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To: scrappy@ki.net |
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Subject: src/test/regress/README |
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|
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src/test/regress/README |
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|
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Introduction |
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|
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The Postgres95 regression tests are a comprehensive set of tests for the |
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SQL implementation embeded in Postgres95 developed by Jolly Chen and |
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Andrew Yu. It tests standard SQL operations as well as the extensability |
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capabilities of Postgres95. |
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|
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Preparation |
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|
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The regression test is invoked thru by the 'make' command which compiles |
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a 'c' program with Postgres95 extension functions into a shared library |
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in the 'obj' directory. Localised shell scripts are also created in |
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the 'obj' directory. The 'expected.input' file is massaged into the |
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'obj/expected.out' file. The localization replaces macros in the source |
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files with absolute pathnames and user names. |
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|
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The 'expected.input' file and the 'sample.regress.out' file |
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|
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The 'expected.input' file was created on a SPARC Solaris 2.4 system |
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using the 'postgres5-1.02a5.tar.gz' source tree. It has been compared |
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with a file created on an I386 Solaris 2.4 system and the differences |
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are only in the floating point polygons in the 3rd digit to the right |
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of the decimal point. (see below) |
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|
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The 'sample.regress.out' file is from the postgres-1.01 release |
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constructed by Jolly Chen and is included here for reference. It may |
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have been created on a DEC ALPHA machine as the 'Makefile.global' |
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in the postgres-1.01 release has PORTNAME=alpha. |
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|
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Running the regression test |
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Change directory to the regression test directory: |
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cd ...../src/test/regress |
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If you have prevously invoked the regression test, clean up the |
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working directory with: |
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make clean |
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|
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The regression test is invoked with the command: |
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|
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make all runtest |
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|
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Normally, the regression test should be run as the 'postgres' user as the |
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'src/test/regress' directory and sub-directories are owned by the |
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'postgres' user. If you run the regression test as another user the |
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'src/test/regress/obj' directory should be writeable to that user. |
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|
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Comparing expected/actual output |
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|
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The results are in the file 'obj/regress.out' which can be compared |
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with the 'obj/expected.out' file using 'diff'. The files will NOT |
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compare exactly. The following paragraphs attempt to explain the |
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differences. |
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|
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OID differences |
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|
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There are several places where Postgres95 OID (object identifiers) appear |
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in 'regress.out'. OID's are unique 32-bit integers which are generated |
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by the Postgres95 backend whenever a table row is inserted or updated. |
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If you run the regression test on a non-virgin database or run it multiple |
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times, the OID's reported will have different values. |
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|
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The following SQL statements in 'regress.out' have shown this behavior: |
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|
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QUERY: SELECT user_relns() AS user_relns ORDER BY user_relns; |
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The 'a,523676' row is composed from an OID. |
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|
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TIME differences |
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|
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Some of the tests involving date/time functions use the implicit |
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time zone in effect at the time the regression test is run. In other |
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tests the timezone to be inserted into the regression data base is |
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explicitly specified. |
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|
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The 'expected.input' file was prepared in the 'US/Pacific' timezone |
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so there may be differences where the 'expected.out' file has |
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PST/PDT times and the 'regress.out' file has your local timezone. |
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|
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FLOATING POINT differences |
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|
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Some of the tests involve computing 64-bit (FLOAT8) number from table |
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columns. Differences in results involving mathematical functions of |
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FLOAT8 columns have been observed. These differences occur where |
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different operating systems are used on the same platform ie: |
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BSDI and SOLARIS on Intel/86, and where the same operating system is |
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used used on different platforms, ie: SOLARIS on SPARC and Intel/86. |
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|
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Human eyeball comparison is needed to determine the real significance |
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of these differences which are usually 10 places to the right of |
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the decimal point. |
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POLYGON differences |
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Several of the tests involve operations on geographic date about the |
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Oakland/Berkley CA street map. The map data is expressed as polygons |
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whose verticies are represened as pairs of FLOAT8 numbers (decimal |
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lattitude and longitude). Initially, some tables are created and |
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loaded with geographic data, then some views are created which join |
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two tables using the polygon intersection operator (##), then a select |
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is done on the view. |
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|
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When comparing the results from different platforms, differences occur |
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in the 2nd or 3rd place to the right of the decimal point. The SQL |
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statements where these problems occur are the folowing: |
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|
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QUERY: SELECT * from street; |
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QUERY: SELECT * from iexit; |
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|
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