mariadb/mysql-test/r/order_by_innodb.result
Sergei Petrunia ff8d4009a7 MDEV-9457: Poor query plan chosen for ORDER BY query by a recent 10.1
Undo the change in test_if_skip_sort_order() that set ref_key=-1 when
a variant of index_merge is used (was made in fix for MDEV-9021).

It turned out that test_if_cheaper_ordering() call below assumes that
ref_key=-1 means "no index is used", that is, "an inefficient full table
scan is done".
This is not the same as index_merge, index_merge can actually be quite
efficient. So, ref_key=MAX_KEY denotes the fact that some index is used,
not any given index.
2016-01-24 16:59:41 +03:00

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drop table if exists t0,t1,t2,t3;
#
# MDEV-6434: Wrong result (extra rows) with ORDER BY, multiple-column index, InnoDB
#
CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT, b INT, c INT, d TEXT, KEY idx(a,b,c)) ENGINE=InnoDB;
INSERT INTO t1 (a,c) VALUES
(8, 9),(8, 10),(13, 15),(16, 17),(16, 18),(16, 19),(20, 21),
(20, 22),(20, 24),(20, 25),(20, 26),(20, 27),(20, 28);
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a = 8 AND (b = 1 OR b IS NULL) ORDER BY c;
a b c d
8 NULL 9 NULL
8 NULL 10 NULL
DROP TABLE t1;
#
# MDEV-9457: Poor query plan chosen for ORDER BY query by a recent 10.1
#
create table t0 (a int);
insert into t0 values (0),(1),(2),(3),(4),(5),(6),(7),(8),(9);
create table t1 (
pk int primary key,
key1 int,
key2 int,
col1 char(255),
key(key1),
key(key2)
) engine=innodb;
set @a=-1;
insert into t1
select
@a:=@a+1,
@a,
@a,
repeat('abcd', 63)
from t0 A, t0 B, t0 C, t0 D;
# The following must NOT use 'index' on PK.
# It should use index_merge(key1,key2) + filesort
explain
select *
from t1
where key1<3 or key2<3
order by pk;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t1 index_merge key1,key2 key1,key2 5,5 NULL # Using sort_union(key1,key2); Using where; Using filesort
explain
select *
from t1
where key1<3 or key2<3;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t1 index_merge key1,key2 key1,key2 5,5 NULL # Using sort_union(key1,key2); Using where
drop table t0, t1;