Files
postgresql/src/test/regress/sql/select_implicit.sql
Peter Eisentraut b034ef9b37 Remove gratuitous uses of deprecated SELECT INTO
CREATE TABLE AS has been preferred over SELECT INTO (outside of ecpg
and PL/pgSQL) for a long time.  There were still a few uses of SELECT
INTO in tests and documentation, some old, some more recent.  This
changes them to CREATE TABLE AS.  Some occurrences in the tests remain
where they are specifically testing SELECT INTO parsing or similar.

Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/96dc0df3-e13a-a85d-d045-d6e2c85218da%40enterprisedb.com
2021-01-28 14:28:41 +01:00

157 lines
5.4 KiB
SQL

--
-- SELECT_IMPLICIT
-- Test cases for queries with ordering terms missing from the target list.
-- This used to be called "junkfilter.sql".
-- The parser uses the term "resjunk" to handle these cases.
-- - thomas 1998-07-09
--
-- load test data
CREATE TABLE test_missing_target (a int, b int, c char(8), d char);
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (0, 1, 'XXXX', 'A');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (1, 2, 'ABAB', 'b');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (2, 2, 'ABAB', 'c');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (3, 3, 'BBBB', 'D');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (4, 3, 'BBBB', 'e');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (5, 3, 'bbbb', 'F');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (6, 4, 'cccc', 'g');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (7, 4, 'cccc', 'h');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (8, 4, 'CCCC', 'I');
INSERT INTO test_missing_target VALUES (9, 4, 'CCCC', 'j');
-- w/ existing GROUP BY target
SELECT c, count(*) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY test_missing_target.c ORDER BY c;
-- w/o existing GROUP BY target using a relation name in GROUP BY clause
SELECT count(*) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY test_missing_target.c ORDER BY c;
-- w/o existing GROUP BY target and w/o existing a different ORDER BY target
-- failure expected
SELECT count(*) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY a ORDER BY b;
-- w/o existing GROUP BY target and w/o existing same ORDER BY target
SELECT count(*) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY b ORDER BY b;
-- w/ existing GROUP BY target using a relation name in target
SELECT test_missing_target.b, count(*)
FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY b ORDER BY b;
-- w/o existing GROUP BY target
SELECT c FROM test_missing_target ORDER BY a;
-- w/o existing ORDER BY target
SELECT count(*) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY b ORDER BY b desc;
-- group using reference number
SELECT count(*) FROM test_missing_target ORDER BY 1 desc;
-- order using reference number
SELECT c, count(*) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY 1 ORDER BY 1;
-- group using reference number out of range
-- failure expected
SELECT c, count(*) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY 3;
-- group w/o existing GROUP BY and ORDER BY target under ambiguous condition
-- failure expected
SELECT count(*) FROM test_missing_target x, test_missing_target y
WHERE x.a = y.a
GROUP BY b ORDER BY b;
-- order w/ target under ambiguous condition
-- failure NOT expected
SELECT a, a FROM test_missing_target
ORDER BY a;
-- order expression w/ target under ambiguous condition
-- failure NOT expected
SELECT a/2, a/2 FROM test_missing_target
ORDER BY a/2;
-- group expression w/ target under ambiguous condition
-- failure NOT expected
SELECT a/2, a/2 FROM test_missing_target
GROUP BY a/2 ORDER BY a/2;
-- group w/ existing GROUP BY target under ambiguous condition
SELECT x.b, count(*) FROM test_missing_target x, test_missing_target y
WHERE x.a = y.a
GROUP BY x.b ORDER BY x.b;
-- group w/o existing GROUP BY target under ambiguous condition
SELECT count(*) FROM test_missing_target x, test_missing_target y
WHERE x.a = y.a
GROUP BY x.b ORDER BY x.b;
-- group w/o existing GROUP BY target under ambiguous condition
-- into a table
CREATE TABLE test_missing_target2 AS
SELECT count(*)
FROM test_missing_target x, test_missing_target y
WHERE x.a = y.a
GROUP BY x.b ORDER BY x.b;
SELECT * FROM test_missing_target2;
-- Functions and expressions
-- w/ existing GROUP BY target
SELECT a%2, count(b) FROM test_missing_target
GROUP BY test_missing_target.a%2
ORDER BY test_missing_target.a%2;
-- w/o existing GROUP BY target using a relation name in GROUP BY clause
SELECT count(c) FROM test_missing_target
GROUP BY lower(test_missing_target.c)
ORDER BY lower(test_missing_target.c);
-- w/o existing GROUP BY target and w/o existing a different ORDER BY target
-- failure expected
SELECT count(a) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY a ORDER BY b;
-- w/o existing GROUP BY target and w/o existing same ORDER BY target
SELECT count(b) FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY b/2 ORDER BY b/2;
-- w/ existing GROUP BY target using a relation name in target
SELECT lower(test_missing_target.c), count(c)
FROM test_missing_target GROUP BY lower(c) ORDER BY lower(c);
-- w/o existing GROUP BY target
SELECT a FROM test_missing_target ORDER BY upper(d);
-- w/o existing ORDER BY target
SELECT count(b) FROM test_missing_target
GROUP BY (b + 1) / 2 ORDER BY (b + 1) / 2 desc;
-- group w/o existing GROUP BY and ORDER BY target under ambiguous condition
-- failure expected
SELECT count(x.a) FROM test_missing_target x, test_missing_target y
WHERE x.a = y.a
GROUP BY b/2 ORDER BY b/2;
-- group w/ existing GROUP BY target under ambiguous condition
SELECT x.b/2, count(x.b) FROM test_missing_target x, test_missing_target y
WHERE x.a = y.a
GROUP BY x.b/2 ORDER BY x.b/2;
-- group w/o existing GROUP BY target under ambiguous condition
-- failure expected due to ambiguous b in count(b)
SELECT count(b) FROM test_missing_target x, test_missing_target y
WHERE x.a = y.a
GROUP BY x.b/2;
-- group w/o existing GROUP BY target under ambiguous condition
-- into a table
CREATE TABLE test_missing_target3 AS
SELECT count(x.b)
FROM test_missing_target x, test_missing_target y
WHERE x.a = y.a
GROUP BY x.b/2 ORDER BY x.b/2;
SELECT * FROM test_missing_target3;
-- Cleanup
DROP TABLE test_missing_target;
DROP TABLE test_missing_target2;
DROP TABLE test_missing_target3;