Changes a couple of function signatures to return `Completion`. Also, I
changed `Completion` to be internally `Arc` to abstract the `Arc`
implementation detail, and to be able to attach a `#[must_use]` to the
`Completion` struct, so that cargo check can show us where we are not
tracking completions in the code. I also attached a `#[must_use]` to
`IOResult` so that we can see the places that we are not propagating or
waiting for I/O, demonstrating locations where functions should be
reentrant and are not.
Also, while we are with this refactor in progress I want to relax the
Clippy CI lint on unused_variables.
Closes#2309
`maybe_reparse_schema` function introduced in the #2246 was incorrect as
it didn't update `schema_version` for internal schema representation and
basically updated only schema for connection which called
`maybe_reparse_schema`.
This PR fixes this issue by reading schema and cookie value within a
single transaction and updating both schema content and its version for
internal representation.
Reviewed-by: Pedro Muniz (@pedrocarlo)
Closes#2259
Closes: #1947
This PR replaces the `Name(pub String)` struct with a `Name` enum that
explicitly models how the name appeared in the source either as an
unquoted identifier (`Ident`) or a quoted string (`Quoted`).
In the process, the separate `Id` wrapper type has been coalesced into
the `Name` enum, simplifying the AST and reducing duplication in
identifier handling logic.
While this increases the size of some AST nodes (notably
`yyStackEntry`).
cc: @levydsa
Reviewed-by: Levy A. (@levydsa)
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe (@PThorpe92)
Closes#2251
Support for attaching databases. The main difference from SQLite is that
we support an arbitrary number of attached databases, and we are not
bound to just 100ish.
We for now only support read-only databases. We open them as read-only,
but also, to keep things simple, we don't patch any of the insert
machinery to resolve foreign tables. So if an insert is tried on an
attached database, it will just fail with a "no such table" error - this
is perfect for now.
The code in core/translate/attach.rs is written by Claude, who also
played a key part in the boilerplate for stuff like the .databases
command and extending the pragma database_list, and also aided me in
the test cases.
This commit replaces the `Name(pub String)` struct with a `Name` enum that
explicitly models how the name appeared in the source either as an
unquoted identifier (`Ident`) or a quoted string (`Quoted`).
In the process, the separate `Id` wrapper type has been coalesced into the
`Name` enum, simplifying the AST and reducing duplication in identifier
handling logic.
While this increases the size of some AST nodes (notably `yyStackEntry`),
it improves correctness and makes source structure more explicit for
later phases.
This PR adds a const associated value on the VTabModule trait,
`READONLY` defaulted to `true`, so we can bail early when a write
operation is done on an invalid vtable.
This prevents extensions from having to implement `insert`,`update`,
`delete` just to return `Error::ReadOnly`, and prevents us from having
to step through `VUpdate` just to error out.
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#2247
Before this update, the entire immutable record was **fully**
deserialized **every** time it was compared in the sorter.
This PR extends the sorter with incremental deserialization of record
keys, only when needed and only if they weren’t already deserialized in
a previous iteration.
I hate that we panic on failed deserialization in `cmp`, but
unfortunately, I can’t return `Result` as part of this interface.
Looking for feedback around a better way to handle this.
Alternatively, I could store the deserialization error as part of
`SortableImmutableRecord` and check it before returning the record in
`next`, thereby deferring the error handling. The downside of this
approach is that it complicates debugging, since the error will be
completely decoupled from the place where it occurs.
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#2207
# Fix SUM aggregate function for mixed types
Fixes#2133
The SUM aggregate function was returning incorrect results when
processing tables with mixed numeric and non-numeric values. According
to SQLite documentation:
> "If any input to sum() is neither an integer nor a NULL, then sum()
returns a floating point value"
[*](https://sqlite.org/lang_aggfunc.html)
Now both SQLite and Turso yield the same output of 44.0.
--
I modified `Sum` to increment only for numeric values, skipping non-
numeric values. However, if we have mixed numeric values or non-numeric
values, we return a float output. Added a flag to keep track of it.
as pointed out by @FHaggs , If there are no non-NULL input rows then
sum() returns NULL but total() returns 0.0. I decided to include it in
this PR as well. Empty was such a natural test case.
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#2182
When compiling with features disabled, there are lots of clippy
warnings. This PR silences them.
For the utils file, I am using a bit of a hammer and just allowing
unused stuff in the whole file. Due to the box of utilities nature of
this file, it'll always be the case that things will be unused depending
on the feature-set.
There's no such thing as a read-only connection.
In a normal connection, you can have many attached databases. Some r/o,
some r/w.
To properly fix that, we also need to fix the OpenWrite opcode. Right
now we are passing a name, which is the name of the table. That
parameter is not used anywhere. That is also not what the SQLite opcode
specifies. Same as OpenRead, the p3 register should be the database
index.
With that change, we can - for now - pass the index 0, which is all we
support anyway, and then use that to test if we are r/o.
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe (@PThorpe92)
Closes#2232
There's no such thing as a read-only connection.
In a normal connection, you can have many attached databases. Some
r/o, some r/w.
To properly fix that, we also need to fix the OpenWrite opcode. Right
now we are passing a name, which is the name of the table. That
parameter is not used anywhere. That is also not what the SQLite opcode
specifies. Same as OpenRead, the p3 register should be the database
index.
With that change, we can - for now - pass the index 0, which is all
we support anyway, and then use that to test if we are r/o.
Currently, each record header is decoded at least twice: once to
determine the record size within the read buffer (in order to construct
the `ImmutableRecord` instance), and again later when decoding the
record for comparison. This redundant decoding can have a noticeable
negative impact on performance when records are wide (eg. contain
multiple columns).
This update modifies the (de)serialization format for sorted chunk files
by prepending a record size varint to each record payload. As a result,
only a single varint needs to be decoded to determine the record size,
eliminating the need to decode the full record header during reads.
Closes#2176
Two of the opcodes we implement (OpenRead and Transaction) should have
an opcode specifying the database to use, but they don't.
Add it, and for now always use 0 (the main database).