xref: /freebsd/contrib/kyua/store/schema_v2.sql (revision b0d29bc4)
1-- Copyright 2012 The Kyua Authors.
2-- All rights reserved.
3--
4-- Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5-- modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
6-- met:
7--
8-- * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9--   notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10-- * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11--   notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12--   documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13-- * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its contributors
14--   may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
15--   without specific prior written permission.
16--
17-- THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
18-- "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
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20-- A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
21-- OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
22-- SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
23-- LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
24-- DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
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26-- (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
27-- OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
28
29-- \file store/schema_v2.sql
30-- Definition of the database schema.
31--
32-- The whole contents of this file are wrapped in a transaction.  We want
33-- to ensure that the initial contents of the database (the table layout as
34-- well as any predefined values) are written atomically to simplify error
35-- handling in our code.
36
37
38BEGIN TRANSACTION;
39
40
41-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
42-- Metadata.
43-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
44
45
46-- Database-wide properties.
47--
48-- Rows in this table are immutable: modifying the metadata implies writing
49-- a new record with a new schema_version greater than all existing
50-- records, and never updating previous records.  When extracting data from
51-- this table, the only "valid" row is the one with the highest
52-- scheam_version.  All the other rows are meaningless and only exist for
53-- historical purposes.
54--
55-- In other words, this table keeps the history of the database metadata.
56-- The only reason for doing this is for debugging purposes.  It may come
57-- in handy to know when a particular database-wide operation happened if
58-- it turns out that the database got corrupted.
59CREATE TABLE metadata (
60    schema_version INTEGER PRIMARY KEY CHECK (schema_version >= 1),
61    timestamp TIMESTAMP NOT NULL CHECK (timestamp >= 0)
62);
63
64
65-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
66-- Contexts.
67-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
68
69
70-- Execution contexts.
71--
72-- A context represents the execution environment of a particular action.
73-- Because every action is invoked by the user, the context may have
74-- changed.  We record such information for information and debugging
75-- purposes.
76CREATE TABLE contexts (
77    context_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
78    cwd TEXT NOT NULL
79
80    -- TODO(jmmv): Record the run-time configuration.
81);
82
83
84-- Environment variables of a context.
85CREATE TABLE env_vars (
86    context_id INTEGER REFERENCES contexts,
87    var_name TEXT NOT NULL,
88    var_value TEXT NOT NULL,
89
90    PRIMARY KEY (context_id, var_name)
91);
92
93
94-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
95-- Actions.
96-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
97
98
99-- Representation of user-initiated actions.
100--
101-- An action is an operation initiated by the user.  At the moment, the
102-- only operation Kyua supports is the "test" operation (in the future we
103-- should be able to store, e.g. build logs).  To keep things simple the
104-- database schema is restricted to represent one single action.
105CREATE TABLE actions (
106    action_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
107    context_id INTEGER REFERENCES contexts
108);
109
110
111-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
112-- Test suites.
113--
114-- The tables in this section represent all the components that form a test
115-- suite.  This includes data about the test suite itself (test programs
116-- and test cases), and also the data about particular runs (test results).
117--
118-- As you will notice, every object belongs to a particular action, has a
119-- unique identifier and there is no attempt to deduplicate data.  This
120-- comes from the fact that a test suite is not "stable" over time: i.e. on
121-- each execution of the test suite, test programs and test cases may have
122-- come and gone.  This has the interesting result of making the
123-- distinction of a test case and a test result a pure syntactic
124-- difference, because there is always a 1:1 relation.
125--
126-- The code that performs the processing of the actions is the component in
127-- charge of finding correlations between test programs and test cases
128-- across different actions.
129-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
130
131
132-- Representation of the metadata objects.
133--
134-- The way this table works is like this: every time we record a metadata
135-- object, we calculate what its identifier should be as the last rowid of
136-- the table.  All properties of that metadata object thus receive the same
137-- identifier.
138CREATE TABLE metadatas (
139    metadata_id INTEGER NOT NULL,
140
141    -- The name of the property.
142    property_name TEXT NOT NULL,
143
144    -- One of the values of the property.
145    property_value TEXT,
146
147    PRIMARY KEY (metadata_id, property_name)
148);
149
150
151-- Optimize the loading of the metadata of any single entity.
152--
153-- The metadata_id column of the metadatas table is not enough to act as a
154-- primary key, yet we need to locate entries in the metadatas table solely by
155-- their identifier.
156--
157-- TODO(jmmv): I think this index is useless given that the primary key in the
158-- metadatas table includes the metadata_id as the first component.  Need to
159-- verify this and drop the index or this comment appropriately.
160CREATE INDEX index_metadatas_by_id
161    ON metadatas (metadata_id);
162
163
164-- Representation of a test program.
165--
166-- At the moment, there are no substantial differences between the
167-- different interfaces, so we can simplify the design by with having a
168-- single table representing all test caes.  We may need to revisit this in
169-- the future.
170CREATE TABLE test_programs (
171    test_program_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
172    action_id INTEGER REFERENCES actions,
173
174    -- The absolute path to the test program.  This should not be necessary
175    -- because it is basically the concatenation of root and relative_path.
176    -- However, this allows us to very easily search for test programs
177    -- regardless of where they were executed from.  (I.e. different
178    -- combinations of root + relative_path can map to the same absolute path).
179    absolute_path TEXT NOT NULL,
180
181    -- The path to the root of the test suite (where the Kyuafile lives).
182    root TEXT NOT NULL,
183
184    -- The path to the test program, relative to the root.
185    relative_path TEXT NOT NULL,
186
187    -- Name of the test suite the test program belongs to.
188    test_suite_name TEXT NOT NULL,
189
190    -- Reference to the various rows of metadatas.
191    metadata_id INTEGER,
192
193    -- The name of the test program interface.
194    --
195    -- Note that this indicates both the interface for the test program and
196    -- its test cases.  See below for the corresponding detail tables.
197    interface TEXT NOT NULL
198);
199
200
201-- Optimize the lookup of test programs by the action they belong to.
202CREATE INDEX index_test_programs_by_action_id
203    ON test_programs (action_id);
204
205
206-- Representation of a test case.
207--
208-- At the moment, there are no substantial differences between the
209-- different interfaces, so we can simplify the design by with having a
210-- single table representing all test caes.  We may need to revisit this in
211-- the future.
212CREATE TABLE test_cases (
213    test_case_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
214    test_program_id INTEGER REFERENCES test_programs,
215    name TEXT NOT NULL,
216
217    -- Reference to the various rows of metadatas.
218    metadata_id INTEGER
219);
220
221
222-- Optimize the loading of all test cases that are part of a test program.
223CREATE INDEX index_test_cases_by_test_programs_id
224    ON test_cases (test_program_id);
225
226
227-- Representation of test case results.
228--
229-- Note that there is a 1:1 relation between test cases and their results.
230-- This is a result of storing the information of a test case on every
231-- single action.
232CREATE TABLE test_results (
233    test_case_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY REFERENCES test_cases,
234    result_type TEXT NOT NULL,
235    result_reason TEXT,
236
237    start_time TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
238    end_time TIMESTAMP NOT NULL
239);
240
241
242-- Collection of output files of the test case.
243CREATE TABLE test_case_files (
244    test_case_id INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES test_cases,
245
246    -- The raw name of the file.
247    --
248    -- The special names '__STDOUT__' and '__STDERR__' are reserved to hold
249    -- the stdout and stderr of the test case, respectively.  If any of
250    -- these are empty, there will be no corresponding entry in this table
251    -- (hence why we do not allow NULLs in these fields).
252    file_name TEXT NOT NULL,
253
254    -- Pointer to the file itself.
255    file_id INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES files,
256
257    PRIMARY KEY (test_case_id, file_name)
258);
259
260
261-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
262-- Verbatim files.
263-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
264
265
266-- Copies of files or logs generated during testing.
267--
268-- TODO(jmmv): This will probably grow to unmanageable sizes.  We should add a
269-- hash to the file contents and use that as the primary key instead.
270CREATE TABLE files (
271    file_id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
272
273    contents BLOB NOT NULL
274);
275
276
277-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
278-- Initialization of values.
279-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
280
281
282-- Create a new metadata record.
283--
284-- For every new database, we want to ensure that the metadata is valid if
285-- the database creation (i.e. the whole transaction) succeeded.
286--
287-- If you modify the value of the schema version in this statement, you
288-- will also have to modify the version encoded in the backend module.
289INSERT INTO metadata (timestamp, schema_version)
290    VALUES (strftime('%s', 'now'), 2);
291
292
293COMMIT TRANSACTION;
294