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--
-- BTREE_INDEX
-- test retrieval of min/max keys for each index
--
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_i4_heap b
WHERE b.seqno < 1;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_i4_heap b
WHERE b.seqno >= 9999;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_i4_heap b
WHERE b.seqno = 4500;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_name_heap b
WHERE b.seqno < '1'::name;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_name_heap b
WHERE b.seqno >= '9999'::name;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_name_heap b
WHERE b.seqno = '4500'::name;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_txt_heap b
WHERE b.seqno < '1'::text;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_txt_heap b
WHERE b.seqno >= '9999'::text;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_txt_heap b
WHERE b.seqno = '4500'::text;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_f8_heap b
WHERE b.seqno < '1'::float8;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_f8_heap b
WHERE b.seqno >= '9999'::float8;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_f8_heap b
WHERE b.seqno = '4500'::float8;
--
-- Check correct optimization of LIKE (special index operator support)
-- for both indexscan and bitmapscan cases
--
set enable_seqscan to false;
set enable_indexscan to true;
set enable_bitmapscan to false;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname like E'RI\\_FKey%del' order by 1;
select proname from pg_proc where proname like E'RI\\_FKey%del' order by 1;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike '00%foo' order by 1;
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike '00%foo' order by 1;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike 'ri%foo' order by 1;
set enable_indexscan to false;
set enable_bitmapscan to true;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname like E'RI\\_FKey%del' order by 1;
select proname from pg_proc where proname like E'RI\\_FKey%del' order by 1;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike '00%foo' order by 1;
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike '00%foo' order by 1;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike 'ri%foo' order by 1;
reset enable_seqscan;
reset enable_indexscan;
reset enable_bitmapscan;
-- Also check LIKE optimization with binary-compatible cases
create temp table btree_bpchar (f1 text collate "C");
create index on btree_bpchar(f1 bpchar_ops) WITH (deduplicate_items=on);
insert into btree_bpchar values ('foo'), ('fool'), ('bar'), ('quux');
-- doesn't match index:
explain (costs off)
select * from btree_bpchar where f1 like 'foo';
select * from btree_bpchar where f1 like 'foo';
explain (costs off)
select * from btree_bpchar where f1 like 'foo%';
select * from btree_bpchar where f1 like 'foo%';
-- these do match the index:
explain (costs off)
select * from btree_bpchar where f1::bpchar like 'foo';
select * from btree_bpchar where f1::bpchar like 'foo';
explain (costs off)
select * from btree_bpchar where f1::bpchar like 'foo%';
select * from btree_bpchar where f1::bpchar like 'foo%';
-- get test coverage for "single value" deduplication strategy:
insert into btree_bpchar select 'foo' from generate_series(1,1500);
--
-- Perform unique checking, with and without the use of deduplication
--
CREATE TABLE dedup_unique_test_table (a int) WITH (autovacuum_enabled=false);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX dedup_unique ON dedup_unique_test_table (a) WITH (deduplicate_items=on);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX plain_unique ON dedup_unique_test_table (a) WITH (deduplicate_items=off);
-- Generate enough garbage tuples in index to ensure that even the unique index
-- with deduplication enabled has to check multiple leaf pages during unique
-- checking (at least with a BLCKSZ of 8192 or less)
DO $$
BEGIN
FOR r IN 1..1350 LOOP
DELETE FROM dedup_unique_test_table;
INSERT INTO dedup_unique_test_table SELECT 1;
END LOOP;
END$$;
-- Exercise the LP_DEAD-bit-set tuple deletion code with a posting list tuple.
-- The implementation prefers deleting existing items to merging any duplicate
-- tuples into a posting list, so we need an explicit test to make sure we get
-- coverage (note that this test also assumes BLCKSZ is 8192 or less):
DROP INDEX plain_unique;
DELETE FROM dedup_unique_test_table WHERE a = 1;
INSERT INTO dedup_unique_test_table SELECT i FROM generate_series(0,450) i;
--
-- Test B-tree fast path (cache rightmost leaf page) optimization.
--
-- First create a tree that's at least three levels deep (i.e. has one level
-- between the root and leaf levels). The text inserted is long. It won't be
-- TOAST compressed because we use plain storage in the table. Only a few
-- index tuples fit on each internal page, allowing us to get a tall tree with
-- few pages. (A tall tree is required to trigger caching.)
--
-- The text column must be the leading column in the index, since suffix
-- truncation would otherwise truncate tuples on internal pages, leaving us
-- with a short tree.
create table btree_tall_tbl(id int4, t text);
alter table btree_tall_tbl alter COLUMN t set storage plain;
create index btree_tall_idx on btree_tall_tbl (t, id) with (fillfactor = 10);
insert into btree_tall_tbl select g, repeat('x', 250)
from generate_series(1, 130) g;
--
-- Test for multilevel page deletion
--
CREATE TABLE delete_test_table (a bigint, b bigint, c bigint, d bigint);
INSERT INTO delete_test_table SELECT i, 1, 2, 3 FROM generate_series(1,80000) i;
ALTER TABLE delete_test_table ADD PRIMARY KEY (a,b,c,d);
-- Delete most entries, and vacuum, deleting internal pages and creating "fast
-- root"
DELETE FROM delete_test_table WHERE a < 79990;
VACUUM delete_test_table;
--
-- Test B-tree insertion with a metapage update (XLOG_BTREE_INSERT_META
-- WAL record type). This happens when a "fast root" page is split. This
-- also creates coverage for nbtree FSM page recycling.
--
-- The vacuum above should've turned the leaf page into a fast root. We just
-- need to insert some rows to cause the fast root page to split.
INSERT INTO delete_test_table SELECT i, 1, 2, 3 FROM generate_series(1,1000) i;
-- Test unsupported btree opclass parameters
create index on btree_tall_tbl (id int4_ops(foo=1));
-- Test case of ALTER INDEX with abuse of column names for indexes.
-- This grammar is not officially supported, but the parser allows it.
CREATE INDEX btree_tall_idx2 ON btree_tall_tbl (id);
ALTER INDEX btree_tall_idx2 ALTER COLUMN id SET (n_distinct=100);
DROP INDEX btree_tall_idx2;
-- Partitioned index
CREATE TABLE btree_part (id int4) PARTITION BY RANGE (id);
CREATE INDEX btree_part_idx ON btree_part(id);
ALTER INDEX btree_part_idx ALTER COLUMN id SET (n_distinct=100);
DROP TABLE btree_part;
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