This commit adds suport for DROP INDEX.
Bytecode produced by this commit differs from SQLITE's bytecode, main
reason we don't do autovacuum or repacking of pages like SQLITE does.
Closes#1384 . This PR implements Primary Key constraint for inserts. As
can be seen in the issue, if you created an Index with a Primary Key
constraint, it could trigger `Unique Constraint` error, but still insert
the record. Sqlite uses the opcode `NoConflict` to check if the record
already exists in the Btree. As we did not have this Opcode yet, I
implemented it. It is very similar to `NotFound` with the difference
that if any value in the Record is Null, it will immediately jump to the
offset. The added benefit of implementing this, is that now we fully
support Composite Primary Keys. Also, I think with the current
implementation, it will be trivial to implement the Unique opcode for
Insert. To support Updates, I need to understand more of the plan
optimizer to and find where we are Making the Record and opening the
autoindex.
For testing, I have written a test generator to generate many different
tables that can have a varying numbers of Primary Keys.
```sql
limbo> CREATE TABLE users (id INT, username TEXT, PRIMARY KEY (id, username));
limbo> INSERT INTO users VALUES (1, 'alice');
limbo> explain INSERT INTO users VALUES (1, 'alice');
addr opcode p1 p2 p3 p4 p5 comment
---- ----------------- ---- ---- ---- ------------- -- -------
0 Init 0 16 0 0 Start at 16
1 OpenWrite 0 2 0 0
2 Integer 1 2 0 0 r[2]=1
3 String8 0 3 0 alice 0 r[3]='alice'
4 OpenWrite 1 3 0 0
5 NewRowId 0 1 0 0
6 Copy 2 5 0 0 r[5]=r[2]
7 Copy 3 6 0 0 r[6]=r[3]
8 Copy 1 7 0 0 r[7]=r[1]
9 MakeRecord 5 3 8 0 r[8]=mkrec(r[5..7])
10 NoConflict 1 12 5 2 0 key=r[5]
11 Halt 1555 0 0 users.id, users.username 0
12 IdxInsert 1 8 5 0 key=r[8]
13 MakeRecord 2 2 4 0 r[4]=mkrec(r[2..3])
14 Insert 0 4 1 0
15 Halt 0 0 0 0
16 Transaction 0 1 0 0 write=true
17 Goto 0 1 0 0
limbo> INSERT INTO users VALUES (1, 'alice');
× Runtime error: UNIQUE constraint failed: users.id, users.username (19)
limbo> INSERT INTO users VALUES (1, 'bob');
limbo> INSERT INTO users VALUES (1, 'bob');
× Runtime error: UNIQUE constraint failed: users.id, users.username (19)
```
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#1393
1) Fix a bug where cli pretty mode would not print pragma results;
2) Add ability to read page_size using PRAGMA page_size;
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#1394
This avoids redundant `IsNull` instructions during index seeks if the
seek key columns are primary keys of other tables, which they often are.
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe (@PThorpe92)
Closes#1388
I was reading through the `translate_expr` function and `COMPAT.md` to
see what was not implemented yet. I saw that `Expr::Between` was marked
as a `todo!` so I set trying to implement it only to find that it was
being rewritten in the optimizer haha. This PR just adjusts the docs and
add an `unreachable` in the appropriate locations.
Closes#1378
This PR adds the statement.columns() function, inspired from Rusqlite: h
ttps://docs.rs/rusqlite/latest/rusqlite/struct.Statement.html#method.col
umns
Note that the rusqlite documentation says
> If associated DB schema can be altered concurrently, you should make
sure that current statement has already been stepped once before calling
this method.
Do we have this requirement as well?
The first commit is just the rust binding. The second commit implements
the column name for the rowid column.
Closes#1376
The previous version of `julian_day-converter` had precision issues,
potentially causing loss of precision when converting between
`julianday` and `datetime`

Reviewed-by: Diego Reis (@diegoreis42)
Closes#1344
This PR is based on #1357 and further improves performance:
```sql
limbo> select l_orderkey, 3 as revenue, o_orderdate, o_shippriority from lineitem, orders, customer where c_mktsegment = 'FURNITURE' and c_custkey = o_custkey and l_orderkey = o_orderkey and o_orderdate < cast('1995-03-29' as datetime) and l_shipdate > cast('1995-03-29' as datetime);
┌────────────┬─────────┬─────────────┬────────────────┐
│ l_orderkey │ revenue │ o_orderdate │ o_shippriority │
├────────────┼─────────┼─────────────┼────────────────┤
└────────────┴─────────┴─────────────┴────────────────┘
Command stats:
----------------------------
total: 3.728050958 s (this includes parsing/coloring of cli app)
```
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe (@PThorpe92)
Reviewed-by: Pere Diaz Bou <pere-altea@homail.com>
Closes#1358
In left joins, even if the join condition is not matched, the system
must emit a row for every row of the outer table:
-- this must return t1.count() rows, with NULLs for all columns of t2
SELECT * FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t2 ON FALSE;
Our logic for clearing the null flag was to do it in Next/Prev. However,
this is problematic for a few reasons:
- If the inner table of the left join is using SeekRowid, then Next/Prev
is never called on its cursor, so the null flag doesn't get cleared.
- If the inner table of the left join is using a non-covering index seek,
i.e. it iterates its rows using an index, but seeks to the main table
to fetch data, then Next/Prev is never called on the main table, and the
main table's null flag doesn't get cleared.
What this results in is NULL values incorrectly being emitted for the
inner table after the first correct NULL row, since the null flag is
correctly set to true, but never cleared.
This PR fixes the issue by clearing the null flag whenever seek() is
invoked on the cursor. Hence, the null flag is now cleared on:
- next()
- prev()
- seek()