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
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.
First step toward resolving
https://github.com/tursodatabase/limbo/issues/1643.
### This PR
With this change, the following two queries are considered equivalent:
```sql
SELECT value FROM generate_series(5, 50);
SELECT value FROM generate_series WHERE start = 5 AND stop = 50;
```
Arguments passed in parentheses to the virtual table name are now
matched to hidden columns.
Additionally, I fixed two bugs related to virtual tables.
### TODO (I'll handle this in a separate PR)
Column references are still not supported as table-valued function
arguments. The only difference is that previously, a query like:
```sql
SELECT one.value, series.value
FROM (SELECT 1 AS value) one, generate_series(one.value, 3) series;
```
would cause a panic. Now, it returns a proper error message instead.
Adding support for column references is more nuanced for two main
reasons:
* We need to ensure that in joins where a TVF depends on other tables,
those other tables are processed first. For example, in:
```sql
SELECT one.value, series.value
FROM generate_series(one.value, 3) series, (SELECT 1 AS value) one;
```
the one table must be processed by the top-level loop, and series must
be nested.
* For outer joins involving TVFs, the arguments must be treated as `ON`
predicates, not `WHERE` predicates.
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#1727
Simple PR to check minor issue that `INTEGER PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL` (`NOT
NULL` is redundant here obviously) will prevent user to insert anything
to the table as rowid-alias column always set to null by `turso-db`
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#2063
Makes it easier to test the feature:
```
$ cargo run -- --experimental-indexes
Limbo v0.0.22
Enter ".help" for usage hints.
Connected to a transient in-memory database.
Use ".open FILENAME" to reopen on a persistent database
limbo> CREATE TABLE t(x);
limbo> CREATE INDEX t_idx ON t(x);
limbo> DROP INDEX t_idx;
```
- `Update` query doesn't update `n_changes`. Let's make it work
- Add `InsertFlags` to add meta information related to insert operations
- For update query, add `UPDATE` flag
- Currently, the update query executes `Insn::Delete` and `Insn::Insert`
internally, it increases `n_change` by 2. So, for the update query,
let's skip increasing `n_change` for the `Insn::Insert`
https://github.com/tursodatabase/limbo/issues/1681
Reviewed-by: Pere Diaz Bou <pere-altea@homail.com>
Closes#1683
Currently we have this:
program.alloc_cursor_id(Option<String>, CursorType)`
where the String is the table's name or alias ('users' or 'u' in
the query).
This is problematic because this can happen:
`SELECT * FROM t WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM t)`
There are two cursors, both with identifier 't'. This causes a bug
where the program will use the same cursor for both the main query
and the subquery, since they are keyed by 't'.
Instead introduce `CursorKey`, which is a combination of:
1. `TableInternalId`, and
2. index name (Option<String> -- in case of index cursors.
This should provide key uniqueness for cursors:
`SELECT * FROM t WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM t)`
here the first 't' will have a different `TableInternalId` than the
second `t`, so there is no clash.