# t/innodb_mysql.test # # Last update: # 2006-07-26 ML test refactored (MySQL 5.1) # main testing code t/innodb_mysql.test -> include/mix1.inc # #Want to skip this test from daily Valgrind execution. --source include/no_valgrind_without_big.inc # Adding big test option for this test. --source include/big_test.inc -- source include/have_innodb.inc let $engine_type= InnoDB; let $other_engine_type= MEMORY; # InnoDB does support FOREIGN KEYs let $test_foreign_keys= 1; --source include/mix1.inc --disable_warnings drop table if exists t1, t2, t3; --enable_warnings --echo # --echo # BUG#35850: Performance regression in 5.1.23/5.1.24 --echo # create table t1(a int); insert into t1 values (0),(1),(2),(3),(4),(5),(6),(7),(8),(9); create table t2 (a int, b int, pk int, key(a,b), primary key(pk)) engine=innodb; insert into t2 select @a:=A.a+10*(B.a + 10*C.a),@a, @a from t1 A, t1 B, t1 C; --echo # this must use key 'a', not PRIMARY: --replace_column 9 # explain select a from t2 where a=b; drop table t1, t2; --echo # --echo # Bug #40360: Binlog related errors with binlog off --echo # # This bug is triggered when the binlog format is STATEMENT and the # binary log is turned off. In this case, no error should be shown for # the statement since there are no replication issues. SET SESSION BINLOG_FORMAT=STATEMENT; SET SESSION TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED; query_vertical select @@session.sql_log_bin, @@session.binlog_format, @@session.tx_isolation; CREATE TABLE t1 ( a INT ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1); DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#37284 Crash in Field_string::type() --echo # --disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; --enable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1 (a char(50)) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE INDEX i1 on t1 (a(3)); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'abcde'; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug #37742: HA_EXTRA_KEYREAD flag is set when key contains only prefix of --echo # requested column --echo # CREATE TABLE foo (a int, b int, c char(10), PRIMARY KEY (c(3)), KEY b (b) ) engine=innodb; CREATE TABLE foo2 (a int, b int, c char(10), PRIMARY KEY (c), KEY b (b) ) engine=innodb; CREATE TABLE bar (a int, b int, c char(10), PRIMARY KEY (c(3)), KEY b (b) ) engine=myisam; INSERT INTO foo VALUES (1,2,'abcdefghij'), (2,3,''), (3,4,'klmnopqrst'), (4,5,'uvwxyz'), (5,6,'meotnsyglt'), (4,5,'asfdewe'); INSERT INTO bar SELECT * FROM foo; INSERT INTO foo2 SELECT * FROM foo; -- disable_result_log ANALYZE TABLE bar; ANALYZE TABLE foo; ANALYZE TABLE foo2; -- enable_result_log --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT c FROM bar WHERE b>2; --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT c FROM foo WHERE b>2; --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT c FROM foo2 WHERE b>2; --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT c FROM bar WHERE c>2; --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT c FROM foo WHERE c>2; --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT c FROM foo2 WHERE c>2; DROP TABLE foo, bar, foo2; --echo # --echo # Bug#41348: INSERT INTO tbl SELECT * FROM temp_tbl overwrites locking type of temp table --echo # --disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1,t3,t2; DROP FUNCTION IF EXISTS f1; --enable_warnings DELIMITER |; CREATE FUNCTION f1() RETURNS VARCHAR(250) BEGIN return 'hhhhhhh' ; END| DELIMITER ;| CREATE TABLE t1 (a VARCHAR(20), b VARCHAR(20), c VARCHAR(20)) ENGINE=INNODB; BEGIN WORK; CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t2 (a VARCHAR(20), b VARCHAR(20), c varchar(20)) ENGINE=INNODB; CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t3 LIKE t2; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('a','b',NULL),('c','d',NULL),('e','f',NULL); SET @stmt := CONCAT('INSERT INTO t2 SELECT tbl.a, tbl.b, f1()',' FROM t1 tbl'); PREPARE stmt1 FROM @stmt; SET @stmt := CONCAT('INSERT INTO t3', ' SELECT * FROM t2'); PREPARE stmt3 FROM @stmt; EXECUTE stmt1; COMMIT; DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt1; DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt3; DROP TABLE t1,t3,t2; DROP FUNCTION f1; --echo # --echo # Bug#37016: TRUNCATE TABLE removes some rows but not all --echo # --disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1,t2; --enable_warnings 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)) ENGINE=INNODB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1),(2); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (3,2); SET AUTOCOMMIT = 0; START TRANSACTION; --error ER_TRUNCATE_ILLEGAL_FK TRUNCATE TABLE t1; SELECT * FROM t1; COMMIT; SELECT * FROM t1; START TRANSACTION; --error ER_TRUNCATE_ILLEGAL_FK TRUNCATE TABLE t1; SELECT * FROM t1; ROLLBACK; SELECT * FROM t1; SET AUTOCOMMIT = 1; START TRANSACTION; SELECT * FROM t1; COMMIT; --error ER_TRUNCATE_ILLEGAL_FK TRUNCATE TABLE t1; SELECT * FROM t1; DELETE FROM t2 WHERE id = 3; START TRANSACTION; SELECT * FROM t1; --error ER_TRUNCATE_ILLEGAL_FK TRUNCATE TABLE t1; ROLLBACK; SELECT * FROM t1; TRUNCATE TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#40127 Multiple table DELETE IGNORE hangs on foreign key constraint violation on 5.0 --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 ( id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, PRIMARY KEY (id) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 ( id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, aid INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id), FOREIGN KEY (aid) REFERENCES t1 (id) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t3 ( bid INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL, FOREIGN KEY (bid) REFERENCES t2 (id) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t4 ( a INT ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t5 ( a INT ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 (id) VALUES (1); INSERT INTO t2 (id, aid) VALUES (1, 1),(2,1),(3,1),(4,1); INSERT INTO t3 (bid) VALUES (1); INSERT INTO t4 VALUES (1),(2),(3),(4),(5); INSERT INTO t5 VALUES (1); DELETE t5 FROM t4 LEFT JOIN t5 ON t4.a= t5.a; --error ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED_2 DELETE t2, t1 FROM t2 INNER JOIN t1 ON (t2.aid = t1.id) WHERE t2.id = 1; --error ER_ROW_IS_REFERENCED_2 DELETE t2, t1 FROM t2 INNER JOIN t1 ON (t2.aid = t1.id) WHERE t2.id = 1; DELETE IGNORE t2, t1 FROM t2 INNER JOIN t1 ON (t2.aid = t1.id) WHERE t2.id = 1; DROP TABLE t3; DROP TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t1; DROP TABLES t4,t5; --echo # Bug#40127 Multiple table DELETE IGNORE hangs on foreign key constraint violation on 5.0 --echo # Testing for any side effects of IGNORE on AFTER DELETE triggers used with --echo # transactional tables. --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 (a VARCHAR(100)) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t3 (i INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t4 (i INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, t1i INT, FOREIGN KEY (t1i) REFERENCES t1(i)) ENGINE=InnoDB; delimiter ||; CREATE TRIGGER trg AFTER DELETE ON t1 FOR EACH ROW BEGIN SET @b:='EXECUTED TRIGGER'; INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (@b); SET @a:= error_happens_here; END|| delimiter ;|| SET @b:=""; SET @a:=""; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1),(2),(3),(4); INSERT INTO t3 SELECT * FROM t1; --echo ** An error in a trigger causes rollback of the statement. --error ER_BAD_FIELD_ERROR DELETE t1 FROM t3 LEFT JOIN t1 ON t1.i=t3.i; SELECT @a,@b; SELECT * FROM t2; SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t3 ON t1.i=t3.i; --echo ** Same happens with the IGNORE option --error ER_BAD_FIELD_ERROR DELETE IGNORE t1 FROM t3 LEFT JOIN t1 ON t1.i=t3.i; SELECT * FROM t2; SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t3 ON t1.i=t3.i; --echo ** --echo ** The following is an attempt to demonstrate --echo ** error handling inside a row iteration. --echo ** DROP TRIGGER trg; DELETE FROM t1; DELETE FROM t2; DELETE FROM t3; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1),(2),(3),(4); INSERT INTO t3 VALUES (1),(2),(3),(4); INSERT INTO t4 VALUES (3,3),(4,4); delimiter ||; CREATE TRIGGER trg AFTER DELETE ON t1 FOR EACH ROW BEGIN SET @b:= CONCAT('EXECUTED TRIGGER FOR ROW ',CAST(OLD.i AS CHAR)); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (@b); END|| delimiter ;|| --echo ** DELETE is prevented by foreign key constrains but errors are silenced. --echo ** The AFTER trigger isn't fired. DELETE IGNORE t1 FROM t3 LEFT JOIN t1 ON t1.i=t3.i; --echo ** Tables are modified by best effort: SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t3 ON t1.i=t3.i; --echo ** The AFTER trigger was only executed on successful rows: SELECT * FROM t2; DROP TRIGGER trg; --echo ** --echo ** Induce an error midway through an AFTER-trigger --echo ** DELETE FROM t4; DELETE FROM t1; DELETE FROM t3; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1),(2),(3),(4); INSERT INTO t3 VALUES (1),(2),(3),(4); delimiter ||; CREATE TRIGGER trg AFTER DELETE ON t1 FOR EACH ROW BEGIN SET @a:= @a+1; IF @a > 2 THEN INSERT INTO t4 VALUES (5,5); END IF; END|| delimiter ;|| SET @a:=0; --echo ** Errors in the trigger causes the statement to abort. --error ER_NO_REFERENCED_ROW_2 DELETE IGNORE t1 FROM t3 LEFT JOIN t1 ON t1.i=t3.i; SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t3 ON t1.i=t3.i; SELECT * FROM t4; DROP TRIGGER trg; DROP TABLE t4; DROP TABLE t1; DROP TABLE t2; DROP TABLE t3; --echo # --echo # Bug#43580: Issue with Innodb on multi-table update --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b INT, KEY (a)) ENGINE = INNODB; CREATE TABLE t2 (a INT KEY, b INT, KEY (b)) ENGINE = INNODB; CREATE TABLE t3 (a INT, b INT KEY, KEY (a)) ENGINE = INNODB; CREATE TABLE t4 (a INT KEY, b INT, KEY (b)) ENGINE = INNODB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), (4, 4), (5, 5), (6, 6); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), (4, 4), (5, 5); INSERT INTO t3 VALUES (1, 101), (2, 102), (3, 103), (4, 104), (5, 105), (6, 106); INSERT INTO t4 VALUES (1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), (4, 4), (5, 5); # Because t1.a changes and t2.b changes based on t1.a, the result # depends on join order, so STRAIGHT_JOIN is used to have it repeatable. UPDATE t2 straight_join t1 SET t1.a = t1.a + 100, t2.b = t1.a + 10 WHERE t1.a BETWEEN 2 AND 4 AND t2.a = t1.b; --sorted_result SELECT * FROM t2; # Because t1.a changes and t2.b changes based on t1.a, the result # depends on join order, so STRAIGHT_JOIN is used to have it repeatable. UPDATE t4 straight_join t3 SET t3.a = t3.a + 100, t4.b = t3.a + 10 WHERE t3.a BETWEEN 2 AND 4 AND t4.a = t3.b - 100; --sorted_result SELECT * FROM t4; DROP TABLE t1, t2, t3, t4; --echo # --echo # Bug#44886: SIGSEGV in test_if_skip_sort_order() - --echo # uninitialized variable used as subscript --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b INT, c INT, d INT, PRIMARY KEY (b), KEY (a,c)) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,1,1,0); CREATE TABLE t2 (a INT, b INT, e INT, KEY (e)) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1,1,2); CREATE TABLE t3 (a INT, b INT) ENGINE=MyISAM; INSERT INTO t3 VALUES (1, 1); SELECT * FROM t1, t2, t3 WHERE t1.a = t3.a AND (t1.b = t3.b OR t1.d) AND t2.b = t1.b AND t2.e = 2 GROUP BY t1.b; DROP TABLE t1, t2, t3; --echo # --echo # Bug #45828: Optimizer won't use partial primary key if another --echo # index can prevent filesort --echo # # Create the table CREATE TABLE `t1` ( c1 int NOT NULL, c2 int NOT NULL, c3 int NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (c1,c2), KEY (c3) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; # populate with data INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (5,2,1246276747); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (2,1,1246281721); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (7,3,1246281756); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (4,2,1246282139); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (3,1,1246282230); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,0,1246282712); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (8,3,1246282765); INSERT INTO t1 SELECT c1+10,c2+10,c3+10 FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 SELECT c1+100,c2+100,c3+100 from t1; INSERT INTO t1 SELECT c1+1000,c2+1000,c3+1000 from t1; INSERT INTO t1 SELECT c1+10000,c2+10000,c3+10000 from t1; INSERT INTO t1 SELECT c1+100000,c2+100000,c3+100000 from t1; INSERT INTO t1 SELECT c1+1000000,c2+1000000,c3+1000000 from t1; ANALYZE TABLE t1; # query and no rows will match the c1 condition, whereas all will match c3 SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE c1 = 99999999 AND c3 > 1 ORDER BY c3; # SHOULD use the pk. # index on c3 will be used instead of primary key EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE c1 = 99999999 AND c3 > 1 ORDER BY c3; # if we force the primary key, we can see the estimate is 1 EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 FORCE INDEX (PRIMARY) WHERE c1 = 99999999 AND c3 > 1 ORDER BY c3; CREATE TABLE t2 ( c1 int NOT NULL, c2 int NOT NULL, c3 int NOT NULL, KEY (c1,c2), KEY (c3) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; # SHOULD use the pk. # if we switch it from a primary key to a regular index, it works correctly as well explain SELECT * FROM t2 WHERE c1 = 99999999 AND c3 > 1 ORDER BY c3; DROP TABLE t1,t2; --echo # --echo # 36259: Optimizing with ORDER BY --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 ( a INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, b INT NOT NULL, c INT NOT NULL, d VARCHAR(5), e INT NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (a), KEY i2 (b,c,d) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 (b,c,d,e) VALUES (1,1,'a',1), (2,2,'b',2); INSERT INTO t1 (b,c,d,e) SELECT RAND()*10000, RAND()*10000, d, e FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 (b,c,d,e) SELECT RAND()*10000, RAND()*10000, d, e FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 (b,c,d,e) SELECT RAND()*10000, RAND()*10000, d, e FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 (b,c,d,e) SELECT RAND()*10000, RAND()*10000, d, e FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 (b,c,d,e) SELECT RAND()*10000, RAND()*10000, d, e FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 (b,c,d,e) SELECT RAND()*10000, RAND()*10000, d, e FROM t1; -- disable_result_log ANALYZE TABLE t1; -- enable_result_log EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE b=1 AND c=1 ORDER BY a; EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 FORCE INDEX(i2) WHERE b=1 and c=1 ORDER BY a; # With 4k pages, the 'rows' column in the output below is either 120 or 138, # not 128 as it is with 8k and 16k. Bug#12602606 --replace_result 128 {checked} 120 {checked} 138 {checked} EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 FORCE INDEX(PRIMARY) WHERE b=1 AND c=1 ORDER BY a; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug #47963: Wrong results when index is used --echo # CREATE TABLE t1( a VARCHAR(5) NOT NULL, b VARCHAR(5) NOT NULL, c DATETIME NOT NULL, KEY (c) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('TEST', 'TEST', '2009-10-09 00:00:00'); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'TEST' AND c >= '2009-10-09 00:00:00' AND c <= '2009-10-09 00:00:00'; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'TEST' AND c >= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.0' AND c <= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.0'; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'TEST' AND c >= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.0' AND c <= '2009-10-09 00:00:00'; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'TEST' AND c >= '2009-10-09 00:00:00' AND c <= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.0'; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'TEST' AND c >= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.000' AND c <= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.000'; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'TEST' AND c >= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.00' AND c <= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.001'; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'TEST' AND c >= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.001' AND c <= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.00'; EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 'TEST' AND c >= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.001' AND c <= '2009-10-09 00:00:00.00'; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug #46175: NULL read_view and consistent read assertion --echo # CREATE TABLE t1(a CHAR(13),KEY(a)) ENGINE=innodb; CREATE TABLE t2(b DATETIME,KEY(b)) ENGINE=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (),(); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (),(); CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW v1 AS SELECT 1 FROM t2 WHERE b =(SELECT a FROM t1 LIMIT 1); CONNECT (con1, localhost, root,,); CONNECTION default; DELIMITER |; CREATE PROCEDURE p1(num INT) BEGIN DECLARE i INT DEFAULT 0; REPEAT SHOW CREATE VIEW v1; SET i:=i+1; UNTIL i>num END REPEAT; END| DELIMITER ;| --echo # Should not crash --disable_query_log --disable_result_log --send CALL p1(1000) CONNECTION con1; --echo # Should not crash CALL p1(1000); CONNECTION default; --reap --enable_query_log --enable_result_log DISCONNECT con1; DROP PROCEDURE p1; DROP VIEW v1; DROP TABLE t1,t2; --echo # --echo # Bug #49324: more valgrind errors in test_if_skip_sort_order --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=innodb ; --echo # should not cause valgrind warnings SELECT 1 FROM t1 JOIN t1 a USING(a) GROUP BY t1.a,t1.a; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#50843: Filesort used instead of clustered index led to --echo # performance degradation. --echo # create table t1(f1 int not null primary key, f2 int) engine=innodb; create table t2(f1 int not null, key (f1)) engine=innodb; insert into t1 values (1,1),(2,2),(3,3); insert into t2 values (1),(2),(3); -- disable_result_log analyze table t1; analyze table t2; -- enable_result_log explain select t1.* from t1 left join t2 using(f1) group by t1.f1; drop table t1,t2; --echo # --echo # --echo # Bug #39653: find_shortest_key in sql_select.cc does not consider --echo # clustered primary keys --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT PRIMARY KEY, b INT, c INT, d INT, e INT, f INT, KEY (b,c)) ENGINE=INNODB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,1,1,1,1,1), (2,2,2,2,2,2), (3,3,3,3,3,3), (4,4,4,4,4,4), (5,5,5,5,5,5), (6,6,6,6,6,6), (7,7,7,7,7,7), (8,8,8,8,8,8), (9,9,9,9,9,9), (11,11,11,11,11,11); ANALYZE TABLE t1; --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1 DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug #49838: DROP INDEX and ADD UNIQUE INDEX for same index may --echo # corrupt definition at engine --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT NOT NULL, b INT NOT NULL, KEY k (a,b)) ENGINE=InnoDB; ALTER TABLE t1 DROP INDEX k, ADD UNIQUE INDEX k (a,b); --query_vertical SHOW INDEXES FROM t1; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug #47453: InnoDB incorrectly changes TIMESTAMP columns when --echo # JOINed during an UPDATE --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (d INT) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 (a INT, b INT, c TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP) ENGINE=InnoDB; --echo # set up our data elements INSERT INTO t1 (d) VALUES (1); INSERT INTO t2 (a,b) VALUES (1,1); SELECT SECOND(c) INTO @bug47453 FROM t2; SELECT SECOND(c)-@bug47453 FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON d=a; UPDATE t1 JOIN t2 ON d=a SET b=1 WHERE a=1; SELECT SECOND(c)-@bug47453 FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON d=a; SELECT SLEEP(1); UPDATE t1 JOIN t2 ON d=a SET b=1 WHERE a=1; --echo # should be 0 SELECT SECOND(c)-@bug47453 FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON d=a; DROP TABLE t1, t2; --echo # --echo # Bug #53334: wrong result for outer join with impossible ON condition --echo # (see the same test case for MyISAM in join.test) --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (id INT PRIMARY KEY); CREATE TABLE t2 (id INT); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (75); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (79); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (78); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (77); REPLACE INTO t1 VALUES (76); REPLACE INTO t1 VALUES (76); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (104); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (103); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (102); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (101); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (105); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (106); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (107); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (107),(75),(1000); SELECT t1.id,t2.id FROM t2 LEFT JOIN t1 ON t1.id>=74 AND t1.id<=0 WHERE t2.id=75 AND t1.id IS NULL; EXPLAIN SELECT t1.id,t2.id FROM t2 LEFT JOIN t1 ON t1.id>=74 AND t1.id<=0 WHERE t2.id=75 AND t1.id IS NULL; DROP TABLE t1,t2; --echo # --echo # Bug#38999 valgrind warnings for update statement in function compare_record() --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 (a INT PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 values (1),(2),(3),(4),(5); INSERT INTO t2 values (1); SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 2; UPDATE t1,t2 SET t1.a = t1.a + 100 WHERE t1.a = 1; DROP TABLE t1,t2; --echo # --echo # Bug #53830: !table || (!table->read_set || bitmap_is_set(table->read_set, field_index)) --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b INT, c INT, d INT, PRIMARY KEY(a,b,c), KEY(b,d)) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (0, 77, 1, 3); UPDATE t1 SET d = 0 WHERE b = 77 AND c = 25; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#50389 Using intersect does not return all rows --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 ( f1 INT(10) NOT NULL, f2 INT(10), f3 INT(10), f4 TINYINT(4), f5 VARCHAR(50), PRIMARY KEY (f1), KEY idx1 (f2,f5,f4), KEY idx2 (f2,f4) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; LOAD DATA INFILE '../../std_data/intersect-bug50389.tsv' INTO TABLE t1; -- disable_result_log ANALYZE TABLE t1; -- enable_result_log set @tmp_innodb_mysql= @@optimizer_switch; set optimizer_switch='extended_keys=off'; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE f1 IN (3305028,3353871,3772880,3346860,4228206,3336022, 3470988,3305175,3329875,3817277,3856380,3796193, 3784744,4180925,4559596,3963734,3856391,4494153) AND f5 = 'abcdefghijklmnopwrst' AND f2 = 1221457 AND f4 = 0 ; EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE f1 IN (3305028,3353871,3772880,3346860,4228206,3336022, 3470988,3305175,3329875,3817277,3856380,3796193, 3784744,4180925,4559596,3963734,3856391,4494153) AND f5 = 'abcdefghijklmnopwrst' AND f2 = 1221457 AND f4 = 0 ; set optimizer_switch=@tmp_innodb_mysql; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#51431 Wrong sort order after import of dump file --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 ( f1 INT(11) NOT NULL, f2 int(11) NOT NULL, f3 int(11) NOT NULL, f4 tinyint(1) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (f1), UNIQUE KEY (f2, f3), KEY (f4) ) ENGINE=InnoDB STATS_PERSISTENT=0; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,1,991,1), (2,1,992,1), (3,1,993,1), (4,1,994,1), (5,1,995,1), (6,1,996,1), (7,1,997,1), (8,1,998,1), (10,1,999,1), (11,1,9910,1), (16,1,9911,1), (17,1,9912,1), (18,1,9913,1), (19,1,9914,1), (20,1,9915,1), (21,1,9916,1), (22,1,9917,1), (23,1,9918,1), (24,1,9919,1), (25,1,9920,1), (26,1,9921,1), (27,1,9922,1); FLUSH TABLES; SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE f2 = 1 AND f4 = TRUE ORDER BY f1 DESC LIMIT 5; EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE f2 = 1 AND f4 = TRUE ORDER BY f1 DESC LIMIT 5; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#54117 crash in thr_multi_unlock, temporary table --echo # CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t1(a INT) ENGINE = InnoDB; LOCK TABLES t1 READ; ALTER TABLE t1 COMMENT 'test'; UNLOCK TABLES; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#55656: mysqldump can be slower after bug #39653 fix --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT , b INT, c INT, d INT, KEY (b), PRIMARY KEY (a,b)) ENGINE=INNODB STATS_PERSISTENT=0; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,1,1,1), (2,2,2,2), (3,3,3,3); --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1 DROP INDEX b ON t1; CREATE INDEX b ON t1(a,b); --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1 DROP INDEX b ON t1; CREATE INDEX b ON t1(a,b,c); --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1 DROP INDEX b ON t1; CREATE INDEX b ON t1(a,b,c,d); --query_vertical EXPLAIN SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1 DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#55826: create table .. select crashes with when KILL_BAD_DATA --echo # is returned --echo # CREATE TABLE t1(a INT) ENGINE=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (0); SET SQL_MODE='STRICT_ALL_TABLES'; --error ER_TRUNCATED_WRONG_VALUE CREATE TABLE t2 SELECT LEAST((SELECT '' FROM t1),NOW()) FROM `t1`; DROP TABLE t1; SET SQL_MODE=DEFAULT; --echo # --echo # Bug#56862 Execution of a query that uses index merge returns a wrong result --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 ( pk int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, a int, b int, INDEX idx(a)) ENGINE=INNODB; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) VALUES (11, 1100), (2, 200), (1, 100), (14, 1400), (5, 500), (3, 300), (17, 1700), (4, 400), (12, 1200), (8, 800), (6, 600), (18, 1800), (9, 900), (10, 1000), (7, 700), (13, 1300), (15, 1500), (19, 1900), (16, 1600), (20, 2000); INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a+20, b+2000 FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a+40, b+4000 FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a+80, b+8000 FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a,b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a,b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a,b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a,b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a,b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a,b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a,b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1(a,b) SELECT a,b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1000000, 0, 0); set @optimizer_switch_saved=@@optimizer_switch; SET SESSION optimizer_switch='derived_merge=off'; SET SESSION sort_buffer_size = 1024*36; --replace_column 9 # EXPLAIN SELECT COUNT(*) FROM (SELECT * FROM t1 FORCE INDEX (idx,PRIMARY) WHERE a BETWEEN 2 AND 7 OR pk=1000000) AS t; SELECT COUNT(*) FROM (SELECT * FROM t1 FORCE INDEX (idx,PRIMARY) WHERE a BETWEEN 2 AND 7 OR pk=1000000) AS t; set @@optimizer_switch=@optimizer_switch_saved; SET SESSION sort_buffer_size = DEFAULT; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Test for bug #39932 "create table fails if column for FK is in different --echo # case than in corr index". --echo # --disable_warnings drop tables if exists t1, t2; --enable_warnings create table t1 (pk int primary key) engine=InnoDB; # Even although the below statement uses uppercased field names in # foreign key definition it still should be able to find explicitly # created supporting index. So it should succeed and should not # create any additional supporting indexes. create table t2 (fk int, key x (fk), constraint x foreign key (FK) references t1 (PK)) engine=InnoDB; show create table t2; drop table t2, t1; --echo # --echo # Test for bug #11762012 - "54553: INNODB ASSERTS IN HA_INNOBASE:: --echo # UPDATE_ROW, TEMPORARY TABLE, TABLE LOCK". --echo # --disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; --enable_warnings CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t1 (c int) ENGINE = InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1); LOCK TABLES t1 READ; --echo # Even though temporary table was locked for READ we --echo # still allow writes to it to be compatible with MyISAM. --echo # This is possible since due to fact that temporary tables --echo # are specific to connection and therefore locking for them --echo # is irrelevant. UPDATE t1 SET c = 5; UNLOCK TABLES; DROP TEMPORARY TABLE t1; --echo # End of 5.1 tests --echo # --echo # Bug#49604 "6.0 processing compound WHERE clause incorrectly --echo # with Innodb - extra rows" --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 ( c1 INT NOT NULL, c2 INT, PRIMARY KEY (c1), KEY k1 (c2) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (12,1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (15,1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (16,1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (22,1); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (20,2); CREATE TABLE t2 ( c1 INT NOT NULL, c2 INT, PRIMARY KEY (c1) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1,2); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (2,9); SELECT STRAIGHT_JOIN t2.c2, t1.c2, t2.c1 FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON t1.c2 = t2.c1 WHERE t2.c1 IN (2, 1, 6) OR t2.c1 NOT IN (1); DROP TABLE t1, t2; --echo # --echo # Bug#44613 SELECT statement inside FUNCTION takes a shared lock --echo # --disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; DROP FUNCTION IF EXISTS f1; --enable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1(x INT PRIMARY KEY, y INT) ENGINE=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 0), (2, 0); CREATE FUNCTION f1(z INT) RETURNS INT READS SQL DATA RETURN (SELECT x FROM t1 WHERE x = z); START TRANSACTION; SELECT f1(1); --disable_query_log connect (con2, localhost, root); --enable_query_log START TRANSACTION; SELECT f1(1); # This next statement used to block. UPDATE t1 SET y = 1 WHERE x = 1; COMMIT; disconnect con2; --source include/wait_until_disconnected.inc connection default; COMMIT; DROP TABLE t1; DROP FUNCTION f1; --echo # --echo # Bug#42744: Crash when using a join buffer to join a table with a blob --echo # column and an additional column used for duplicate elimination. --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (a tinyblob) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t2 (a int PRIMARY KEY, b tinyblob) ENGINE=InnoDB; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('1'), (NULL); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1, '1'); EXPLAIN SELECT t2.b FROM t1,t2 WHERE t1.a IN (SELECT 1 FROM t2); SELECT t2.b FROM t1,t2 WHERE t1.a IN (SELECT 1 FROM t2); DROP TABLE t1,t2; --echo # --echo # Bug#48093: 6.0 Server not processing equivalent IN clauses properly --echo # with Innodb tables --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 ( i int(11) DEFAULT NULL, v1 varchar(1) DEFAULT NULL, v2 varchar(20) DEFAULT NULL, KEY i (i), KEY v (v1,i) ) ENGINE=innodb; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,'f','no'); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (2,'u','yes-u'); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (2,'h','yes-h'); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (3,'d','no'); --echo SELECT v2 FROM t1 WHERE v1 IN ('f', 'd', 'h', 'u' ) AND i = 2; --echo --echo # Should not use index_merge EXPLAIN SELECT v2 FROM t1 WHERE v1 IN ('f', 'd', 'h', 'u' ) AND i = 2; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#54606 innodb fast alter table + pack_keys=0 --echo # prevents adding new indexes --echo # --disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; --enable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b CHAR(9), c INT, key(b)) ENGINE=InnoDB PACK_KEYS=0; CREATE INDEX a ON t1 (a); CREATE INDEX c on t1 (c); DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Additional coverage for refactoring which is made as part --echo # of fix for Bug#27480 "Extend CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES privilege --echo # to allow temp table operations". --echo # --echo # Check that OPTIMIZE table works for temporary InnoDB tables. --disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; --enable_warnings CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t1 (a INT) ENGINE=InnoDB; OPTIMIZE TABLE t1; DROP TABLE t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#11762345 54927: DROPPING AND ADDING AN INDEX IN ONE --echo # COMMAND CAN FAIL IN INNODB PLUGIN 1.0 --echo # --disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; --enable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1 (id int, a int, b int, PRIMARY KEY (id), INDEX a (a)) ENGINE=innodb; ALTER TABLE t1 DROP INDEX a, ADD INDEX a (b, a); # This used to fail ALTER TABLE t1 DROP INDEX a, ADD INDEX (a, b); DROP TABLE t1; --echo End of 6.0 tests