Last resort would be to dump and reload the table.

On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 19:34, Peter Laursen <peter_laursen@webyog.com> wrote:
I don't know what effect REPAIR TABLE would have on PBXT.  But worth a try I think.

-- Peter

On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 17:30, Brian Evans <grknight@scent-team.com> wrote:
After testing inserting the full data into a new table,  it seems the fault is in PBXT somewhere.
This is a very old table that is constantly accessed.  I can only reproduce it in the existing table. 
Any attempt to create it in a new one fails to have the same results.

Also, data appears in the range version that seems to be transactional that is rolled back and not in the table by the indexes.

This is a bad sign for PBXT.

Brian


On 3/16/2012 11:53 AM, Peter Laursen wrote:
I think specific data are required to reproduce wrong ordering. I cannot reproduce with a few inserted data. I do like this:

SELECT VERSION() #5.2.10-MariaDB

DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tableinventory`;

CREATE TABLE `tableinventory` (
`StockNo` VARCHAR(64) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`ItemDesc` VARCHAR(96) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
PRIMARY KEY (`StockNo`)
) ENGINE=PBXT DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;

INSERT INTO `tableinventory`(`StockNo`,`ItemDesc`) VALUES ('JBccccccc','ccccccc');
INSERT INTO `tableinventory`(`StockNo`,`ItemDesc`) VALUES ('JGddddddd','ddddddd');
INSERT INTO `tableinventory`(`StockNo`,`ItemDesc`) VALUES ('JRaaaaaaa','aaaaaaa');
INSERT INTO `tableinventory`(`StockNo`,`ItemDesc`) VALUES ('VSbbbbbbb','bbbbbbb');

SELECT SUBSTRING(StockNo, 3, 3) AS $number FROM `tableinventory` WHERE LEFT(StockNo,2) IN('JR','VS','JB','JG') ORDER BY $number DESC;

SELECT SUBSTRING(StockNo, 3, 3) AS $number FROM `tableinventory` WHERE StockNo LIKE 'JR%' OR StockNo LIKE 'VS%' OR StockNo LIKE 'JB%' OR StockNo LIKE 'JG%'ORDER BY $number DESC;

/* and both SELECTs return the same expected ordering om my environment (Win7/64 - MariaDB 5.2.10):

$number  
---------
ddd
ccc
bbb
aaa
*/

Maybe characters used in 'StockNo' are a little less trivial than 'a', 'b' etc. in the environment where you see the problem?


Peter
(not a MP person)


On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 16:01, Brian Evans <grknight@scent-team.com> wrote:
We are hitting a wrong ordering in 5.2.10 but it does not happen on a test box using 5.3 series (tried 5.3.3 and 5.3.5).
The query can be rewritten and when we do, the range becomes an index scan and produces the correct results.

Here are the queries:
[Incorrect Order]
SELECT SUBSTRING(StockNo, 3, 3) AS $number FROM inv WHERE StockNo LIKE
'JR%' OR StockNo LIKE 'VS%' OR StockNo LIKE 'JB%' OR StockNo LIKE 'JG%'
ORDER BY $number DESC LIMIT 1;

EXPLAIN Result
id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE inv range PRIMARY PRIMARY 66 (NULL) 4 Using where; Using index; Using filesort


[Correct Order]
SELECT SUBSTRING(StockNo, 3, 3) AS $number FROM inv WHERE LEFT(StockNo,2) IN('JR','VS','JB','JG')
ORDER BY $number DESC LIMIT 1;

EXPLAIN Result

id select_type table type possible_keys key key_len ref rows Extra
1 SIMPLE inv index (NULL) PRIMARY 66 (NULL) 2496 Using where; Using index; Using filesort


Simplified Table Structure:
CREATE TABLE `tableinventory` (
  `StockNo` varchar(64) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
  `ItemDesc` varchar(96) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
  PRIMARY KEY (`StockNo`)
) ENGINE=PBXT DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;

All data is using a length of 7 even though it is defined as varchar(64).

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