1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340
|
puts {# 2008 December 11
#
# 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 implements regression tests for SQLite library.
#
# This file is automatically generated from a separate TCL script.
# This file seeks to exercise integer boundary values.
#
# $Id: boundary4.tcl,v 1.3 2009/01/02 15:45:48 shane Exp $
set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
source $testdir/tester.tcl
# Many of the boundary tests depend on a working 64-bit implementation.
if {![working_64bit_int]} { finish_test; return }
ifcapable !altertable { finish_test; return }
}
expr srand(0)
# Generate interesting boundary numbers
#
foreach x {
0x7f
0x7fff
0x7fffff
0x7fffffff
0x7fffffffff
0x7fffffffffff
0x7fffffffffffff
0x7fffffffffffffff
} {
set x [expr {wide($x)}]
set boundarynum($x) 1
set boundarynum([expr {$x+1}]) 1
set boundarynum([expr {-($x+1)}]) 1
set boundarynum([expr {-($x+2)}]) 1
set boundarynum([expr {$x+$x+1}]) 1
set boundarynum([expr {$x+$x+2}]) 1
}
set x [expr {wide(127)}]
for {set i 127} {$i<=9} {incr i} {
set boundarynum($x) 1
set boundarynum([expr {$x+1}]) 1
set x [expr {wide($x*128 + 127)}]
}
# Scramble the $inlist into a random order.
#
proc scramble {inlist} {
set y {}
foreach x $inlist {
lappend y [list [expr {rand()}] $x]
}
set y [lsort $y]
set outlist {}
foreach x $y {
lappend outlist [lindex $x 1]
}
return $outlist
}
# A simple selection sort. Not trying to be efficient.
#
proc sort {inlist} {
set outlist {}
set mn [lindex $inlist 0]
foreach x $inlist {
if {$x<$mn} {set mn $x}
}
set outlist $mn
set mx $mn
while {1} {
set valid 0
foreach x $inlist {
if {$x>$mx && (!$valid || $mn>$x)} {
set mn $x
set valid 1
}
}
if {!$valid} break
lappend outlist $mn
set mx $mn
}
return $outlist
}
# Reverse the order of a list
#
proc reverse {inlist} {
set i [llength $inlist]
set outlist {}
for {incr i -1} {$i>=0} {incr i -1} {
lappend outlist [lindex $inlist $i]
}
return $outlist
}
set nums1 [scramble [array names boundarynum]]
set nums2 [scramble [array names boundarynum]]
set tname boundary4
puts "do_test $tname-1.1 \173"
puts " db eval \173"
puts " CREATE TABLE t1(a,x);"
set a 0
set all_rowid {}
set all_a {}
set all_x {}
foreach r $nums1 {
incr a
set t1ra($r) $a
set t1ar($a) $r
set x [format %08x%08x [expr {wide($r)>>32}] $r]
set t1rx($r) $x
set t1xr($x) $r
puts " INSERT INTO t1(oid,a,x) VALUES($r,$a,'$x');"
lappend all_rowid $r
lappend all_a $a
lappend all_x $x
}
puts " CREATE INDEX t1i1 ON t1(a);"
puts " CREATE INDEX t1i2 ON t1(x);"
puts " \175"
puts "\175 {}"
puts "do_test $tname-1.2 \173"
puts " db eval \173"
puts " SELECT count(*) FROM t1"
puts " \175"
puts "\175 {[llength $nums1]}"
proc maketest {tnum sql answer} {
puts "do_test $::tname-$tnum \173"
puts " db eval \173"
puts " $sql"
puts " \175"
puts "\175 {$answer}"
}
set ans {}
foreach r [sort $all_rowid] {
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 1.3 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +rowid} $ans
maketest 1.4 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid} $ans
set ans {}
foreach r [reverse [sort $all_rowid]] {
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 1.5 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +rowid DESC} $ans
maketest 1.6 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid DESC} $ans
set ans {}
foreach a [sort $all_a] {
set r $t1ar($a)
lappend ans $r $a $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 1.7 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +a} $ans
maketest 1.8 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY a} $ans
set ans {}
foreach a [reverse [sort $all_a]] {
set r $t1ar($a)
lappend ans $r $a $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 1.9 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +a DESC} $ans
maketest 1.10 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY a DESC} $ans
set ans {}
foreach x [sort $all_x] {
set r $t1xr($x)
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $x
}
maketest 1.11 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +x} $ans
maketest 1.12 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY x} $ans
set ans {}
foreach x [reverse [sort $all_x]] {
set r $t1xr($x)
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $x
}
maketest 1.13 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +x DESC} $ans
maketest 1.14 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY x DESC} $ans
maketest 2.1 {UPDATE t1 SET rowid=a, a=rowid} {}
set ans {}
foreach r [sort $all_rowid] {
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 2.3 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +a} $ans
maketest 2.4 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY a} $ans
set ans {}
foreach r [reverse [sort $all_rowid]] {
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 2.5 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +a DESC} $ans
maketest 2.6 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY a DESC} $ans
set ans {}
foreach a [sort $all_a] {
set r $t1ar($a)
lappend ans $r $a $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 2.7 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +rowid} $ans
maketest 2.8 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid} $ans
set ans {}
foreach a [reverse [sort $all_a]] {
set r $t1ar($a)
lappend ans $r $a $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 2.9 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +rowid DESC} $ans
maketest 2.10 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid DESC} $ans
set ans {}
foreach x [sort $all_x] {
set r $t1xr($x)
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $x
}
maketest 2.11 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +x} $ans
maketest 2.12 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY x} $ans
set ans {}
foreach x [reverse [sort $all_x]] {
set r $t1xr($x)
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $x
}
maketest 2.13 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +x DESC} $ans
maketest 2.14 {SELECT a, rowid, x FROM t1 ORDER BY x DESC} $ans
maketest 3.1 {UPDATE t1 SET rowid=a, a=rowid} {}
maketest 3.2 {ALTER TABLE t1 ADD COLUMN z; UPDATE t1 SET z=zeroblob(600)} {}
set ans {}
foreach r [sort $all_rowid] {
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 3.3 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +rowid} $ans
maketest 3.4 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid} $ans
set ans {}
foreach r [reverse [sort $all_rowid]] {
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 3.5 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +rowid DESC} $ans
maketest 3.6 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid DESC} $ans
set ans {}
foreach a [sort $all_a] {
set r $t1ar($a)
lappend ans $r $a $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 3.7 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +a} $ans
maketest 3.8 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY a} $ans
set ans {}
foreach a [reverse [sort $all_a]] {
set r $t1ar($a)
lappend ans $r $a $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 3.9 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +a DESC} $ans
maketest 3.10 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY a DESC} $ans
set ans {}
foreach x [sort $all_x] {
set r $t1xr($x)
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $x
}
maketest 3.11 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +x} $ans
maketest 3.12 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY x} $ans
set ans {}
foreach x [reverse [sort $all_x]] {
set r $t1xr($x)
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $x
}
maketest 3.13 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY +x DESC} $ans
maketest 3.14 {SELECT rowid, a, x FROM t1 ORDER BY x DESC} $ans
maketest 4.1 {UPDATE t1 SET rowid=a, a=rowid, x=z, z=x} {}
set ans {}
foreach r [sort $all_rowid] {
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 4.3 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY +a} $ans
maketest 4.4 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY a} $ans
set ans {}
foreach r [reverse [sort $all_rowid]] {
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 4.5 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY +a DESC} $ans
maketest 4.6 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY a DESC} $ans
set ans {}
foreach a [sort $all_a] {
set r $t1ar($a)
lappend ans $r $a $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 4.7 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY +rowid} $ans
maketest 4.8 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid} $ans
set ans {}
foreach a [reverse [sort $all_a]] {
set r $t1ar($a)
lappend ans $r $a $t1rx($r)
}
maketest 4.9 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY +rowid DESC} $ans
maketest 4.10 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid DESC} $ans
set ans {}
foreach x [sort $all_x] {
set r $t1xr($x)
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $x
}
maketest 4.11 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY +z} $ans
maketest 4.12 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY z} $ans
set ans {}
foreach x [reverse [sort $all_x]] {
set r $t1xr($x)
lappend ans $r $t1ra($r) $x
}
maketest 4.13 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY +z DESC} $ans
maketest 4.14 {SELECT a, rowid, z FROM t1 ORDER BY z DESC} $ans
puts {finish_test}
|