For efficiency, the mysqltest test engine does
not start with a clean new database for running each test case, so
a test case generally starts with a “cleaning up
section.” Assume that a test case will use two tables named
t1
and t2
. The test case
should begin by making sure that any old tables with those names
do not exist:
--disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1,t2; --enable_warnings
The disable_warnings
command instructs the test
engine not to log any warnings until an
enable_warnings
command occurs or the test case
is ended. (MySQL generates a warning if the table
t1
or t2
does not exist.)
Surrounding this part of the test case with commands to disable
and enable warnings makes its output the same regardless of
whether the tables exist before the test is started. After
ensuring that the tables do not exist, we are free to put in any
SQL statements that create and use the tables
t1
and t2
. The test case
should also clean up at the end of the test by dropping any tables
that it creates.
Let's put in some SQL code into this test case:
--disable_warnings DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1,t2; --enable_warnings CREATE TABLE t1 ( Period SMALLINT(4) UNSIGNED ZEROFILL DEFAULT '0000' NOT NULL, Varor_period SMALLINT(4) UNSIGNED DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL ); CREATE TABLE t2 (Period SMALLINT); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (9410,9412); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES (9410),(9411),(9412),(9413); SELECT PERIOD FROM t1; SELECT * FROM t1; SELECT t1.* FROM t1; SELECT * FROM t1 INNER JOIN t2 USING (Period); DROP TABLE t1, t2;
If a test case creates other objects such as stored programs or user accounts, it should take care to also clean those up at the beginning and end of the test.