mariadb/mysql-test/t/delete.test
unknown 661796389f Bug#17711: DELETE doesn't use index when ORDER BY, LIMIT and non-restricting
WHERE is present.

If a DELETE statement with ORDER BY and LIMIT contains a WHERE clause
with conditions that for sure cannot be used for index access (like in
WHERE @var:= field) the execution always follows the filesort path.    
It happens currently even when for the above case there is an index that
can be used to speedup sorting by the order by list.

Now if a DELETE statement with ORDER BY and LIMIT contains such WHERE
clause conditions that cannot be used to build any quick select then
the mysql_delete() tries to use an index like there is no WHERE clause at all.


mysql-test/t/delete.test:
  Added a test case for bug#17711: DELETE doesn't use index when ORDER BY, LIMIT and non-restricting
  WHERE is present.
mysql-test/r/delete.result:
  Added a test case for bug#17711: DELETE doesn't use index when ORDER BY, LIMIT and non-restricting WHERE is present.
sql/sql_delete.cc:
  Bug#17711: DELETE doesn't use index when ORDER BY, LIMIT and non-restricting WHERE is present.
  Now if a DELETE statement with ORDER BY and LIMIT contains such WHERE
  clause conditions that cannot be used to build any quick select then
  the mysql_delete() tries to use an index like there is no WHERE clause at all.
2007-01-11 16:05:03 +03:00

187 lines
4.9 KiB
Text

#
# Check for problems with delete
#
--disable_warnings
drop table if exists t1,t11,t12,t2;
--enable_warnings
CREATE TABLE t1 (a tinyint(3), b tinyint(5));
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,1);
INSERT LOW_PRIORITY INTO t1 VALUES (1,2);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,3);
DELETE from t1 where a=1 limit 1;
DELETE LOW_PRIORITY from t1 where a=1;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,1);
DELETE from t1;
LOCK TABLE t1 write;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,2);
DELETE from t1;
UNLOCK TABLES;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,2);
SET AUTOCOMMIT=0;
DELETE from t1;
SET AUTOCOMMIT=1;
drop table t1;
#
# Test of delete when the delete will cause a node to disappear and reappear
# (This assumes a block size of 1024)
#
create table t1 (
a bigint not null,
b bigint not null default 0,
c bigint not null default 0,
d bigint not null default 0,
e bigint not null default 0,
f bigint not null default 0,
g bigint not null default 0,
h bigint not null default 0,
i bigint not null default 0,
j bigint not null default 0,
primary key (a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i,j));
insert into t1 (a) values (2),(4),(6),(8),(10),(12),(14),(16),(18),(20),(22),(24),(26),(23);
delete from t1 where a=26;
drop table t1;
create table t1 (
a bigint not null,
b bigint not null default 0,
c bigint not null default 0,
d bigint not null default 0,
e bigint not null default 0,
f bigint not null default 0,
g bigint not null default 0,
h bigint not null default 0,
i bigint not null default 0,
j bigint not null default 0,
primary key (a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i,j));
insert into t1 (a) values (2),(4),(6),(8),(10),(12),(14),(16),(18),(20),(22),(24),(26),(23),(27);
delete from t1 where a=27;
drop table t1;
CREATE TABLE `t1` (
`i` int(10) NOT NULL default '0',
`i2` int(10) NOT NULL default '0',
PRIMARY KEY (`i`)
);
-- error 1054
DELETE FROM t1 USING t1 WHERE post='1';
drop table t1;
#
# CHAR(0) bug - not actually DELETE bug, but anyway...
#
CREATE TABLE t1 (
bool char(0) default NULL,
not_null varchar(20) binary NOT NULL default '',
misc integer not null,
PRIMARY KEY (not_null)
) ENGINE=MyISAM;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (NULL,'a',4), (NULL,'b',5), (NULL,'c',6), (NULL,'d',7);
select * from t1 where misc > 5 and bool is null;
delete from t1 where misc > 5 and bool is null;
select * from t1 where misc > 5 and bool is null;
select count(*) from t1;
delete from t1 where 1 > 2;
select count(*) from t1;
delete from t1 where 3 > 2;
select count(*) from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# Bug #5733: Table handler error with self-join multi-table DELETE
#
create table t1 (a int not null auto_increment primary key, b char(32));
insert into t1 (b) values ('apple'), ('apple');
select * from t1;
delete t1 from t1, t1 as t2 where t1.b = t2.b and t1.a > t2.a;
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# IGNORE option
#
create table t11 (a int NOT NULL, b int, primary key (a));
create table t12 (a int NOT NULL, b int, primary key (a));
create table t2 (a int NOT NULL, b int, primary key (a));
insert into t11 values (0, 10),(1, 11),(2, 12);
insert into t12 values (33, 10),(0, 11),(2, 12);
insert into t2 values (1, 21),(2, 12),(3, 23);
select * from t11;
select * from t12;
select * from t2;
-- error 1242
delete t11.*, t12.* from t11,t12 where t11.a = t12.a and t11.b <> (select b from t2 where t11.a < t2.a);
select * from t11;
select * from t12;
delete ignore t11.*, t12.* from t11,t12 where t11.a = t12.a and t11.b <> (select b from t2 where t11.a < t2.a);
select * from t11;
select * from t12;
insert into t11 values (2, 12);
-- error 1242
delete from t11 where t11.b <> (select b from t2 where t11.a < t2.a);
select * from t11;
delete ignore from t11 where t11.b <> (select b from t2 where t11.a < t2.a);
select * from t11;
drop table t11, t12, t2;
#
# Bug #4198: deletion and KEYREAD
#
create table t1 (a int, b int, unique key (a), key (b));
insert into t1 values (3, 3), (7, 7);
delete t1 from t1 where a = 3;
check table t1;
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# Bug #8392: delete with ORDER BY containing a direct reference to the table
#
CREATE TABLE t1 ( a int PRIMARY KEY );
DELETE FROM t1 WHERE t1.a > 0 ORDER BY t1.a;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (0),(1),(2);
DELETE FROM t1 WHERE t1.a > 0 ORDER BY t1.a LIMIT 1;
SELECT * FROM t1;
DROP TABLE t1;
#
# Bug #21392: multi-table delete with alias table name fails with
# 1003: Incorrect table name
#
create table t1 (a int);
delete `4.t1` from t1 as `4.t1` where `4.t1`.a = 5;
delete FROM `4.t1` USING t1 as `4.t1` where `4.t1`.a = 5;
drop table t1;
#
# Bug #8143: deleting '0000-00-00' values using IS NULL
#
create table t1(a date not null);
insert into t1 values (0);
select * from t1 where a is null;
delete from t1 where a is null;
select count(*) from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# Bug#17711: DELETE doesn't use index when ORDER BY, LIMIT and
# non-restricting WHERE is present.
#
create table t1(f1 int primary key);
insert into t1 values (4),(3),(1),(2);
delete from t1 where (@a:= f1) order by f1 limit 1;
select @a;
drop table t1;
--echo End of 4.1 tests