-- -- SUBSELECT -- SELECT 1 AS one WHERE 1 IN (SELECT 1); SELECT 1 AS zero WHERE 1 NOT IN (SELECT 1); SELECT 1 AS zero WHERE 1 IN (SELECT 2); -- Set up some simple test tables CREATE TABLE SUBSELECT_TBL ( f1 integer, f2 integer, f3 float ); INSERT INTO SUBSELECT_TBL VALUES (1, 2, 3); INSERT INTO SUBSELECT_TBL VALUES (2, 3, 4); INSERT INTO SUBSELECT_TBL VALUES (3, 4, 5); INSERT INTO SUBSELECT_TBL VALUES (1, 1, 1); INSERT INTO SUBSELECT_TBL VALUES (2, 2, 2); INSERT INTO SUBSELECT_TBL VALUES (3, 3, 3); INSERT INTO SUBSELECT_TBL VALUES (6, 7, 8); INSERT INTO SUBSELECT_TBL VALUES (8, 9, NULL); SELECT '' AS eight, * FROM SUBSELECT_TBL; -- Uncorrelated subselects SELECT '' AS two, f1 AS "Constant Select" FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE f1 IN (SELECT 1); SELECT '' AS six, f1 AS "Uncorrelated Field" FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE f1 IN (SELECT f2 FROM SUBSELECT_TBL); SELECT '' AS six, f1 AS "Uncorrelated Field" FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE f1 IN (SELECT f2 FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE f2 IN (SELECT f1 FROM SUBSELECT_TBL)); SELECT '' AS three, f1, f2 FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE (f1, f2) NOT IN (SELECT f2, CAST(f3 AS int4) FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE f3 IS NOT NULL); -- Correlated subselects SELECT '' AS six, f1 AS "Correlated Field", f2 AS "Second Field" FROM SUBSELECT_TBL upper WHERE f1 IN (SELECT f2 FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE f1 = upper.f1); SELECT '' AS six, f1 AS "Correlated Field", f3 AS "Second Field" FROM SUBSELECT_TBL upper WHERE f1 IN (SELECT f2 FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE CAST(upper.f2 AS float) = f3); SELECT '' AS six, f1 AS "Correlated Field", f3 AS "Second Field" FROM SUBSELECT_TBL upper WHERE f3 IN (SELECT upper.f1 + f2 FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE f2 = CAST(f3 AS integer)); SELECT '' AS five, f1 AS "Correlated Field" FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE (f1, f2) IN (SELECT f2, CAST(f3 AS int4) FROM SUBSELECT_TBL WHERE f3 IS NOT NULL); -- -- Use some existing tables in the regression test -- SELECT '' AS eight, ss.f1 AS "Correlated Field", ss.f3 AS "Second Field" FROM SUBSELECT_TBL ss WHERE f1 NOT IN (SELECT f1+1 FROM INT4_TBL WHERE f1 != ss.f1 AND f1 < 2147483647); select q1, float8(count(*)) / (select count(*) from int8_tbl) from int8_tbl group by q1 order by q1; -- -- Test cases to catch unpleasant interactions between IN-join processing -- and subquery pullup. -- select count(*) from (select 1 from tenk1 a where unique1 IN (select hundred from tenk1 b)) ss; select count(distinct ss.ten) from (select ten from tenk1 a where unique1 IN (select hundred from tenk1 b)) ss; select count(*) from (select 1 from tenk1 a where unique1 IN (select distinct hundred from tenk1 b)) ss; select count(distinct ss.ten) from (select ten from tenk1 a where unique1 IN (select distinct hundred from tenk1 b)) ss; -- -- Test cases to check for overenthusiastic optimization of -- "IN (SELECT DISTINCT ...)" and related cases. Per example from -- Luca Pireddu and Michael Fuhr. -- CREATE TEMP TABLE foo (id integer); CREATE TEMP TABLE bar (id1 integer, id2 integer); INSERT INTO foo VALUES (1); INSERT INTO bar VALUES (1, 1); INSERT INTO bar VALUES (2, 2); INSERT INTO bar VALUES (3, 1); -- These cases require an extra level of distinct-ing above subquery s SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id IN (SELECT id2 FROM (SELECT DISTINCT id1, id2 FROM bar) AS s); SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id IN (SELECT id2 FROM (SELECT id1,id2 FROM bar GROUP BY id1,id2) AS s); SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id IN (SELECT id2 FROM (SELECT id1, id2 FROM bar UNION SELECT id1, id2 FROM bar) AS s); -- These cases do not SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id IN (SELECT id2 FROM (SELECT DISTINCT ON (id2) id1, id2 FROM bar) AS s); SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id IN (SELECT id2 FROM (SELECT id2 FROM bar GROUP BY id2) AS s); SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id IN (SELECT id2 FROM (SELECT id2 FROM bar UNION SELECT id2 FROM bar) AS s); -- -- Test case to catch problems with multiply nested sub-SELECTs not getting -- recalculated properly. Per bug report from Didier Moens. -- CREATE TABLE orderstest ( approver_ref integer, po_ref integer, ordercancelled boolean ); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (1, 1, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (66, 5, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (66, 6, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (66, 7, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (66, 1, true); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (66, 8, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (66, 1, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (77, 1, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (1, 1, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (66, 1, false); INSERT INTO orderstest VALUES (1, 1, false); CREATE VIEW orders_view AS SELECT *, (SELECT CASE WHEN ord.approver_ref=1 THEN '---' ELSE 'Approved' END) AS "Approved", (SELECT CASE WHEN ord.ordercancelled THEN 'Cancelled' ELSE (SELECT CASE WHEN ord.po_ref=1 THEN (SELECT CASE WHEN ord.approver_ref=1 THEN '---' ELSE 'Approved' END) ELSE 'PO' END) END) AS "Status", (CASE WHEN ord.ordercancelled THEN 'Cancelled' ELSE (CASE WHEN ord.po_ref=1 THEN (CASE WHEN ord.approver_ref=1 THEN '---' ELSE 'Approved' END) ELSE 'PO' END) END) AS "Status_OK" FROM orderstest ord; SELECT * FROM orders_view; DROP TABLE orderstest cascade; -- -- Test cases to catch situations where rule rewriter fails to propagate -- hasSubLinks flag correctly. Per example from Kyle Bateman. -- create temp table parts ( partnum text, cost float8 ); create temp table shipped ( ttype char(2), ordnum int4, partnum text, value float8 ); create temp view shipped_view as select * from shipped where ttype = 'wt'; create rule shipped_view_insert as on insert to shipped_view do instead insert into shipped values('wt', new.ordnum, new.partnum, new.value); insert into parts (partnum, cost) values (1, 1234.56); insert into shipped_view (ordnum, partnum, value) values (0, 1, (select cost from parts where partnum = '1')); select * from shipped_view; create rule shipped_view_update as on update to shipped_view do instead update shipped set partnum = new.partnum, value = new.value where ttype = new.ttype and ordnum = new.ordnum; update shipped_view set value = 11 from int4_tbl a join int4_tbl b on (a.f1 = (select f1 from int4_tbl c where c.f1=b.f1)) where ordnum = a.f1; select * from shipped_view; select f1, ss1 as relabel from (select *, (select sum(f1) from int4_tbl b where f1 >= a.f1) as ss1 from int4_tbl a) ss; -- -- Test cases involving PARAM_EXEC parameters and min/max index optimizations. -- Per bug report from David Sanchez i Gregori. -- select * from ( select max(unique1) from tenk1 as a where exists (select 1 from tenk1 as b where b.thousand = a.unique2) ) ss; select * from ( select min(unique1) from tenk1 as a where not exists (select 1 from tenk1 as b where b.unique2 = 10000) ) ss; -- -- Test that an IN implemented using a UniquePath does unique-ification -- with the right semantics, as per bug #4113. (Unfortunately we have -- no simple way to ensure that this test case actually chooses that type -- of plan, but it does in releases 7.4-8.3. Note that an ordering difference -- here might mean that some other plan type is being used, rendering the test -- pointless.) -- create temp table numeric_table (num_col numeric); insert into numeric_table values (1), (1.000000000000000000001), (2), (3); create temp table float_table (float_col float8); insert into float_table values (1), (2), (3); select * from float_table where float_col in (select num_col from numeric_table); select * from numeric_table where num_col in (select float_col from float_table);