# 2009 July 2
#
# The author disclaims copyright to this source code.  In place of
# a legal notice, here is a blessing:
#
#    May you do good and not evil.
#    May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others.
#    May you share freely, never taking more than you give.
#
#***********************************************************************
#
# $Id: sharedlock.test,v 1.1 2009/07/02 17:21:58 danielk1977 Exp $

set testdir [file dirname $argv0]
source $testdir/tester.tcl
db close

ifcapable !shared_cache {
  finish_test
  return
}

set ::enable_shared_cache [sqlite3_enable_shared_cache 1]
sqlite3 db  test.db
sqlite3 db2 test.db

do_test sharedlock-1.1 {
  execsql {
    CREATE TABLE t1(a, b);
    INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(1, 'one');
    INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(2, 'two');
  }
} {}

do_test sharedlock-1.2 {
  set res [list]
  db eval { SELECT * FROM t1 ORDER BY rowid } {
    lappend res $a $b
    if {$a == 1} { catch { db  eval "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(3, 'three')" } }

    # This should fail. Connection [db] has a read-lock on t1, which should
    # prevent connection [db2] from obtaining the write-lock it needs to
    # modify t1. At one point there was a bug causing the previous INSERT
    # to drop the read-lock belonging to [db].
    if {$a == 2} { catch { db2 eval "INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(4, 'four')"  } }
  }
  set res
} {1 one 2 two 3 three}

db close
db2 close

sqlite3_enable_shared_cache $::enable_shared_cache
finish_test