# # 2003 December 18 # # The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of # a legal notice, here is a blessing: # # May you do good and not evil. # May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. # May you share freely, never taking more than you give. # #*********************************************************************** # This file implements regression tests for SQLite library. The # focus of this script is multithreading behavior # # $Id: thread1.test,v 1.3 2004/02/11 02:18:07 drh Exp $ set testdir [file dirname $argv0] source $testdir/tester.tcl # Skip this whole file if the thread testing code is not enabled # if {[llength [info command thread_step]]==0 || [sqlite -has-codec]} { finish_test return } # Create some data to work with # do_test thread1-1.1 { execsql { CREATE TABLE t1(a,b); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1,'abcdefgh'); INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a+1, b||b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a+2, b||b FROM t1; INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a+4, b||b FROM t1; SELECT count(*), max(length(b)) FROM t1; } } {8 64} # Interleave two threads on read access. Then make sure a third # thread can write the database. In other words: # # read-lock A # read-lock B # unlock A # unlock B # write-lock C # # At one point, the write-lock of C would fail on Linux. # do_test thread1-1.2 { thread_create A test.db thread_create B test.db thread_create C test.db thread_compile A {SELECT a FROM t1} thread_step A thread_result A } SQLITE_ROW do_test thread1-1.3 { thread_argc A } 1 do_test thread1-1.4 { thread_argv A 0 } 1 do_test thread1-1.5 { thread_compile B {SELECT b FROM t1} thread_step B thread_result B } SQLITE_ROW do_test thread1-1.6 { thread_argc B } 1 do_test thread1-1.7 { thread_argv B 0 } abcdefgh do_test thread1-1.8 { thread_finalize A thread_result A } SQLITE_OK do_test thread1-1.9 { thread_finalize B thread_result B } SQLITE_OK do_test thread1-1.10 { thread_compile C {CREATE TABLE t2(x,y)} thread_step C thread_result C } SQLITE_DONE do_test thread1-1.11 { thread_finalize C thread_result C } SQLITE_OK do_test thread1-1.12 { catchsql {SELECT name FROM sqlite_master} execsql {SELECT name FROM sqlite_master} } {t1 t2} # Under this scenario: # # read-lock A # read-lock B # unlock A # write-lock C # # Make sure the write-lock fails with SQLITE_BUSY # do_test thread1-2.1 { thread_halt * thread_create A test.db thread_compile A {SELECT a FROM t1} thread_step A thread_result A } SQLITE_ROW do_test thread1-2.2 { thread_create B test.db thread_compile B {SELECT b FROM t1} thread_step B thread_result B } SQLITE_ROW do_test thread1-2.3 { thread_create C test.db thread_compile C {INSERT INTO t2 VALUES(98,99)} thread_step C thread_result C } SQLITE_BUSY do_test thread1-2.4 { execsql {SELECT * FROM t2} } {} do_test thread1-2.5 { thread_finalize A thread_result A } SQLITE_OK do_test thread1-2.6 { thread_step C thread_result C } SQLITE_BUSY do_test thread1-2.7 { execsql {SELECT * FROM t2} } {} do_test thread1-2.8 { thread_finalize B thread_result B } SQLITE_OK do_test thread1-2.9 { thread_step C thread_result C } SQLITE_DONE do_test thread1-2.10 { execsql {SELECT * FROM t2} } {98 99} do_test thread1-2.11 { thread_finalize C thread_result C } SQLITE_OK thread_halt * finish_test