xref: /sqlite-3.40.0/test/e_createtable.test (revision e7952263)
1# 2010 September 25
2#
3# The author disclaims copyright to this source code.  In place of
4# a legal notice, here is a blessing:
5#
6#    May you do good and not evil.
7#    May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
8#    May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
9#
10#***********************************************************************
11#
12# This file implements tests to verify that the "testable statements" in
13# the lang_createtable.html document are correct.
14#
15
16set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
17source $testdir/tester.tcl
18
19set ::testprefix e_createtable
20
21# Test organization:
22#
23#   e_createtable-0.*: Test that the syntax diagrams are correct.
24#
25#   e_createtable-1.*: Test statements related to table and database names,
26#       the TEMP and TEMPORARY keywords, and the IF NOT EXISTS clause.
27#
28#   e_createtable-2.*: Test "CREATE TABLE AS" statements.
29#
30
31proc do_createtable_tests {nm args} {
32  uplevel do_select_tests [list e_createtable-$nm] $args
33}
34
35
36#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
37# This command returns a serialized tcl array mapping from the name of
38# each attached database to a list of tables in that database. For example,
39# if the database schema is created with:
40#
41#   CREATE TABLE t1(x);
42#   CREATE TEMP TABLE t2(x);
43#   CREATE TEMP TABLE t3(x);
44#
45# Then this command returns "main t1 temp {t2 t3}".
46#
47proc table_list {} {
48  set res [list]
49  db eval { pragma database_list } a {
50    set dbname $a(name)
51    set master $a(name).sqlite_master
52    if {$dbname == "temp"} { set master sqlite_temp_master }
53    lappend res $dbname [
54      db eval "SELECT DISTINCT tbl_name FROM $master ORDER BY tbl_name"
55    ]
56  }
57  set res
58}
59
60
61do_createtable_tests 0.1.1 -repair {
62  drop_all_tables
63} {
64  1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 one)"                        {}
65  2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 one two)"                    {}
66  3   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 one two three)"              {}
67  4   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 one two three four)"         {}
68  5   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 one two three four(14))"     {}
69  6   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 one two three four(14, 22))" {}
70  7   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 var(+14, -22.3))"            {}
71  8   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 var(1.0e10))"                {}
72}
73do_createtable_tests 0.1.2 -error {
74  near "%s": syntax error
75} {
76  1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 one(number))"                {number}
77}
78
79
80# syntax diagram column-constraint
81#
82do_createtable_tests 0.2.1 -repair {
83  drop_all_tables
84  execsql { CREATE TABLE t2(x PRIMARY KEY) }
85} {
86  1.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text PRIMARY KEY)"                         {}
87  1.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text PRIMARY KEY ASC)"                     {}
88  1.3   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text PRIMARY KEY DESC)"                    {}
89  1.4   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text CONSTRAINT cons PRIMARY KEY DESC)"    {}
90
91  2.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text NOT NULL)"                            {}
92  2.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text CONSTRAINT nm NOT NULL)"              {}
93  2.3   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text NULL)"                                {}
94  2.4   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text CONSTRAINT nm NULL)"                  {}
95
96  3.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text UNIQUE)"                              {}
97  3.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text CONSTRAINT un UNIQUE)"                {}
98
99  4.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text CHECK(c1!=0))"                        {}
100  4.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text CONSTRAINT chk CHECK(c1!=0))"         {}
101
102  5.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text DEFAULT 1)"                           {}
103  5.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text DEFAULT -1)"                          {}
104  5.3   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text DEFAULT +1)"                          {}
105  5.4   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text DEFAULT -45.8e22)"                    {}
106  5.5   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text DEFAULT (1+1))"                       {}
107  5.6   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text CONSTRAINT \"1 2\" DEFAULT (1+1))"    {}
108
109  6.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text COLLATE nocase)"        {}
110  6.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 text CONSTRAINT 'a x' COLLATE nocase)"     {}
111
112  7.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 REFERENCES t2)"                            {}
113  7.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1 CONSTRAINT abc REFERENCES t2)"             {}
114
115  8.1   {
116    CREATE TABLE t1(c1
117      PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL UNIQUE CHECK(c1 IS 'ten') DEFAULT 123 REFERENCES t1
118    );
119  } {}
120  8.2   {
121    CREATE TABLE t1(c1
122      REFERENCES t1 DEFAULT 123 CHECK(c1 IS 'ten') UNIQUE NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY
123    );
124  } {}
125}
126
127# -- syntax diagram table-constraint
128#
129do_createtable_tests 0.3.1 -repair {
130  drop_all_tables
131  execsql { CREATE TABLE t2(x PRIMARY KEY) }
132} {
133  1.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1, c2, PRIMARY KEY(c1))"                         {}
134  1.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1, c2, PRIMARY KEY(c1, c2))"                     {}
135  1.3   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1, c2, PRIMARY KEY(c1, c2) ON CONFLICT IGNORE)"  {}
136
137  2.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1, c2, UNIQUE(c1))"                              {}
138  2.2   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1, c2, UNIQUE(c1, c2))"                          {}
139  2.3   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1, c2, UNIQUE(c1, c2) ON CONFLICT IGNORE)"       {}
140
141  3.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1, c2, CHECK(c1 IS NOT c2))"                     {}
142
143  4.1   "CREATE TABLE t1(c1, c2, FOREIGN KEY(c1) REFERENCES t2)"           {}
144}
145
146# -- syntax diagram column-def
147#
148do_createtable_tests 0.4.1 -repair {
149  drop_all_tables
150} {
151  1     {CREATE TABLE t1(
152           col1,
153           col2 TEXT,
154           col3 INTEGER UNIQUE,
155           col4 VARCHAR(10, 10) PRIMARY KEY,
156           "name with spaces" REFERENCES t1
157         );
158        } {}
159}
160
161# -- syntax diagram create-table-stmt
162#
163do_createtable_tests 0.5.1 -repair {
164  drop_all_tables
165  execsql { CREATE TABLE t2(a, b, c) }
166} {
167  1     "CREATE TABLE t1(a, b, c)"                                    {}
168  2     "CREATE TEMP TABLE t1(a, b, c)"                               {}
169  3     "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t1(a, b, c)"                          {}
170  4     "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS t1(a, b, c)"                      {}
171  5     "CREATE TEMP TABLE IF NOT EXISTS t1(a, b, c)"                 {}
172  6     "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE IF NOT EXISTS t1(a, b, c)"            {}
173
174  7     "CREATE TABLE main.t1(a, b, c)"                               {}
175  8     "CREATE TEMP TABLE temp.t1(a, b, c)"                          {}
176  9     "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE temp.t1(a, b, c)"                     {}
177  10    "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS main.t1(a, b, c)"                 {}
178  11    "CREATE TEMP TABLE IF NOT EXISTS temp.t1(a, b, c)"            {}
179  12    "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE IF NOT EXISTS temp.t1(a, b, c)"       {}
180
181  13    "CREATE TABLE t1 AS SELECT * FROM t2"                         {}
182  14    "CREATE TEMP TABLE t1 AS SELECT c, b, a FROM t2"              {}
183  15    "CREATE TABLE t1 AS SELECT count(*), max(b), min(a) FROM t2"  {}
184}
185
186#
187#   1:         Explicit parent-key columns.
188#   2:         Implicit child-key columns.
189#
190#   1:         MATCH FULL
191#   2:         MATCH PARTIAL
192#   3:         MATCH SIMPLE
193#   4:         MATCH STICK
194#   5:
195#
196#   1:         ON DELETE SET NULL
197#   2:         ON DELETE SET DEFAULT
198#   3:         ON DELETE CASCADE
199#   4:         ON DELETE RESTRICT
200#   5:         ON DELETE NO ACTION
201#   6:
202#
203#   1:         ON UPDATE SET NULL
204#   2:         ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT
205#   3:         ON UPDATE CASCADE
206#   4:         ON UPDATE RESTRICT
207#   5:         ON UPDATE NO ACTION
208#   6:
209#
210#   1:         NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED
211#   2:         NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
212#   3:         NOT DEFERRABLE
213#   4:         DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED
214#   5:         DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
215#   6:         DEFERRABLE
216#   7:
217#
218do_createtable_tests 0.6.1 -repair {
219  drop_all_tables
220  execsql { CREATE TABLE t2(x PRIMARY KEY, y) }
221  execsql { CREATE TABLE t3(i, j, UNIQUE(i, j) ) }
222} {
223  11146 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
224    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH FULL
225    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE RESTRICT DEFERRABLE
226  )} {}
227  11412 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
228    REFERENCES t2(x)
229    ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE SET NULL MATCH FULL
230    NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
231  )} {}
232  12135 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
233    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH PARTIAL
234    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE CASCADE DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
235  )} {}
236  12427 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
237    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH PARTIAL
238    ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT
239  )} {}
240  12446 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
241    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH PARTIAL
242    ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE RESTRICT DEFERRABLE
243  )} {}
244  12522 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
245    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH PARTIAL
246    ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
247  )} {}
248  13133 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
249    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH SIMPLE
250    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE CASCADE NOT DEFERRABLE
251  )} {}
252  13216 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
253    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH SIMPLE
254    ON DELETE SET DEFAULT ON UPDATE SET NULL DEFERRABLE
255  )} {}
256  13263 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
257    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH SIMPLE
258    ON DELETE SET DEFAULT  NOT DEFERRABLE
259  )} {}
260  13421 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
261    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH SIMPLE
262    ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED
263  )} {}
264  13432 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
265    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH SIMPLE
266    ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE CASCADE NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
267  )} {}
268  13523 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
269    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH SIMPLE
270    ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT NOT DEFERRABLE
271  )} {}
272  14336 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
273    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH STICK
274    ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE DEFERRABLE
275  )} {}
276  14611 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
277    REFERENCES t2(x) MATCH STICK
278    ON UPDATE SET NULL NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED
279  )} {}
280  15155 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
281    REFERENCES t2(x)
282    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE NO ACTION DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
283  )} {}
284  15453 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
285    REFERENCES t2(x) ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE NO ACTION NOT DEFERRABLE
286  )} {}
287  15661 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
288    REFERENCES t2(x) NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED
289  )} {}
290  21115 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
291    REFERENCES t2 MATCH FULL
292    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE SET NULL DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
293  )} {}
294  21123 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
295    REFERENCES t2 MATCH FULL
296    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT NOT DEFERRABLE
297  )} {}
298  21217 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
299    REFERENCES t2 MATCH FULL ON DELETE SET DEFAULT ON UPDATE SET NULL
300  )} {}
301  21362 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
302    REFERENCES t2 MATCH FULL
303    ON DELETE CASCADE NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
304  )} {}
305  22143 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
306    REFERENCES t2 MATCH PARTIAL
307    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE RESTRICT NOT DEFERRABLE
308  )} {}
309  22156 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
310    REFERENCES t2 MATCH PARTIAL
311    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE NO ACTION DEFERRABLE
312  )} {}
313  22327 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
314    REFERENCES t2 MATCH PARTIAL ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT
315  )} {}
316  22663 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
317    REFERENCES t2 MATCH PARTIAL NOT DEFERRABLE
318  )} {}
319  23236 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
320    REFERENCES t2 MATCH SIMPLE
321    ON DELETE SET DEFAULT ON UPDATE CASCADE DEFERRABLE
322  )} {}
323  24155 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
324    REFERENCES t2 MATCH STICK
325    ON DELETE SET NULL ON UPDATE NO ACTION DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
326  )} {}
327  24522 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
328    REFERENCES t2 MATCH STICK
329    ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT NOT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
330  )} {}
331  24625 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
332    REFERENCES t2 MATCH STICK
333    ON UPDATE SET DEFAULT DEFERRABLE INITIALLY IMMEDIATE
334  )} {}
335  25454 { CREATE TABLE t1(a
336    REFERENCES t2
337    ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE NO ACTION DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED
338  )} {}
339}
340
341#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
342# Test cases e_createtable-1.* - test statements related to table and
343# database names, the TEMP and TEMPORARY keywords, and the IF NOT EXISTS
344# clause.
345#
346drop_all_tables
347forcedelete test.db2 test.db3
348
349do_execsql_test e_createtable-1.0 {
350  ATTACH 'test.db2' AS auxa;
351  ATTACH 'test.db3' AS auxb;
352} {}
353
354# EVIDENCE-OF: R-17899-04554 Table names that begin with "sqlite_" are
355# reserved for internal use. It is an error to attempt to create a table
356# with a name that starts with "sqlite_".
357#
358do_createtable_tests 1.1.1 -error {
359  object name reserved for internal use: %s
360} {
361  1    "CREATE TABLE sqlite_abc(a, b, c)"        sqlite_abc
362  2    "CREATE TABLE temp.sqlite_helloworld(x)"  sqlite_helloworld
363  3    {CREATE TABLE auxa."sqlite__"(x, y)}      sqlite__
364  4    {CREATE TABLE auxb."sqlite_"(z)}          sqlite_
365  5    {CREATE TABLE "SQLITE_TBL"(z)}            SQLITE_TBL
366}
367do_createtable_tests 1.1.2 {
368  1    "CREATE TABLE sqlit_abc(a, b, c)"         {}
369  2    "CREATE TABLE temp.sqlitehelloworld(x)"   {}
370  3    {CREATE TABLE auxa."sqlite"(x, y)}        {}
371  4    {CREATE TABLE auxb."sqlite-"(z)}          {}
372  5    {CREATE TABLE "SQLITE-TBL"(z)}            {}
373}
374
375
376# EVIDENCE-OF: R-18448-33677 If a schema-name is specified, it must be
377# either "main", "temp", or the name of an attached database.
378#
379# EVIDENCE-OF: R-39822-07822 In this case the new table is created in
380# the named database.
381#
382#   Test cases 1.2.* test the first of the two requirements above. The
383#   second is verified by cases 1.3.*.
384#
385do_createtable_tests 1.2.1 -error {
386  unknown database %s
387} {
388  1    "CREATE TABLE george.t1(a, b)"            george
389  2    "CREATE TABLE _.t1(a, b)"                 _
390}
391do_createtable_tests 1.2.2 {
392  1    "CREATE TABLE main.abc(a, b, c)"          {}
393  2    "CREATE TABLE temp.helloworld(x)"         {}
394  3    {CREATE TABLE auxa."t 1"(x, y)}           {}
395  4    {CREATE TABLE auxb.xyz(z)}                {}
396}
397drop_all_tables
398do_createtable_tests 1.3 -tclquery {
399  unset -nocomplain X
400  array set X [table_list]
401  list $X(main) $X(temp) $X(auxa) $X(auxb)
402} {
403  1    "CREATE TABLE main.abc(a, b, c)"  {abc {} {} {}}
404  2    "CREATE TABLE main.t1(a, b, c)"   {{abc t1} {} {} {}}
405  3    "CREATE TABLE temp.tmp(a, b, c)"  {{abc t1} tmp {} {}}
406  4    "CREATE TABLE auxb.tbl(x, y)"     {{abc t1} tmp {} tbl}
407  5    "CREATE TABLE auxb.t1(k, v)"      {{abc t1} tmp {} {t1 tbl}}
408  6    "CREATE TABLE auxa.next(c, d)"    {{abc t1} tmp next {t1 tbl}}
409}
410
411# EVIDENCE-OF: R-18895-27365 If the "TEMP" or "TEMPORARY" keyword occurs
412# between the "CREATE" and "TABLE" then the new table is created in the
413# temp database.
414#
415drop_all_tables
416do_createtable_tests 1.4 -tclquery {
417  unset -nocomplain X
418  array set X [table_list]
419  list $X(main) $X(temp) $X(auxa) $X(auxb)
420} {
421  1    "CREATE TEMP TABLE t1(a, b)"      {{} t1 {} {}}
422  2    "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t2(a, b)" {{} {t1 t2} {} {}}
423}
424
425# EVIDENCE-OF: R-23976-43329 It is an error to specify both a
426# schema-name and the TEMP or TEMPORARY keyword, unless the schema-name
427# is "temp".
428#
429drop_all_tables
430do_createtable_tests 1.5.1 -error {
431  temporary table name must be unqualified
432} {
433  1    "CREATE TEMP TABLE main.t1(a, b)"        {}
434  2    "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE auxa.t2(a, b)"   {}
435  3    "CREATE TEMP TABLE auxb.t3(a, b)"        {}
436  4    "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE main.xxx(x)"     {}
437}
438drop_all_tables
439do_createtable_tests 1.5.2 -tclquery {
440  unset -nocomplain X
441  array set X [table_list]
442  list $X(main) $X(temp) $X(auxa) $X(auxb)
443} {
444  1    "CREATE TEMP TABLE temp.t1(a, b)"        {{} t1 {} {}}
445  2    "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE temp.t2(a, b)"   {{} {t1 t2} {} {}}
446  3    "CREATE TEMP TABLE TEMP.t3(a, b)"        {{} {t1 t2 t3} {} {}}
447  4    "CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE TEMP.xxx(x)"     {{} {t1 t2 t3 xxx} {} {}}
448}
449
450# EVIDENCE-OF: R-31997-24564 If no schema name is specified and the TEMP
451# keyword is not present then the table is created in the main database.
452#
453drop_all_tables
454do_createtable_tests 1.6 -tclquery {
455  unset -nocomplain X
456  array set X [table_list]
457  list $X(main) $X(temp) $X(auxa) $X(auxb)
458} {
459  1    "CREATE TABLE t1(a, b)"   {t1 {} {} {}}
460  2    "CREATE TABLE t2(a, b)"   {{t1 t2} {} {} {}}
461  3    "CREATE TABLE t3(a, b)"   {{t1 t2 t3} {} {} {}}
462  4    "CREATE TABLE xxx(x)"     {{t1 t2 t3 xxx} {} {} {}}
463}
464
465drop_all_tables
466do_execsql_test e_createtable-1.7.0 {
467  CREATE TABLE t1(x, y);
468  CREATE INDEX i1 ON t1(x);
469  CREATE VIEW  v1 AS SELECT * FROM t1;
470
471  CREATE TABLE auxa.tbl1(x, y);
472  CREATE INDEX auxa.idx1 ON tbl1(x);
473  CREATE VIEW auxa.view1 AS SELECT * FROM tbl1;
474} {}
475
476# EVIDENCE-OF: R-01232-54838 It is usually an error to attempt to create
477# a new table in a database that already contains a table, index or view
478# of the same name.
479#
480#   Test cases 1.7.1.* verify that creating a table in a database with a
481#   table/index/view of the same name does fail. 1.7.2.* tests that creating
482#   a table with the same name as a table/index/view in a different database
483#   is Ok.
484#
485do_createtable_tests 1.7.1 -error { %s } {
486  1    "CREATE TABLE t1(a, b)"   {{table t1 already exists}}
487  2    "CREATE TABLE i1(a, b)"   {{there is already an index named i1}}
488  3    "CREATE TABLE v1(a, b)"   {{table v1 already exists}}
489  4    "CREATE TABLE auxa.tbl1(a, b)"   {{table tbl1 already exists}}
490  5    "CREATE TABLE auxa.idx1(a, b)"   {{there is already an index named idx1}}
491  6    "CREATE TABLE auxa.view1(a, b)"  {{table view1 already exists}}
492}
493do_createtable_tests 1.7.2 {
494  1    "CREATE TABLE auxa.t1(a, b)"   {}
495  2    "CREATE TABLE auxa.i1(a, b)"   {}
496  3    "CREATE TABLE auxa.v1(a, b)"   {}
497  4    "CREATE TABLE tbl1(a, b)"      {}
498  5    "CREATE TABLE idx1(a, b)"      {}
499  6    "CREATE TABLE view1(a, b)"     {}
500}
501
502# EVIDENCE-OF: R-33917-24086 However, if the "IF NOT EXISTS" clause is
503# specified as part of the CREATE TABLE statement and a table or view of
504# the same name already exists, the CREATE TABLE command simply has no
505# effect (and no error message is returned).
506#
507drop_all_tables
508do_execsql_test e_createtable-1.8.0 {
509  CREATE TABLE t1(x, y);
510  CREATE INDEX i1 ON t1(x);
511  CREATE VIEW  v1 AS SELECT * FROM t1;
512  CREATE TABLE auxa.tbl1(x, y);
513  CREATE INDEX auxa.idx1 ON tbl1(x);
514  CREATE VIEW auxa.view1 AS SELECT * FROM tbl1;
515} {}
516do_createtable_tests 1.8 {
517  1    "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS t1(a, b)"          {}
518  2    "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS auxa.tbl1(a, b)"   {}
519  3    "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS v1(a, b)"          {}
520  4    "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS auxa.view1(a, b)"  {}
521}
522
523# EVIDENCE-OF: R-16465-40078 An error is still returned if the table
524# cannot be created because of an existing index, even if the "IF NOT
525# EXISTS" clause is specified.
526#
527do_createtable_tests 1.9 -error { %s } {
528  1    "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS i1(a, b)"
529       {{there is already an index named i1}}
530  2    "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS auxa.idx1(a, b)"
531       {{there is already an index named idx1}}
532}
533
534# EVIDENCE-OF: R-05513-33819 It is not an error to create a table that
535# has the same name as an existing trigger.
536#
537drop_all_tables
538do_execsql_test e_createtable-1.10.0 {
539  CREATE TABLE t1(x, y);
540  CREATE TABLE auxb.t2(x, y);
541
542  CREATE TRIGGER tr1 AFTER INSERT ON t1 BEGIN
543    SELECT 1;
544  END;
545  CREATE TRIGGER auxb.tr2 AFTER INSERT ON t2 BEGIN
546    SELECT 1;
547  END;
548} {}
549do_createtable_tests 1.10 {
550  1    "CREATE TABLE tr1(a, b)"          {}
551  2    "CREATE TABLE tr2(a, b)"          {}
552  3    "CREATE TABLE auxb.tr1(a, b)"     {}
553  4    "CREATE TABLE auxb.tr2(a, b)"     {}
554}
555
556# EVIDENCE-OF: R-22283-14179 Tables are removed using the DROP TABLE
557# statement.
558#
559drop_all_tables
560do_execsql_test e_createtable-1.11.0 {
561  CREATE TABLE t1(a, b);
562  CREATE TABLE t2(a, b);
563  CREATE TABLE auxa.t3(a, b);
564  CREATE TABLE auxa.t4(a, b);
565} {}
566
567do_execsql_test e_createtable-1.11.1.1 {
568  SELECT * FROM t1;
569  SELECT * FROM t2;
570  SELECT * FROM t3;
571  SELECT * FROM t4;
572} {}
573do_execsql_test  e_createtable-1.11.1.2 { DROP TABLE t1 } {}
574do_catchsql_test e_createtable-1.11.1.3 {
575  SELECT * FROM t1
576} {1 {no such table: t1}}
577do_execsql_test  e_createtable-1.11.1.4 { DROP TABLE t3 } {}
578do_catchsql_test e_createtable-1.11.1.5 {
579  SELECT * FROM t3
580} {1 {no such table: t3}}
581
582do_execsql_test e_createtable-1.11.2.1 {
583  SELECT name FROM sqlite_master;
584  SELECT name FROM auxa.sqlite_master;
585} {t2 t4}
586do_execsql_test  e_createtable-1.11.2.2 { DROP TABLE t2 } {}
587do_execsql_test  e_createtable-1.11.2.3 { DROP TABLE t4 } {}
588do_execsql_test e_createtable-1.11.2.4 {
589  SELECT name FROM sqlite_master;
590  SELECT name FROM auxa.sqlite_master;
591} {}
592
593#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
594# Test cases e_createtable-2.* - test statements related to the CREATE
595# TABLE AS ... SELECT statement.
596#
597
598# Three Tcl commands:
599#
600#   select_column_names SQL
601#     The argument must be a SELECT statement. Return a list of the names
602#     of the columns of the result-set that would be returned by executing
603#     the SELECT.
604#
605#   table_column_names TBL
606#     The argument must be a table name. Return a list of column names, from
607#     left to right, for the table.
608#
609#   table_column_decltypes TBL
610#     The argument must be a table name. Return a list of column declared
611#     types, from left to right, for the table.
612#
613proc sci {select cmd} {
614  set res [list]
615  set STMT [sqlite3_prepare_v2 db $select -1 dummy]
616  for {set i 0} {$i < [sqlite3_column_count $STMT]} {incr i} {
617    lappend res [$cmd $STMT $i]
618  }
619  sqlite3_finalize $STMT
620  set res
621}
622proc tci {tbl cmd} { sci "SELECT * FROM $tbl" $cmd }
623proc select_column_names    {sql} { sci $sql sqlite3_column_name }
624proc table_column_names     {tbl} { tci $tbl sqlite3_column_name }
625proc table_column_decltypes {tbl} { tci $tbl sqlite3_column_decltype }
626
627# Create a database schema. This schema is used by tests 2.1.* through 2.3.*.
628#
629drop_all_tables
630do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.0 {
631  CREATE TABLE t1(a, b, c);
632  CREATE TABLE t2(d, e, f);
633  CREATE TABLE t3(g BIGINT, h VARCHAR(10));
634  CREATE TABLE t4(i BLOB, j ANYOLDATA);
635  CREATE TABLE t5(k FLOAT, l INTEGER);
636  CREATE TABLE t6(m DEFAULT 10, n DEFAULT 5, PRIMARY KEY(m, n));
637  CREATE TABLE t7(x INTEGER PRIMARY KEY);
638  CREATE TABLE t8(o COLLATE nocase DEFAULT 'abc');
639  CREATE TABLE t9(p NOT NULL, q DOUBLE CHECK (q!=0), r STRING UNIQUE);
640} {}
641
642# EVIDENCE-OF: R-64828-59568 The table has the same number of columns as
643# the rows returned by the SELECT statement. The name of each column is
644# the same as the name of the corresponding column in the result set of
645# the SELECT statement.
646#
647do_createtable_tests 2.1 -tclquery {
648  table_column_names x1
649} -repair {
650  catchsql { DROP TABLE x1 }
651} {
652  1    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT * FROM t1"                     {a b c}
653  2    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT c, b, a FROM t1"               {c b a}
654  3    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT * FROM t1, t2"                 {a b c d e f}
655  4    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT count(*) FROM t1"              {count(*)}
656  5    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT count(a) AS a, max(b) FROM t1" {a max(b)}
657}
658
659# EVIDENCE-OF: R-55407-45319 The declared type of each column is
660# determined by the expression affinity of the corresponding expression
661# in the result set of the SELECT statement, as follows: Expression
662# Affinity Column Declared Type TEXT "TEXT" NUMERIC "NUM" INTEGER "INT"
663# REAL "REAL" BLOB (a.k.a "NONE") "" (empty string)
664#
665do_createtable_tests 2.2 -tclquery {
666  table_column_decltypes x1
667} -repair {
668  catchsql { DROP TABLE x1 }
669} {
670  1    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT a FROM t1"     {""}
671  2    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT * FROM t3"     {INT TEXT}
672  3    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT * FROM t4"     {"" NUM}
673  4    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT * FROM t5"     {REAL INT}
674}
675
676# EVIDENCE-OF: R-16667-09772 A table created using CREATE TABLE AS has
677# no PRIMARY KEY and no constraints of any kind. The default value of
678# each column is NULL. The default collation sequence for each column of
679# the new table is BINARY.
680#
681#   The following tests create tables based on SELECT statements that read
682#   from tables that have primary keys, constraints and explicit default
683#   collation sequences. None of this is transfered to the definition of
684#   the new table as stored in the sqlite_master table.
685#
686#   Tests 2.3.2.* show that the default value of each column is NULL.
687#
688do_createtable_tests 2.3.1 -query {
689  SELECT sql FROM sqlite_master ORDER BY rowid DESC LIMIT 1
690} {
691  1    "CREATE TABLE x1 AS SELECT * FROM t6" {{CREATE TABLE x1(m,n)}}
692  2    "CREATE TABLE x2 AS SELECT * FROM t7" {{CREATE TABLE x2(x INT)}}
693  3    "CREATE TABLE x3 AS SELECT * FROM t8" {{CREATE TABLE x3(o)}}
694  4    "CREATE TABLE x4 AS SELECT * FROM t9" {{CREATE TABLE x4(p,q REAL,r NUM)}}
695}
696do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.3.2.1 {
697  INSERT INTO x1 DEFAULT VALUES;
698  INSERT INTO x2 DEFAULT VALUES;
699  INSERT INTO x3 DEFAULT VALUES;
700  INSERT INTO x4 DEFAULT VALUES;
701} {}
702db nullvalue null
703do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.3.2.2 { SELECT * FROM x1 } {null null}
704do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.3.2.3 { SELECT * FROM x2 } {null}
705do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.3.2.4 { SELECT * FROM x3 } {null}
706do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.3.2.5 { SELECT * FROM x4 } {null null null}
707db nullvalue {}
708
709drop_all_tables
710do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.4.0 {
711  CREATE TABLE t1(x, y);
712  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('i',   'one');
713  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('ii',  'two');
714  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('iii', 'three');
715} {}
716
717# EVIDENCE-OF: R-24153-28352 Tables created using CREATE TABLE AS are
718# initially populated with the rows of data returned by the SELECT
719# statement.
720#
721# EVIDENCE-OF: R-08224-30249 Rows are assigned contiguously ascending
722# rowid values, starting with 1, in the order that they are returned by
723# the SELECT statement.
724#
725#   Each test case below is specified as the name of a table to create
726#   using "CREATE TABLE ... AS SELECT ..." and a SELECT statement to use in
727#   creating it. The table is created.
728#
729#   Test cases 2.4.*.1 check that after it has been created, the data in the
730#   table is the same as the data returned by the SELECT statement executed as
731#   a standalone command, verifying the first testable statement above.
732#
733#   Test cases 2.4.*.2 check that the rowids were allocated contiguously
734#   as required by the second testable statement above. That the rowids
735#   from the contiguous block were allocated to rows in the order rows are
736#   returned by the SELECT statement is verified by 2.4.*.1.
737#
738# EVIDENCE-OF: R-32365-09043 A "CREATE TABLE ... AS SELECT" statement
739# creates and populates a database table based on the results of a
740# SELECT statement.
741#
742#   The above is also considered to be tested by the following. It is
743#   clear that tables are being created and populated by the command in
744#   question.
745#
746foreach {tn tbl select} {
747  1   x1   "SELECT * FROM t1"
748  2   x2   "SELECT * FROM t1 ORDER BY x DESC"
749  3   x3   "SELECT * FROM t1 ORDER BY x ASC"
750} {
751  # Create the table using a "CREATE TABLE ... AS SELECT ..." command.
752  execsql [subst {CREATE TABLE $tbl AS $select}]
753
754  # Check that the rows inserted into the table, sorted in ascending rowid
755  # order, match those returned by executing the SELECT statement as a
756  # standalone command.
757  do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.4.$tn.1 [subst {
758    SELECT * FROM $tbl ORDER BY rowid;
759  }] [execsql $select]
760
761  # Check that the rowids in the new table are a contiguous block starting
762  # with rowid 1. Note that this will fail if SELECT statement $select
763  # returns 0 rows (as max(rowid) will be NULL).
764  do_execsql_test e_createtable-2.4.$tn.2 [subst {
765    SELECT min(rowid), count(rowid)==max(rowid) FROM $tbl
766  }] {1 1}
767}
768
769#--------------------------------------------------------------------------
770# Test cases for column defintions in CREATE TABLE statements that do not
771# use a SELECT statement. Not including data constraints. In other words,
772# tests for the specification of:
773#
774#   * declared types,
775#   * default values, and
776#   * default collation sequences.
777#
778
779# EVIDENCE-OF: R-27219-49057 Unlike most SQL databases, SQLite does not
780# restrict the type of data that may be inserted into a column based on
781# the columns declared type.
782#
783#   Test this by creating a few tables with varied declared types, then
784#   inserting various different types of values into them.
785#
786drop_all_tables
787do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.1.0 {
788  CREATE TABLE t1(x VARCHAR(10), y INTEGER, z DOUBLE);
789  CREATE TABLE t2(a DATETIME, b STRING, c REAL);
790  CREATE TABLE t3(o, t);
791} {}
792
793# value type -> declared column type
794# ----------------------------------
795# integer    -> VARCHAR(10)
796# string     -> INTEGER
797# blob       -> DOUBLE
798#
799do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.1.1 {
800  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(14, 'quite a lengthy string', X'555655');
801  SELECT * FROM t1;
802} {14 {quite a lengthy string} UVU}
803
804# string     -> DATETIME
805# integer    -> STRING
806# time       -> REAL
807#
808do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.1.2 {
809  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('not a datetime', 13, '12:41:59');
810  SELECT * FROM t2;
811} {{not a datetime} 13 12:41:59}
812
813# EVIDENCE-OF: R-10565-09557 The declared type of a column is used to
814# determine the affinity of the column only.
815#
816#     Affinities are tested in more detail elsewhere (see document
817#     datatype3.html). Here, just test that affinity transformations
818#     consistent with the expected affinity of each column (based on
819#     the declared type) appear to take place.
820#
821# Affinities of t1 (test cases 3.2.1.*): TEXT, INTEGER, REAL
822# Affinities of t2 (test cases 3.2.2.*): NUMERIC, NUMERIC, REAL
823# Affinities of t3 (test cases 3.2.3.*): NONE, NONE
824#
825do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.2.0 { DELETE FROM t1; DELETE FROM t2; } {}
826
827do_createtable_tests 3.2.1 -query {
828  SELECT quote(x), quote(y), quote(z) FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid DESC LIMIT 1;
829} {
830  1   "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(15,   '22.0', '14')"   {'15' 22 14.0}
831  2   "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(22.0, 22.0, 22.0)"     {'22.0' 22 22.0}
832}
833do_createtable_tests 3.2.2 -query {
834  SELECT quote(a), quote(b), quote(c) FROM t2 ORDER BY rowid DESC LIMIT 1;
835} {
836  1   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(15,   '22.0', '14')"   {15   22  14.0}
837  2   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(22.0, 22.0, 22.0)"     {22   22  22.0}
838}
839do_createtable_tests 3.2.3 -query {
840  SELECT quote(o), quote(t) FROM t3 ORDER BY rowid DESC LIMIT 1;
841} {
842  1   "INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('15', '22.0')"         {'15' '22.0'}
843  2   "INSERT INTO t3 VALUES(15, 22.0)"             {15 22.0}
844}
845
846# EVIDENCE-OF: R-42316-09582 If there is no explicit DEFAULT clause
847# attached to a column definition, then the default value of the column
848# is NULL.
849#
850#     None of the columns in table t1 have an explicit DEFAULT clause.
851#     So testing that the default value of all columns in table t1 is
852#     NULL serves to verify the above.
853#
854do_createtable_tests 3.2.3 -query {
855  SELECT quote(x), quote(y), quote(z) FROM t1
856} -repair {
857  execsql { DELETE FROM t1 }
858} {
859  1   "INSERT INTO t1(x, y) VALUES('abc', 'xyz')"   {'abc' 'xyz' NULL}
860  2   "INSERT INTO t1(x, z) VALUES('abc', 'xyz')"   {'abc' NULL 'xyz'}
861  3   "INSERT INTO t1 DEFAULT VALUES"               {NULL NULL NULL}
862}
863
864# EVIDENCE-OF: R-07343-35026 An explicit DEFAULT clause may specify that
865# the default value is NULL, a string constant, a blob constant, a
866# signed-number, or any constant expression enclosed in parentheses. A
867# default value may also be one of the special case-independent keywords
868# CURRENT_TIME, CURRENT_DATE or CURRENT_TIMESTAMP.
869#
870do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.3.1 {
871  CREATE TABLE t4(
872    a DEFAULT NULL,
873    b DEFAULT 'string constant',
874    c DEFAULT X'424C4F42',
875    d DEFAULT 1,
876    e DEFAULT -1,
877    f DEFAULT 3.14,
878    g DEFAULT -3.14,
879    h DEFAULT ( substr('abcd', 0, 2) || 'cd' ),
880    i DEFAULT CURRENT_TIME,
881    j DEFAULT CURRENT_DATE,
882    k DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
883  );
884} {}
885
886# EVIDENCE-OF: R-18415-27776 For the purposes of the DEFAULT clause, an
887# expression is considered constant if it does contains no sub-queries,
888# column or table references, bound parameters, or string literals
889# enclosed in double-quotes instead of single-quotes.
890#
891do_createtable_tests 3.4.1 -error {
892  default value of column [x] is not constant
893} {
894  1   {CREATE TABLE t5(x DEFAULT ( (SELECT 1) ))}  {}
895  2   {CREATE TABLE t5(x DEFAULT ( "abc" ))}  {}
896  3   {CREATE TABLE t5(x DEFAULT ( 1 IN (SELECT 1) ))}  {}
897  4   {CREATE TABLE t5(x DEFAULT ( EXISTS (SELECT 1) ))}  {}
898  5   {CREATE TABLE t5(x DEFAULT ( x!=?1 ))}  {}
899}
900do_createtable_tests 3.4.2 -repair {
901  catchsql { DROP TABLE t5 }
902} {
903  1   {CREATE TABLE t5(x DEFAULT ( 'abc' ))}  {}
904  2   {CREATE TABLE t5(x DEFAULT ( 1 IN (1, 2, 3) ))}  {}
905}
906
907# EVIDENCE-OF: R-18814-23501 Each time a row is inserted into the table
908# by an INSERT statement that does not provide explicit values for all
909# table columns the values stored in the new row are determined by their
910# default values
911#
912#     Verify this with some assert statements for which all, some and no
913#     columns lack explicit values.
914#
915set sqlite_current_time 1000000000
916do_createtable_tests 3.5 -query {
917  SELECT quote(a), quote(b), quote(c), quote(d), quote(e), quote(f),
918         quote(g), quote(h), quote(i), quote(j), quote(k)
919  FROM t4 ORDER BY rowid DESC LIMIT 1;
920} {
921  1 "INSERT INTO t4 DEFAULT VALUES" {
922    NULL {'string constant'} X'424C4F42' 1 -1 3.14 -3.14
923    'acd' '01:46:40' '2001-09-09' {'2001-09-09 01:46:40'}
924  }
925
926  2 "INSERT INTO t4(a, b, c) VALUES(1, 2, 3)" {
927    1 2 3 1 -1 3.14 -3.14 'acd' '01:46:40' '2001-09-09' {'2001-09-09 01:46:40'}
928  }
929
930  3 "INSERT INTO t4(k, j, i) VALUES(1, 2, 3)" {
931    NULL {'string constant'} X'424C4F42' 1 -1 3.14 -3.14 'acd' 3 2 1
932  }
933
934  4 "INSERT INTO t4(a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i,j,k) VALUES(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11)" {
935    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
936  }
937}
938
939# EVIDENCE-OF: R-12572-62501 If the default value of the column is a
940# constant NULL, text, blob or signed-number value, then that value is
941# used directly in the new row.
942#
943do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.6.1 {
944  CREATE TABLE t5(
945    a DEFAULT NULL,
946    b DEFAULT 'text value',
947    c DEFAULT X'424C4F42',
948    d DEFAULT -45678.6,
949    e DEFAULT 394507
950  );
951} {}
952do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.6.2 {
953  INSERT INTO t5 DEFAULT VALUES;
954  SELECT quote(a), quote(b), quote(c), quote(d), quote(e) FROM t5;
955} {NULL {'text value'} X'424C4F42' -45678.6 394507}
956
957# EVIDENCE-OF: R-60616-50251 If the default value of a column is an
958# expression in parentheses, then the expression is evaluated once for
959# each row inserted and the results used in the new row.
960#
961#   Test case 3.6.4 demonstrates that the expression is evaluated
962#   separately for each row if the INSERT is an "INSERT INTO ... SELECT ..."
963#   command.
964#
965set ::nextint 0
966proc nextint {} { incr ::nextint }
967db func nextint nextint
968
969do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.7.1 {
970  CREATE TABLE t6(a DEFAULT ( nextint() ), b DEFAULT ( nextint() ));
971} {}
972do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.7.2 {
973  INSERT INTO t6 DEFAULT VALUES;
974  SELECT quote(a), quote(b) FROM t6;
975} {1 2}
976do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.7.3 {
977  INSERT INTO t6(a) VALUES('X');
978  SELECT quote(a), quote(b) FROM t6;
979} {1 2 'X' 3}
980do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.7.4 {
981  INSERT INTO t6(a) SELECT a FROM t6;
982  SELECT quote(a), quote(b) FROM t6;
983} {1 2 'X' 3 1 4 'X' 5}
984
985# EVIDENCE-OF: R-15363-55230 If the default value of a column is
986# CURRENT_TIME, CURRENT_DATE or CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, then the value used
987# in the new row is a text representation of the current UTC date and/or
988# time.
989#
990#     This is difficult to test literally without knowing what time the
991#     user will run the tests. Instead, we test that the three cases
992#     above set the value to the current date and/or time according to
993#     the xCurrentTime() method of the VFS. Which is usually the same
994#     as UTC. In this case, however, we instrument it to always return
995#     a time equivalent to "2001-09-09 01:46:40 UTC".
996#
997set sqlite_current_time 1000000000
998do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.8.1 {
999  CREATE TABLE t7(
1000    a DEFAULT CURRENT_TIME,
1001    b DEFAULT CURRENT_DATE,
1002    c DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
1003  );
1004} {}
1005do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.8.2 {
1006  INSERT INTO t7 DEFAULT VALUES;
1007  SELECT quote(a), quote(b), quote(c) FROM t7;
1008} {'01:46:40' '2001-09-09' {'2001-09-09 01:46:40'}}
1009
1010
1011# EVIDENCE-OF: R-62327-53843 For CURRENT_TIME, the format of the value
1012# is "HH:MM:SS".
1013#
1014# EVIDENCE-OF: R-03775-43471 For CURRENT_DATE, "YYYY-MM-DD".
1015#
1016# EVIDENCE-OF: R-07677-44926 The format for CURRENT_TIMESTAMP is
1017# "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS".
1018#
1019#     The three above are demonstrated by tests 1, 2 and 3 below.
1020#     Respectively.
1021#
1022do_createtable_tests 3.8.3 -query {
1023  SELECT a, b, c FROM t7 ORDER BY rowid DESC LIMIT 1;
1024} {
1025  1 "INSERT INTO t7(b, c) VALUES('x', 'y')" {01:46:40 x y}
1026  2 "INSERT INTO t7(c, a) VALUES('x', 'y')" {y 2001-09-09 x}
1027  3 "INSERT INTO t7(a, b) VALUES('x', 'y')" {x y {2001-09-09 01:46:40}}
1028}
1029
1030# EVIDENCE-OF: R-55061-47754 The COLLATE clause specifies the name of a
1031# collating sequence to use as the default collation sequence for the
1032# column.
1033#
1034# EVIDENCE-OF: R-40275-54363 If no COLLATE clause is specified, the
1035# default collation sequence is BINARY.
1036#
1037do_execsql_test e_createtable-3-9.1 {
1038  CREATE TABLE t8(a COLLATE nocase, b COLLATE rtrim, c COLLATE binary, d);
1039  INSERT INTO t8 VALUES('abc',   'abc',   'abc',   'abc');
1040  INSERT INTO t8 VALUES('abc  ', 'abc  ', 'abc  ', 'abc  ');
1041  INSERT INTO t8 VALUES('ABC  ', 'ABC  ', 'ABC  ', 'ABC  ');
1042  INSERT INTO t8 VALUES('ABC',   'ABC',   'ABC',   'ABC');
1043} {}
1044do_createtable_tests 3.9 {
1045  2    "SELECT a FROM t8 ORDER BY a, rowid"    {abc ABC {abc  } {ABC  }}
1046  3    "SELECT b FROM t8 ORDER BY b, rowid"    {{ABC  } ABC abc {abc  }}
1047  4    "SELECT c FROM t8 ORDER BY c, rowid"    {ABC {ABC  } abc {abc  }}
1048  5    "SELECT d FROM t8 ORDER BY d, rowid"    {ABC {ABC  } abc {abc  }}
1049}
1050
1051# EVIDENCE-OF: R-25473-20557 The number of columns in a table is limited
1052# by the SQLITE_MAX_COLUMN compile-time parameter.
1053#
1054proc columns {n} {
1055  set res [list]
1056  for {set i 0} {$i < $n} {incr i} { lappend res "c$i" }
1057  join $res ", "
1058}
1059do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.10.1 [subst {
1060  CREATE TABLE t9([columns $::SQLITE_MAX_COLUMN]);
1061}] {}
1062do_catchsql_test e_createtable-3.10.2 [subst {
1063  CREATE TABLE t10([columns [expr $::SQLITE_MAX_COLUMN+1]]);
1064}] {1 {too many columns on t10}}
1065
1066# EVIDENCE-OF: R-27775-64721 Both of these limits can be lowered at
1067# runtime using the sqlite3_limit() C/C++ interface.
1068#
1069#   A 30,000 byte blob consumes 30,003 bytes of record space. A record
1070#   that contains 3 such blobs consumes (30,000*3)+1 bytes of space. Tests
1071#   3.11.4 and 3.11.5, which verify that SQLITE_MAX_LENGTH may be lowered
1072#   at runtime, are based on this calculation.
1073#
1074sqlite3_limit db SQLITE_LIMIT_COLUMN 500
1075do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.11.1 [subst {
1076  CREATE TABLE t10([columns 500]);
1077}] {}
1078do_catchsql_test e_createtable-3.11.2 [subst {
1079  CREATE TABLE t11([columns 501]);
1080}] {1 {too many columns on t11}}
1081
1082# Check that it is not possible to raise the column limit above its
1083# default compile time value.
1084#
1085sqlite3_limit db SQLITE_LIMIT_COLUMN [expr $::SQLITE_MAX_COLUMN+2]
1086do_catchsql_test e_createtable-3.11.3 [subst {
1087  CREATE TABLE t11([columns [expr $::SQLITE_MAX_COLUMN+1]]);
1088}] {1 {too many columns on t11}}
1089
1090sqlite3_limit db SQLITE_LIMIT_LENGTH 90010
1091do_execsql_test e_createtable-3.11.4 {
1092  CREATE TABLE t12(a, b, c);
1093  INSERT INTO t12 VALUES(randomblob(30000),randomblob(30000),randomblob(30000));
1094} {}
1095do_catchsql_test e_createtable-3.11.5 {
1096  INSERT INTO t12 VALUES(randomblob(30001),randomblob(30000),randomblob(30000));
1097} {1 {string or blob too big}}
1098
1099#-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1100# Tests for statements regarding constraints (PRIMARY KEY, UNIQUE, NOT
1101# NULL and CHECK constraints).
1102#
1103
1104# EVIDENCE-OF: R-52382-54248 Each table in SQLite may have at most one
1105# PRIMARY KEY.
1106#
1107# EVIDENCE-OF: R-31826-01813 An error is raised if more than one PRIMARY
1108# KEY clause appears in a CREATE TABLE statement.
1109#
1110#     To test the two above, show that zero primary keys is Ok, one primary
1111#     key is Ok, and two or more primary keys is an error.
1112#
1113drop_all_tables
1114do_createtable_tests 4.1.1 {
1115  1    "CREATE TABLE t1(a, b, c)"                                        {}
1116  2    "CREATE TABLE t2(a PRIMARY KEY, b, c)"                            {}
1117  3    "CREATE TABLE t3(a, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(a))"                        {}
1118  4    "CREATE TABLE t4(a, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(c,b,a))"                    {}
1119}
1120do_createtable_tests 4.1.2 -error {
1121  table "t5" has more than one primary key
1122} {
1123  1    "CREATE TABLE t5(a PRIMARY KEY, b PRIMARY KEY, c)"                {}
1124  2    "CREATE TABLE t5(a, b PRIMARY KEY, c, PRIMARY KEY(a))"            {}
1125  3    "CREATE TABLE t5(a INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, b PRIMARY KEY, c)"        {}
1126  4    "CREATE TABLE t5(a INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(b, c))" {}
1127  5    "CREATE TABLE t5(a PRIMARY KEY, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(a))"            {}
1128  6    "CREATE TABLE t5(a INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(a))"    {}
1129}
1130
1131# EVIDENCE-OF: R-54755-39291 The PRIMARY KEY is optional for ordinary
1132# tables but is required for WITHOUT ROWID tables.
1133#
1134do_catchsql_test 4.1.3 {
1135  CREATE TABLE t6(a, b); --ok
1136} {0 {}}
1137do_catchsql_test 4.1.4 {
1138  CREATE TABLE t7(a, b) WITHOUT ROWID; --Error, no PRIMARY KEY
1139} {1 {PRIMARY KEY missing on table t7}}
1140
1141
1142proc table_pk {tbl} {
1143  set pk [list]
1144  db eval "pragma table_info($tbl)" a {
1145    if {$a(pk)} { lappend pk $a(name) }
1146  }
1147  set pk
1148}
1149
1150# EVIDENCE-OF: R-41411-18837 If the keywords PRIMARY KEY are added to a
1151# column definition, then the primary key for the table consists of that
1152# single column.
1153#
1154#     The above is tested by 4.2.1.*
1155#
1156# EVIDENCE-OF: R-31775-48204 Or, if a PRIMARY KEY clause is specified as
1157# a table-constraint, then the primary key of the table consists of the
1158# list of columns specified as part of the PRIMARY KEY clause.
1159#
1160#     The above is tested by 4.2.2.*
1161#
1162do_createtable_tests 4.2 -repair {
1163  catchsql { DROP TABLE t5 }
1164} -tclquery {
1165  table_pk t5
1166} {
1167  1.1    "CREATE TABLE t5(a, b INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, c)"       {b}
1168  1.2    "CREATE TABLE t5(a PRIMARY KEY, b, c)"               {a}
1169
1170  2.1    "CREATE TABLE t5(a, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(a))"           {a}
1171  2.2    "CREATE TABLE t5(a, b, c, PRIMARY KEY(c,b,a))"       {a b c}
1172  2.3    "CREATE TABLE t5(a, b INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, c)"       {b}
1173}
1174
1175# EVIDENCE-OF: R-59124-61339 Each row in a table with a primary key must
1176# have a unique combination of values in its primary key columns.
1177#
1178# EVIDENCE-OF: R-06471-16287 If an INSERT or UPDATE statement attempts
1179# to modify the table content so that two or more rows have identical
1180# primary key values, that is a constraint violation.
1181#
1182drop_all_tables
1183do_execsql_test 4.3.0 {
1184  CREATE TABLE t1(x PRIMARY KEY, y);
1185  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(0,          'zero');
1186  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(45.5,       'one');
1187  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('brambles', 'two');
1188  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(X'ABCDEF',  'three');
1189
1190  CREATE TABLE t2(x, y, PRIMARY KEY(x, y));
1191  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(0,          'zero');
1192  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(45.5,       'one');
1193  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('brambles', 'two');
1194  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(X'ABCDEF',  'three');
1195} {}
1196
1197do_createtable_tests 4.3.1 -error {UNIQUE constraint failed: t1.x} {
1198  1    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(0, 0)"                 {"column x is"}
1199  2    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(45.5, 'abc')"          {"column x is"}
1200  3    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(0.0, 'abc')"           {"column x is"}
1201  4    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('brambles', 'abc')"    {"column x is"}
1202  5    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(X'ABCDEF', 'abc')"     {"column x is"}
1203}
1204do_createtable_tests 4.3.1 -error {UNIQUE constraint failed: t2.x, t2.y} {
1205  6    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(0, 'zero')"            {"columns x, y are"}
1206  7    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(45.5, 'one')"          {"columns x, y are"}
1207  8    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(0.0, 'zero')"          {"columns x, y are"}
1208  9    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('brambles', 'two')"    {"columns x, y are"}
1209  10   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(X'ABCDEF', 'three')"   {"columns x, y are"}
1210}
1211do_createtable_tests 4.3.2 {
1212  1    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(-1, 0)"                {}
1213  2    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(45.2, 'abc')"          {}
1214  3    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(0.01, 'abc')"          {}
1215  4    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('bramble', 'abc')"     {}
1216  5    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(X'ABCDEE', 'abc')"     {}
1217
1218  6    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(0, 0)"                 {}
1219  7    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(45.5, 'abc')"          {}
1220  8    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(0.0, 'abc')"           {}
1221  9    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('brambles', 'abc')"    {}
1222  10   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(X'ABCDEF', 'abc')"     {}
1223}
1224do_createtable_tests 4.3.3 -error {UNIQUE constraint failed: t1.x} {
1225  1    "UPDATE t1 SET x=0           WHERE y='two'"    {"column x is"}
1226  2    "UPDATE t1 SET x='brambles'  WHERE y='three'"  {"column x is"}
1227  3    "UPDATE t1 SET x=45.5        WHERE y='zero'"   {"column x is"}
1228  4    "UPDATE t1 SET x=X'ABCDEF'   WHERE y='one'"    {"column x is"}
1229  5    "UPDATE t1 SET x=0.0         WHERE y='three'"  {"column x is"}
1230}
1231do_createtable_tests 4.3.3 -error {UNIQUE constraint failed: t2.x, t2.y} {
1232  6    "UPDATE t2 SET x=0, y='zero' WHERE y='two'"    {"columns x, y are"}
1233  7    "UPDATE t2 SET x='brambles', y='two' WHERE y='three'"
1234       {"columns x, y are"}
1235  8    "UPDATE t2 SET x=45.5, y='one' WHERE y='zero'" {"columns x, y are"}
1236  9    "UPDATE t2 SET x=X'ABCDEF', y='three' WHERE y='one'"
1237       {"columns x, y are"}
1238  10   "UPDATE t2 SET x=0.0, y='zero'        WHERE y='three'"
1239       {"columns x, y are"}
1240}
1241
1242
1243# EVIDENCE-OF: R-52572-02078 For the purposes of determining the
1244# uniqueness of primary key values, NULL values are considered distinct
1245# from all other values, including other NULLs.
1246#
1247do_createtable_tests 4.4 {
1248  1    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(NULL, 0)"              {}
1249  2    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(NULL, 0)"              {}
1250  3    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(NULL, 0)"              {}
1251
1252  4    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(NULL, 'zero')"         {}
1253  5    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(NULL, 'one')"          {}
1254  6    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(NULL, 'two')"          {}
1255  7    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(NULL, 'three')"        {}
1256
1257  8    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(0, NULL)"              {}
1258  9    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(45.5, NULL)"           {}
1259  10   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(0.0, NULL)"            {}
1260  11   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('brambles', NULL)"     {}
1261  12   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(X'ABCDEF', NULL)"      {}
1262
1263  13   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(NULL, NULL)"           {}
1264  14   "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(NULL, NULL)"           {}
1265}
1266
1267# EVIDENCE-OF: R-35113-43214 Unless the column is an INTEGER PRIMARY KEY
1268# or the table is a WITHOUT ROWID table or the column is declared NOT
1269# NULL, SQLite allows NULL values in a PRIMARY KEY column.
1270#
1271#     If the column is an integer primary key, attempting to insert a NULL
1272#     into the column triggers the auto-increment behavior. Attempting
1273#     to use UPDATE to set an ipk column to a NULL value is an error.
1274#
1275do_createtable_tests 4.5.1 {
1276  1    "SELECT count(*) FROM t1 WHERE x IS NULL"                   3
1277  2    "SELECT count(*) FROM t2 WHERE x IS NULL"                   6
1278  3    "SELECT count(*) FROM t2 WHERE y IS NULL"                   7
1279  4    "SELECT count(*) FROM t2 WHERE x IS NULL AND y IS NULL"     2
1280}
1281do_execsql_test 4.5.2 {
1282  CREATE TABLE t3(s, u INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, v);
1283  INSERT INTO t3 VALUES(1, NULL, 2);
1284  INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('x', NULL, 'y');
1285  SELECT u FROM t3;
1286} {1 2}
1287do_catchsql_test 4.5.3 {
1288  INSERT INTO t3 VALUES(2, 5, 3);
1289  UPDATE t3 SET u = NULL WHERE s = 2;
1290} {1 {datatype mismatch}}
1291do_catchsql_test 4.5.4 {
1292  CREATE TABLE t4(s, u INT PRIMARY KEY, v) WITHOUT ROWID;
1293  INSERT INTO t4 VALUES(1, NULL, 2);
1294} {1 {NOT NULL constraint failed: t4.u}}
1295do_catchsql_test 4.5.5 {
1296  CREATE TABLE t5(s, u INT PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL, v);
1297  INSERT INTO t5 VALUES(1, NULL, 2);
1298} {1 {NOT NULL constraint failed: t5.u}}
1299
1300# EVIDENCE-OF: R-00227-21080 A UNIQUE constraint is similar to a PRIMARY
1301# KEY constraint, except that a single table may have any number of
1302# UNIQUE constraints.
1303#
1304drop_all_tables
1305do_createtable_tests 4.6 {
1306  1    "CREATE TABLE t1(a UNIQUE, b UNIQUE)"                       {}
1307  2    "CREATE TABLE t2(a UNIQUE, b, c, UNIQUE(c, b))"             {}
1308  3    "CREATE TABLE t3(a, b, c, UNIQUE(a), UNIQUE(b), UNIQUE(c))" {}
1309  4    "CREATE TABLE t4(a, b, c, UNIQUE(a, b, c))"                 {}
1310}
1311
1312# EVIDENCE-OF: R-30981-64168 For each UNIQUE constraint on the table,
1313# each row must contain a unique combination of values in the columns
1314# identified by the UNIQUE constraint.
1315#
1316# EVIDENCE-OF: R-59124-61339 Each row in a table with a primary key must
1317# have a unique combination of values in its primary key columns.
1318#
1319do_execsql_test 4.7.0 {
1320  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1, 2);
1321  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(4.3, 5.5);
1322  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('reveal', 'variableness');
1323  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(X'123456', X'654321');
1324
1325  INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('xyx', 1, 1);
1326  INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('xyx', 2, 1);
1327  INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('uvw', 1, 1);
1328}
1329do_createtable_tests 4.7.1 -error {UNIQUE constraint failed: %s} {
1330  1    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1, 'one')"             {{t1.a}}
1331  2    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(4.3, 'two')"           {{t1.a}}
1332  3    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('reveal', 'three')"    {{t1.a}}
1333  4    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(X'123456', 'four')"    {{t1.a}}
1334
1335  5    "UPDATE t1 SET a = 1 WHERE rowid=2"           {{t1.a}}
1336  6    "UPDATE t1 SET a = 4.3 WHERE rowid=3"         {{t1.a}}
1337  7    "UPDATE t1 SET a = 'reveal' WHERE rowid=4"    {{t1.a}}
1338  8    "UPDATE t1 SET a = X'123456' WHERE rowid=1"   {{t1.a}}
1339
1340  9    "INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('xyx', 1, 1)"          {{t4.a, t4.b, t4.c}}
1341  10   "INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('xyx', 2, 1)"          {{t4.a, t4.b, t4.c}}
1342  11   "INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('uvw', 1, 1)"          {{t4.a, t4.b, t4.c}}
1343
1344  12   "UPDATE t4 SET a='xyx' WHERE rowid=3"         {{t4.a, t4.b, t4.c}}
1345  13   "UPDATE t4 SET b=1 WHERE rowid=2"             {{t4.a, t4.b, t4.c}}
1346  14   "UPDATE t4 SET a=0, b=0, c=0"                 {{t4.a, t4.b, t4.c}}
1347}
1348
1349# EVIDENCE-OF: R-00404-17670 For the purposes of UNIQUE constraints,
1350# NULL values are considered distinct from all other values, including
1351# other NULLs.
1352#
1353do_createtable_tests 4.8 {
1354  1    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(NULL, NULL)"           {}
1355  2    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(NULL, NULL)"           {}
1356  3    "UPDATE t1 SET a = NULL"                      {}
1357  4    "UPDATE t1 SET b = NULL"                      {}
1358
1359  5    "INSERT INTO t4 VALUES(NULL, NULL, NULL)"     {}
1360  6    "INSERT INTO t4 VALUES(NULL, NULL, NULL)"     {}
1361  7    "UPDATE t4 SET a = NULL"                      {}
1362  8    "UPDATE t4 SET b = NULL"                      {}
1363  9    "UPDATE t4 SET c = NULL"                      {}
1364}
1365
1366# EVIDENCE-OF: R-55820-29984 In most cases, UNIQUE and PRIMARY KEY
1367# constraints are implemented by creating a unique index in the
1368# database.
1369do_createtable_tests 4.9 -repair drop_all_tables -query {
1370  SELECT count(*) FROM sqlite_master WHERE type='index'
1371} {
1372  1    "CREATE TABLE t1(a TEXT PRIMARY KEY, b)"              1
1373  2    "CREATE TABLE t1(a INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, b)"           0
1374  3    "CREATE TABLE t1(a TEXT UNIQUE, b)"                   1
1375  4    "CREATE TABLE t1(a PRIMARY KEY, b TEXT UNIQUE)"       2
1376  5    "CREATE TABLE t1(a PRIMARY KEY, b, c, UNIQUE(c, b))"  2
1377}
1378
1379# Obsolete: R-02252-33116 Such an index is used like any other index
1380# in the database to optimize queries.
1381#
1382do_execsql_test 4.10.0 {
1383  CREATE TABLE t1(a, b PRIMARY KEY);
1384  CREATE TABLE t2(a, b, c, UNIQUE(b, c));
1385}
1386do_createtable_tests 4.10 {
1387  1    "EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE b = 5"
1388       {/*SEARCH TABLE t1 USING INDEX sqlite_autoindex_t1_1 (b=?)*/}
1389
1390  2    "EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN SELECT * FROM t2 ORDER BY b, c"
1391       {/*SCAN TABLE t2 USING INDEX sqlite_autoindex_t2_1*/}
1392
1393  3    "EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN SELECT * FROM t2 WHERE b=10 AND c>10"
1394       {/*SEARCH TABLE t2 USING INDEX sqlite_autoindex_t2_1 (b=? AND c>?)*/}
1395}
1396
1397# EVIDENCE-OF: R-45493-35653 A CHECK constraint may be attached to a
1398# column definition or specified as a table constraint. In practice it
1399# makes no difference.
1400#
1401#   All the tests that deal with CHECK constraints below (4.11.* and
1402#   4.12.*) are run once for a table with the check constraint attached
1403#   to a column definition, and once with a table where the check
1404#   condition is specified as a table constraint.
1405#
1406# EVIDENCE-OF: R-55435-14303 Each time a new row is inserted into the
1407# table or an existing row is updated, the expression associated with
1408# each CHECK constraint is evaluated and cast to a NUMERIC value in the
1409# same way as a CAST expression. If the result is zero (integer value 0
1410# or real value 0.0), then a constraint violation has occurred.
1411#
1412drop_all_tables
1413do_execsql_test 4.11 {
1414  CREATE TABLE x1(a TEXT, b INTEGER CHECK( b>0 ));
1415  CREATE TABLE t1(a TEXT, b INTEGER, CHECK( b>0 ));
1416  INSERT INTO x1 VALUES('x', 'xx');
1417  INSERT INTO x1 VALUES('y', 'yy');
1418  INSERT INTO t1 SELECT * FROM x1;
1419
1420  CREATE TABLE x2(a CHECK( a||b ), b);
1421  CREATE TABLE t2(a, b, CHECK( a||b ));
1422  INSERT INTO x2 VALUES(1, 'xx');
1423  INSERT INTO x2 VALUES(1, 'yy');
1424  INSERT INTO t2 SELECT * FROM x2;
1425}
1426
1427do_createtable_tests 4.11 -error {CHECK constraint failed: %s} {
1428  1a    "INSERT INTO x1 VALUES('one', 0)"       {x1}
1429  1b    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('one', -4.0)"    {t1}
1430
1431  2a    "INSERT INTO x2 VALUES('abc', 1)"       {x2}
1432  2b    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('abc', 1)"       {t2}
1433
1434  3a    "INSERT INTO x2 VALUES(0, 'abc')"       {x2}
1435  3b    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(0, 'abc')"       {t2}
1436
1437  4a    "UPDATE t1 SET b=-1 WHERE rowid=1"      {t1}
1438  4b    "UPDATE x1 SET b=-1 WHERE rowid=1"      {x1}
1439
1440  4a    "UPDATE x2 SET a='' WHERE rowid=1"      {x2}
1441  4b    "UPDATE t2 SET a='' WHERE rowid=1"      {t2}
1442}
1443
1444# EVIDENCE-OF: R-34109-39108 If the CHECK expression evaluates to NULL,
1445# or any other non-zero value, it is not a constraint violation.
1446#
1447do_createtable_tests 4.12 {
1448  1a    "INSERT INTO x1 VALUES('one', NULL)"    {}
1449  1b    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('one', NULL)"    {}
1450
1451  2a    "INSERT INTO x1 VALUES('one', 2)"    {}
1452  2b    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('one', 2)"    {}
1453
1454  3a    "INSERT INTO x2 VALUES(1, 'abc')"       {}
1455  3b    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(1, 'abc')"       {}
1456}
1457
1458# EVIDENCE-OF: R-02060-64547 A NOT NULL constraint may only be attached
1459# to a column definition, not specified as a table constraint.
1460#
1461drop_all_tables
1462do_createtable_tests 4.13.1 {
1463  1     "CREATE TABLE t1(a NOT NULL, b)"                               {}
1464  2     "CREATE TABLE t2(a PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL, b)"                   {}
1465  3     "CREATE TABLE t3(a NOT NULL, b NOT NULL, c NOT NULL UNIQUE)"   {}
1466}
1467do_createtable_tests 4.13.2 -error {
1468  near "NOT": syntax error
1469} {
1470  1     "CREATE TABLE t4(a, b, NOT NULL(a))"                   {}
1471  2     "CREATE TABLE t4(a PRIMARY KEY, b, NOT NULL(a))"       {}
1472  3     "CREATE TABLE t4(a, b, c UNIQUE, NOT NULL(a, b, c))"   {}
1473}
1474
1475# EVIDENCE-OF: R-31795-57643 a NOT NULL constraint dictates that the
1476# associated column may not contain a NULL value. Attempting to set the
1477# column value to NULL when inserting a new row or updating an existing
1478# one causes a constraint violation.
1479#
1480#     These tests use the tables created by 4.13.
1481#
1482do_execsql_test 4.14.0 {
1483  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('x', 'y');
1484  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('z', NULL);
1485
1486  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('x', 'y');
1487  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('z', NULL);
1488
1489  INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('x', 'y', 'z');
1490  INSERT INTO t3 VALUES(1, 2, 3);
1491}
1492do_createtable_tests 4.14 -error {NOT NULL constraint failed: %s} {
1493  1    "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(NULL, 'a')"         {t1.a}
1494  2    "INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(NULL, 'b')"         {t2.a}
1495  3    "INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('c', 'd', NULL)"    {t3.c}
1496  4    "INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('e', NULL, 'f')"    {t3.b}
1497  5    "INSERT INTO t3 VALUES(NULL, 'g', 'h')"    {t3.a}
1498}
1499
1500# EVIDENCE-OF: R-42511-39459 PRIMARY KEY, UNIQUE and NOT NULL
1501# constraints may be explicitly assigned a default conflict resolution
1502# algorithm by including a conflict-clause in their definitions.
1503#
1504#     Conflict clauses: ABORT, ROLLBACK, IGNORE, FAIL, REPLACE
1505#
1506#     Test cases 4.15.*, 4.16.* and 4.17.* focus on PRIMARY KEY, NOT NULL
1507#     and UNIQUE constraints, respectively.
1508#
1509drop_all_tables
1510do_execsql_test 4.15.0 {
1511  CREATE TABLE t1_ab(a PRIMARY KEY ON CONFLICT ABORT, b);
1512  CREATE TABLE t1_ro(a PRIMARY KEY ON CONFLICT ROLLBACK, b);
1513  CREATE TABLE t1_ig(a PRIMARY KEY ON CONFLICT IGNORE, b);
1514  CREATE TABLE t1_fa(a PRIMARY KEY ON CONFLICT FAIL, b);
1515  CREATE TABLE t1_re(a PRIMARY KEY ON CONFLICT REPLACE, b);
1516  CREATE TABLE t1_xx(a PRIMARY KEY, b);
1517
1518  INSERT INTO t1_ab VALUES(1, 'one');
1519  INSERT INTO t1_ab VALUES(2, 'two');
1520  INSERT INTO t1_ro SELECT * FROM t1_ab;
1521  INSERT INTO t1_ig SELECT * FROM t1_ab;
1522  INSERT INTO t1_fa SELECT * FROM t1_ab;
1523  INSERT INTO t1_re SELECT * FROM t1_ab;
1524  INSERT INTO t1_xx SELECT * FROM t1_ab;
1525
1526  CREATE TABLE t2_ab(a, b NOT NULL ON CONFLICT ABORT);
1527  CREATE TABLE t2_ro(a, b NOT NULL ON CONFLICT ROLLBACK);
1528  CREATE TABLE t2_ig(a, b NOT NULL ON CONFLICT IGNORE);
1529  CREATE TABLE t2_fa(a, b NOT NULL ON CONFLICT FAIL);
1530  CREATE TABLE t2_re(a, b NOT NULL ON CONFLICT REPLACE);
1531  CREATE TABLE t2_xx(a, b NOT NULL);
1532
1533  INSERT INTO t2_ab VALUES(1, 'one');
1534  INSERT INTO t2_ab VALUES(2, 'two');
1535  INSERT INTO t2_ro SELECT * FROM t2_ab;
1536  INSERT INTO t2_ig SELECT * FROM t2_ab;
1537  INSERT INTO t2_fa SELECT * FROM t2_ab;
1538  INSERT INTO t2_re SELECT * FROM t2_ab;
1539  INSERT INTO t2_xx SELECT * FROM t2_ab;
1540
1541  CREATE TABLE t3_ab(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b) ON CONFLICT ABORT);
1542  CREATE TABLE t3_ro(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b) ON CONFLICT ROLLBACK);
1543  CREATE TABLE t3_ig(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b) ON CONFLICT IGNORE);
1544  CREATE TABLE t3_fa(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b) ON CONFLICT FAIL);
1545  CREATE TABLE t3_re(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b) ON CONFLICT REPLACE);
1546  CREATE TABLE t3_xx(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b));
1547
1548  INSERT INTO t3_ab VALUES(1, 'one');
1549  INSERT INTO t3_ab VALUES(2, 'two');
1550  INSERT INTO t3_ro SELECT * FROM t3_ab;
1551  INSERT INTO t3_ig SELECT * FROM t3_ab;
1552  INSERT INTO t3_fa SELECT * FROM t3_ab;
1553  INSERT INTO t3_re SELECT * FROM t3_ab;
1554  INSERT INTO t3_xx SELECT * FROM t3_ab;
1555}
1556
1557foreach {tn tbl res ac data} {
1558  1   t1_ab    {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t1_ab.a}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three}
1559  2   t1_ro    {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t1_ro.a}} 1 {1 one 2 two}
1560  3   t1_fa    {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t1_fa.a}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three 4 string}
1561  4   t1_ig    {0 {}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three 4 string 6 string}
1562  5   t1_re    {0 {}} 0 {1 one 2 two 4 string 3 string 6 string}
1563  6   t1_xx    {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t1_xx.a}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three}
1564} {
1565  catchsql COMMIT
1566  do_execsql_test  4.15.$tn.1 "BEGIN; INSERT INTO $tbl VALUES(3, 'three')"
1567
1568  do_catchsql_test 4.15.$tn.2 "
1569    INSERT INTO $tbl SELECT ((a%2)*a+3), 'string' FROM $tbl;
1570  " $res
1571
1572  do_test e_createtable-4.15.$tn.3 { sqlite3_get_autocommit db } $ac
1573  do_execsql_test 4.15.$tn.4 "SELECT * FROM $tbl" $data
1574}
1575foreach {tn tbl res ac data} {
1576  1   t2_ab    {1 {NOT NULL constraint failed: t2_ab.b}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three}
1577  2   t2_ro    {1 {NOT NULL constraint failed: t2_ro.b}} 1 {1 one 2 two}
1578  3   t2_fa    {1 {NOT NULL constraint failed: t2_fa.b}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three 4 xx}
1579  4   t2_ig    {0 {}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three 4 xx 6 xx}
1580  5   t2_re    {1 {NOT NULL constraint failed: t2_re.b}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three}
1581  6   t2_xx    {1 {NOT NULL constraint failed: t2_xx.b}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three}
1582} {
1583  catchsql COMMIT
1584  do_execsql_test  4.16.$tn.1 "BEGIN; INSERT INTO $tbl VALUES(3, 'three')"
1585
1586  do_catchsql_test 4.16.$tn.2 "
1587    INSERT INTO $tbl SELECT a+3, CASE a WHEN 2 THEN NULL ELSE 'xx' END FROM $tbl
1588  " $res
1589
1590  do_test e_createtable-4.16.$tn.3 { sqlite3_get_autocommit db } $ac
1591  do_execsql_test 4.16.$tn.4 "SELECT * FROM $tbl" $data
1592}
1593foreach {tn tbl res ac data} {
1594  1   t3_ab    {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t3_ab.a, t3_ab.b}}
1595               0 {1 one 2 two 3 three}
1596  2   t3_ro    {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t3_ro.a, t3_ro.b}}
1597               1 {1 one 2 two}
1598  3   t3_fa    {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t3_fa.a, t3_fa.b}}
1599               0 {1 one 2 two 3 three 4 three}
1600  4   t3_ig    {0 {}} 0 {1 one 2 two 3 three 4 three 6 three}
1601  5   t3_re    {0 {}} 0 {1 one 2 two 4 three 3 three 6 three}
1602  6   t3_xx    {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t3_xx.a, t3_xx.b}}
1603               0 {1 one 2 two 3 three}
1604} {
1605  catchsql COMMIT
1606  do_execsql_test  4.17.$tn.1 "BEGIN; INSERT INTO $tbl VALUES(3, 'three')"
1607
1608  do_catchsql_test 4.17.$tn.2 "
1609    INSERT INTO $tbl SELECT ((a%2)*a+3), 'three' FROM $tbl
1610  " $res
1611
1612  do_test e_createtable-4.17.$tn.3 { sqlite3_get_autocommit db } $ac
1613  do_execsql_test 4.17.$tn.4 "SELECT * FROM $tbl ORDER BY rowid" $data
1614}
1615catchsql COMMIT
1616
1617# EVIDENCE-OF: R-12645-39772 Or, if a constraint definition does not
1618# include a conflict-clause or it is a CHECK constraint, the default
1619# conflict resolution algorithm is ABORT.
1620#
1621#     The first half of the above is tested along with explicit ON
1622#     CONFLICT clauses above (specifically, the tests involving t1_xx, t2_xx
1623#     and t3_xx). The following just tests that the default conflict
1624#     handling for CHECK constraints is ABORT.
1625#
1626do_execsql_test 4.18.1 {
1627  CREATE TABLE t4(a, b CHECK (b!=10));
1628  INSERT INTO t4 VALUES(1, 2);
1629  INSERT INTO t4 VALUES(3, 4);
1630}
1631do_execsql_test  4.18.2 { BEGIN; INSERT INTO t4 VALUES(5, 6) }
1632do_catchsql_test 4.18.3 {
1633  INSERT INTO t4 SELECT a+4, b+4 FROM t4
1634} {1 {CHECK constraint failed: t4}}
1635do_test e_createtable-4.18.4 { sqlite3_get_autocommit db } 0
1636do_execsql_test 4.18.5 { SELECT * FROM t4 } {1 2 3 4 5 6}
1637
1638# EVIDENCE-OF: R-19114-56113 Different constraints within the same table
1639# may have different default conflict resolution algorithms.
1640#
1641do_execsql_test 4.19.0 {
1642  CREATE TABLE t5(a NOT NULL ON CONFLICT IGNORE, b NOT NULL ON CONFLICT ABORT);
1643}
1644do_catchsql_test 4.19.1 { INSERT INTO t5 VALUES(NULL, 'not null') } {0 {}}
1645do_execsql_test  4.19.2 { SELECT * FROM t5 } {}
1646do_catchsql_test 4.19.3 { INSERT INTO t5 VALUES('not null', NULL) } \
1647  {1 {NOT NULL constraint failed: t5.b}}
1648do_execsql_test  4.19.4 { SELECT * FROM t5 } {}
1649
1650#------------------------------------------------------------------------
1651# Tests for INTEGER PRIMARY KEY and rowid related statements.
1652#
1653
1654# EVIDENCE-OF: R-52584-04009 The rowid value can be accessed using one
1655# of the special case-independent names "rowid", "oid", or "_rowid_" in
1656# place of a column name.
1657#
1658# EVIDENCE-OF: R-06726-07466 A column name can be any of the names
1659# defined in the CREATE TABLE statement or one of the following special
1660# identifiers: "ROWID", "OID", or "_ROWID_".
1661#
1662drop_all_tables
1663do_execsql_test 5.1.0 {
1664  CREATE TABLE t1(x, y);
1665  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('one', 'first');
1666  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('two', 'second');
1667  INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('three', 'third');
1668}
1669do_createtable_tests 5.1 {
1670  1   "SELECT rowid FROM t1"        {1 2 3}
1671  2   "SELECT oid FROM t1"          {1 2 3}
1672  3   "SELECT _rowid_ FROM t1"      {1 2 3}
1673  4   "SELECT ROWID FROM t1"        {1 2 3}
1674  5   "SELECT OID FROM t1"          {1 2 3}
1675  6   "SELECT _ROWID_ FROM t1"      {1 2 3}
1676  7   "SELECT RoWiD FROM t1"        {1 2 3}
1677  8   "SELECT OiD FROM t1"          {1 2 3}
1678  9   "SELECT _RoWiD_ FROM t1"      {1 2 3}
1679}
1680
1681# EVIDENCE-OF: R-26501-17306 If a table contains a user defined column
1682# named "rowid", "oid" or "_rowid_", then that name always refers the
1683# explicitly declared column and cannot be used to retrieve the integer
1684# rowid value.
1685#
1686# EVIDENCE-OF: R-44615-33286 The special identifiers only refer to the
1687# row key if the CREATE TABLE statement does not define a real column
1688# with the same name.
1689#
1690do_execsql_test 5.2.0 {
1691  CREATE TABLE t2(oid, b);
1692  CREATE TABLE t3(a, _rowid_);
1693  CREATE TABLE t4(a, b, rowid);
1694
1695  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('one', 'two');
1696  INSERT INTO t2 VALUES('three', 'four');
1697
1698  INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('five', 'six');
1699  INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('seven', 'eight');
1700
1701  INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('nine', 'ten', 'eleven');
1702  INSERT INTO t4 VALUES('twelve', 'thirteen', 'fourteen');
1703}
1704do_createtable_tests 5.2 {
1705  1   "SELECT oid, rowid, _rowid_ FROM t2"   {one 1 1      three 2 2}
1706  2   "SELECT oid, rowid, _rowid_ FROM t3"   {1 1 six      2 2 eight}
1707  3   "SELECT oid, rowid, _rowid_ FROM t4"   {1 eleven 1   2 fourteen 2}
1708}
1709
1710
1711# Argument $tbl is the name of a table in the database. Argument $col is
1712# the name of one of the tables columns. Return 1 if $col is an alias for
1713# the rowid, or 0 otherwise.
1714#
1715proc is_integer_primary_key {tbl col} {
1716  lindex [db eval [subst {
1717    DELETE FROM $tbl;
1718    INSERT INTO $tbl ($col) VALUES(0);
1719    SELECT (rowid==$col) FROM $tbl;
1720    DELETE FROM $tbl;
1721  }]] 0
1722}
1723
1724# EVIDENCE-OF: R-47901-33947 With one exception noted below, if a rowid
1725# table has a primary key that consists of a single column and the
1726# declared type of that column is "INTEGER" in any mixture of upper and
1727# lower case, then the column becomes an alias for the rowid.
1728#
1729# EVIDENCE-OF: R-45951-08347 if the declaration of a column with
1730# declared type "INTEGER" includes an "PRIMARY KEY DESC" clause, it does
1731# not become an alias for the rowid and is not classified as an integer
1732# primary key.
1733#
1734do_createtable_tests 5.3 -tclquery {
1735  is_integer_primary_key t5 pk
1736} -repair {
1737  catchsql { DROP TABLE t5 }
1738} {
1739  1   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk integer primary key)"                         1
1740  2   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk integer, primary key(pk))"                    1
1741  3   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk integer, v integer, primary key(pk))"         1
1742  4   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk integer, v integer, primary key(pk, v))"      0
1743  5   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk int, v integer, primary key(pk, v))"          0
1744  6   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk int, v integer, primary key(pk))"             0
1745  7   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk int primary key, v integer)"                  0
1746  8   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk inTEger primary key)"                         1
1747  9   "CREATE TABLE t5(pk inteGEr, primary key(pk))"                    1
1748  10  "CREATE TABLE t5(pk INTEGER, v integer, primary key(pk))"         1
1749}
1750
1751# EVIDENCE-OF: R-41444-49665 Other integer type names like "INT" or
1752# "BIGINT" or "SHORT INTEGER" or "UNSIGNED INTEGER" causes the primary
1753# key column to behave as an ordinary table column with integer affinity
1754# and a unique index, not as an alias for the rowid.
1755#
1756do_execsql_test 5.4.1 {
1757  CREATE TABLE t6(pk INT primary key);
1758  CREATE TABLE t7(pk BIGINT primary key);
1759  CREATE TABLE t8(pk SHORT INTEGER primary key);
1760  CREATE TABLE t9(pk UNSIGNED INTEGER primary key);
1761}
1762do_test e_createtable-5.4.2.1 { is_integer_primary_key t6 pk } 0
1763do_test e_createtable-5.4.2.2 { is_integer_primary_key t7 pk } 0
1764do_test e_createtable-5.4.2.3 { is_integer_primary_key t8 pk } 0
1765do_test e_createtable-5.4.2.4 { is_integer_primary_key t9 pk } 0
1766
1767do_execsql_test 5.4.3 {
1768  INSERT INTO t6 VALUES('2.0');
1769  INSERT INTO t7 VALUES('2.0');
1770  INSERT INTO t8 VALUES('2.0');
1771  INSERT INTO t9 VALUES('2.0');
1772  SELECT typeof(pk), pk FROM t6;
1773  SELECT typeof(pk), pk FROM t7;
1774  SELECT typeof(pk), pk FROM t8;
1775  SELECT typeof(pk), pk FROM t9;
1776} {integer 2 integer 2 integer 2 integer 2}
1777
1778do_catchsql_test 5.4.4.1 {
1779  INSERT INTO t6 VALUES(2)
1780} {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t6.pk}}
1781do_catchsql_test 5.4.4.2 {
1782  INSERT INTO t7 VALUES(2)
1783} {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t7.pk}}
1784do_catchsql_test 5.4.4.3 {
1785  INSERT INTO t8 VALUES(2)
1786} {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t8.pk}}
1787do_catchsql_test 5.4.4.4 {
1788  INSERT INTO t9 VALUES(2)
1789} {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t9.pk}}
1790
1791# EVIDENCE-OF: R-56094-57830 the following three table declarations all
1792# cause the column "x" to be an alias for the rowid (an integer primary
1793# key): CREATE TABLE t(x INTEGER PRIMARY KEY ASC, y, z); CREATE TABLE
1794# t(x INTEGER, y, z, PRIMARY KEY(x ASC)); CREATE TABLE t(x INTEGER, y,
1795# z, PRIMARY KEY(x DESC));
1796#
1797# EVIDENCE-OF: R-20149-25884 the following declaration does not result
1798# in "x" being an alias for the rowid: CREATE TABLE t(x INTEGER PRIMARY
1799# KEY DESC, y, z);
1800#
1801do_createtable_tests 5 -tclquery {
1802  is_integer_primary_key t x
1803} -repair {
1804  catchsql { DROP TABLE t }
1805} {
1806  5.1    "CREATE TABLE t(x INTEGER PRIMARY KEY ASC, y, z)"      1
1807  5.2    "CREATE TABLE t(x INTEGER, y, z, PRIMARY KEY(x ASC))"  1
1808  5.3    "CREATE TABLE t(x INTEGER, y, z, PRIMARY KEY(x DESC))" 1
1809  6.1    "CREATE TABLE t(x INTEGER PRIMARY KEY DESC, y, z)"     0
1810}
1811
1812# EVIDENCE-OF: R-03733-29734 Rowid values may be modified using an
1813# UPDATE statement in the same way as any other column value can, either
1814# using one of the built-in aliases ("rowid", "oid" or "_rowid_") or by
1815# using an alias created by an integer primary key.
1816#
1817do_execsql_test 5.7.0 {
1818  CREATE TABLE t10(a, b);
1819  INSERT INTO t10 VALUES('ten', 10);
1820
1821  CREATE TABLE t11(a, b INTEGER PRIMARY KEY);
1822  INSERT INTO t11 VALUES('ten', 10);
1823}
1824do_createtable_tests 5.7.1 -query {
1825  SELECT rowid, _rowid_, oid FROM t10;
1826} {
1827  1    "UPDATE t10 SET rowid = 5"   {5 5 5}
1828  2    "UPDATE t10 SET _rowid_ = 6" {6 6 6}
1829  3    "UPDATE t10 SET oid = 7"     {7 7 7}
1830}
1831do_createtable_tests 5.7.2 -query {
1832  SELECT rowid, _rowid_, oid, b FROM t11;
1833} {
1834  1    "UPDATE t11 SET rowid = 5"   {5 5 5 5}
1835  2    "UPDATE t11 SET _rowid_ = 6" {6 6 6 6}
1836  3    "UPDATE t11 SET oid = 7"     {7 7 7 7}
1837  4    "UPDATE t11 SET b = 8"       {8 8 8 8}
1838}
1839
1840# EVIDENCE-OF: R-58706-14229 Similarly, an INSERT statement may provide
1841# a value to use as the rowid for each row inserted.
1842#
1843do_createtable_tests 5.8.1 -query {
1844  SELECT rowid, _rowid_, oid FROM t10;
1845} -repair {
1846  execsql { DELETE FROM t10 }
1847} {
1848  1    "INSERT INTO t10(oid) VALUES(15)"           {15 15 15}
1849  2    "INSERT INTO t10(rowid) VALUES(16)"         {16 16 16}
1850  3    "INSERT INTO t10(_rowid_) VALUES(17)"       {17 17 17}
1851  4    "INSERT INTO t10(a, b, oid) VALUES(1,2,3)"  {3 3 3}
1852}
1853do_createtable_tests 5.8.2 -query {
1854  SELECT rowid, _rowid_, oid, b FROM t11;
1855} -repair {
1856  execsql { DELETE FROM t11 }
1857} {
1858  1    "INSERT INTO t11(oid) VALUES(15)"           {15 15 15 15}
1859  2    "INSERT INTO t11(rowid) VALUES(16)"         {16 16 16 16}
1860  3    "INSERT INTO t11(_rowid_) VALUES(17)"       {17 17 17 17}
1861  4    "INSERT INTO t11(a, b) VALUES(1,2)"         {2 2 2 2}
1862}
1863
1864# EVIDENCE-OF: R-32326-44592 Unlike normal SQLite columns, an integer
1865# primary key or rowid column must contain integer values. Integer
1866# primary key or rowid columns are not able to hold floating point
1867# values, strings, BLOBs, or NULLs.
1868#
1869#     This is considered by the tests for the following 3 statements,
1870#     which show that:
1871#
1872#       1. Attempts to UPDATE a rowid column to a non-integer value fail,
1873#       2. Attempts to INSERT a real, string or blob value into a rowid
1874#          column fail, and
1875#       3. Attempting to INSERT a NULL value into a rowid column causes the
1876#          system to automatically select an integer value to use.
1877#
1878
1879
1880# EVIDENCE-OF: R-64224-62578 If an UPDATE statement attempts to set an
1881# integer primary key or rowid column to a NULL or blob value, or to a
1882# string or real value that cannot be losslessly converted to an
1883# integer, a "datatype mismatch" error occurs and the statement is
1884# aborted.
1885#
1886drop_all_tables
1887do_execsql_test 5.9.0 {
1888  CREATE TABLE t12(x INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, y);
1889  INSERT INTO t12 VALUES(5, 'five');
1890}
1891do_createtable_tests 5.9.1 -query { SELECT typeof(x), x FROM t12 } {
1892  1   "UPDATE t12 SET x = 4"       {integer 4}
1893  2   "UPDATE t12 SET x = 10.0"    {integer 10}
1894  3   "UPDATE t12 SET x = '12.0'"  {integer 12}
1895  4   "UPDATE t12 SET x = '-15.0'" {integer -15}
1896}
1897do_createtable_tests 5.9.2 -error {
1898  datatype mismatch
1899} {
1900  1   "UPDATE t12 SET x = 4.1"         {}
1901  2   "UPDATE t12 SET x = 'hello'"     {}
1902  3   "UPDATE t12 SET x = NULL"        {}
1903  4   "UPDATE t12 SET x = X'ABCD'"     {}
1904  5   "UPDATE t12 SET x = X'3900'"     {}
1905  6   "UPDATE t12 SET x = X'39'"       {}
1906}
1907
1908# EVIDENCE-OF: R-05734-13629 If an INSERT statement attempts to insert a
1909# blob value, or a string or real value that cannot be losslessly
1910# converted to an integer into an integer primary key or rowid column, a
1911# "datatype mismatch" error occurs and the statement is aborted.
1912#
1913do_execsql_test 5.10.0 { DELETE FROM t12 }
1914do_createtable_tests 5.10.1 -error {
1915  datatype mismatch
1916} {
1917  1   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES(4.1)"     {}
1918  2   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES('hello')" {}
1919  3   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES(X'ABCD')" {}
1920  4   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES(X'3900')" {}
1921  5   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES(X'39')"   {}
1922}
1923do_createtable_tests 5.10.2 -query {
1924  SELECT typeof(x), x FROM t12
1925} -repair {
1926  execsql { DELETE FROM t12 }
1927} {
1928  1   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES(4)"       {integer 4}
1929  2   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES(10.0)"    {integer 10}
1930  3   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES('12.0')"  {integer 12}
1931  4   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES('4e3')"   {integer 4000}
1932  5   "INSERT INTO t12(x) VALUES('-14.0')" {integer -14}
1933}
1934
1935# EVIDENCE-OF: R-07986-46024 If an INSERT statement attempts to insert a
1936# NULL value into a rowid or integer primary key column, the system
1937# chooses an integer value to use as the rowid automatically.
1938#
1939do_execsql_test 5.11.0 { DELETE FROM t12 }
1940do_createtable_tests 5.11 -query {
1941  SELECT typeof(x), x FROM t12 WHERE y IS (SELECT max(y) FROM t12)
1942} {
1943  1   "INSERT INTO t12 DEFAULT VALUES"                {integer 1}
1944  2   "INSERT INTO t12(y)   VALUES(5)"                {integer 2}
1945  3   "INSERT INTO t12(x,y) VALUES(NULL, 10)"         {integer 3}
1946  4   "INSERT INTO t12(x,y) SELECT NULL, 15 FROM t12"
1947      {integer 4 integer 5 integer 6}
1948  5   "INSERT INTO t12(y) SELECT 20 FROM t12 LIMIT 3"
1949      {integer 7 integer 8 integer 9}
1950}
1951
1952finish_test
1953