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Posted to issues@ignite.apache.org by "Igor Rudyak (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2016/09/19 20:39:22 UTC

[jira] [Created] (IGNITE-3933) JDBC issue with Replicated & Partitioned caches

Igor Rudyak created IGNITE-3933:
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             Summary: JDBC issue with Replicated & Partitioned caches
                 Key: IGNITE-3933
                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IGNITE-3933
             Project: Ignite
          Issue Type: Bug
          Components: jdbc-driver, odbc, SQL
    Affects Versions: 1.8
            Reporter: Igor Rudyak
            Priority: Critical


There is an issue with JDBC when trying to play with different types of caches using the same JDBC connection.

Example 1 - using simple JDBC connection URL jdbc:ignite:cfg://file:///my-ignite-client-config.xm

1) For REPLICATED caches SQL query like "select * from my_replicated_cache" returns as many duplicates for each record as many nodes in an Ignite cluster. Same problem with "select count(*) from my_replicated_cache" - it returns actual number of records multiplied by the number of Ignite nodes.

2) At the same time if traversing the cache using "for" loop and iterator, it returns exactly what's needed without any duplicates.

Example 2 - specifying replicated or partitioned cache in JDBC connection URL jdbc:ignite:cfg://cache=my_cache@file:///my-ignite-client-config.xm
 
1) If specifying PARTITIONED cache in JDBC URL - queries like "select * from my_replicated_cache" return duplicates
 
2) If specifying REPLICATED cache in JDBC URL - it doesn't return duplicates for the "select * from my_replicated_cache" query. At the same time it failed to execute simple queries like "select * from my_partitioned_cache" against PARTITIONED caches throwing this error:

java.lang.RuntimeException: javax.cache.CacheException: Queries running on replicated cache should not contain JOINs with partitioned tables [rCache=product, pCache=order]

The fact that it's not possible to combine REPLICATED and PARTITIONED caches in one SQL query (using one JDBC connection) looks not very good. 

Also the idea of specifying cache name (for REPLICATED cache) in the JDBC URL for optimization purposes doesn't look good. It's better to utilize rather wide used "hits" approach, to provide optimization hints inside SQL query. Otherwise it's not possible to use JDBC with analytical and UI tools to run ad-hock SQL queries.



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