sqlite/test/fts2n.test
drh 85b623f2f9 Change all instances of "it's" in comments to either "its" or "it is",
as appropriate, in case the comments are ever again read by a pedantic
grammarian.  Ticket #2840. (CVS 4629)

FossilOrigin-Name: 4e91a267febda572e7239f0f1cc66b3102558c36
2007-12-13 21:54:09 +00:00

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5.3 KiB
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# 2007 April 26
#
# The author disclaims copyright to this source code.
#
#*************************************************************************
# This file implements tests for prefix-searching in the fts2
# component of the SQLite library.
#
# $Id: fts2n.test,v 1.2 2007/12/13 21:54:11 drh Exp $
#
set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
source $testdir/tester.tcl
# If SQLITE_ENABLE_FTS2 is defined, omit this file.
ifcapable !fts2 {
finish_test
return
}
# A large string to prime the pump with.
set text {
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Maecenas
iaculis mollis ipsum. Praesent rhoncus placerat justo. Duis non quam
sed turpis posuere placerat. Curabitur et lorem in lorem porttitor
aliquet. Pellentesque bibendum tincidunt diam. Vestibulum blandit
ante nec elit. In sapien diam, facilisis eget, dictum sed, viverra
at, felis. Vestibulum magna. Sed magna dolor, vestibulum rhoncus,
ornare vel, vulputate sit amet, felis. Integer malesuada, tellus at
luctus gravida, diam nunc porta nibh, nec imperdiet massa metus eu
lectus. Aliquam nisi. Nunc fringilla nulla at lectus. Suspendisse
potenti. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient
montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Pellentesque odio nulla, feugiat eu,
suscipit nec, consequat quis, risus.
}
db eval {
CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE t1 USING fts2(c);
INSERT INTO t1(rowid, c) VALUES(1, $text);
INSERT INTO t1(rowid, c) VALUES(2, 'Another lovely row');
}
# Exact match
do_test fts2n-1.1 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH 'lorem'"
} {1}
# And a prefix
do_test fts2n-1.2 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH 'lore*'"
} {1}
# Prefix includes exact match
do_test fts2n-1.3 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH 'lorem*'"
} {1}
# Make certain everything isn't considered a prefix!
do_test fts2n-1.4 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH 'lore'"
} {}
# Prefix across multiple rows.
do_test fts2n-1.5 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH 'lo*'"
} {1 2}
# Likewise, with multiple hits in one document.
do_test fts2n-1.6 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH 'l*'"
} {1 2}
# Prefix which should only hit one document.
do_test fts2n-1.7 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH 'lov*'"
} {2}
# * not at end is dropped.
do_test fts2n-1.8 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH 'lo *'"
} {}
# Stand-alone * is dropped.
do_test fts2n-1.9 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH '*'"
} {}
# Phrase-query prefix.
do_test fts2n-1.10 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH '\"lovely r*\"'"
} {2}
do_test fts2n-1.11 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH '\"lovely r\"'"
} {}
# Phrase query with multiple prefix matches.
do_test fts2n-1.12 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH '\"a* l*\"'"
} {1 2}
# Phrase query with multiple prefix matches.
do_test fts2n-1.13 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t1 WHERE t1 MATCH '\"a* l* row\"'"
} {2}
# Test across updates (and, by implication, deletes).
# Version of text without "lorem".
regsub -all {[Ll]orem} $text '' ntext
db eval {
CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE t2 USING fts2(c);
INSERT INTO t2(rowid, c) VALUES(1, $text);
INSERT INTO t2(rowid, c) VALUES(2, 'Another lovely row');
UPDATE t2 SET c = $ntext WHERE rowid = 1;
}
# Can't see lorem as an exact match.
do_test fts2n-2.1 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t2 WHERE t2 MATCH 'lorem'"
} {}
# Can't see a prefix of lorem, either.
do_test fts2n-2.2 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t2 WHERE t2 MATCH 'lore*'"
} {}
# Can see lovely in the other document.
do_test fts2n-2.3 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t2 WHERE t2 MATCH 'lo*'"
} {2}
# Can still see other hits.
do_test fts2n-2.4 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t2 WHERE t2 MATCH 'l*'"
} {1 2}
# Prefix which should only hit one document.
do_test fts2n-2.5 {
execsql "SELECT rowid FROM t2 WHERE t2 MATCH 'lov*'"
} {2}
# Test with a segment which will have multiple levels in the tree.
# Build a big document with lots of unique terms.
set bigtext $text
foreach c {a b c d e} {
regsub -all {[A-Za-z]+} $bigtext "&$c" t
append bigtext $t
}
# Populate a table with many copies of the big document, so that we
# can test the number of hits found. Populate $ret with the expected
# hit counts for each row. offsets() returns 4 elements for every
# hit. We'll have 6 hits for row 1, 1 for row 2, and 6*(2^5)==192 for
# $bigtext.
set ret {6 1}
db eval {
BEGIN;
CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE t3 USING fts2(c);
INSERT INTO t3(rowid, c) VALUES(1, $text);
INSERT INTO t3(rowid, c) VALUES(2, 'Another lovely row');
}
for {set i 0} {$i<100} {incr i} {
db eval {INSERT INTO t3(rowid, c) VALUES(3+$i, $bigtext)}
lappend ret 192
}
db eval {COMMIT;}
# Test that we get the expected number of hits.
do_test fts2n-3.1 {
set t {}
db eval {SELECT offsets(t3) as o FROM t3 WHERE t3 MATCH 'l*'} {
set l [llength $o]
lappend t [expr {$l/4}]
}
set t
} $ret
# TODO(shess) It would be useful to test a couple edge cases, but I
# don't know if we have the precision to manage it from here at this
# time. Prefix hits can cross leaves, which the code above _should_
# hit by virtue of size. There are two variations on this. If the
# tree is 2 levels high, the code will find the leaf-node extent
# directly, but if its higher, the code will have to follow two
# separate interior branches down the tree. Both should be tested.
finish_test