postgresql/src/test/regress/sql/btree_index.sql
Tom Lane cc50080a82 Rearrange core regression tests to reduce cross-script dependencies.
The idea behind this patch is to make it possible to run individual
test scripts without running the entire core test suite.  Making all
the scripts completely independent would involve a massive rewrite,
and would probably be worse for coverage of things like concurrent DDL.
So this patch just does what seems practical with limited changes.

The net effect is that any test script can be run after running
limited earlier dependencies:
* all scripts depend on test_setup
* many scripts depend on create_index
* other dependencies are few in number, and are documented in
  the parallel_schedule file.

To accomplish this, I chose a small number of commonly-used tables
and moved their creation and filling into test_setup.  Later scripts
are expected not to modify these tables' data contents, for fear of
affecting other scripts' results.  Also, our former habit of declaring
all C functions in one place is now gone in favor of declaring them
where they're used, if that's just one script, or in test_setup if
necessary.

There's more that could be done to remove some of the remaining
inter-script dependencies, but significantly more-invasive changes
would be needed, and at least for now it doesn't seem worth it.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1114748.1640383217@sss.pgh.pa.us
2022-02-08 15:30:38 -05:00

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SQL

--
-- BTREE_INDEX
--
-- directory paths are passed to us in environment variables
\getenv abs_srcdir PG_ABS_SRCDIR
CREATE TABLE bt_i4_heap (
seqno int4,
random int4
);
CREATE TABLE bt_name_heap (
seqno name,
random int4
);
CREATE TABLE bt_txt_heap (
seqno text,
random int4
);
CREATE TABLE bt_f8_heap (
seqno float8,
random int4
);
\set filename :abs_srcdir '/data/desc.data'
COPY bt_i4_heap FROM :'filename';
\set filename :abs_srcdir '/data/hash.data'
COPY bt_name_heap FROM :'filename';
\set filename :abs_srcdir '/data/desc.data'
COPY bt_txt_heap FROM :'filename';
\set filename :abs_srcdir '/data/hash.data'
COPY bt_f8_heap FROM :'filename';
ANALYZE bt_i4_heap;
ANALYZE bt_name_heap;
ANALYZE bt_txt_heap;
ANALYZE bt_f8_heap;
--
-- BTREE ascending/descending cases
--
-- we load int4/text from pure descending data (each key is a new
-- low key) and name/f8 from pure ascending data (each key is a new
-- high key). we had a bug where new low keys would sometimes be
-- "lost".
--
CREATE INDEX bt_i4_index ON bt_i4_heap USING btree (seqno int4_ops);
CREATE INDEX bt_name_index ON bt_name_heap USING btree (seqno name_ops);
CREATE INDEX bt_txt_index ON bt_txt_heap USING btree (seqno text_ops);
CREATE INDEX bt_f8_index ON bt_f8_heap USING btree (seqno float8_ops);
--
-- test retrieval of min/max keys for each index
--
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_i4_heap b
WHERE b.seqno < 1;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_i4_heap b
WHERE b.seqno >= 9999;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_i4_heap b
WHERE b.seqno = 4500;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_name_heap b
WHERE b.seqno < '1'::name;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_name_heap b
WHERE b.seqno >= '9999'::name;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_name_heap b
WHERE b.seqno = '4500'::name;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_txt_heap b
WHERE b.seqno < '1'::text;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_txt_heap b
WHERE b.seqno >= '9999'::text;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_txt_heap b
WHERE b.seqno = '4500'::text;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_f8_heap b
WHERE b.seqno < '1'::float8;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_f8_heap b
WHERE b.seqno >= '9999'::float8;
SELECT b.*
FROM bt_f8_heap b
WHERE b.seqno = '4500'::float8;
--
-- Check correct optimization of LIKE (special index operator support)
-- for both indexscan and bitmapscan cases
--
set enable_seqscan to false;
set enable_indexscan to true;
set enable_bitmapscan to false;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname like E'RI\\_FKey%del' order by 1;
select proname from pg_proc where proname like E'RI\\_FKey%del' order by 1;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike '00%foo' order by 1;
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike '00%foo' order by 1;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike 'ri%foo' order by 1;
set enable_indexscan to false;
set enable_bitmapscan to true;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname like E'RI\\_FKey%del' order by 1;
select proname from pg_proc where proname like E'RI\\_FKey%del' order by 1;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike '00%foo' order by 1;
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike '00%foo' order by 1;
explain (costs off)
select proname from pg_proc where proname ilike 'ri%foo' order by 1;
reset enable_seqscan;
reset enable_indexscan;
reset enable_bitmapscan;
-- Also check LIKE optimization with binary-compatible cases
create temp table btree_bpchar (f1 text collate "C");
create index on btree_bpchar(f1 bpchar_ops) WITH (deduplicate_items=on);
insert into btree_bpchar values ('foo'), ('fool'), ('bar'), ('quux');
-- doesn't match index:
explain (costs off)
select * from btree_bpchar where f1 like 'foo';
select * from btree_bpchar where f1 like 'foo';
explain (costs off)
select * from btree_bpchar where f1 like 'foo%';
select * from btree_bpchar where f1 like 'foo%';
-- these do match the index:
explain (costs off)
select * from btree_bpchar where f1::bpchar like 'foo';
select * from btree_bpchar where f1::bpchar like 'foo';
explain (costs off)
select * from btree_bpchar where f1::bpchar like 'foo%';
select * from btree_bpchar where f1::bpchar like 'foo%';
-- get test coverage for "single value" deduplication strategy:
insert into btree_bpchar select 'foo' from generate_series(1,1500);
--
-- Perform unique checking, with and without the use of deduplication
--
CREATE TABLE dedup_unique_test_table (a int) WITH (autovacuum_enabled=false);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX dedup_unique ON dedup_unique_test_table (a) WITH (deduplicate_items=on);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX plain_unique ON dedup_unique_test_table (a) WITH (deduplicate_items=off);
-- Generate enough garbage tuples in index to ensure that even the unique index
-- with deduplication enabled has to check multiple leaf pages during unique
-- checking (at least with a BLCKSZ of 8192 or less)
DO $$
BEGIN
FOR r IN 1..1350 LOOP
DELETE FROM dedup_unique_test_table;
INSERT INTO dedup_unique_test_table SELECT 1;
END LOOP;
END$$;
-- Exercise the LP_DEAD-bit-set tuple deletion code with a posting list tuple.
-- The implementation prefers deleting existing items to merging any duplicate
-- tuples into a posting list, so we need an explicit test to make sure we get
-- coverage (note that this test also assumes BLCKSZ is 8192 or less):
DROP INDEX plain_unique;
DELETE FROM dedup_unique_test_table WHERE a = 1;
INSERT INTO dedup_unique_test_table SELECT i FROM generate_series(0,450) i;
--
-- Test B-tree fast path (cache rightmost leaf page) optimization.
--
-- First create a tree that's at least three levels deep (i.e. has one level
-- between the root and leaf levels). The text inserted is long. It won't be
-- TOAST compressed because we use plain storage in the table. Only a few
-- index tuples fit on each internal page, allowing us to get a tall tree with
-- few pages. (A tall tree is required to trigger caching.)
--
-- The text column must be the leading column in the index, since suffix
-- truncation would otherwise truncate tuples on internal pages, leaving us
-- with a short tree.
create table btree_tall_tbl(id int4, t text);
alter table btree_tall_tbl alter COLUMN t set storage plain;
create index btree_tall_idx on btree_tall_tbl (t, id) with (fillfactor = 10);
insert into btree_tall_tbl select g, repeat('x', 250)
from generate_series(1, 130) g;
--
-- Test for multilevel page deletion
--
CREATE TABLE delete_test_table (a bigint, b bigint, c bigint, d bigint);
INSERT INTO delete_test_table SELECT i, 1, 2, 3 FROM generate_series(1,80000) i;
ALTER TABLE delete_test_table ADD PRIMARY KEY (a,b,c,d);
-- Delete most entries, and vacuum, deleting internal pages and creating "fast
-- root"
DELETE FROM delete_test_table WHERE a < 79990;
VACUUM delete_test_table;
--
-- Test B-tree insertion with a metapage update (XLOG_BTREE_INSERT_META
-- WAL record type). This happens when a "fast root" page is split. This
-- also creates coverage for nbtree FSM page recycling.
--
-- The vacuum above should've turned the leaf page into a fast root. We just
-- need to insert some rows to cause the fast root page to split.
INSERT INTO delete_test_table SELECT i, 1, 2, 3 FROM generate_series(1,1000) i;
-- Test unsupported btree opclass parameters
create index on btree_tall_tbl (id int4_ops(foo=1));
-- Test case of ALTER INDEX with abuse of column names for indexes.
-- This grammar is not officially supported, but the parser allows it.
CREATE INDEX btree_tall_idx2 ON btree_tall_tbl (id);
ALTER INDEX btree_tall_idx2 ALTER COLUMN id SET (n_distinct=100);
DROP INDEX btree_tall_idx2;
-- Partitioned index
CREATE TABLE btree_part (id int4) PARTITION BY RANGE (id);
CREATE INDEX btree_part_idx ON btree_part(id);
ALTER INDEX btree_part_idx ALTER COLUMN id SET (n_distinct=100);
DROP TABLE btree_part;