mariadb/mysql-test/t/auto_increment.test
Narayanan V d714d29058 Bug#38338: REPLACE causes last_insert_id() to return an incorrect value
Fix the write_record function to record auto increment
values in a consistent way.

mysql-test/r/auto_increment.result:
  Updated the test result file with the output of the
  new test case added to verify this bug.
mysql-test/t/auto_increment.test:
  Added a new test case to verify this bug.
sql/sql_insert.cc:
  The algorithm for the write_record function
  in sql_insert.cc is (more emphasis given to
  the parts that deal with the autogenerated values)
  
  1) If a write fails
  
     1.1) save the autogenerated value to avoid 
          thd->insert_id_for_cur_row to become 0.
  
     1.2) <logic to handle INSERT ON DUPLICATE KEY
          UPDATE and REPLACE>
  
  2) record the first successful insert id.
  
  explanation of the failure
  --------------------------
  
  As long as 1.1) was executed 2) worked fine.
  
  1.1) was always executed when REPLACE worked 
       with the last row update optimization, but
       in cases where 1.1) was not executed 2)
       would fail and would result in the autogenerated
       value not being saved.
  
  solution
  --------
  
  repeat a check for thd->insert_id_for_cur_row 
  being zero similar to 1.1) before 2) and ensure
  that the correct value is saved.
2008-09-16 18:37:59 +05:30

328 lines
9.6 KiB
Text

#
# Test of auto_increment; The test for BDB tables is in bdb.test
#
--disable_warnings
drop table if exists t1;
drop table if exists t2;
--enable_warnings
SET SQL_WARNINGS=1;
create table t1 (a int not null auto_increment,b int, primary key (a)) engine=myisam auto_increment=3;
insert into t1 values (1,1),(NULL,3),(NULL,4);
delete from t1 where a=4;
insert into t1 values (NULL,5),(NULL,6);
select * from t1;
delete from t1 where a=6;
#show table status like "t1";
replace t1 values (3,1);
ALTER TABLE t1 add c int;
replace t1 values (3,3,3);
insert into t1 values (NULL,7,7);
update t1 set a=8,b=b+1,c=c+1 where a=7;
insert into t1 values (NULL,9,9);
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
create table t1 (
skey tinyint unsigned NOT NULL auto_increment PRIMARY KEY,
sval char(20)
);
insert into t1 values (NULL, "hello");
insert into t1 values (NULL, "hey");
select * from t1;
select _rowid,t1._rowid,skey,sval from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# Test auto_increment on sub key
#
create table t1 (a char(10) not null, b int not null auto_increment, primary key(a,b));
insert into t1 values ("a",1),("b",2),("a",2),("c",1);
insert into t1 values ("a",NULL),("b",NULL),("c",NULL),("e",NULL);
insert into t1 (a) values ("a"),("b"),("c"),("d");
insert into t1 (a) values ('k'),('d');
insert into t1 (a) values ("a");
insert into t1 values ("d",last_insert_id());
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
create table t1 (ordid int(8) not null auto_increment, ord varchar(50) not null, primary key (ordid), index(ord,ordid));
insert into t1 (ordid,ord) values (NULL,'sdj'),(NULL,'sdj');
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
create table t1 (ordid int(8) not null auto_increment, ord varchar(50) not null, primary key (ord,ordid));
insert into t1 values (NULL,'sdj'),(NULL,'sdj'),(NULL,"abc"),(NULL,'abc'),(NULL,'zzz'),(NULL,'sdj'),(NULL,'abc');
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
create table t1 (sid char(5), id int(2) NOT NULL auto_increment, key(sid, id));
create table t2 (sid char(20), id int(2));
insert into t2 values ('skr',NULL),('skr',NULL),('test',NULL);
insert into t1 select * from t2;
select * from t1;
drop table t1,t2;
#
# Test of auto_increment columns when they are set to 0
#
create table t1 (a int not null primary key auto_increment);
insert into t1 values (0);
update t1 set a=0;
select * from t1;
check table t1;
drop table t1;
#
# Test negative values (Bug #1366)
#
create table t1 (a int not null auto_increment primary key);
insert into t1 values (NULL);
insert into t1 values (-1);
select last_insert_id();
insert into t1 values (NULL);
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
create table t1 (a int not null auto_increment primary key) /*!40102 engine=heap */;
insert into t1 values (NULL);
insert into t1 values (-1);
select last_insert_id();
insert into t1 values (NULL);
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# last_insert_id() madness
#
create table t1 (i tinyint unsigned not null auto_increment primary key);
insert into t1 set i = 254;
insert into t1 set i = null;
select last_insert_id();
explain extended select last_insert_id();
--error ER_DUP_ENTRY
insert into t1 set i = 254;
select last_insert_id();
--error ER_DUP_ENTRY
insert into t1 set i = null;
select last_insert_id();
drop table t1;
create table t1 (i tinyint unsigned not null auto_increment, key (i));
insert into t1 set i = 254;
insert into t1 set i = null;
select last_insert_id();
insert into t1 set i = null;
select last_insert_id();
drop table t1;
create table t1 (i tinyint unsigned not null auto_increment primary key, b int, unique (b));
insert into t1 values (NULL, 10);
select last_insert_id();
insert into t1 values (NULL, 15);
select last_insert_id();
--error ER_DUP_ENTRY
insert into t1 values (NULL, 10);
select last_insert_id();
drop table t1;
create table t1(a int auto_increment,b int null,primary key(a));
SET SQL_MODE=NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO;
insert into t1(a,b)values(NULL,1);
insert into t1(a,b)values(200,2);
insert into t1(a,b)values(0,3);
insert into t1(b)values(4);
insert into t1(b)values(5);
insert into t1(b)values(6);
insert into t1(b)values(7);
select * from t1 order by b;
alter table t1 modify b mediumint;
select * from t1 order by b;
create table t2 (a int);
insert t2 values (1),(2);
alter table t2 add b int auto_increment primary key;
select * from t2;
drop table t2;
delete from t1 where a=0;
update t1 set a=0 where b=5;
select * from t1 order by b;
delete from t1 where a=0;
--error 1048
update t1 set a=NULL where b=6;
update t1 set a=300 where b=7;
SET SQL_MODE='';
insert into t1(a,b)values(NULL,8);
insert into t1(a,b)values(400,9);
insert into t1(a,b)values(0,10);
insert into t1(b)values(11);
insert into t1(b)values(12);
insert into t1(b)values(13);
insert into t1(b)values(14);
select * from t1 order by b;
delete from t1 where a=0;
update t1 set a=0 where b=12;
select * from t1 order by b;
delete from t1 where a=0;
--error 1048
update t1 set a=NULL where b=13;
update t1 set a=500 where b=14;
select * from t1 order by b;
drop table t1;
#
# Test of behavior of ALTER TABLE when coulmn containing NULL or zeroes is
# converted to AUTO_INCREMENT column
#
create table t1 (a bigint);
insert into t1 values (1), (2), (3), (NULL), (NULL);
alter table t1 modify a bigint not null auto_increment primary key;
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
create table t1 (a bigint);
insert into t1 values (1), (2), (3), (0), (0);
alter table t1 modify a bigint not null auto_increment primary key;
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
# We still should be able to preserve zero in NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO mode
create table t1 (a bigint);
insert into t1 values (0), (1), (2), (3);
set sql_mode=NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO;
alter table t1 modify a bigint not null auto_increment primary key;
set sql_mode= '';
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
# It also sensible to preserve zeroes if we are converting auto_increment
# column to auto_increment column (or not touching it at all, which is more
# common case probably)
create table t1 (a int auto_increment primary key , b int null);
set sql_mode=NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO;
insert into t1 values (0,1),(1,2),(2,3);
select * from t1;
set sql_mode= '';
alter table t1 modify b varchar(255);
insert into t1 values (0,4);
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# BUG #10045: Problem with composite AUTO_INCREMENT + BLOB key
CREATE TABLE t1 ( a INT AUTO_INCREMENT, b BLOB, PRIMARY KEY (a,b(10)));
INSERT INTO t1 (b) VALUES ('aaaa');
CHECK TABLE t1;
INSERT INTO t1 (b) VALUES ('');
CHECK TABLE t1;
INSERT INTO t1 (b) VALUES ('bbbb');
CHECK TABLE t1;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1;
# BUG #19025:
CREATE TABLE `t1` (
t1_name VARCHAR(255) DEFAULT NULL,
t1_id INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
KEY (t1_name),
PRIMARY KEY (t1_id)
) AUTO_INCREMENT = 1000;
INSERT INTO t1 (t1_name) VALUES('MySQL');
INSERT INTO t1 (t1_name) VALUES('MySQL');
INSERT INTO t1 (t1_name) VALUES('MySQL');
SELECT * from t1;
SHOW CREATE TABLE `t1`;
DROP TABLE `t1`;
#
# Bug #6880: LAST_INSERT_ID() within a statement
#
create table t1(a int not null auto_increment primary key);
create table t2(a int not null auto_increment primary key, t1a int);
insert into t1 values(NULL);
insert into t2 values (NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID()), (NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID());
insert into t1 values (NULL);
insert into t2 values (NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID()), (NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID()),
(NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID());
insert into t1 values (NULL);
insert into t2 values (NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID()), (NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID()),
(NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID()), (NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID());
select * from t2;
drop table t1, t2;
--echo End of 4.1 tests
#
# Bug #11080 & #11005 Multi-row REPLACE fails on a duplicate key error
#
CREATE TABLE t1 ( `a` int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment, `b` int(11) default NULL,PRIMARY KEY (`a`),UNIQUE KEY `b` (`b`));
insert into t1 (b) values (1);
replace into t1 (b) values (2), (1), (3);
select * from t1;
truncate table t1;
insert into t1 (b) values (1);
replace into t1 (b) values (2);
replace into t1 (b) values (1);
replace into t1 (b) values (3);
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
create table t1 (rowid int not null auto_increment, val int not null,primary
key (rowid), unique(val));
replace into t1 (val) values ('1'),('2');
replace into t1 (val) values ('1'),('2');
--error ER_DUP_ENTRY
insert into t1 (val) values ('1'),('2');
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# Test that update changes internal auto-increment value
#
create table t1 (a int not null auto_increment primary key, val int);
insert into t1 (val) values (1);
update t1 set a=2 where a=1;
insert into t1 (val) values (1);
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# Test key duplications with auto-increment in ALTER TABLE
# bug #14573
#
CREATE TABLE t1 (t1 INT(10) PRIMARY KEY, t2 INT(10));
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(0, 0);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1, 1);
--error ER_DUP_ENTRY
ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE t1 t1 INT(10) auto_increment;
DROP TABLE t1;
# Test of REPLACE when it does INSERT+DELETE and not UPDATE:
# see if it sets LAST_INSERT_ID() ok
create table t1 (a int primary key auto_increment, b int, c int, d timestamp default current_timestamp, unique(b),unique(c));
insert into t1 values(null,1,1,now());
insert into t1 values(null,0,0,null);
# this will delete two rows
replace into t1 values(null,1,0,null);
select last_insert_id();
drop table t1;
# Test of REPLACE when it does a INSERT+DELETE for all the conflicting rows
# (i.e.) when there are three rows conflicting in unique key columns with
# a row that is being inserted, all the three rows will be deleted and then
# the new rows will be inserted.
create table t1 (a int primary key auto_increment, b int, c int, e int, d timestamp default current_timestamp, unique(b),unique(c),unique(e));
insert into t1 values(null,1,1,1,now());
insert into t1 values(null,0,0,0,null);
replace into t1 values(null,1,0,2,null);
select last_insert_id();
drop table t1;