Three findings, each caught by a different debugging technique,
documented in DECISION_LOG.md:
1. CURNAME+NFETCH PDU: trailing reserved field is SHORT not INT.
Caught by byte-diffing our 44-byte PDU against JDBC's 42-byte
reference under socat. The server tolerated the longer version
for INT-only SELECTs (silently consuming extra zeros) but
rejected it for VARCHAR queries. Lesson: server tolerance varies
by query type — always match JDBC byte-for-byte.
2. SQ_TUPLE payload pads to even byte alignment. An 11-byte
"syscolumns" VARCHAR payload had a trailing 0x00 between it and
the next SQ_TUPLE tag. JDBC's IfxRowColumn.readTuple consumes
this pad silently; we weren't, so any odd-length variable-width
row desynced the parser.
3. VARCHAR/NCHAR/NVCHAR in tuple data use a SINGLE-byte length
prefix (max 255 chars — IDS VARCHAR's hard limit). NOT a 2-byte
short as I'd initially assumed. CHAR is fixed-width per
encoded_length. LVARCHAR uses a 4-byte int prefix for >255 byte
values.
Module changes:
src/informix_db/_resultset.py — _LENGTH_PREFIXED_SHORT_TYPES set,
branched VARCHAR/NCHAR/NVCHAR (1-byte prefix) vs CHAR (fixed)
vs LVARCHAR (4-byte prefix); even-byte alignment pad consumed
after each SQ_TUPLE payload.
src/informix_db/cursors.py — CURNAME+NFETCH and standalone NFETCH
PDUs now write_short(0) for the reserved trailing field.
Tests: 40 unit + 18 integration (3 new VARCHAR tests) = 58 total,
all green, ruff clean. New tests cover:
- VARCHAR single-column SELECT
- Odd-length VARCHAR row (regression for the pad-byte bug)
- Mixed INT + VARCHAR + FLOAT three-column SELECT
Sample output:
SELECT FIRST 5 tabname FROM systables → ('systables',),
('syscolumns',), ('sysindices',), ('systabauth',), ('syscolauth',)
SELECT FIRST 3 tabname, tabid, nrows → ('systables', 1, 276.0), ...
VARCHAR was the last known gap from the Phase 2 commit. Phase 2
now reads INT, BIGINT, REAL, FLOAT, CHAR, VARCHAR end-to-end. Phase
6+ types (DATETIME, INTERVAL, DECIMAL, BLOBs) remain.