# 2001 September 15 # # 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. # #*********************************************************************** # This file implements regression tests for SQLite library. The # focus of this file is testing the use of indices in WHERE clases. # # $Id: where.test,v 1.3 2001/09/16 00:13:28 drh Exp $ set testdir [file dirname $argv0] source $testdir/tester.tcl # Build some test data # do_test where-1.0 { execsql { CREATE TABLE t1(w int, x int, y int); CREATE TABLE t2(p int, q int, r int, s int); } for {set i 1} {$i<=100} {incr i} { set w $i set x [expr {int(log($i)/log(2))}] set y [expr {$i*$i + 2*$i + 1}] execsql "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES($w,$x,$y)" } execsql { INSERT INTO t2 SELECT 101-w, x, (SELECT max(y) FROM t1)+1-y, y FROM t1; CREATE INDEX i1w ON t1(w); CREATE INDEX i1xy ON t1(x,y); CREATE INDEX i2p ON t2(p); CREATE INDEX i2r ON t2(r); CREATE INDEX i2qs ON t2(q, s); } } {} # Verify that queries use an index. We are using the special "fcnt(*)" # function to verify the results. fcnt(*) returns the number of Fetch # operations that have occurred up to the point where fcnt(*) is invoked. # By verifing that fcnt(*) returns a small number we know that an index # was used instead of an exhaustive search. # do_test where-1.1 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE w=10} } {3 121 1} do_test where-1.2 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE w=11} } {3 144 1} do_test where-1.3 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE 11=w} } {3 144 1} do_test where-1.4 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE 11=w AND x>2} } {3 144 1} do_test where-1.5 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE y<200 AND w=11 AND x>2} } {3 144 1} do_test where-1.6 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE y<200 AND x>2 AND w=11} } {3 144 1} do_test where-1.7 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE w=11 AND y<200 AND x>2} } {3 144 1} do_test where-1.8 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE w>10 AND y=144 AND x=3} } {3 144 1} do_test where-1.9 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE y=144 AND w>10 AND x=3} } {3 144 1} do_test where-1.10 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE x=3 AND w>=10 AND y=121} } {3 121 1} do_test where-1.11 { execsql {SELECT x, y, fcnt(*) FROM t1 WHERE x=3 AND y=100 AND w<10} } {3 100 1} # Do the same kind of thing except use a join as the data source. # do_test where-2.1 { execsql { SELECT w, p, fcnt(*) FROM t2, t1 WHERE x=q AND y=s AND r=8977 } } {34 67 2} do_test where-2.2 { execsql { SELECT w, p, fcnt(*) FROM t2, t1 WHERE x=q AND s=y AND r=8977 } } {34 67 2} do_test where-2.3 { execsql { SELECT w, p, fcnt(*) FROM t2, t1 WHERE x=q AND s=y AND r=8977 AND w>10 } } {34 67 2} do_test where-2.4 { execsql { SELECT w, p, fcnt(*) FROM t2, t1 WHERE p<80 AND x=q AND s=y AND r=8977 AND w>10 } } {34 67 2} do_test where-2.5 { execsql { SELECT w, p, fcnt(*) FROM t2, t1 WHERE p<80 AND x=q AND 8977=r AND s=y AND w>10 } } {34 67 2} do_test where-2.6 { execsql { SELECT w, p, fcnt(*) FROM t2, t1 WHERE x=q AND p=77 AND s=y AND w>5 } } {24 77 2} do_test where-2.7 { execsql { SELECT w, p, fcnt(*) FROM t1, t2 WHERE x=q AND p>77 AND s=y AND w=5 } } {5 96 2} # Lets do a 3-way join. # do_test where-3.1 { execsql { SELECT A.w, B.p, C.w, fcnt(*) FROM t1 as A, t2 as B, t1 as C WHERE C.w=101-B.p AND B.r=10202-A.y AND A.w=11 } } {11 90 11 3} do_test where-3.2 { execsql { SELECT A.w, B.p, C.w, fcnt(*) FROM t1 as A, t2 as B, t1 as C WHERE C.w=101-B.p AND B.r=10202-A.y AND A.w=12 } } {12 89 12 3} do_test where-3.3 { execsql { SELECT A.w, B.p, C.w, fcnt(*) FROM t1 as A, t2 as B, t1 as C WHERE A.w=15 AND B.p=C.w AND B.r=10202-A.y } } {15 86 86 3} finish_test