Commit 2f22e85d authored by Sergey Petrunya's avatar Sergey Petrunya

Backport from 10.0 to 10.0-base the following:

revision-id: psergey@askmonty.org-20140204092710-2yt5ysa5ej3l2c03
MDEV-5606: range optimizer: "x < y" is sargable, while "y > x" is not
Port to mariadb-1.0 the following fix from mysql-5.6:
      
Revision ID: jorgen.loland@oracle.com-20120314131055-ml54x9deueqfsff4
BUG#13701206: WHERE A>=B DOES NOT GIVE SAME EXECUTION PLAN
              AS WHERE B<=A (RANGE OPTIMIZER)
       
that fix didn't have a public testcase, so I created one.
parent 80a38b92
......@@ -2046,3 +2046,34 @@ f1 f2 f3 f4
10 0 0 0
DROP TABLE t1;
DROP VIEW v3;
#
# MDEV-5606: range optimizer: "x < y" is sargable, while "y > x" is not
#
create table t1(a int);
insert into t1 values (0),(1),(2),(3),(4),(5),(6),(7),(8),(9);
create table t2(a int);
insert into t2 select A.a + B.a* 10 + C.a * 100 from t1 A, t1 B, t1 C;
alter table t2 add key(a);
# Should have "range checked for each table" for second table:
explain select * from t1, t2 where t2.a < t1.a;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t1 ALL NULL NULL NULL NULL 10
1 SIMPLE t2 ALL a NULL NULL NULL 1000 Range checked for each record (index map: 0x1)
# Should have "range checked for each table" for second table:
explain select * from t1, t2 where t1.a > t2.a;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t1 ALL NULL NULL NULL NULL 10
1 SIMPLE t2 ALL a NULL NULL NULL 1000 Range checked for each record (index map: 0x1)
create table t3 (a int primary key, b int);
insert into t3 select a,a from t1;
# The second table should use 'range':
explain select * from t3, t2 where t2.a < t3.b and t3.a=1;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t3 const PRIMARY PRIMARY 4 const 1
1 SIMPLE t2 range a a 5 NULL 1 Using where; Using index
# The second table should use 'range':
explain select * from t3, t2 where t3.b > t2.a and t3.a=1;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t3 const PRIMARY PRIMARY 4 const 1
1 SIMPLE t2 range a a 5 NULL 1 Using where; Using index
drop table t1,t2,t3;
......@@ -2048,4 +2048,35 @@ f1 f2 f3 f4
10 0 0 0
DROP TABLE t1;
DROP VIEW v3;
#
# MDEV-5606: range optimizer: "x < y" is sargable, while "y > x" is not
#
create table t1(a int);
insert into t1 values (0),(1),(2),(3),(4),(5),(6),(7),(8),(9);
create table t2(a int);
insert into t2 select A.a + B.a* 10 + C.a * 100 from t1 A, t1 B, t1 C;
alter table t2 add key(a);
# Should have "range checked for each table" for second table:
explain select * from t1, t2 where t2.a < t1.a;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t1 ALL NULL NULL NULL NULL 10
1 SIMPLE t2 ALL a NULL NULL NULL 1000 Range checked for each record (index map: 0x1)
# Should have "range checked for each table" for second table:
explain select * from t1, t2 where t1.a > t2.a;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t1 ALL NULL NULL NULL NULL 10
1 SIMPLE t2 ALL a NULL NULL NULL 1000 Range checked for each record (index map: 0x1)
create table t3 (a int primary key, b int);
insert into t3 select a,a from t1;
# The second table should use 'range':
explain select * from t3, t2 where t2.a < t3.b and t3.a=1;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t3 const PRIMARY PRIMARY 4 const 1
1 SIMPLE t2 range a a 5 NULL 1 Using where; Using index
# The second table should use 'range':
explain select * from t3, t2 where t3.b > t2.a and t3.a=1;
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE t3 const PRIMARY PRIMARY 4 const 1
1 SIMPLE t2 range a a 5 NULL 1 Using where; Using index
drop table t1,t2,t3;
set optimizer_switch=@mrr_icp_extra_tmp;
......@@ -1638,3 +1638,25 @@ UPDATE v3 SET f3=0, f4=4 WHERE f2=68 ORDER BY f1;
SELECT * FROM v3;
DROP TABLE t1;
DROP VIEW v3;
--echo #
--echo # MDEV-5606: range optimizer: "x < y" is sargable, while "y > x" is not
--echo #
create table t1(a int);
insert into t1 values (0),(1),(2),(3),(4),(5),(6),(7),(8),(9);
create table t2(a int);
insert into t2 select A.a + B.a* 10 + C.a * 100 from t1 A, t1 B, t1 C;
alter table t2 add key(a);
--echo # Should have "range checked for each table" for second table:
explain select * from t1, t2 where t2.a < t1.a;
--echo # Should have "range checked for each table" for second table:
explain select * from t1, t2 where t1.a > t2.a;
create table t3 (a int primary key, b int);
insert into t3 select a,a from t1;
--echo # The second table should use 'range':
explain select * from t3, t2 where t2.a < t3.b and t3.a=1;
--echo # The second table should use 'range':
explain select * from t3, t2 where t3.b > t2.a and t3.a=1;
drop table t1,t2,t3;
......@@ -7663,7 +7663,8 @@ static SEL_TREE *get_func_mm_tree(RANGE_OPT_PARAM *param, Item_func *cond_func,
param PARAM from SQL_SELECT::test_quick_select
cond_func item for the predicate
field_item field in the predicate
value constant in the predicate
value constant in the predicate (or a field already read from
a table in the case of dynamic range access)
(for BETWEEN it contains the number of the field argument,
for IN it's always 0)
inv TRUE <> NOT cond_func is considered
......@@ -7932,25 +7933,42 @@ static SEL_TREE *get_mm_tree(RANGE_OPT_PARAM *param,COND *cond)
DBUG_RETURN(ftree);
}
default:
DBUG_ASSERT (!ftree);
if (cond_func->arguments()[0]->real_item()->type() == Item::FIELD_ITEM)
{
field_item= (Item_field*) (cond_func->arguments()[0]->real_item());
value= cond_func->arg_count > 1 ? cond_func->arguments()[1] : 0;
value= cond_func->arg_count > 1 ? cond_func->arguments()[1] : NULL;
if (value && value->is_expensive())
DBUG_RETURN(0);
ftree= get_full_func_mm_tree(param, cond_func, field_item, value, inv);
}
else if (cond_func->have_rev_func() &&
cond_func->arguments()[1]->real_item()->type() ==
Item::FIELD_ITEM)
/*
Even if get_full_func_mm_tree() was executed above and did not
return a range predicate it may still be possible to create one
by reversing the order of the operands. Note that this only
applies to predicates where both operands are fields. Example: A
query of the form
WHERE t1.a OP t2.b
In this case, arguments()[0] == t1.a and arguments()[1] == t2.b.
When creating range predicates for t2, get_full_func_mm_tree()
above will return NULL because 'field' belongs to t1 and only
predicates that applies to t2 are of interest. In this case a
call to get_full_func_mm_tree() with reversed operands (see
below) may succeed.
*/
if (!ftree && cond_func->have_rev_func() &&
cond_func->arguments()[1]->real_item()->type() == Item::FIELD_ITEM)
{
field_item= (Item_field*) (cond_func->arguments()[1]->real_item());
value= cond_func->arguments()[0];
}
else
DBUG_RETURN(0);
if (value && value->is_expensive())
DBUG_RETURN(0);
ftree= get_full_func_mm_tree(param, cond_func, field_item, value, inv);
}
}
DBUG_RETURN(ftree);
}
......
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