Details
Description
If in a statement of the form "UPDATE ... SET ... WHERE CURRENT OF ..." the SET clause includes a correlated subquery that has a predicate referencing the table that is being updated, Derby will fail with an ASSERT failure in sane mode and an IndexOutOfBounds exception in insane mode.
For example, if we have a cursor CUR1 for the results of a SELECT query on BASICTABLE1, and then we try to execute the following update statement:
update BASICTABLE1 set C3 = (SELECT CC3 FROM
BASICTABLE2 WHERE BASICTABLE1.ID=BASICTABLE2.IID)
where current of CUR1
the result in SANE mode will be:
org.apache.derby.shared.common.sanity.AssertFailure: ASSERT FAILED tableNumber is expected to be non-negative.
and in INSANE mode will be:
java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException: bitIndex < 0: -1
The failure occurs during preprocessing of the subquery node when Derby is trying to "categorize" a predicate to see if it is pushable. The exact code is in ColumnReference.categorize():
public boolean categorize(JBitSet referencedTabs, boolean simplePredsOnly)
{ if (SanityManager.DEBUG) SanityManager.ASSERT(tableNumber >= 0, "tableNumber is expected to be non-negative"); referencedTabs.set(tableNumber); return ( ! replacesAggregate ) && ( (source.getExpression() instanceof ColumnReference) || (source.getExpression() instanceof VirtualColumnNode) || (source.getExpression() instanceof ConstantNode)); }We get to this code for a ColumnReference who's tableNumber is -1, which means that, in sane mode, the assert will fire; in insane mode, we'll call "referencedTabs.set()" passing in a -1, which leads to the IndexOutOfBoundsException.
This failure occurs in embedded and with both clients, and occurs in 10.0, 10.1, and the 10.2 trunk.