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259 lines
8.4 KiB
Tcl
259 lines
8.4 KiB
Tcl
# See the file LICENSE for redistribution information.
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#
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# Copyright (c) 2001-2002
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# Sleepycat Software. All rights reserved.
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#
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# $Id: sindex.tcl,v 1.8 2002/05/07 17:15:46 krinsky Exp $
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#
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# Secondary index test driver and maintenance routines.
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#
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# Breaking from the usual convention, we put the driver function
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# for the secondary index tests here, in its own file. The reason
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# for this is that it's something which compartmentalizes nicely,
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# has little in common with other driver functions, and
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# is likely to be run on its own from time to time.
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#
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# The secondary index tests themselves live in si0*.tcl.
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# Standard number of secondary indices to create if a single-element
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# list of methods is passed into the secondary index tests.
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global nsecondaries
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set nsecondaries 2
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# Run the secondary index tests.
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proc sindex { {verbose 0} args } {
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global verbose_check_secondaries
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set verbose_check_secondaries $verbose
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# Run basic tests with a single secondary index and a small number
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# of keys, then again with a larger number of keys. (Note that
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# we can't go above 5000, since we use two items from our
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# 10K-word list for each key/data pair.)
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foreach n { 200 5000 } {
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foreach pm { btree hash recno frecno queue queueext } {
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foreach sm { dbtree dhash ddbtree ddhash btree hash } {
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sindex001 [list $pm $sm $sm] $n
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sindex002 [list $pm $sm $sm] $n
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# Skip tests 3 & 4 for large lists;
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# they're not that interesting.
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if { $n < 1000 } {
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sindex003 [list $pm $sm $sm] $n
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sindex004 [list $pm $sm $sm] $n
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}
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sindex006 [list $pm $sm $sm] $n
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}
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}
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}
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# Run secondary index join test. (There's no point in running
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# this with both lengths, the primary is unhappy for now with fixed-
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# length records (XXX), and we need unsorted dups in the secondaries.)
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foreach pm { btree hash recno } {
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foreach sm { btree hash } {
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sindex005 [list $pm $sm $sm] 1000
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}
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sindex005 [list $pm btree hash] 1000
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sindex005 [list $pm hash btree] 1000
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}
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# Run test with 50 secondaries.
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foreach pm { btree hash } {
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set methlist [list $pm]
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for { set i 0 } { $i < 50 } { incr i } {
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# XXX this should incorporate hash after #3726
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if { $i % 2 == 0 } {
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lappend methlist "dbtree"
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} else {
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lappend methlist "ddbtree"
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}
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}
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sindex001 $methlist 500
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sindex002 $methlist 500
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sindex003 $methlist 500
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sindex004 $methlist 500
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}
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}
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# The callback function we use for each given secondary in most tests
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# is a simple function of its place in the list of secondaries (0-based)
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# and the access method (since recnos may need different callbacks).
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#
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# !!!
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# Note that callbacks 0-3 return unique secondary keys if the input data
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# are unique; callbacks 4 and higher may not, so don't use them with
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# the normal wordlist and secondaries that don't support dups.
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# The callbacks that incorporate a key don't work properly with recno
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# access methods, at least not in the current test framework (the
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# error_check_good lines test for e.g. 1foo, when the database has
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# e.g. 0x010x000x000x00foo).
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proc callback_n { n } {
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switch $n {
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0 { return _s_reversedata }
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1 { return _s_noop }
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2 { return _s_concatkeydata }
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3 { return _s_concatdatakey }
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4 { return _s_reverseconcat }
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5 { return _s_truncdata }
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6 { return _s_alwayscocacola }
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}
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return _s_noop
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}
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proc _s_reversedata { a b } { return [reverse $b] }
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proc _s_truncdata { a b } { return [string range $b 1 end] }
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proc _s_concatkeydata { a b } { return $a$b }
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proc _s_concatdatakey { a b } { return $b$a }
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proc _s_reverseconcat { a b } { return [reverse $a$b] }
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proc _s_alwayscocacola { a b } { return "Coca-Cola" }
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proc _s_noop { a b } { return $b }
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# Should the check_secondary routines print lots of output?
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set verbose_check_secondaries 0
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# Given a primary database handle, a list of secondary handles, a
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# number of entries, and arrays of keys and data, verify that all
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# databases have what they ought to.
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proc check_secondaries { pdb sdbs nentries keyarr dataarr {pref "Check"} } {
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upvar $keyarr keys
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upvar $dataarr data
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global verbose_check_secondaries
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# Make sure each key/data pair is in the primary.
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if { $verbose_check_secondaries } {
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puts "\t\t$pref.1: Each key/data pair is in the primary"
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}
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for { set i 0 } { $i < $nentries } { incr i } {
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error_check_good pdb_get($i) [$pdb get $keys($i)] \
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[list [list $keys($i) $data($i)]]
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}
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for { set j 0 } { $j < [llength $sdbs] } { incr j } {
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# Make sure each key/data pair is in this secondary.
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if { $verbose_check_secondaries } {
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puts "\t\t$pref.2:\
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Each skey/key/data tuple is in secondary #$j"
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}
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for { set i 0 } { $i < $nentries } { incr i } {
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set sdb [lindex $sdbs $j]
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set skey [[callback_n $j] $keys($i) $data($i)]
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error_check_good sdb($j)_pget($i) \
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[$sdb pget -get_both $skey $keys($i)] \
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[list [list $skey $keys($i) $data($i)]]
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}
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# Make sure this secondary contains only $nentries
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# items.
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if { $verbose_check_secondaries } {
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puts "\t\t$pref.3: Secondary #$j has $nentries items"
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}
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set dbc [$sdb cursor]
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error_check_good dbc($i) \
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[is_valid_cursor $dbc $sdb] TRUE
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for { set k 0 } { [llength [$dbc get -next]] > 0 } \
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{ incr k } { }
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error_check_good numitems($i) $k $nentries
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error_check_good dbc($i)_close [$dbc close] 0
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}
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if { $verbose_check_secondaries } {
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puts "\t\t$pref.4: Primary has $nentries items"
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}
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set dbc [$pdb cursor]
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error_check_good pdbc [is_valid_cursor $dbc $pdb] TRUE
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for { set k 0 } { [llength [$dbc get -next]] > 0 } { incr k } { }
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error_check_good numitems $k $nentries
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error_check_good pdbc_close [$dbc close] 0
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}
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# Given a primary database handle and a list of secondary handles, walk
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# through the primary and make sure all the secondaries are correct,
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# then walk through the secondaries and make sure the primary is correct.
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#
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# This is slightly less rigorous than the normal check_secondaries--we
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# use it whenever we don't have up-to-date "keys" and "data" arrays.
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proc cursor_check_secondaries { pdb sdbs nentries { pref "Check" } } {
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global verbose_check_secondaries
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# Make sure each key/data pair in the primary is in each secondary.
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set pdbc [$pdb cursor]
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error_check_good ccs_pdbc [is_valid_cursor $pdbc $pdb] TRUE
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set i 0
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if { $verbose_check_secondaries } {
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puts "\t\t$pref.1:\
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Key/data in primary => key/data in secondaries"
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}
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for { set dbt [$pdbc get -first] } { [llength $dbt] > 0 } \
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{ set dbt [$pdbc get -next] } {
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incr i
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set pkey [lindex [lindex $dbt 0] 0]
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set pdata [lindex [lindex $dbt 0] 1]
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for { set j 0 } { $j < [llength $sdbs] } { incr j } {
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set sdb [lindex $sdbs $j]
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set sdbt [$sdb pget -get_both \
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[[callback_n $j] $pkey $pdata] $pkey]
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error_check_good pkey($pkey,$j) \
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[lindex [lindex $sdbt 0] 1] $pkey
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error_check_good pdata($pdata,$j) \
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[lindex [lindex $sdbt 0] 2] $pdata
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}
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}
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error_check_good ccs_pdbc_close [$pdbc close] 0
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error_check_good primary_has_nentries $i $nentries
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for { set j 0 } { $j < [llength $sdbs] } { incr j } {
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if { $verbose_check_secondaries } {
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puts "\t\t$pref.2:\
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Key/data in secondary #$j => key/data in primary"
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}
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set sdb [lindex $sdbs $j]
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set sdbc [$sdb cursor]
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error_check_good ccs_sdbc($j) [is_valid_cursor $sdbc $sdb] TRUE
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set i 0
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for { set dbt [$sdbc pget -first] } { [llength $dbt] > 0 } \
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{ set dbt [$sdbc pget -next] } {
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incr i
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set pkey [lindex [lindex $dbt 0] 1]
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set pdata [lindex [lindex $dbt 0] 2]
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error_check_good pdb_get($pkey/$pdata,$j) \
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[$pdb get -get_both $pkey $pdata] \
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[list [list $pkey $pdata]]
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}
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error_check_good secondary($j)_has_nentries $i $nentries
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# To exercise pget -last/pget -prev, we do it backwards too.
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set i 0
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for { set dbt [$sdbc pget -last] } { [llength $dbt] > 0 } \
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{ set dbt [$sdbc pget -prev] } {
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incr i
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set pkey [lindex [lindex $dbt 0] 1]
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set pdata [lindex [lindex $dbt 0] 2]
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error_check_good pdb_get_bkwds($pkey/$pdata,$j) \
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[$pdb get -get_both $pkey $pdata] \
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[list [list $pkey $pdata]]
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}
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error_check_good secondary($j)_has_nentries_bkwds $i $nentries
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error_check_good ccs_sdbc_close($j) [$sdbc close] 0
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}
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}
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# The secondary index tests take a list of the access methods that
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# each array ought to use. Convert at one blow into a list of converted
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# argses and omethods for each method in the list.
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proc convert_argses { methods largs } {
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set ret {}
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foreach m $methods {
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lappend ret [convert_args $m $largs]
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}
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return $ret
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}
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proc convert_methods { methods } {
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set ret {}
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foreach m $methods {
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lappend ret [convert_method $m]
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}
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return $ret
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}
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