# 2010 June 15 # # The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of # a legal notice, here is a blessing: # # May you do good and not evil. # May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. # May you share freely, never taking more than you give. # #*********************************************************************** # # The tests in this file test the pager modules response to various # fault conditions (OOM, IO error, disk full etc.). They are similar # to those in file pagerfault1.test. # # More specifically, the tests in this file are those deemed too slow to # run as part of pagerfault1.test. # set testdir [file dirname $argv0] source $testdir/tester.tcl source $testdir/lock_common.tcl source $testdir/malloc_common.tcl set a_string_counter 1 proc a_string {n} { global a_string_counter incr a_string_counter string range [string repeat "${a_string_counter}." $n] 1 $n } db func a_string a_string # The following tests, pagerfault2-1.*, attempt to provoke OOM errors when # manipulating the internal "bitvec" structures. Since bitvec structures # only allocate memory very rarely, this requires fairly large databases. # do_test pagerfault2-1-pre1 { faultsim_delete_and_reopen db func a_string a_string execsql { PRAGMA journal_mode = DELETE; CREATE TABLE t1(a, b); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(a_string(401), a_string(402)); } for {set ii 0} {$ii < 14} {incr ii} { execsql { INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a_string(401), a_string(402) FROM t1 } } faultsim_save_and_close } {} do_faultsim_test pagerfault2-1.1 -faults oom* -prep { faultsim_restore_and_reopen execsql { BEGIN; INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(5, 6); SAVEPOINT abc; UPDATE t1 SET a = a||'x'; } } -body { execsql { ROLLBACK TO abc } } -test { faultsim_test_result {0 {}} faultsim_integrity_check } finish_test