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- # 2007 May 12
- #
- # 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 tests a special case in the b-tree code that can be
- # hit by the "IN" operator (or EXISTS, NOT IN, etc.).
- #
- # $Id: in2.test,v 1.3 2008/07/12 14:52:20 drh Exp $
- set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
- source $testdir/tester.tcl
- do_test in2-1 {
- execsql {
- CREATE TABLE a(i INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, a);
- }
- } {}
- set ::N 2000
- do_test in2-2 {
- db transaction {
- for {set ::ii 0} {$::ii < $::N} {incr ::ii} {
- execsql {INSERT INTO a VALUES($::ii, $::ii)}
- }
- execsql {INSERT INTO a VALUES(4000, '')}
- for {set ::ii 0} {$::ii < $::N} {incr ::ii} {
- set ::t [format "x%04d" $ii]
- execsql {INSERT INTO a VALUES(NULL, $::t)}
- }
- }
- } {}
- # Each iteration of this loop builds a slightly different b-tree to
- # evaluate the "IN (...)" operator in the SQL statement. The contents
- # of the b-tree are (in sorted order):
- #
- # $::ii integers.
- # a string of zero length.
- # $::N short strings.
- #
- # Records are inserted in sorted order.
- #
- # The string of zero-length is stored in a b-tree cell with 3 bytes
- # of payload. Moving this cell from a leaf node to a internal node
- # during b-tree balancing was causing an assertion failure.
- #
- # This bug only applied to b-trees generated to evaluate IN (..)
- # clauses, as it is impossible for persistent b-trees (SQL tables +
- # indices) to contain cells smaller than 4 bytes.
- #
- for {set ::ii 3} {$::ii < $::N} {incr ::ii} {
- do_test in2-$::ii {
- execsql {
- SELECT 1 IN (SELECT a FROM a WHERE (i < $::ii) OR (i >= $::N))
- }
- } {1}
- }
- finish_test
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