Artifact 6c9db560f7d7127cddf941a6b0dc98d5aa149c87:

  • File test/collate1.test — part of check-in [6ebe82280d] at 2012-04-23 16:50:41 on branch trunk — Change the tcl interface so that tcl scripts may specify collation sequence xMkKey callbacks. (user: dan size: 9329)

#
# 2001 September 15
#
# 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.
#
#***********************************************************************
# This file implements regression tests for SQLite library.  The
# focus of this script is page cache subsystem.
#
# $Id: collate1.test,v 1.5 2007/02/01 23:02:46 drh Exp $

set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
source $testdir/tester.tcl

#
# Tests are roughly organised as follows:
#
# collate1-1.* - Single-field ORDER BY with an explicit COLLATE clause.
# collate1-2.* - Multi-field ORDER BY with an explicit COLLATE clause.
# collate1-3.* - ORDER BY using a default collation type. Also that an 
#                explict collate type overrides a default collate type.
# collate1-4.* - ORDER BY using a data type.
#

#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Collation type 'HEX'. If an argument can be interpreted as a hexadecimal
# number, then it is converted to one before the comparison is performed. 
# Hex numbers are less than other strings. If neither argument is a 
# number, [string compare] is used.
#
db collate HEX hex_collate hex_mkkey
proc hex_collate {lhs rhs} {
  set lhs_ishex [regexp {^(0x|)[1234567890abcdefABCDEF]+$} $lhs]
  set rhs_ishex [regexp {^(0x|)[1234567890abcdefABCDEF]+$} $rhs]
  if {$lhs_ishex && $rhs_ishex} { 
    set lhsx [scan $lhs %x]
    set rhsx [scan $rhs %x]
    if {$lhs < $rhs} {return -1}
    if {$lhs == $rhs} {return 0}
    if {$lhs > $rhs} {return 1}
  }
  if {$lhs_ishex} {
    return -1;
  }
  if {$rhs_ishex} {
    return 1;
  }
  return [string compare $lhs $rhs]
}

proc hex_mkkey {zIn} {
  set ishex [regexp {^(0x|)[1234567890abcdefABCDEF]+$} $zIn]
  if {$ishex==0} {
    set res "b_$zIn"
  } else {
    set num [scan $zIn %x]
    set res [format "a_%024d" $num]
  }
  return $res
}

db function hex {format 0x%X}

#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Mimic the SQLite 2 collation type NUMERIC. Sort of. Use the following
# rules:
#
#   * If [string is integer] says both sides of a comparison are integers,
#     do an integer comparison.
#
#   * If one side is an integer and the other not, the integer is less
#     than the other value.
#
#   * Otherwise, if neither side is an integer, do a memcmp() comparison.
#
db collate numeric numeric_collate numeric_mkkey
proc numeric_collate {lhs rhs} {
  set lhs_isint [string is integer $lhs]
  set rhs_isint [string is integer $rhs]

  if {$lhs_isint && $rhs_isint} { return [expr $lhs - $rhs] }
  if {$lhs_isint != $rhs_isint} { return [expr $rhs_isint - $lhs_isint] }
  return [string compare $lhs $rhs]
}
proc numeric_mkkey {zIn} {
  if {[string is integer $zIn]} {
    set res [format "a_%024d" $zIn]
  } else {
    set res "b_$zIn"
  }
  return $res
}

do_test collate1-1.0 {
  execsql {
    CREATE TABLE collate1t1(c1, c2);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES(45, hex(45));
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES(NULL, NULL);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES(281, hex(281));
  }
} {}
do_test collate1-1.1 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1;
  }
} {{} 0x119 0x2D}
do_test collate1-1.2 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 COLLATE hex;
  }
} {{} 0x2D 0x119}
do_test collate1-1.3 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 COLLATE hex DESC;
  }
} {0x119 0x2D {}}
do_test collate1-1.4 {
  execsql {
   SELECT c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 COLLATE hex ASC;
  }
} {{} 0x2D 0x119}
do_test collate1-1.5 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c2 COLLATE hex FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1
  }
} {{} 0x2D 0x119}
do_test collate1-1.6 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c2 COLLATE hex FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 ASC
  }
} {{} 0x2D 0x119}
do_test collate1-1.7 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c2 COLLATE hex FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 DESC
  }
} {0x119 0x2D {}}
do_test collate1-1.99 {
  execsql {
    DROP TABLE collate1t1;
  }
} {}

do_test collate1-2.0 {
  execsql {
    CREATE TABLE collate1t1(c1, c2);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES('5', '0x11');
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES('5', '0xA');
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES(NULL, NULL);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES('7', '0xA');
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES('11', '0x11');
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES('11', '0x101');
  }
} {}
do_test collate1-2.2 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1, c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 COLLATE numeric, 2 COLLATE hex;
  }
} {{} {} 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA 11 0x11 11 0x101}
do_test collate1-2.3 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1, c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 COLLATE binary, 2 COLLATE hex;
  }
} {{} {} 11 0x11 11 0x101 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA}
do_test collate1-2.4 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1, c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 COLLATE binary DESC, 2 COLLATE hex;
  }
} {7 0xA 5 0xA 5 0x11 11 0x11 11 0x101 {} {}}
do_test collate1-2.5 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1, c2 FROM collate1t1 
        ORDER BY 1 COLLATE binary DESC, 2 COLLATE hex DESC;
  }
} {7 0xA 5 0x11 5 0xA 11 0x101 11 0x11 {} {}}
do_test collate1-2.6 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1, c2 FROM collate1t1 
        ORDER BY 1 COLLATE binary ASC, 2 COLLATE hex ASC;
  }
} {{} {} 11 0x11 11 0x101 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA}
do_test collate1-2.12.1 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1 COLLATE numeric, c2 FROM collate1t1 
     ORDER BY 1, 2 COLLATE hex;
  }
} {{} {} 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA 11 0x11 11 0x101}
do_test collate1-2.12.2 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1 COLLATE hex, c2 FROM collate1t1 
     ORDER BY 1 COLLATE numeric, 2 COLLATE hex;
  }
} {{} {} 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA 11 0x11 11 0x101}
do_test collate1-2.12.3 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1, c2 COLLATE hex FROM collate1t1 
     ORDER BY 1 COLLATE numeric, 2;
  }
} {{} {} 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA 11 0x11 11 0x101}
do_test collate1-2.12.4 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1 COLLATE numeric, c2 COLLATE hex
      FROM collate1t1 
     ORDER BY 1, 2;
  }
} {{} {} 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA 11 0x11 11 0x101}
do_test collate1-2.13 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1 COLLATE binary, c2 COLLATE hex
      FROM collate1t1
     ORDER BY 1, 2;
  }
} {{} {} 11 0x11 11 0x101 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA}
do_test collate1-2.14 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1, c2
      FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1 COLLATE binary DESC, 2 COLLATE hex;
  }
} {7 0xA 5 0xA 5 0x11 11 0x11 11 0x101 {} {}}
do_test collate1-2.15 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1 COLLATE binary, c2 COLLATE hex
      FROM collate1t1 
     ORDER BY 1 DESC, 2 DESC;
  }
} {7 0xA 5 0x11 5 0xA 11 0x101 11 0x11 {} {}}
do_test collate1-2.16 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1 COLLATE hex, c2 COLLATE binary
      FROM collate1t1 
     ORDER BY 1 COLLATE binary ASC, 2 COLLATE hex ASC;
  }
} {{} {} 11 0x11 11 0x101 5 0xA 5 0x11 7 0xA}
do_test collate1-2.99 {
  execsql {
    DROP TABLE collate1t1;
  }
} {}

#
# These tests ensure that the default collation type for a column is used 
# by an ORDER BY clause correctly. The focus is all the different ways
# the column can be referenced. i.e. a, collate2t1.a, main.collate2t1.a etc.
#
do_test collate1-3.0 {
  execsql {
    CREATE TABLE collate1t1(a COLLATE hex, b);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES( '0x5', 5 );
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES( '1', 1 );
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES( '0x45', 69 );
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES( NULL, NULL );
    SELECT * FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY a;
  }
} {{} {} 1 1 0x5 5 0x45 69}

do_test collate1-3.1 {
  execsql {
    SELECT * FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1;
  }
} {{} {} 1 1 0x5 5 0x45 69}
do_test collate1-3.2 {
  execsql {
    SELECT * FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY collate1t1.a;
  }
} {{} {} 1 1 0x5 5 0x45 69}
do_test collate1-3.3 {
  execsql {
    SELECT * FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY main.collate1t1.a;
  }
} {{} {} 1 1 0x5 5 0x45 69}
do_test collate1-3.4 {
  execsql {
    SELECT a as c1, b as c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY c1;
  }
} {{} {} 1 1 0x5 5 0x45 69}
do_test collate1-3.5 {
  execsql {
    SELECT a as c1, b as c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY c1 COLLATE binary;
  }
} {{} {} 0x45 69 0x5 5 1 1}
do_test collate1-3.5.1 {
  execsql {
    SELECT a COLLATE binary as c1, b as c2
      FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY c1;
  }
} {{} {} 0x45 69 0x5 5 1 1}
do_test collate1-3.6 {
  execsql {
    DROP TABLE collate1t1;
  }
} {}

# Update for SQLite version 3. The collate1-4.* test cases were written
# before manifest types were introduced. The following test cases still
# work, due to the 'affinity' mechanism, but they don't prove anything
# about collation sequences.
#
do_test collate1-4.0 {
  execsql {
    CREATE TABLE collate1t1(c1 numeric, c2 text);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES(1, 1);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES(12, 12);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES(NULL, NULL);
    INSERT INTO collate1t1 VALUES(101, 101);
  }
} {}
do_test collate1-4.1 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1;
  }
} {{} 1 12 101}
do_test collate1-4.2 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c2 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1;
  }
} {{} 1 101 12}
do_test collate1-4.3 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c2+0 FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1;
  }
} {{} 1 12 101}
do_test collate1-4.4 {
  execsql {
    SELECT c1||'' FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1;
  }
} {{} 1 101 12}
do_test collate1-4.4.1 {
  execsql {
    SELECT (c1||'') COLLATE numeric FROM collate1t1 ORDER BY 1;
  }
} {{} 1 12 101}
do_test collate1-4.5 {
  execsql {
    DROP TABLE collate1t1;
  }
} {}

finish_test