xref: /titanic_41/usr/src/lib/libsqlite/test/thread1.test (revision 4b484e007f44a62fb92d63bf345660cb76111d26)
1
2#pragma ident	"%Z%%M%	%I%	%E% SMI"
3
4# 2003 December 18
5#
6# The author disclaims copyright to this source code.  In place of
7# a legal notice, here is a blessing:
8#
9#    May you do good and not evil.
10#    May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
11#    May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
12#
13#***********************************************************************
14# This file implements regression tests for SQLite library.  The
15# focus of this script is multithreading behavior
16#
17# $Id: thread1.test,v 1.3 2004/02/11 02:18:07 drh Exp $
18
19
20set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
21source $testdir/tester.tcl
22
23# Skip this whole file if the thread testing code is not enabled
24#
25if {[llength [info command thread_step]]==0 || [sqlite -has-codec]} {
26  finish_test
27  return
28}
29
30# Create some data to work with
31#
32do_test thread1-1.1 {
33  execsql {
34    CREATE TABLE t1(a,b);
35    INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1,'abcdefgh');
36    INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a+1, b||b FROM t1;
37    INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a+2, b||b FROM t1;
38    INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a+4, b||b FROM t1;
39    SELECT count(*), max(length(b)) FROM t1;
40  }
41} {8 64}
42
43# Interleave two threads on read access.  Then make sure a third
44# thread can write the database.  In other words:
45#
46#    read-lock A
47#    read-lock B
48#    unlock A
49#    unlock B
50#    write-lock C
51#
52# At one point, the write-lock of C would fail on Linux.
53#
54do_test thread1-1.2 {
55  thread_create A test.db
56  thread_create B test.db
57  thread_create C test.db
58  thread_compile A {SELECT a FROM t1}
59  thread_step A
60  thread_result A
61} SQLITE_ROW
62do_test thread1-1.3 {
63  thread_argc A
64} 1
65do_test thread1-1.4 {
66  thread_argv A 0
67} 1
68do_test thread1-1.5 {
69  thread_compile B {SELECT b FROM t1}
70  thread_step B
71  thread_result B
72} SQLITE_ROW
73do_test thread1-1.6 {
74  thread_argc B
75} 1
76do_test thread1-1.7 {
77  thread_argv B 0
78} abcdefgh
79do_test thread1-1.8 {
80  thread_finalize A
81  thread_result A
82} SQLITE_OK
83do_test thread1-1.9 {
84  thread_finalize B
85  thread_result B
86} SQLITE_OK
87do_test thread1-1.10 {
88  thread_compile C {CREATE TABLE t2(x,y)}
89  thread_step C
90  thread_result C
91} SQLITE_DONE
92do_test thread1-1.11 {
93  thread_finalize C
94  thread_result C
95} SQLITE_OK
96do_test thread1-1.12 {
97  catchsql {SELECT name FROM sqlite_master}
98  execsql {SELECT name FROM sqlite_master}
99} {t1 t2}
100
101
102# Under this scenario:
103#
104#    read-lock A
105#    read-lock B
106#    unlock A
107#    write-lock C
108#
109# Make sure the write-lock fails with SQLITE_BUSY
110#
111do_test thread1-2.1 {
112  thread_halt *
113  thread_create A test.db
114  thread_compile A {SELECT a FROM t1}
115  thread_step A
116  thread_result A
117} SQLITE_ROW
118do_test thread1-2.2 {
119  thread_create B test.db
120  thread_compile B {SELECT b FROM t1}
121  thread_step B
122  thread_result B
123} SQLITE_ROW
124do_test thread1-2.3 {
125  thread_create C test.db
126  thread_compile C {INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(98,99)}
127  thread_step C
128  thread_result C
129} SQLITE_BUSY
130do_test thread1-2.4 {
131  execsql {SELECT * FROM t2}
132} {}
133do_test thread1-2.5 {
134  thread_finalize A
135  thread_result A
136} SQLITE_OK
137do_test thread1-2.6 {
138  thread_step C
139  thread_result C
140} SQLITE_BUSY
141do_test thread1-2.7 {
142  execsql {SELECT * FROM t2}
143} {}
144do_test thread1-2.8 {
145  thread_finalize B
146  thread_result B
147} SQLITE_OK
148do_test thread1-2.9 {
149  thread_step C
150  thread_result C
151} SQLITE_DONE
152do_test thread1-2.10 {
153  execsql {SELECT * FROM t2}
154} {98 99}
155do_test thread1-2.11 {
156  thread_finalize C
157  thread_result C
158} SQLITE_OK
159
160thread_halt *
161finish_test
162