# include/index_merge_ror_cpk.inc # # Clustered PK ROR-index_merge tests # # Note: The comments/expectations refer to InnoDB. # They might be not valid for other storage engines. # # Last update: # 2006-08-02 ML test refactored # old name was t/index_merge_ror_cpk.test # main code went into include/index_merge_ror_cpk.inc # --source include/have_sequence.inc --echo #---------------- Clustered PK ROR-index_merge tests ----------------------------- create table t1 ( pk1 int not null, pk2 int not null, key1 int not null, key2 int not null, pktail1ok int not null, pktail2ok int not null, pktail3bad int not null, pktail4bad int not null, pktail5bad int not null, pk2copy int not null, badkey int not null, filler1 char (200), filler2 char (200), key (key1), key (key2), /* keys with tails from CPK members */ key (pktail1ok, pk1), key (pktail2ok, pk1, pk2), key (pktail3bad, pk2, pk1), key (pktail4bad, pk1, pk2copy), key (pktail5bad, pk1, pk2, pk2copy), primary key (pk1, pk2) ); --disable_query_log begin; let $1=10000; while ($1) { eval insert into t1 values ($1 div 10,$1 mod 100, $1/100,$1/100, $1/100,$1/100,$1/100,$1/100,$1/100, $1 mod 100, $1/1000,'filler-data-$1','filler2'); dec $1; } commit; --enable_query_log # Verify that range scan on CPK is ROR # (use index_intersection because it is impossible to check that for index union) explain select * from t1 where pk1 = 1 and pk2 < 80 and key1=0; # CPK scan + 1 ROR range scan is a special case select * from t1 where pk1 = 1 and pk2 < 80 and key1=0; # Verify that CPK fields are considered to be covered by index scans explain select pk1,pk2 from t1 where key1 = 10 and key2=10 and 2*pk1+1 < 2*96+1; select pk1,pk2 from t1 where key1 = 10 and key2=10 and 2*pk1+1 < 2*96+1; # Verify that CPK is always used for index intersection scans # (this is because it is used as a filter, not for retrieval) explain select * from t1 where badkey=1 and key1=10; set @tmp_index_merge_ror_cpk=@@optimizer_switch; set optimizer_switch='extended_keys=off'; --replace_column 9 ROWS explain select * from t1 where pk1 < 7500 and key1 = 10; set optimizer_switch=@tmp_index_merge_ror_cpk; # Verify that keys with 'tails' of PK members are ok. explain select * from t1 where pktail1ok=1 and key1=10; explain select * from t1 where pktail2ok=1 and key1=10; # Note: The following is actually a deficiency, it uses sort_union currently. # This comment refers to InnoDB and is probably not valid for other engines. explain select * from t1 where (pktail2ok=1 and pk1< 50000) or key1=10; # The expected rows differs a bit from platform to platform --replace_result 98 ROWS 99 ROWS explain select * from t1 where pktail3bad=1 and key1=10; explain select * from t1 where pktail4bad=1 and key1=10; explain select * from t1 where pktail5bad=1 and key1=10; # Test for problem with innodb key values prefetch buffer: explain select pk1,pk2,key1,key2 from t1 where key1 = 10 and key2=10 limit 10; select pk1,pk2,key1,key2 from t1 where key1 = 10 and key2=10 limit 10; drop table t1; # Testcase for BUG#4984 create table t1 ( RUNID varchar(22), SUBMITNR varchar(5), ORDERNR char(1), PROGRAMM varchar(8), TESTID varchar(4), UCCHECK char(1), ETEXT varchar(80), ETEXT_TYPE char(1), INFO char(1), SEVERITY tinyint(3), TADIRFLAG char(1), PRIMARY KEY (RUNID,SUBMITNR,ORDERNR,PROGRAMM,TESTID,UCCHECK), KEY `TVERM~KEY` (PROGRAMM,TESTID,UCCHECK) ) DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1; update t1 set `ETEXT` = '', `ETEXT_TYPE`='', `INFO`='', `SEVERITY`='', `TADIRFLAG`='' WHERE `RUNID`= '' AND `SUBMITNR`= '' AND `ORDERNR`='' AND `PROGRAMM`='' AND `TESTID`='' AND `UCCHECK`=''; drop table t1; --echo # --echo # Bug#50402 Optimizer producing wrong results when using Index Merge on InnoDB --echo # CREATE TABLE t1 (f1 INT, PRIMARY KEY (f1)); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (2); CREATE TABLE t2 (f1 INT, f2 INT, f3 char(1), PRIMARY KEY (f1), KEY (f2), KEY (f3) ); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (1, 1, 'h'), (2, 3, 'h'), (3, 2, ''), (4, 2, ''); SELECT t1.f1 FROM t1 WHERE (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t2 WHERE t2.f3 = 'h' AND t2.f2 = t1.f1) = 0 AND t1.f1 = 2; EXPLAIN SELECT t1.f1 FROM t1 WHERE (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t2 WHERE t2.f3 = 'h' AND t2.f2 = t1.f1) = 0 AND t1.f1 = 2; DROP TABLE t1,t2;