107cb560bSdanielk1977# 2005 December 30 207cb560bSdanielk1977# 307cb560bSdanielk1977# The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of 407cb560bSdanielk1977# a legal notice, here is a blessing: 507cb560bSdanielk1977# 607cb560bSdanielk1977# May you do good and not evil. 707cb560bSdanielk1977# May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. 807cb560bSdanielk1977# May you share freely, never taking more than you give. 907cb560bSdanielk1977# 1007cb560bSdanielk1977#*********************************************************************** 1107cb560bSdanielk1977# 1207cb560bSdanielk1977# The focus of the tests in this file are IO errors that occur in a shared 1307cb560bSdanielk1977# cache context. What happens to connection B if one connection A encounters 1407cb560bSdanielk1977# an IO-error whilst reading or writing the file-system? 1507cb560bSdanielk1977# 16eec556d3Sshane# $Id: shared_err.test,v 1.24 2008/10/12 00:27:54 shane Exp $ 1707cb560bSdanielk1977 1807cb560bSdanielk1977proc skip {args} {} 1907cb560bSdanielk1977 2007cb560bSdanielk1977 2107cb560bSdanielk1977set testdir [file dirname $argv0] 2207cb560bSdanielk1977source $testdir/tester.tcl 23222a757dSdanielk1977source $testdir/malloc_common.tcl 2407cb560bSdanielk1977db close 2507cb560bSdanielk1977 2607cb560bSdanielk1977ifcapable !shared_cache||!subquery { 2707cb560bSdanielk1977 finish_test 2807cb560bSdanielk1977 return 2907cb560bSdanielk1977} 30222a757dSdanielk1977 3107cb560bSdanielk1977set ::enable_shared_cache [sqlite3_enable_shared_cache 1] 3207cb560bSdanielk1977 3307cb560bSdanielk1977do_ioerr_test shared_ioerr-1 -tclprep { 3407cb560bSdanielk1977 sqlite3 db2 test.db 3507cb560bSdanielk1977 execsql { 3607cb560bSdanielk1977 PRAGMA read_uncommitted = 1; 3707cb560bSdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE t1(a,b,c); 3807cb560bSdanielk1977 BEGIN; 3907cb560bSdanielk1977 SELECT * FROM sqlite_master; 4007cb560bSdanielk1977 } db2 4107cb560bSdanielk1977} -sqlbody { 4207cb560bSdanielk1977 SELECT * FROM sqlite_master; 4307cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1,2,3); 4407cb560bSdanielk1977 BEGIN TRANSACTION; 4507cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1,2,3); 4607cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(4,5,6); 4707cb560bSdanielk1977 ROLLBACK; 4807cb560bSdanielk1977 SELECT * FROM t1; 4907cb560bSdanielk1977 BEGIN TRANSACTION; 5007cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1,2,3); 5107cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(4,5,6); 5207cb560bSdanielk1977 COMMIT; 5307cb560bSdanielk1977 SELECT * FROM t1; 5407cb560bSdanielk1977 DELETE FROM t1 WHERE a<100; 5507cb560bSdanielk1977} -cleanup { 5697a227c9Sdanielk1977 do_test shared_ioerr-1.$n.cleanup.1 { 5707cb560bSdanielk1977 set res [catchsql { 5807cb560bSdanielk1977 SELECT * FROM t1; 5907cb560bSdanielk1977 } db2] 6007cb560bSdanielk1977 set possible_results [list \ 6107cb560bSdanielk1977 "1 {disk I/O error}" \ 6207cb560bSdanielk1977 "0 {1 2 3}" \ 6307cb560bSdanielk1977 "0 {1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6}" \ 6407cb560bSdanielk1977 "0 {1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 4 5 6}" \ 6507cb560bSdanielk1977 "0 {}" \ 6678a90655Sdanielk1977 "1 {database disk image is malformed}" \ 6707cb560bSdanielk1977 ] 6807cb560bSdanielk1977 set rc [expr [lsearch -exact $possible_results $res] >= 0] 6907cb560bSdanielk1977 if {$rc != 1} { 7007cb560bSdanielk1977 puts "" 7107cb560bSdanielk1977 puts "Result: $res" 7207cb560bSdanielk1977 } 7307cb560bSdanielk1977 set rc 7407cb560bSdanielk1977 } {1} 7578a90655Sdanielk1977 7678a90655Sdanielk1977 # The "database disk image is malformed" is a special case that can 7778a90655Sdanielk1977 # occur if an IO error occurs during a rollback in the {SELECT * FROM t1} 7878a90655Sdanielk1977 # statement above. This test is to make sure there is no real database 7978a90655Sdanielk1977 # corruption. 8007cb560bSdanielk1977 db2 close 8178a90655Sdanielk1977 do_test shared_ioerr-1.$n.cleanup.2 { 8278a90655Sdanielk1977 execsql {pragma integrity_check} db 8378a90655Sdanielk1977 } {ok} 8407cb560bSdanielk1977} 8507cb560bSdanielk1977 8607cb560bSdanielk1977do_ioerr_test shared_ioerr-2 -tclprep { 8707cb560bSdanielk1977 sqlite3 db2 test.db 8807cb560bSdanielk1977 execsql { 8907cb560bSdanielk1977 PRAGMA read_uncommitted = 1; 9007cb560bSdanielk1977 BEGIN; 9107cb560bSdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE t1(a, b); 9207cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) VALUES(NULL); 9307cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 9407cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 9507cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 9607cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 9707cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 9807cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 9907cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 10007cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 10107cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 10207cb560bSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1(oid) SELECT NULL FROM t1; 10307cb560bSdanielk1977 UPDATE t1 set a = oid, b = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789'; 10407cb560bSdanielk1977 CREATE INDEX i1 ON t1(a); 10507cb560bSdanielk1977 COMMIT; 10607cb560bSdanielk1977 BEGIN; 10707cb560bSdanielk1977 SELECT * FROM sqlite_master; 10807cb560bSdanielk1977 } db2 10907cb560bSdanielk1977} -tclbody { 11007cb560bSdanielk1977 set ::residx 0 11107cb560bSdanielk1977 execsql {DELETE FROM t1 WHERE 0 = (a % 2);} 11207cb560bSdanielk1977 incr ::residx 11307cb560bSdanielk1977 11407cb560bSdanielk1977 # When this transaction begins the table contains 512 entries. The 11507cb560bSdanielk1977 # two statements together add 512+146 more if it succeeds. 11607cb560bSdanielk1977 # (1024/7==146) 11707cb560bSdanielk1977 execsql {BEGIN;} 11807cb560bSdanielk1977 execsql {INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a+1, b FROM t1;} 11907cb560bSdanielk1977 execsql {INSERT INTO t1 SELECT 'string' || a, b FROM t1 WHERE 0 = (a%7);} 12007cb560bSdanielk1977 execsql {COMMIT;} 12107cb560bSdanielk1977 12207cb560bSdanielk1977 incr ::residx 12307cb560bSdanielk1977} -cleanup { 1241527ff4eSdrh catchsql ROLLBACK 12507cb560bSdanielk1977 do_test shared_ioerr-2.$n.cleanup.1 { 12607cb560bSdanielk1977 set res [catchsql { 12707cb560bSdanielk1977 SELECT max(a), min(a), count(*) FROM (SELECT a FROM t1 order by a); 12807cb560bSdanielk1977 } db2] 12907cb560bSdanielk1977 set possible_results [list \ 13007cb560bSdanielk1977 {0 {1024 1 1024}} \ 13107cb560bSdanielk1977 {0 {1023 1 512}} \ 13207cb560bSdanielk1977 {0 {string994 1 1170}} \ 13307cb560bSdanielk1977 ] 13407cb560bSdanielk1977 set idx [lsearch -exact $possible_results $res] 13507cb560bSdanielk1977 set success [expr {$idx==$::residx || $res=="1 {disk I/O error}"}] 13607cb560bSdanielk1977 if {!$success} { 13707cb560bSdanielk1977 puts "" 13807cb560bSdanielk1977 puts "Result: \"$res\" ($::residx)" 13907cb560bSdanielk1977 } 14007cb560bSdanielk1977 set success 14107cb560bSdanielk1977 } {1} 14207cb560bSdanielk1977 db2 close 14307cb560bSdanielk1977} 14407cb560bSdanielk1977 14597a227c9Sdanielk1977# This test is designed to provoke an IO error when a cursor position is 14697a227c9Sdanielk1977# "saved" (because another cursor is going to modify the underlying table). 14797a227c9Sdanielk1977# 14897a227c9Sdanielk1977do_ioerr_test shared_ioerr-3 -tclprep { 14997a227c9Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 db2 test.db 15097a227c9Sdanielk1977 execsql { 15197a227c9Sdanielk1977 PRAGMA read_uncommitted = 1; 152c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 PRAGMA cache_size = 10; 153c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 BEGIN; 154c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE t1(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b)); 155c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 } db2 156c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 for {set i 0} {$i < 200} {incr i} { 157c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 set a [string range [string repeat "[format %03d $i]." 5] 0 end-1] 158c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 159c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 set b [string repeat $i 2000] 160c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 execsql {INSERT INTO t1 VALUES($a, $b)} db2 161c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 } 162c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 execsql {COMMIT} db2 163c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 set ::DB2 [sqlite3_connection_pointer db2] 164c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 set ::STMT [sqlite3_prepare $::DB2 "SELECT a FROM t1 ORDER BY a" -1 DUMMY] 165c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 sqlite3_step $::STMT ;# Cursor points at 000.000.000.000 166c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 sqlite3_step $::STMT ;# Cursor points at 001.001.001.001 167c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 168c4da5b9fSdanielk1977} -tclbody { 169c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 execsql { 17075bab7d6Sdanielk1977 BEGIN; 171c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('201.201.201.201.201', NULL); 17275bab7d6Sdanielk1977 UPDATE t1 SET a = '202.202.202.202.202' WHERE a LIKE '201%'; 17375bab7d6Sdanielk1977 COMMIT; 174c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 } 175c4da5b9fSdanielk1977} -cleanup { 176b94bf855Sdanielk1977 set ::steprc [sqlite3_step $::STMT] 177b94bf855Sdanielk1977 set ::column [sqlite3_column_text $::STMT 0] 178b94bf855Sdanielk1977 set ::finalrc [sqlite3_finalize $::STMT] 179b94bf855Sdanielk1977 180b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # There are three possible outcomes here (assuming persistent IO errors): 181b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # 182b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # 1. If the [sqlite3_step] did not require any IO (required pages in 183b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # the cache), then the next row ("002...") may be retrieved 184b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # successfully. 185b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # 186b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # 2. If the [sqlite3_step] does require IO, then [sqlite3_step] returns 187b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # SQLITE_ERROR and [sqlite3_finalize] returns IOERR. 188b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # 189b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # 3. If, after the initial IO error, SQLite tried to rollback the 190b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # active transaction and a second IO error was encountered, then 191b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # statement $::STMT will have been aborted. This means [sqlite3_stmt] 192b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # returns SQLITE_ABORT, and the statement cursor does not move. i.e. 193b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # [sqlite3_column] still returns the current row ("001...") and 194b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # [sqlite3_finalize] returns SQLITE_OK. 195b94bf855Sdanielk1977 # 196b94bf855Sdanielk1977 197c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 do_test shared_ioerr-3.$n.cleanup.1 { 198b94bf855Sdanielk1977 expr { 199b94bf855Sdanielk1977 $::steprc eq "SQLITE_ROW" || 200b94bf855Sdanielk1977 $::steprc eq "SQLITE_ERROR" || 201b94bf855Sdanielk1977 $::steprc eq "SQLITE_ABORT" 202b94bf855Sdanielk1977 } 203b94bf855Sdanielk1977 } {1} 204c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 do_test shared_ioerr-3.$n.cleanup.2 { 205b94bf855Sdanielk1977 expr { 206b94bf855Sdanielk1977 ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ROW" && $::column eq "002.002.002.002.002") || 207b94bf855Sdanielk1977 ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ERROR" && $::column eq "") || 208b94bf855Sdanielk1977 ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ABORT" && $::column eq "001.001.001.001.001") 209b94bf855Sdanielk1977 } 210b94bf855Sdanielk1977 } {1} 211c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 do_test shared_ioerr-3.$n.cleanup.3 { 212b94bf855Sdanielk1977 expr { 213b94bf855Sdanielk1977 ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ROW" && $::finalrc eq "SQLITE_OK") || 214b94bf855Sdanielk1977 ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ERROR" && $::finalrc eq "SQLITE_IOERR") || 215c1a7f940Sdrh ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ERROR" && $::finalrc eq "SQLITE_ABORT") 216b94bf855Sdanielk1977 } 217b94bf855Sdanielk1977 } {1} 218b94bf855Sdanielk1977 219c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# db2 eval {select * from sqlite_master} 220c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 db2 close 221c4da5b9fSdanielk1977} 222c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 22377a2a5e7Sdrh# This is a repeat of the previous test except that this time we 22477a2a5e7Sdrh# are doing a reverse-order scan of the table when the cursor is 22577a2a5e7Sdrh# "saved". 22677a2a5e7Sdrh# 22777a2a5e7Sdrhdo_ioerr_test shared_ioerr-3rev -tclprep { 22877a2a5e7Sdrh sqlite3 db2 test.db 22977a2a5e7Sdrh execsql { 23077a2a5e7Sdrh PRAGMA read_uncommitted = 1; 23177a2a5e7Sdrh PRAGMA cache_size = 10; 23277a2a5e7Sdrh BEGIN; 23377a2a5e7Sdrh CREATE TABLE t1(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b)); 23477a2a5e7Sdrh } db2 23577a2a5e7Sdrh for {set i 0} {$i < 200} {incr i} { 23677a2a5e7Sdrh set a [string range [string repeat "[format %03d $i]." 5] 0 end-1] 23777a2a5e7Sdrh 23877a2a5e7Sdrh set b [string repeat $i 2000] 23977a2a5e7Sdrh execsql {INSERT INTO t1 VALUES($a, $b)} db2 24077a2a5e7Sdrh } 24177a2a5e7Sdrh execsql {COMMIT} db2 24277a2a5e7Sdrh set ::DB2 [sqlite3_connection_pointer db2] 24377a2a5e7Sdrh set ::STMT [sqlite3_prepare $::DB2 \ 24477a2a5e7Sdrh "SELECT a FROM t1 ORDER BY a DESC" -1 DUMMY] 24577a2a5e7Sdrh sqlite3_step $::STMT ;# Cursor points at 199.199.199.199.199 24677a2a5e7Sdrh sqlite3_step $::STMT ;# Cursor points at 198.198.198.198.198 24777a2a5e7Sdrh 24877a2a5e7Sdrh} -tclbody { 24977a2a5e7Sdrh execsql { 25077a2a5e7Sdrh BEGIN; 25177a2a5e7Sdrh INSERT INTO t1 VALUES('201.201.201.201.201', NULL); 25277a2a5e7Sdrh UPDATE t1 SET a = '202.202.202.202.202' WHERE a LIKE '201%'; 25377a2a5e7Sdrh COMMIT; 25477a2a5e7Sdrh } 25577a2a5e7Sdrh} -cleanup { 25677a2a5e7Sdrh set ::steprc [sqlite3_step $::STMT] 25777a2a5e7Sdrh set ::column [sqlite3_column_text $::STMT 0] 25877a2a5e7Sdrh set ::finalrc [sqlite3_finalize $::STMT] 25977a2a5e7Sdrh 26077a2a5e7Sdrh # There are three possible outcomes here (assuming persistent IO errors): 26177a2a5e7Sdrh # 26277a2a5e7Sdrh # 1. If the [sqlite3_step] did not require any IO (required pages in 26377a2a5e7Sdrh # the cache), then the next row ("002...") may be retrieved 26477a2a5e7Sdrh # successfully. 26577a2a5e7Sdrh # 26677a2a5e7Sdrh # 2. If the [sqlite3_step] does require IO, then [sqlite3_step] returns 26777a2a5e7Sdrh # SQLITE_ERROR and [sqlite3_finalize] returns IOERR. 26877a2a5e7Sdrh # 26977a2a5e7Sdrh # 3. If, after the initial IO error, SQLite tried to rollback the 27077a2a5e7Sdrh # active transaction and a second IO error was encountered, then 27177a2a5e7Sdrh # statement $::STMT will have been aborted. This means [sqlite3_stmt] 27277a2a5e7Sdrh # returns SQLITE_ABORT, and the statement cursor does not move. i.e. 27377a2a5e7Sdrh # [sqlite3_column] still returns the current row ("001...") and 27477a2a5e7Sdrh # [sqlite3_finalize] returns SQLITE_OK. 27577a2a5e7Sdrh # 27677a2a5e7Sdrh 27777a2a5e7Sdrh do_test shared_ioerr-3rev.$n.cleanup.1 { 27877a2a5e7Sdrh expr { 27977a2a5e7Sdrh $::steprc eq "SQLITE_ROW" || 28077a2a5e7Sdrh $::steprc eq "SQLITE_ERROR" || 28177a2a5e7Sdrh $::steprc eq "SQLITE_ABORT" 28277a2a5e7Sdrh } 28377a2a5e7Sdrh } {1} 28477a2a5e7Sdrh do_test shared_ioerr-3rev.$n.cleanup.2 { 28577a2a5e7Sdrh expr { 28677a2a5e7Sdrh ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ROW" && $::column eq "197.197.197.197.197") || 28777a2a5e7Sdrh ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ERROR" && $::column eq "") || 28877a2a5e7Sdrh ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ABORT" && $::column eq "198.198.198.198.198") 28977a2a5e7Sdrh } 29077a2a5e7Sdrh } {1} 29177a2a5e7Sdrh do_test shared_ioerr-3rev.$n.cleanup.3 { 29277a2a5e7Sdrh expr { 29377a2a5e7Sdrh ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ROW" && $::finalrc eq "SQLITE_OK") || 29477a2a5e7Sdrh ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ERROR" && $::finalrc eq "SQLITE_IOERR") || 295c1a7f940Sdrh ($::steprc eq "SQLITE_ERROR" && $::finalrc eq "SQLITE_ABORT") 29677a2a5e7Sdrh } 29777a2a5e7Sdrh } {1} 29877a2a5e7Sdrh 29977a2a5e7Sdrh# db2 eval {select * from sqlite_master} 30077a2a5e7Sdrh db2 close 30177a2a5e7Sdrh} 30277a2a5e7Sdrh 303c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# Provoke a malloc() failure when a cursor position is being saved. This 304c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# only happens with index cursors (because they malloc() space to save the 305c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# current key value). It does not happen with tables, because an integer 306c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# key does not require a malloc() to store. 307c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# 308c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# The library should return an SQLITE_NOMEM to the caller. The query that 309c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# owns the cursor (the one for which the position is not saved) should 310c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# continue unaffected. 311c4da5b9fSdanielk1977# 312c1a7f940Sdrhdo_malloc_test shared_err-4 -tclprep { 313c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 sqlite3 db2 test.db 314c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 execsql { 315c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 PRAGMA read_uncommitted = 1; 31697a227c9Sdanielk1977 BEGIN; 31797a227c9Sdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE t1(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b)); 31897a227c9Sdanielk1977 } db2 31997a227c9Sdanielk1977 for {set i 0} {$i < 5} {incr i} { 32097a227c9Sdanielk1977 set a [string repeat $i 10] 32197a227c9Sdanielk1977 set b [string repeat $i 2000] 32297a227c9Sdanielk1977 execsql {INSERT INTO t1 VALUES($a, $b)} db2 32397a227c9Sdanielk1977 } 32497a227c9Sdanielk1977 execsql {COMMIT} db2 32597a227c9Sdanielk1977 set ::DB2 [sqlite3_connection_pointer db2] 32697a227c9Sdanielk1977 set ::STMT [sqlite3_prepare $::DB2 "SELECT a FROM t1 ORDER BY a" -1 DUMMY] 32797a227c9Sdanielk1977 sqlite3_step $::STMT ;# Cursor points at 0000000000 32897a227c9Sdanielk1977 sqlite3_step $::STMT ;# Cursor points at 1111111111 32997a227c9Sdanielk1977} -tclbody { 33097a227c9Sdanielk1977 execsql { 33197a227c9Sdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(6, NULL); 33297a227c9Sdanielk1977 } 33397a227c9Sdanielk1977} -cleanup { 334c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 do_test shared_malloc-4.$::n.cleanup.1 { 3358d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 set ::rc [sqlite3_step $::STMT] 336c1a7f940Sdrh expr {$::rc=="SQLITE_ROW" || $::rc=="SQLITE_ERROR"} 3378d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 } {1} 3388d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 if {$::rc=="SQLITE_ROW"} { 339c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 do_test shared_malloc-4.$::n.cleanup.2 { 34097a227c9Sdanielk1977 sqlite3_column_text $::STMT 0 34197a227c9Sdanielk1977 } {2222222222} 3428d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 } 343c4da5b9fSdanielk1977 do_test shared_malloc-4.$::n.cleanup.3 { 344c1a7f940Sdrh set rc [sqlite3_finalize $::STMT] 3451527ff4eSdrh expr {$rc=="SQLITE_OK" || $rc=="SQLITE_ABORT" || 3461527ff4eSdrh $rc=="SQLITE_NOMEM" || $rc=="SQLITE_IOERR"} 347c1a7f940Sdrh } {1} 34897a227c9Sdanielk1977# db2 eval {select * from sqlite_master} 34997a227c9Sdanielk1977 db2 close 35097a227c9Sdanielk1977} 35197a227c9Sdanielk1977 352c1a7f940Sdrhdo_malloc_test shared_err-5 -tclbody { 353c1a7f940Sdrh db close 3544b202ae2Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 dbX test.db 3554b202ae2Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 dbY test.db 3564b202ae2Sdanielk1977 dbX close 3574b202ae2Sdanielk1977 dbY close 3584b202ae2Sdanielk1977} -cleanup { 3594b202ae2Sdanielk1977 catch {dbX close} 3604b202ae2Sdanielk1977 catch {dbY close} 3614b202ae2Sdanielk1977} 3624b202ae2Sdanielk1977 363c1a7f940Sdrhdo_malloc_test shared_err-6 -tclbody { 3647246f5b9Sdanielk1977 catch {db close} 365eec556d3Sshane ifcapable deprecated { 3667246f5b9Sdanielk1977 sqlite3_thread_cleanup 367eec556d3Sshane } 3687246f5b9Sdanielk1977 sqlite3_enable_shared_cache 0 3697246f5b9Sdanielk1977} -cleanup { 3707246f5b9Sdanielk1977 sqlite3_enable_shared_cache 1 3717246f5b9Sdanielk1977} 3727246f5b9Sdanielk1977 373c1a7f940Sdrh# As of 3.5.0, sqlite3_enable_shared_cache can be called at 374c1a7f940Sdrh# any time and from any thread 375c1a7f940Sdrh#do_test shared_err-misuse-7.1 { 376c1a7f940Sdrh# sqlite3 db test.db 377c1a7f940Sdrh# catch { 378c1a7f940Sdrh# sqlite3_enable_shared_cache 0 379c1a7f940Sdrh# } msg 380c1a7f940Sdrh# set msg 381*ff4fa772Sdrh#} {bad parameter or other API misuse} 3827246f5b9Sdanielk1977 3838d34dfd6Sdanielk1977# Again provoke a malloc() failure when a cursor position is being saved, 3848d34dfd6Sdanielk1977# this time during a ROLLBACK operation by some other handle. 3858d34dfd6Sdanielk1977# 3868d34dfd6Sdanielk1977# The library should return an SQLITE_NOMEM to the caller. The query that 3878d34dfd6Sdanielk1977# owns the cursor (the one for which the position is not saved) should 3888d34dfd6Sdanielk1977# be aborted. 3898d34dfd6Sdanielk1977# 3908d34dfd6Sdanielk1977set ::aborted 0 391c1a7f940Sdrhdo_malloc_test shared_err-8 -tclprep { 3928d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 db2 test.db 3938d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 execsql { 3948d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 PRAGMA read_uncommitted = 1; 3958d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 BEGIN; 3968d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE t1(a, b, UNIQUE(a, b)); 3978d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 } db2 3988d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 for {set i 0} {$i < 2} {incr i} { 3998d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 set a [string repeat $i 10] 4008d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 set b [string repeat $i 2000] 4018d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 execsql {INSERT INTO t1 VALUES($a, $b)} db2 4028d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 } 4038d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 execsql {COMMIT} db2 4049ccaefb1Sdan execsql BEGIN 4059ccaefb1Sdan execsql ROLLBACK 4068d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 set ::DB2 [sqlite3_connection_pointer db2] 4078d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 set ::STMT [sqlite3_prepare $::DB2 "SELECT a FROM t1 ORDER BY a" -1 DUMMY] 4088d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 sqlite3_step $::STMT ;# Cursor points at 0000000000 4098d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 sqlite3_step $::STMT ;# Cursor points at 1111111111 4108d34dfd6Sdanielk1977} -tclbody { 4118d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 execsql { 4128d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 BEGIN; 4138d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(6, NULL); 4149ccaefb1Sdan ROLLBACK} 4158d34dfd6Sdanielk1977} -cleanup { 4167aad2983Sdanielk1977 # UPDATE: As of [5668], if the rollback fails SQLITE_CORRUPT is returned. 4177aad2983Sdanielk1977 # So these tests have been updated to expect SQLITE_CORRUPT and its 4187aad2983Sdanielk1977 # associated English language error message. 4197aad2983Sdanielk1977 # 4208d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 do_test shared_malloc-8.$::n.cleanup.1 { 4211527ff4eSdrh set res [catchsql {SELECT a FROM t1} db2] 4221527ff4eSdrh set ans [lindex $res 1] 4231527ff4eSdrh if {[lindex $res 0]} { 4247aad2983Sdanielk1977 set r [expr { 4257aad2983Sdanielk1977 $ans=="disk I/O error" || 4267aad2983Sdanielk1977 $ans=="out of memory" || 4277aad2983Sdanielk1977 $ans=="database disk image is malformed" 4287aad2983Sdanielk1977 }] 4291527ff4eSdrh } else { 4301527ff4eSdrh set r [expr {[lrange $ans 0 1]=="0000000000 1111111111"}] 4311527ff4eSdrh } 4321527ff4eSdrh } {1} 4338d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 do_test shared_malloc-8.$::n.cleanup.2 { 4348d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 set rc1 [sqlite3_step $::STMT] 4358d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 set rc2 [sqlite3_finalize $::STMT] 436c1a7f940Sdrh if {$rc2=="SQLITE_ABORT"} { 4378d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 incr ::aborted 4388d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 } 4398d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 expr { 4408d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 ($rc1=="SQLITE_DONE" && $rc2=="SQLITE_OK") || 441c1a7f940Sdrh ($rc1=="SQLITE_ERROR" && $rc2=="SQLITE_ABORT") || 4421527ff4eSdrh ($rc1=="SQLITE_ERROR" && $rc2=="SQLITE_NOMEM") || 4437aad2983Sdanielk1977 ($rc1=="SQLITE_ERROR" && $rc2=="SQLITE_IOERR") || 4447aad2983Sdanielk1977 ($rc1=="SQLITE_ERROR" && $rc2=="SQLITE_CORRUPT") 4458d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 } 4468d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 } {1} 4478d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 db2 close 4488d34dfd6Sdanielk1977} 44958f95c43Sdrh 45058f95c43Sdrh# When this test case was written, OOM errors in write statements would 45158f95c43Sdrh# cause transaction rollback, which would trip cursors in other statements, 45258f95c43Sdrh# aborting them. This no longer happens. 45358f95c43Sdrh# 4548d34dfd6Sdanielk1977do_test shared_malloc-8.X { 4558d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 # Test that one or more queries were aborted due to the malloc() failure. 45658f95c43Sdrh # expr $::aborted>=1 45758f95c43Sdrh expr $::aborted==0 4588d34dfd6Sdanielk1977} {1} 4598d34dfd6Sdanielk1977 460992772c8Sdanielk1977# This test is designed to catch a specific bug that was present during 461992772c8Sdanielk1977# development of 3.5.0. If a malloc() failed while setting the page-size, 462992772c8Sdanielk1977# a buffer (Pager.pTmpSpace) was being freed. This could cause a seg-fault 463992772c8Sdanielk1977# later if another connection tried to use the pager. 464992772c8Sdanielk1977# 465992772c8Sdanielk1977# This test will crash 3.4.2. 466992772c8Sdanielk1977# 467992772c8Sdanielk1977do_malloc_test shared_err-9 -tclprep { 468992772c8Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 db2 test.db 469992772c8Sdanielk1977} -sqlbody { 470992772c8Sdanielk1977 PRAGMA page_size = 4096; 471992772c8Sdanielk1977 PRAGMA page_size = 1024; 472992772c8Sdanielk1977} -cleanup { 473992772c8Sdanielk1977 db2 eval { 474992772c8Sdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE abc(a, b, c); 475992772c8Sdanielk1977 BEGIN; 476992772c8Sdanielk1977 INSERT INTO abc VALUES(1, 2, 3); 477992772c8Sdanielk1977 ROLLBACK; 478992772c8Sdanielk1977 } 479992772c8Sdanielk1977 db2 close 480992772c8Sdanielk1977} 481992772c8Sdanielk1977 482131c8bc0Sdanielk1977catch {db close} 483131c8bc0Sdanielk1977catch {db2 close} 484131c8bc0Sdanielk1977do_malloc_test shared_err-10 -tclprep { 485131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 db test.db 486131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 db2 test.db 487131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 488131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 db eval { SELECT * FROM sqlite_master } 489131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 db2 eval { 490131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 BEGIN; 491131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE abc(a, b, c); 492131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 } 493131c8bc0Sdanielk1977} -tclbody { 494131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 catch {db eval {SELECT * FROM sqlite_master}} 495131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 error 1 496131c8bc0Sdanielk1977} -cleanup { 497131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 execsql { SELECT * FROM sqlite_master } 498131c8bc0Sdanielk1977} 499131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 500131c8bc0Sdanielk1977do_malloc_test shared_err-11 -tclprep { 501131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 db test.db 502131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 sqlite3 db2 test.db 503131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 504131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 db eval { SELECT * FROM sqlite_master } 505131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 db2 eval { 506131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 BEGIN; 507131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE abc(a, b, c); 508131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 } 509131c8bc0Sdanielk1977} -tclbody { 510131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 catch {db eval {SELECT * FROM sqlite_master}} 511131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 catch {sqlite3_errmsg16 db} 512131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 error 1 513131c8bc0Sdanielk1977} -cleanup { 514131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 execsql { SELECT * FROM sqlite_master } 515131c8bc0Sdanielk1977} 516131c8bc0Sdanielk1977 51775c5fa88Sdanielk1977catch {db close} 51875c5fa88Sdanielk1977catch {db2 close} 51975c5fa88Sdanielk1977 5207eaabcdbSdanielk1977do_malloc_test shared_err-12 -sqlbody { 5217eaabcdbSdanielk1977 CREATE TABLE abc(a, b, c); 5227eaabcdbSdanielk1977 INSERT INTO abc VALUES(1, 2, 3); 5237eaabcdbSdanielk1977} 524992772c8Sdanielk1977 52507cb560bSdanielk1977catch {db close} 526992772c8Sdanielk1977catch {db2 close} 52707cb560bSdanielk1977sqlite3_enable_shared_cache $::enable_shared_cache 52807cb560bSdanielk1977finish_test 529