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Posted to torque-dev@db.apache.org by "Stefan Broetz (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2006/10/20 10:02:36 UTC

[jira] Resolved: (TORQUE-60) MySQL left joins may lead to "ERROR 1054: Unknown column ... in on clause"

     [ http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TORQUE-60?page=all ]

Stefan Broetz resolved TORQUE-60.
---------------------------------

    Resolution: Invalid

Actually I read the documentation before submitting this issue, however, one inner join slipped through the conversion as it was hidden in a abstract class somewhere. (Hooray for frameworks...)

Working perfectly now, therefore closing as invalid. Sorry for the noise.

> MySQL left joins may lead to "ERROR 1054: Unknown column ... in on clause"
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: TORQUE-60
>                 URL: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TORQUE-60
>             Project: Torque
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Runtime
>    Affects Versions: 3.2
>         Environment: MySQL 5.0.x (where x >= 15)
>            Reporter: Stefan Broetz
>
> I have three tables A, B, and C, each of them having an ID and DATA column. Now I want to inner join A and B on their ids and left outer join A and C on their ids. Using
> Criteria criteria = new Criteria();
> criteria.addJoin(APeer.ID, BPeer.ID);
> criteria.addJoin(APeer.ID, CPeer.ID, Criteria.LEFT_JOIN);
> [...]
> BasePeer.doSelect(criteria);
> gives me the MySQL error 1054: "Unknown column 'a.ID' in 'on clause'. The problem is the generated SQL statement:
> SELECT ... FROM a, b LEFT JOIN c ON a.id = c.id WHERE a.id = b.id ...
> According to the SQL:2003 standard this means that only tables B and C are joined and a.id is neither a column in B nor in C. If you want to join tables A and C, your SQL statement has either to look like this
> SELECT ... FROM b, a LEFT JOIN c ON a.id = c.id WHERE a.id = b.id ...
> (notice that I swapped a and b in the FROM clause) or like this
> SELECT ... FROM (a, b) LEFT JOIN c ON a.id = c.id WHERE a.id = b.id ...
> I guess the latter is what you usually want to have. So the solution might simply be the introduction of parantheses around the FROM clause.
> See also http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=13551

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