# 2004 June 30
#
# 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 file is verifying that a rollback in one statement
# caused by an ON CONFLICT ROLLBACK clause aborts any other pending
# statements.
#
# $Id: rollback.test,v 1.11 2009/06/26 07:12:07 danielk1977 Exp $

set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
source $testdir/tester.tcl

set DB [sqlite3_connection_pointer db]

do_test rollback-1.1 {
  execsql {
    CREATE TABLE t1(a);
    INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1);
    INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(2);
    INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(3);
    INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(4);
    SELECT * FROM t1;
  }
} {1 2 3 4}

ifcapable conflict {
  do_test rollback-1.2 {
    execsql {
      CREATE TABLE t3(a unique on conflict rollback);
      INSERT INTO t3 SELECT a FROM t1;
      BEGIN;
      INSERT INTO t1 SELECT * FROM t1;
    }
  } {}
}
do_test rollback-1.3 {
  set STMT [sqlite3_prepare $DB "SELECT a FROM t1" -1 TAIL]
  sqlite3_step $STMT
} {SQLITE_ROW}

ifcapable conflict {
  # This causes a ROLLBACK, which deletes the table out from underneath the
  # SELECT statement.
  #
  do_test rollback-1.4 {
    catchsql {
      INSERT INTO t3 SELECT a FROM t1;
    }
  } {1 {UNIQUE constraint failed: t3.a}}
  
  # Try to continue with the SELECT statement
  #
  do_test rollback-1.5 {
    sqlite3_step $STMT
  } {SQLITE_ROW}

  # Restart the SELECT statement
  #
  do_test rollback-1.6 { sqlite3_reset $STMT } {SQLITE_OK}
} else {
  do_test rollback-1.6 { sqlite3_reset $STMT } {SQLITE_OK}
}

do_test rollback-1.7 {
  sqlite3_step $STMT
} {SQLITE_ROW}
do_test rollback-1.8 {
  sqlite3_step $STMT
} {SQLITE_ROW}
do_test rollback-1.9 {
  sqlite3_finalize $STMT
} {SQLITE_OK}

if {$tcl_platform(platform) == "unix" 
 && [permutation] ne "onefile"
 && [permutation] ne "inmemory_journal"
 && [permutation] ne "atomic-batch-write"
 && [atomic_batch_write test.db]==0
} {
  do_test rollback-2.1 {
    execsql {
      BEGIN;
      INSERT INTO t3 VALUES('hello world');
    }
    forcecopy test.db testA.db
    forcecopy test.db-journal testA.db-journal
    execsql {
      COMMIT;
    }
  } {}

  # At this point files testA.db and testA.db-journal are present in the
  # file system. This block adds a master-journal file pointer to the
  # end of testA.db-journal. The master-journal file does not exist.
  # 
  set mj [file normalize testA.db-mj-123]
  binary scan $mj c* a
  set cksum 0
  foreach i $a { incr cksum $i }
  set mj_pgno [expr $sqlite_pending_byte / 1024]
  set zAppend [binary format Ia*IIa8 $mj_pgno $mj [string length $mj] $cksum \
    "\xd9\xd5\x05\xf9\x20\xa1\x63\xd7"
  ]
  set iOffset [expr (([file size testA.db-journal] + 511)/512)*512]
  set fd [open testA.db-journal a+]
  fconfigure $fd -encoding binary -translation binary
  seek $fd $iOffset
  puts -nonewline $fd $zAppend

  # Also, fix the first journal-header in the journal-file. Because the
  # journal file has not yet been synced, the 8-byte magic string at the
  # start of the first journal-header has not been written by SQLite.
  # So write it now.
  seek $fd 0
  puts -nonewline $fd "\xd9\xd5\x05\xf9\x20\xa1\x63\xd7"
  close $fd

  # Open a handle on testA.db and use it to query the database. At one
  # point the first query would attempt a hot rollback, attempt to open
  # the master-journal file and return SQLITE_CANTOPEN when it could not
  # be opened. This is incorrect, it should simply delete the journal
  # file and proceed with the query.
  # 
  do_test rollback-2.2 {
    sqlite3 db2 testA.db
    execsql {
      SELECT distinct tbl_name FROM sqlite_master;
    } db2
  } {t1 t3}
  if {[lsearch {exclusive persistent_journal no_journal} [permutation]]<0} {
    do_test rollback-2.3 {
      file exists testA.db-journal
    } 0
  }
  do_test rollback-2.4 {
    execsql {
      SELECT distinct tbl_name FROM sqlite_master;
    } db2
  } {t1 t3}

  db2 close
}

finish_test