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			can be specified
Currently MySQL allows one to specify what indexes to ignore during
join optimization. The scope of the current USE/FORCE/IGNORE INDEX 
statement is only the FROM clause, while all other clauses are not 
affected.
However, in certain cases, the optimizer
may incorrectly choose an index for sorting and/or grouping, and
produce an inefficient query plan.
This task provides the means to specify what indexes are
ignored/used for what operation in a more fine-grained manner, thus
making it possible to manually force a better plan. We do this
by extending the current IGNORE/USE/FORCE INDEX syntax to:
IGNORE/USE/FORCE INDEX [FOR {JOIN | ORDER | GROUP BY}]
so that:
- if no FOR is specified, the index hint will apply everywhere.
- if MySQL is started with the compatibility option --old_mode then
  an index hint without a FOR clause works as in 5.0 (i.e, the 
  index will only be ignored for JOINs, but can still be used to
  compute ORDER BY).
See the WL#3527 for further details.
		
	
		
			
				
	
	
		
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			102 lines
		
	
	
		
			4.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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| #
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| # Test problem with characters < ' ' at end of strings (Bug #3152)
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| #
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| 
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| -- source include/have_innodb.inc
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| --disable_warnings
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| drop table if exists t1;
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| --enable_warnings
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| 
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| -- source include/endspace.inc
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| 
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| #
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| # Test MyISAM tables.
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| #
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| 
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| create table t1 (text1 varchar(32) not NULL, KEY key1 (text1));
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| insert into t1 values ('teststring'), ('nothing'), ('teststring\t');
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| check table t1;
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| select * from t1 ignore key (key1) where text1='teststring' or 
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|   text1 like 'teststring_%' ORDER BY text1;
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| select * from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| select * from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 > 'teststring\t';
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| select * from t1 order by text1;
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| explain select * from t1 order by text1;
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| 
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| alter table t1 modify text1 char(32) binary not null;
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| check table t1;
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| select * from t1 ignore key (key1) where text1='teststring' or 
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|   text1 like 'teststring_%' ORDER BY text1;
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 > 'teststring\t';
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| select text1, length(text1) from t1 order by text1;
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| select text1, length(text1) from t1 order by binary text1;
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| 
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| alter table t1 modify text1 blob not null, drop key key1, add key key1 (text1(20));
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| insert into t1 values ('teststring ');
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 order by text1;
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 > 'teststring\t';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring ';
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| 
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| alter table t1 modify text1 text not null, pack_keys=1;
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring ';
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| explain select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring ';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 > 'teststring\t';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 order by text1;
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| drop table t1;
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| 
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| create table t1 (text1 varchar(32) not NULL, KEY key1 (text1)) pack_keys=0;
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| insert into t1 values ('teststring'), ('nothing'), ('teststring\t');
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 >= 'teststring\t';
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| drop table t1;
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| 
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| # Test HEAP tables (with BTREE keys)
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| 
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| create table t1 (text1 varchar(32) not NULL, KEY key1 using BTREE (text1)) engine=heap;
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| insert into t1 values ('teststring'), ('nothing'), ('teststring\t');
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| select * from t1 ignore key (key1) where text1='teststring' or 
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|   text1 like 'teststring_%' ORDER BY text1;
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| select * from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| select * from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 >= 'teststring\t';
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| select * from t1 order by text1;
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| explain select * from t1 order by text1;
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| 
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| alter table t1 modify text1 char(32) binary not null;
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| select * from t1 order by text1;
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| drop table t1;
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| 
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| #
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| # Test InnoDB tables
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| #
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| 
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| create table t1 (text1 varchar(32) not NULL, KEY key1 (text1)) engine=innodb;
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| insert into t1 values ('teststring'), ('nothing'), ('teststring\t');
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| check table t1;
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| select * from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| select * from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 > 'teststring\t';
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| select * from t1 order by text1;
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| explain select * from t1 order by text1;
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| 
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| alter table t1 modify text1 char(32) binary not null;
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| select * from t1 order by text1;
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| 
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| alter table t1 modify text1 blob not null, drop key key1, add key key1 (text1(20));
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| insert into t1 values ('teststring ');
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 order by text1;
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| 
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| alter table t1 modify text1 text not null, pack_keys=1;
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| select * from t1 where text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| 
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| # The following gives wrong result in InnoDB
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| select text1, length(text1) from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 like 'teststring_%';
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| select text1, length(text1) from t1 where text1='teststring' or text1 >= 'teststring\t';
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| select concat('|', text1, '|') from t1 order by text1;
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| drop table t1;
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| 
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| # End of 4.1 tests
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