.db] bytes"
}
}
finish_test