[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [OSSTEST PATCH 08/14] Executive: Use index for report__find_test
George Dunlap writes ("Re: [OSSTEST PATCH 08/14] Executive: Use index for report__find_test"): > > On Jul 21, 2020, at 7:41 PM, Ian Jackson <ian.jackson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Example query before (from the Perl DBI trace): ... > So this says: > > Get me all the columns > for the highest-numbered flight > Where: > There is at least one runvar for that flight has the specified $name and > $value > And the job is *not* like build-%-prev or build-%-freebsd > The flight number (?) is <= 151903, and blessing = real > For the specified $branch Yes. > What’s the “TRUE and flight <= 151903” for? These queries are programmetically constructed. In this case, the flight condition is not always there. My test case had a --max-flight=151903 on the command line: this is a debugging option. It avoids newly added stuff in the db confusing me and generally disturbing things. This is implemented with a condition variable which contains either "" or "and flight <= 151903". Doing it this way simplifies the generation code. > And this says (effectively) > > Get me <flight, started, blessing, branch, intended> > From the highest-numbered flight > Where > That flight has a runvar with specified name and value > The job *doesn’t* look like “build-%-prev” or “build-%-freebsd” > flight & blessing as appropriate > branch as specified. I think so, yes. > Isn’t the r.flight = f.flight redundant if we’re joining on flight? Indeed it is. I guess I can add a patch at theend to delete that. > Also, in spite of the paragraph attempting to explain it, I’m afraid > I don’t understand what the “AS sub WHERE TRUE” is for. The reason for the subquery is not evident in the SQL. It's because of the Perl code which generates this query. The same code is used to generate queries that start with things like SELECT * ... SELECT COUNT(*) AS count ... The perl code gets told "*" or "COUNT(*) AS count". The call sites that pass "*" expect to see fields from flights. It would be possible to change "*" to the explicit field list everywhere, but it was much easier to do it this way. (The WHERE TRUE is another one of these stubs where a condition might appear.) > But it looks like the new query should do the same thing as the old > query, assuming that the columns from the subquery are all the > columns that you need in the correct order. The subquery columns are precisely the columns currently existing in he flights table. Thanks, Ian.
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