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
|
# 2009 December 29
#
# 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.
#
#***********************************************************************
#
# Verify that when columns named "rowid", "oid", and "_rowid_" appear
# in a table as ordinary columns (not as the INTEGER PRIMARY KEY) then
# the use of these columns in triggers will refer to the column and not
# to the actual ROWID. Ticket [34d2ae1c6d08b5271ba5e5592936d4a1d913ffe3]
#
# Also, verify that triggers created like this:
#
# CREATE TRIGGER attached.trig AFTER INSERT ON attached.tab ...
#
# can be reparsed as a main database. Ticket [d6ddba6706353915ceedc56b4e3]
#
set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
source $testdir/tester.tcl
ifcapable {!trigger} {
finish_test
return
}
# Triggers on tables where the table has ordinary columns named
# rowid, oid, and _rowid_.
#
do_test triggerD-1.1 {
db eval {
CREATE TABLE t1(rowid, oid, _rowid_, x);
CREATE TABLE log(a,b,c,d,e);
CREATE TRIGGER r1 BEFORE INSERT ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r1', new.rowid, new.oid, new._rowid_, new.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r2 AFTER INSERT ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r2', new.rowid, new.oid, new._rowid_, new.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r3 BEFORE UPDATE ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r3.old', old.rowid, old.oid, old._rowid_, old.x);
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r3.new', new.rowid, new.oid, new._rowid_, new.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r4 AFTER UPDATE ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r4.old', old.rowid, old.oid, old._rowid_, old.x);
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r4.new', new.rowid, new.oid, new._rowid_, new.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r5 BEFORE DELETE ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r5', old.rowid, old.oid, old._rowid_, old.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r6 AFTER DELETE ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r6', old.rowid, old.oid, old._rowid_, old.x);
END;
}
} {}
do_test triggerD-1.2 {
db eval {
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(100,200,300,400);
SELECT * FROM log
}
} {r1 100 200 300 400 r2 100 200 300 400}
do_test triggerD-1.3 {
db eval {
DELETE FROM log;
UPDATE t1 SET rowid=rowid+1;
SELECT * FROM log
}
} {r3.old 100 200 300 400 r3.new 101 200 300 400 r4.old 100 200 300 400 r4.new 101 200 300 400}
do_test triggerD-1.4 {
db eval {
DELETE FROM log;
DELETE FROM t1;
SELECT * FROM log
}
} {r5 101 200 300 400 r6 101 200 300 400}
# Triggers on tables where the table does not have ordinary columns named
# rowid, oid, and _rowid_.
#
do_test triggerD-2.1 {
db eval {
DROP TABLE t1;
CREATE TABLE t1(w,x,y,z);
CREATE TRIGGER r1 BEFORE INSERT ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r1', new.rowid, new.oid, new._rowid_, new.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r2 AFTER INSERT ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r2', new.rowid, new.oid, new._rowid_, new.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r3 BEFORE UPDATE ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r3.old', old.rowid, old.oid, old._rowid_, old.x);
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r3.new', new.rowid, new.oid, new._rowid_, new.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r4 AFTER UPDATE ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r4.old', old.rowid, old.oid, old._rowid_, old.x);
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r4.new', new.rowid, new.oid, new._rowid_, new.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r5 BEFORE DELETE ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r5', old.rowid, old.oid, old._rowid_, old.x);
END;
CREATE TRIGGER r6 AFTER DELETE ON t1 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log VALUES('r6', old.rowid, old.oid, old._rowid_, old.x);
END;
}
} {}
do_test triggerD-2.2 {
db eval {
DELETE FROM log;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(100,200,300,400);
SELECT * FROM log;
}
} {r1 -1 -1 -1 200 r2 1 1 1 200}
do_test triggerD-2.3 {
db eval {
DELETE FROM log;
UPDATE t1 SET x=x+1;
SELECT * FROM log
}
} {r3.old 1 1 1 200 r3.new 1 1 1 201 r4.old 1 1 1 200 r4.new 1 1 1 201}
do_test triggerD-2.4 {
db eval {
DELETE FROM log;
DELETE FROM t1;
SELECT * FROM log
}
} {r5 1 1 1 201 r6 1 1 1 201}
###########################################################################
#
# Ticket [985771e1161200ae5eac3162686ea6711c035d08]:
#
# When both a main database table and a TEMP table have the same name,
# and a main database trigge is created on the main table, the trigger
# is incorrectly bound to the TEMP table. For example:
#
# CREATE TABLE t1(x);
# CREATE TEMP TABLE t1(x);
# CREATE TABLE t2(z);
# CREATE TRIGGER main.r1 AFTER INSERT ON t1 BEGIN
# INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(10000 + new.x);
# END;
# INSERT INTO main.t1 VALUES(3);
# INSERT INTO temp.t1 VALUES(4);
# SELECT * FROM t2;
#
# The r1 trigger fires when the value 4 is inserted into the temp.t1
# table, rather than when value 3 is inserted into main.t1.
#
do_test triggerD-3.1 {
db eval {
CREATE TABLE t300(x);
CREATE TEMP TABLE t300(x);
CREATE TABLE t301(y);
CREATE TRIGGER main.r300 AFTER INSERT ON t300 BEGIN
INSERT INTO t301 VALUES(10000 + new.x);
END;
INSERT INTO main.t300 VALUES(3);
INSERT INTO temp.t300 VALUES(4);
SELECT * FROM t301;
}
} {10003}
do_test triggerD-3.2 {
db eval {
DELETE FROM t301;
CREATE TRIGGER temp.r301 AFTER INSERT ON t300 BEGIN
INSERT INTO t301 VALUES(20000 + new.x);
END;
INSERT INTO main.t300 VALUES(3);
INSERT INTO temp.t300 VALUES(4);
SELECT * FROM t301;
}
} {10003 20004}
#############################################################################
#
# Ticket [d6ddba6706353915ceedc56b4e3e72ecb4d77ba4]
#
# The following syntax really should not be allowed:
#
# CREATE TRIGGER xyz.trig BEFORE UPDATE ON xyz.tab BEGIN ...
#
# But a long-standing bug does allow it. And the "xyz.tab" slips into
# the sqlite_master table. We cannot fix the bug simply by disallowing
# "xyz.tab" since that could break legacy applications. We have to
# fix the system so that the "xyz." on "xyz.tab" is ignored.
# Verify that this is the case.
#
do_test triggerD-4.1 {
db close
forcedelete test.db test2.db
sqlite3 db test.db
db eval {
CREATE TABLE t1(x);
ATTACH 'test2.db' AS db2;
CREATE TABLE db2.t2(y);
CREATE TABLE db2.log(z);
CREATE TRIGGER db2.trig AFTER INSERT ON db2.t2 BEGIN
INSERT INTO log(z) VALUES(new.y);
END;
INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(123);
SELECT * FROM log;
}
} {123}
do_test triggerD-4.2 {
sqlite3 db2 test2.db
db2 eval {
INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(234);
SELECT * FROM log;
}
} {123 234}
db2 close
finish_test
|