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Posted to dev@phoenix.apache.org by "James Taylor (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2015/10/18 02:46:05 UTC

[jira] [Resolved] (PHOENIX-2327) Row value constructors failed on the index, when len(table's pks) > 2 and table's 1st pk is index's last pk

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PHOENIX-2327?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

James Taylor resolved PHOENIX-2327.
-----------------------------------
       Resolution: Fixed
         Assignee: James Taylor
    Fix Version/s: 4.6.0

> Row value constructors failed on the index, when len(table's pks) > 2 and table's 1st pk is index's last pk
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: PHOENIX-2327
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PHOENIX-2327
>             Project: Phoenix
>          Issue Type: Bug
>    Affects Versions: 4.5.2
>         Environment: cdh5.3.6
>            Reporter: Chunhui Liu
>            Assignee: James Taylor
>             Fix For: 4.6.0
>
>         Attachments: PHOENIX-2327.patch, PHOENIX-2327_v1.patch
>
>
> 1. Table has more than 2 primary keys;
> 2. Table's 1st pk as index's last pk; eg. table's pks are (pk1, pk2, pk3), the failed index's pks are (pk2, pk3, pk1); table's pks are (1, 2, 3, 4), failed index's pks are (2, 3, 4, 5, 1); 
> 3. Use row value constructors on index with another condition that use one pks(not the table's 1st pk);
> 4. You will get "DEGENERATE SCAN OVER TABLE_NAME"
> Here is the Test SQL
> {code:sql}
> DROP TABLE IF EXISTS T;
> CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS T (
>    PK1 VARCHAR not null,
>    PK2 VARCHAR not null,
>    PK3 VARCHAR not null,
>    V1  VARCHAR,
>    CONSTRAINT PK PRIMARY KEY (PK1, PK2, PK3)
> );
> CREATE INDEX IDX_T ON T
> (
>    PK2, PK3, PK1
> );
> UPSERT INTO T VALUES('100', '200', '300', 'V');
> UPSERT INTO T VALUES('101', '201', '301', 'V');
> UPSERT INTO T VALUES('102', '202', '302', 'V');
> UPSERT INTO T VALUES('103', '203', '303', 'V');
> UPSERT INTO T VALUES('104', '204', '304', 'V');
> SELECT * FROM T;
> EXPLAIN
> SELECT PK1, PK2, PK3 FROM T WHERE 
> (PK2, PK3, PK1) >= ('202', '302', '102') 
> AND PK2 < '204'
> LIMIT 10;
> {code}
> I've tried 3 primary key, here is the results.
> 1. table's pks are (pk1, pk2, pk3);
> 2. 132 means (pk1, pk3, pk2);
> | index's pks order     | result                               |
> | 132                   | correct                              |
> | 213                   | correct                              |
> | 231                   | fail                                 |
> | 312                   | correct                              |
> | 321                   | correct                              |
> I've also test this on table with 4, 5 pks
> | len(pks)              | failed order                         |
> | 3                     | 231                                  |
> | 4                     | 2341                                 |
> | 5                     | 23451                                |



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