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#
# SQL Syntax for Prepared Statements test
#
--disable_warnings
drop table if exists t1,t2;
--enable_warnings
create table t1
(
a int primary key,
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b char(10)
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);
insert into t1 values (1,'one');
insert into t1 values (2,'two');
insert into t1 values (3,'three');
insert into t1 values (4,'four');
# basic functionality
set @a=2;
prepare stmt1 from 'select * from t1 where a <= ?';
execute stmt1 using @a;
set @a=3;
execute stmt1 using @a;
# non-existant statement
--error 1243
deallocate prepare no_such_statement;
--error 1210
execute stmt1;
# Nesting ps commands is not allowed:
--error 1064
prepare stmt2 from 'prepare nested_stmt from "select 1"';
--error 1064
prepare stmt2 from 'execute stmt1';
--error 1064
prepare stmt2 from 'deallocate prepare z';
# PS insert
prepare stmt3 from 'insert into t1 values (?,?)';
set @arg1=5, @arg2='five';
execute stmt3 using @arg1, @arg2;
select * from t1 where a>3;
# PS update
prepare stmt4 from 'update t1 set a=? where b=?';
set @arg1=55, @arg2='five';
execute stmt4 using @arg1, @arg2;
select * from t1 where a>3;
# PS create/delete
prepare stmt4 from 'create table t2 (a int)';
execute stmt4;
prepare stmt4 from 'drop table t2';
execute stmt4;
# Do something that will cause error
--error 1051
execute stmt4;
# placeholders in result field names.
prepare stmt5 from 'select ? + a from t1';
set @a=1;
execute stmt5 using @a;
execute stmt5 using @no_such_var;
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set @nullvar=1;
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set @nullvar=NULL;
execute stmt5 using @nullvar;
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set @nullvar2=NULL;
execute stmt5 using @nullvar2;
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# Check that multiple SQL statements are disabled inside PREPARE
--error 1064
prepare stmt6 from 'select 1; select2';
--error 1064
prepare stmt6 from 'insert into t1 values (5,"five"); select2';
# This shouldn't parse
--error 1064
explain prepare stmt6 from 'insert into t1 values (5,"five"); select2';
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create table t2
(
a int
);
insert into t2 values (0);
# parameter is NULL
set @arg00=NULL ;
prepare stmt1 from 'select 1 FROM t2 where a=?' ;
execute stmt1 using @arg00 ;
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# prepare using variables:
--error 1064
prepare stmt1 from @nosuchvar;
set @ivar= 1234;
--error 1064
prepare stmt1 from @ivar;
set @fvar= 123.4567;
--error 1064
prepare stmt1 from @fvar;
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drop table t1,t2;
A fix and a test case for Bug#16365 "Prepared Statements: DoS with
too many open statements". The patch adds a new global variable
@@max_prepared_stmt_count. This variable limits the total number
of prepared statements in the server. The default value of
@@max_prepared_stmt_count is 16382. 16382 small statements
(a select against 3 tables with GROUP, ORDER and LIMIT) consume
100MB of RAM. Once this limit has been reached, the server will
refuse to prepare a new statement and return ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
(unfortunately, we can't add new errors to 4.1 without breaking 5.0). The limit is changeable after startup
and can accept any value from 0 to 1 million. In case
the new value of the limit is less than the current
statement count, no new statements can be added, while the old
still can be used. Additionally, the current count of prepared
statements is now available through a global read-only variable
@@prepared_stmt_count.
mysql-test/r/ps.result:
Test results fixed (a test case for Bug#16365)
mysql-test/t/ps.test:
A test case for Bug#16365 "Prepared Statements: DoS with too many
open statements". Also fix statement leaks in other tests.
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Add declarations for new global variables.
sql/mysqld.cc:
Add definitions of max_prepared_stmt_count, prepared_stmt_count.
sql/set_var.cc:
Implement support for @@prepared_stmt_count and
@@max_prepared_stmt_count. Currently these variables are queried
without acquiring LOCK_prepared_stmt_count due to limitations of
the set_var/sys_var class design. Updates are, however, protected
with a lock.
sql/set_var.h:
New declarations to add support for @@max_prepared_stmt_count.
Implement a new class, where the lock to be used when updating
a variable is a parameter.
sql/sql_class.cc:
Add accounting of the total number of prepared statements in the
server to the methods of Statement_map.
sql/sql_class.h:
Add accounting of the total number of prepared statements in the
server to the methods of Statement_map.
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
Statement_map::insert will now send a message in case of an
error.
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deallocate prepare stmt3;
deallocate prepare stmt4;
deallocate prepare stmt5;
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#
# Bug #4105: Server crash on attempt to prepare a statement with character
# set introducer
#
PREPARE stmt1 FROM "select _utf8 'A' collate utf8_bin = ?";
set @var='A';
EXECUTE stmt1 USING @var;
DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt1;
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#
# BUG#3486: FOUND_ROWS() fails inside stored procedure [and prepared statement]
#
create table t1 (id int);
prepare stmt1 from "select FOUND_ROWS()";
select SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS * from t1;
# Expect 0
execute stmt1;
insert into t1 values (1);
select SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS * from t1;
# Expect 1
execute stmt1;
# Expect 0
execute stmt1;
deallocate prepare stmt1;
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drop table t1;
#
# prepared EXPLAIN
#
create table t1
(
c1 tinyint, c2 smallint, c3 mediumint, c4 int,
c5 integer, c6 bigint, c7 float, c8 double,
c9 double precision, c10 real, c11 decimal(7, 4), c12 numeric(8, 4),
c13 date, c14 datetime, c15 timestamp(14), c16 time,
c17 year, c18 bit, c19 bool, c20 char,
c21 char(10), c22 varchar(30), c23 tinyblob, c24 tinytext,
c25 blob, c26 text, c27 mediumblob, c28 mediumtext,
c29 longblob, c30 longtext, c31 enum('one', 'two', 'three'),
c32 set('monday', 'tuesday', 'wednesday')
) engine = MYISAM ;
create table t2 like t1;
set @stmt= ' explain SELECT (SELECT SUM(c1 + c12 + 0.0) FROM t2 where (t1.c2 - 0e-3) = t2.c2 GROUP BY t1.c15 LIMIT 1) as scalar_s, exists (select 1.0e+0 from t2 where t2.c3 * 9.0000000000 = t1.c4) as exists_s, c5 * 4 in (select c6 + 0.3e+1 from t2) as in_s, (c7 - 4, c8 - 4) in (select c9 + 4.0, c10 + 40e-1 from t2) as in_row_s FROM t1, (select c25 x, c32 y from t2) tt WHERE x * 1 = c25 ' ;
prepare stmt1 from @stmt ;
execute stmt1 ;
execute stmt1 ;
explain SELECT (SELECT SUM(c1 + c12 + 0.0) FROM t2 where (t1.c2 - 0e-3) = t2.c2 GROUP BY t1.c15 LIMIT 1) as scalar_s, exists (select 1.0e+0 from t2 where t2.c3 * 9.0000000000 = t1.c4) as exists_s, c5 * 4 in (select c6 + 0.3e+1 from t2) as in_s, (c7 - 4, c8 - 4) in (select c9 + 4.0, c10 + 40e-1 from t2) as in_row_s FROM t1, (select c25 x, c32 y from t2) tt WHERE x * 1 = c25;
deallocate prepare stmt1;
drop tables t1,t2;
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#
# parameters from variables (for field creation)
#
set @arg00=1;
prepare stmt1 from ' create table t1 (m int) as select 1 as m ' ;
execute stmt1 ;
select m from t1;
drop table t1;
prepare stmt1 from ' create table t1 (m int) as select ? as m ' ;
execute stmt1 using @arg00;
select m from t1;
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deallocate prepare stmt1;
drop table t1;
#
# eq() for parameters
#
create table t1 (id int(10) unsigned NOT NULL default '0',
name varchar(64) NOT NULL default '',
PRIMARY KEY (id), UNIQUE KEY `name` (`name`));
insert into t1 values (1,'1'),(2,'2'),(3,'3'),(4,'4'),(5,'5'),(6,'6'),(7,'7');
prepare stmt1 from 'select name from t1 where id=? or id=?';
set @id1=1,@id2=6;
execute stmt1 using @id1, @id2;
select name from t1 where id=1 or id=6;
deallocate prepare stmt1;
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drop table t1;
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#
# SHOW TABLE STATUS test
#
create table t1 ( a int primary key, b varchar(30)) engine = MYISAM ;
prepare stmt1 from ' show table status from test like ''t1%'' ';
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--replace_column 8 4294967295 12 # 13 # 14 #
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execute stmt1;
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--replace_column 8 4294967295 12 # 13 # 14 #
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show table status from test like 't1%' ;
deallocate prepare stmt1 ;
drop table t1;
Fix for bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is executed
a second time". The bug was caused by incompatibility of
negations elimination algorithm and PS: during first statement
execute a subtree with negation was replaced with equivalent
subtree without NOTs.
The problem was that although this transformation was permanent,
items of the new subtree were created in execute-local memory.
The patch adds means to check if it is the first execute of a
prepared statement, and if this is the case, to allocate items
in memory of the prepared statement.
The implementation:
- backports Item_arena from 5.0
- adds Item_arena::is_stmt_prepare(),
Item_arena::is_first_stmt_execute().
- deletes THD::allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing(),
THD::free_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing(); they
were redundant.
and adds a few invariants:
- thd->free_list never contains junk (= freed items)
- thd->current_arena is never null. If there is no
prepared statement, it points at the thd.
The rest of the patch contains mainly mechanical changes and
cleanups.
mysql-test/r/ps.result:
Test results updated (test case for Bug#4912)
mysql-test/t/ps.test:
A test case for Bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is
executed a second time"
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Statement -> Item_arena, current_statement -> current_arena
sql/item_subselect.h:
Item_subselect does not need to save thd->current_statement.
sql/item_sum.cc:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/item_sum.h:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/sql_base.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_class.cc:
- Item_arena
- convenient set_n_backup_statement, restore_backup_statement
(nice idea, Sanja)
sql/sql_class.h:
- Item_arena: backport from 5.0
- allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing,
free_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing removed.
sql/sql_derived.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_lex.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_parse.cc:
Deploy invariant that thd->free_list never contains junk items
(backport from 5.0).
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
- backporting Item_arena
- no need to allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing().
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fix for bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is
executed a second time": if this is the first execute of
a prepared statement, negation elimination is
done in memory of the prepared statement.
sql/sql_union.cc:
Backporting Item_arena from 5.0.
2004-08-21 00:02:46 +02:00
#
# Bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is executed a second time":
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# negation elimination should work once and not break prepared statements
Fix for bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is executed
a second time". The bug was caused by incompatibility of
negations elimination algorithm and PS: during first statement
execute a subtree with negation was replaced with equivalent
subtree without NOTs.
The problem was that although this transformation was permanent,
items of the new subtree were created in execute-local memory.
The patch adds means to check if it is the first execute of a
prepared statement, and if this is the case, to allocate items
in memory of the prepared statement.
The implementation:
- backports Item_arena from 5.0
- adds Item_arena::is_stmt_prepare(),
Item_arena::is_first_stmt_execute().
- deletes THD::allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing(),
THD::free_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing(); they
were redundant.
and adds a few invariants:
- thd->free_list never contains junk (= freed items)
- thd->current_arena is never null. If there is no
prepared statement, it points at the thd.
The rest of the patch contains mainly mechanical changes and
cleanups.
mysql-test/r/ps.result:
Test results updated (test case for Bug#4912)
mysql-test/t/ps.test:
A test case for Bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is
executed a second time"
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Statement -> Item_arena, current_statement -> current_arena
sql/item_subselect.h:
Item_subselect does not need to save thd->current_statement.
sql/item_sum.cc:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/item_sum.h:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/sql_base.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_class.cc:
- Item_arena
- convenient set_n_backup_statement, restore_backup_statement
(nice idea, Sanja)
sql/sql_class.h:
- Item_arena: backport from 5.0
- allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing,
free_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing removed.
sql/sql_derived.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_lex.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_parse.cc:
Deploy invariant that thd->free_list never contains junk items
(backport from 5.0).
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
- backporting Item_arena
- no need to allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing().
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fix for bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is
executed a second time": if this is the first execute of
a prepared statement, negation elimination is
done in memory of the prepared statement.
sql/sql_union.cc:
Backporting Item_arena from 5.0.
2004-08-21 00:02:46 +02:00
#
create table t1(a varchar(2), b varchar(3));
prepare stmt1 from "select a, b from t1 where (not (a='aa' and b < 'zzz'))";
execute stmt1;
execute stmt1;
deallocate prepare stmt1;
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drop table t1;
#
# Bug#5034 "prepared "select 1 into @arg15", second execute crashes
# server".
# Check that descendands of select_result can be reused in prepared
# statements or are correctly created and deleted on each execute
#
Fix for bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is executed
a second time". The bug was caused by incompatibility of
negations elimination algorithm and PS: during first statement
execute a subtree with negation was replaced with equivalent
subtree without NOTs.
The problem was that although this transformation was permanent,
items of the new subtree were created in execute-local memory.
The patch adds means to check if it is the first execute of a
prepared statement, and if this is the case, to allocate items
in memory of the prepared statement.
The implementation:
- backports Item_arena from 5.0
- adds Item_arena::is_stmt_prepare(),
Item_arena::is_first_stmt_execute().
- deletes THD::allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing(),
THD::free_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing(); they
were redundant.
and adds a few invariants:
- thd->free_list never contains junk (= freed items)
- thd->current_arena is never null. If there is no
prepared statement, it points at the thd.
The rest of the patch contains mainly mechanical changes and
cleanups.
mysql-test/r/ps.result:
Test results updated (test case for Bug#4912)
mysql-test/t/ps.test:
A test case for Bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is
executed a second time"
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Statement -> Item_arena, current_statement -> current_arena
sql/item_subselect.h:
Item_subselect does not need to save thd->current_statement.
sql/item_sum.cc:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/item_sum.h:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Statement -> Item_arena
sql/sql_base.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_class.cc:
- Item_arena
- convenient set_n_backup_statement, restore_backup_statement
(nice idea, Sanja)
sql/sql_class.h:
- Item_arena: backport from 5.0
- allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing,
free_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing removed.
sql/sql_derived.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_lex.cc:
current_statement -> current_arena
sql/sql_parse.cc:
Deploy invariant that thd->free_list never contains junk items
(backport from 5.0).
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
- backporting Item_arena
- no need to allocate_temporary_pool_for_ps_preparing().
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fix for bug#4912 "mysqld crashs in case a statement is
executed a second time": if this is the first execute of
a prepared statement, negation elimination is
done in memory of the prepared statement.
sql/sql_union.cc:
Backporting Item_arena from 5.0.
2004-08-21 00:02:46 +02:00
2004-08-24 18:17:11 +02:00
prepare stmt1 from "select 1 into @var";
execute stmt1;
execute stmt1;
prepare stmt1 from "create table t1 select 1 as i";
execute stmt1;
drop table t1;
execute stmt1;
prepare stmt1 from "insert into t1 select i from t1";
execute stmt1;
execute stmt1;
prepare stmt1 from "select * from t1 into outfile 'f1.txt'";
execute stmt1;
deallocate prepare stmt1;
drop table t1;
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#
# BUG#5242 "Prepared statement names are case sensitive"
#
prepare stmt1 from 'select 1';
prepare STMT1 from 'select 2';
execute sTmT1;
deallocate prepare StMt1;
--error 1243
deallocate prepare Stmt1;
# also check that statement names are in right charset.
set names utf8;
prepare `ü` from 'select 1234';
execute `ü` ;
set names latin1;
execute `<60> `;
A fix and a test case for Bug#16365 "Prepared Statements: DoS with
too many open statements". The patch adds a new global variable
@@max_prepared_stmt_count. This variable limits the total number
of prepared statements in the server. The default value of
@@max_prepared_stmt_count is 16382. 16382 small statements
(a select against 3 tables with GROUP, ORDER and LIMIT) consume
100MB of RAM. Once this limit has been reached, the server will
refuse to prepare a new statement and return ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
(unfortunately, we can't add new errors to 4.1 without breaking 5.0). The limit is changeable after startup
and can accept any value from 0 to 1 million. In case
the new value of the limit is less than the current
statement count, no new statements can be added, while the old
still can be used. Additionally, the current count of prepared
statements is now available through a global read-only variable
@@prepared_stmt_count.
mysql-test/r/ps.result:
Test results fixed (a test case for Bug#16365)
mysql-test/t/ps.test:
A test case for Bug#16365 "Prepared Statements: DoS with too many
open statements". Also fix statement leaks in other tests.
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Add declarations for new global variables.
sql/mysqld.cc:
Add definitions of max_prepared_stmt_count, prepared_stmt_count.
sql/set_var.cc:
Implement support for @@prepared_stmt_count and
@@max_prepared_stmt_count. Currently these variables are queried
without acquiring LOCK_prepared_stmt_count due to limitations of
the set_var/sys_var class design. Updates are, however, protected
with a lock.
sql/set_var.h:
New declarations to add support for @@max_prepared_stmt_count.
Implement a new class, where the lock to be used when updating
a variable is a parameter.
sql/sql_class.cc:
Add accounting of the total number of prepared statements in the
server to the methods of Statement_map.
sql/sql_class.h:
Add accounting of the total number of prepared statements in the
server to the methods of Statement_map.
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
Statement_map::insert will now send a message in case of an
error.
2006-04-07 21:37:06 +02:00
deallocate prepare `<60> `;
2004-08-29 17:44:28 +02:00
set names default;
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#
# BUG#4368 "select * from t1 where a like ?" crashes server if a is in utf8
# and ? is in latin1
# Check that Item converting latin1 to utf8 (for LIKE function) is created
# in memory of prepared statement.
#
create table t1 (a varchar(10)) charset=utf8;
insert into t1 (a) values ('yahoo');
set character_set_connection=latin1;
prepare stmt from 'select a from t1 where a like ?';
set @var='google';
execute stmt using @var;
execute stmt using @var;
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1;
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#
# BUG#5510 "inserting Null in AutoIncrement primary key Column Fails"
# (prepared statements)
# The cause: misuse of internal MySQL 'Field' API.
#
create table t1 (a bigint(20) not null primary key auto_increment);
insert into t1 (a) values (null);
select * from t1;
prepare stmt from "insert into t1 (a) values (?)";
set @var=null;
execute stmt using @var;
select * from t1;
drop table t1;
#
# check the same for timestamps
#
create table t1 (a timestamp not null);
prepare stmt from "insert into t1 (a) values (?)";
execute stmt using @var;
--disable_result_log
select * from t1;
--enable_result_log
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1;
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#
# BUG#5688 "Upgraded 4.1.5 Server seg faults" # (prepared statements)
# The test case speaks for itself.
# Just another place where we used wrong memory root for Items created
# during statement prepare.
#
prepare stmt from "select 'abc' like convert('abc' using utf8)";
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2004-10-08 00:21:19 +02:00
#
# BUG#5748 "Prepared statement with BETWEEN and bigint values crashes
# mysqld". Just another place where an item tree modification must be
# rolled back.
#
create table t1 ( a bigint );
prepare stmt from 'select a from t1 where a between ? and ?';
set @a=1;
execute stmt using @a, @a;
execute stmt using @a, @a;
execute stmt using @a, @a;
drop table t1;
deallocate prepare stmt;
A fix and test case for Bug#5987 "subselect in bool function
crashes server (prepared statements)": the bug was that all boolean
items always recovered its original arguments at statement cleanup
stage.
This collided with Item_subselect::select_transformer, which tries to
permanently change the item tree to use a transformed subselect instead of
original one.
So we had this call sequence for prepare:
mysql_stmt_prepare -> JOIN::prepare ->
Item_subselect::fix_fields -> the item tree gets transformed ->
Item_bool_rowready_func2::cleanup, item tree is recovered to original
state, while it shouldn't have been;
mysql_stmt_execute -> attempts to execute a broken tree -> crash.
Now instead of bluntly recovering all arguments of bool functions in
Item_bool_rowready_func2::cleanup, we recover only those
which were changed, and do it in one place.
There still would exist a possibility for a collision with subselect
tranformation, if permanent and temporary changes were performed at the
same stage.
But fortunately subselect transformation is always done first, so it
doesn't conflict with the optimization done by propogate_cond_constants.
Now we have:
mysql_stmt_prepare -> JOIN::prepare -> subselect transformation
permanently changes the tree -> cleanup doesn't recover anything,
because nothing was registered for recovery.
mysql_stmt_execute -> JOIN::prepare (the tree is already transformed,
so it doesn't change), JOIN::optimize ->
propogate_cond_constants -> temporary changes the item tree
with constants -> JOIN::execute -> cleanup ->
the changes done by propogate_cond_constants are recovered, as
they were registered for recovery.
mysql-test/r/ps.result:
Bug#5987: test results fixed.
mysql-test/t/ps.test:
A test for bug#5987 "subselect in bool function crashes server
(prepared statements)"
sql/item.cc:
resolve_const_item is now responsible to register all changes of the
item tree for recovery
sql/item.h:
resolve_const_item signagture changed
sql/item_cmpfunc.h:
Arguments of boolean functions are now recovered using the
centralized registry of THD.
sql/sql_class.cc:
It's crucial to add new items to the beginning of the recovery list,
so that the recovery is performed in LIFO mode: otherwise if we
change one node of a tree twice, it will be recovered to some intermediate
state.
sql/sql_select.cc:
change_cond_ref_to_const and propogate_cond_constants are now responsible
to register all changes of the item tree for recovery.
The recovery is done using the centralized THD registry of
changed tree items.
2004-10-10 00:39:22 +02:00
#
# Bug #5987 subselect in bool function crashes server (prepared statements):
# don't overwrite transformed subselects with old arguments of a bool
# function.
#
create table t1 (a int);
prepare stmt from "select * from t1 where 1 > (1 in (SELECT * FROM t1))";
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
drop table t1;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2004-10-12 19:16:07 +02:00
#
# Test case for Bug#6042 "constants propogation works only once (prepared
# statements): check that the query plan changes whenever we change
# placeholder value.
#
create table t1 (a int, b int);
insert into t1 (a, b) values (1,1), (1,2), (2,1), (2,2);
prepare stmt from
"explain select * from t1 where t1.a=2 and t1.a=t1.b and t1.b > 1 + ?";
set @v=5;
--replace_column 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 -
execute stmt using @v;
2006-10-03 15:33:44 +02:00
set @v=0;
2004-10-12 19:16:07 +02:00
--replace_column 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 -
2006-10-03 15:33:44 +02:00
execute stmt using @v;
2004-10-12 19:16:07 +02:00
set @v=5;
2006-10-03 15:33:44 +02:00
--replace_column 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 -
2004-10-12 19:16:07 +02:00
execute stmt using @v;
drop table t1;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2004-10-14 00:53:59 +02:00
#
# A test case for Bug#5985 prepare stmt from "select rand(?)" crashes
# server. Check that Item_func_rand is prepared-statements friendly.
#
create table t1 (a int);
insert into t1 (a) values (1), (2), (3), (4);
set @precision=10000000000;
--replace_column 1 - 3 -
select rand(),
2005-09-06 13:19:59 +02:00
cast(rand(10)*@precision as unsigned integer) from t1;
2004-10-14 00:53:59 +02:00
prepare stmt from
"select rand(),
cast(rand(10)*@precision as unsigned integer),
cast(rand(?)*@precision as unsigned integer) from t1";
set @var=1;
--replace_column 1 - 3 -
execute stmt using @var;
set @var=2;
--replace_column 1 -
execute stmt using @var;
set @var=3;
--replace_column 1 -
execute stmt using @var;
drop table t1;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2004-10-22 12:47:35 +02:00
#
# A test case for Bug#6050 "EXECUTE stmt reports ambiguous fieldnames with
# identical tables from different schemata"
# Check that field name resolving in prepared statements works OK.
#
create database mysqltest1;
create table t1 (a int);
create table mysqltest1.t1 (a int);
select * from t1, mysqltest1.t1;
prepare stmt from "select * from t1, mysqltest1.t1";
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
drop table t1;
drop table mysqltest1.t1;
drop database mysqltest1;
deallocate prepare stmt;
select '1.1' as a, '1.2' as a UNION SELECT '2.1', '2.2';
prepare stmt from
"select '1.1' as a, '1.2' as a UNION SELECT '2.1', '2.2'";
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2004-10-22 17:44:51 +02:00
#
# Test CREATE TABLE ... SELECT (Bug #6094)
#
create table t1 (a int);
insert into t1 values (1),(2),(3);
create table t2 select * from t1;
2004-10-22 20:55:49 +02:00
prepare stmt FROM 'create table t2 select * from t1';
2004-10-22 17:44:51 +02:00
drop table t2;
2004-10-22 20:55:49 +02:00
execute stmt;
2004-10-22 17:44:51 +02:00
drop table t2;
2004-10-22 20:55:49 +02:00
execute stmt;
2004-10-22 17:44:51 +02:00
--error 1050
2004-10-22 20:55:49 +02:00
execute stmt;
2004-10-22 17:44:51 +02:00
drop table t2;
2004-10-22 20:55:49 +02:00
execute stmt;
2004-10-22 17:44:51 +02:00
drop table t1,t2;
2004-10-22 20:55:49 +02:00
deallocate prepare stmt;
2004-10-22 20:51:16 +02:00
#
# Bug#6088 "FOUND_ROWS returns wrong values for prepared statements when
# LIMIT is used"
#
create table t1 (a int);
insert into t1 (a) values (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10);
prepare stmt from "select sql_calc_found_rows * from t1 limit 2";
execute stmt;
select found_rows();
execute stmt;
select found_rows();
execute stmt;
select found_rows();
2004-10-22 20:55:49 +02:00
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1;
2004-10-23 02:30:27 +02:00
#
# Bug#6047 "permission problem when executing mysql_stmt_execute with derived
# table"
#
CREATE TABLE t1 (N int, M tinyint);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1,0),(1,0),(2,0),(2,0),(3,0);
PREPARE stmt FROM 'UPDATE t1 AS P1 INNER JOIN (SELECT N FROM t1 GROUP BY N HAVING COUNT(M) > 1) AS P2 ON P1.N = P2.N SET P1.M = 2';
EXECUTE stmt;
DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt;
DROP TABLE t1;
2004-11-21 10:04:27 +01:00
#
# Bug#6297 "prepared statement, wrong handling of <parameter> IS NULL"
# Test that placeholders work with IS NULL/IS NOT NULL clauses.
#
prepare stmt from "select ? is null, ? is not null, ?";
select @no_such_var is null, @no_such_var is not null, @no_such_var;
execute stmt using @no_such_var, @no_such_var, @no_such_var;
set @var='abc';
select @var is null, @var is not null, @var;
execute stmt using @var, @var, @var;
set @var=null;
select @var is null, @var is not null, @var;
execute stmt using @var, @var, @var;
2004-12-08 22:37:17 +01:00
#
# Bug#6873 "PS, having with subquery, crash during execute"
# check that if we modify having subtree, we update JOIN->having pointer
#
create table t1 (pnum char(3));
create table t2 (pnum char(3));
prepare stmt from "select pnum from t2 having pnum in (select 'p1' from t1)";
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1, t2;
2005-03-02 17:00:48 +01:00
#
# Bug #6089: FOUND_ROWS returns wrong values when no table/view is used
#
prepare stmt from "SELECT SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS 'foo' UNION SELECT 'bar' LIMIT 0";
execute stmt;
SELECT FOUND_ROWS();
execute stmt;
SELECT FOUND_ROWS();
deallocate prepare stmt;
2005-05-03 10:47:27 +02:00
#
# Bug#9096 "select doesn't return all matched records if prepared statements
# is used"
# The bug was is bad co-operation of the optimizer's algorithm which determines
# which keys can be used to execute a query, constants propagation
# part of the optimizer and parameter markers used by prepared statements.
drop table if exists t1;
create table t1 (c1 int(11) not null, c2 int(11) not null,
primary key (c1,c2), key c2 (c2), key c1 (c1));
insert into t1 values (200887, 860);
insert into t1 values (200887, 200887);
select * from t1 where (c1=200887 and c2=200887) or c2=860;
prepare stmt from
"select * from t1 where (c1=200887 and c2=200887) or c2=860";
execute stmt;
prepare stmt from
"select * from t1 where (c1=200887 and c2=?) or c2=?";
set @a=200887, @b=860;
# this query did not return all matching rows
execute stmt using @a, @b;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2005-05-05 10:55:09 +02:00
drop table t1;
#
# Bug#9777 - another occurrence of the problem stated in Bug#9096:
# we can not compare basic constants by their names, because a placeholder
# is a basic constant while his name is always '?'
#
create table t1 (
id bigint(20) not null auto_increment,
code varchar(20) character set utf8 collate utf8_bin not null default '',
company_name varchar(250) character set utf8 collate utf8_bin default null,
setup_mode tinyint(4) default null,
start_date datetime default null,
primary key (id), unique key code (code)
);
create table t2 (
id bigint(20) not null auto_increment,
email varchar(250) character set utf8 collate utf8_bin default null,
name varchar(250) character set utf8 collate utf8_bin default null,
t1_id bigint(20) default null,
password varchar(250) character set utf8 collate utf8_bin default null,
primary_contact tinyint(4) not null default '0',
email_opt_in tinyint(4) not null default '1',
primary key (id), unique key email (email), key t1_id (t1_id),
constraint t2_fk1 foreign key (t1_id) references t1 (id)
);
insert into t1 values
(1, 'demo', 'demo s', 0, current_date()),
(2, 'code2', 'name 2', 0, current_date()),
(3, 'code3', 'name 3', 0, current_date());
insert into t2 values
(2, 'email1', 'name1', 3, 'password1', 0, 0),
(3, 'email2', 'name1', 1, 'password2', 1, 0),
(5, 'email3', 'name3', 2, 'password3', 0, 0);
prepare stmt from 'select t2.id from t2, t1 where (t1.id=? and t2.t1_id=t1.id)';
set @a=1;
execute stmt using @a;
select t2.id from t2, t1 where (t1.id=1 and t2.t1_id=t1.id);
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1, t2;
2005-06-20 14:07:00 +02:00
#
# Bug#11060 "Server crashes on calling stored procedure with INSERT SELECT
# UNION SELECT" aka "Server crashes on re-execution of prepared INSERT ...
# SELECT with UNION".
#
create table t1 (id int);
prepare stmt from "insert into t1 (id) select id from t1 union select id from t1";
execute stmt;
execute stmt;
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1;
2005-07-13 15:38:55 +02:00
#
# Bug#11458 "Prepared statement with subselects return random data":
# drop PARAM_TABLE_BIT from the list of tables used by a subquery
#
create table t1 (
id int(11) unsigned not null primary key auto_increment,
partner_id varchar(35) not null,
t1_status_id int(10) unsigned
);
insert into t1 values ("1", "partner1", "10"), ("2", "partner2", "10"),
("3", "partner3", "10"), ("4", "partner4", "10");
create table t2 (
id int(11) unsigned not null default '0',
t1_line_id int(11) unsigned not null default '0',
article_id varchar(20),
sequence int(11) not null default '0',
primary key (id,t1_line_id)
);
insert into t2 values ("1", "1", "sup", "0"), ("2", "1", "sup", "1"),
("2", "2", "sup", "2"), ("2", "3", "sup", "3"),
("2", "4", "imp", "4"), ("3", "1", "sup", "0"),
("4", "1", "sup", "0");
create table t3 (
id int(11) not null default '0',
preceeding_id int(11) not null default '0',
primary key (id,preceeding_id)
);
create table t4 (
user_id varchar(50) not null,
article_id varchar(20) not null,
primary key (user_id,article_id)
);
insert into t4 values("nicke", "imp");
prepare stmt from
'select distinct t1.partner_id
from t1 left join t3 on t1.id = t3.id
left join t1 pp on pp.id = t3.preceeding_id
where
exists (
select *
from t2 as pl_inner
where pl_inner.id = t1.id
and pl_inner.sequence <= (
select min(sequence) from t2 pl_seqnr
where pl_seqnr.id = t1.id
)
and exists (
select * from t4
where t4.article_id = pl_inner.article_id
and t4.user_id = ?
)
)
and t1.id = ?
group by t1.id
having count(pp.id) = 0';
set @user_id = 'nicke';
set @id = '2';
execute stmt using @user_id, @id;
execute stmt using @user_id, @id;
2005-07-13 16:01:04 +02:00
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1, t2, t3, t4;
2005-07-13 21:43:46 +02:00
#
# Bug#9379: make sure that Item::collation is reset when one sets
# a parameter marker from a string variable.
#
prepare stmt from 'select ?=?';
set @a='CHRISTINE ';
set @b='CHRISTINE';
execute stmt using @a, @b;
execute stmt using @a, @b;
set @a=1, @b=2;
execute stmt using @a, @b;
set @a='CHRISTINE ';
set @b='CHRISTINE';
execute stmt using @a, @b;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2005-07-13 22:15:23 +02:00
#
2005-07-14 22:01:49 +02:00
# Bug#11299 "prepared statement makes wrong SQL syntax in binlog which stops
# replication": check that errouneous queries with placeholders are not
# allowed
#
create table t1 (a int);
--error 1064
prepare stmt from "select ??";
--error 1064
prepare stmt from "select ?FROM t1";
--error 1064
prepare stmt from "select FROM t1 WHERE?=1";
--error 1064
prepare stmt from "update t1 set a=a+?WHERE 1";
2005-07-15 00:11:07 +02:00
--disable_ps_protocol
2005-07-14 22:01:49 +02:00
--error 1064
select ?;
--error 1064
select ??;
--error 1064
select ? from t1;
2005-07-15 00:11:07 +02:00
--enable_ps_protocol
2005-07-14 22:01:49 +02:00
drop table t1;
2005-07-16 01:29:13 +02:00
#
# Bug#9359 "Prepared statements take snapshot of system vars at PREPARE
# time"
#
prepare stmt from "select @@time_zone";
execute stmt;
set @@time_zone:='Japan';
execute stmt;
prepare stmt from "select @@tx_isolation";
execute stmt;
set transaction isolation level read committed;
execute stmt;
set transaction isolation level serializable;
execute stmt;
set @@tx_isolation=default;
execute stmt;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2005-07-28 02:22:47 +02:00
2005-11-25 11:25:31 +01:00
#
# Bug#14410 "Crash in Enum or Set type in CREATE TABLE and PS/SP"
#
# Part I. Make sure the typelib for ENUM is created in the statement memory
# root.
prepare stmt from "create temporary table t1 (letter enum('','a','b','c')
not null)";
execute stmt;
drop table t1;
execute stmt;
drop table t1;
execute stmt;
drop table t1;
# Part II. Make sure that when the default value is converted to UTF-8,
# the new item is # created in the statement memory root.
set names latin1;
prepare stmt from "create table t1 (a enum('test') default 'test')
character set utf8";
execute stmt;
drop table t1;
execute stmt;
drop table t1;
execute stmt;
drop table t1;
# Cleanup
set names default;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2006-01-14 02:55:07 +01:00
#
# A test case for Bug#12734 "prepared statement may return incorrect result
# set for a select SQL request": test that canDoTurboBM is reset for each
# execute of a prepared statement.
#
create table t1 (
word_id mediumint(8) unsigned not null default '0',
formatted varchar(20) not null default ''
);
insert into t1 values
(80,'pendant'), (475,'pretendants'), (989,'tendances'),
(1019,'cependant'),(1022,'abondance'),(1205,'independants'),
(13,'lessiver'),(25,'lambiner'),(46,'situer'),(71,'terminer'),
(82,'decrocher');
select count(*) from t1 where formatted like '%NDAN%';
select count(*) from t1 where formatted like '%ER';
prepare stmt from "select count(*) from t1 where formatted like ?";
set @like="%NDAN%";
execute stmt using @like;
set @like="%ER";
execute stmt using @like;
set @like="%NDAN%";
execute stmt using @like;
set @like="%ER";
execute stmt using @like;
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1;
2005-11-25 11:25:31 +01:00
2006-02-21 17:52:20 +01:00
#
# Bug#13134 "Length of VARCHAR() utf8 column is increasing when table is
# recreated with PS/SP"
#
prepare stmt from 'create table t1 (a varchar(10) character set utf8)';
execute stmt;
--disable_warnings
insert into t1 (a) values (repeat('a', 20));
--enable_warnings
select length(a) from t1;
drop table t1;
execute stmt;
--disable_warnings
insert into t1 (a) values (repeat('a', 20));
--enable_warnings
# Check that the data is truncated to the same length
select length(a) from t1;
drop table t1;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2006-04-07 20:26:25 +02:00
#
# Bug#16248 "WHERE (col1,col2) IN ((?,?)) gives wrong results":
# check that ROW implementation is reexecution-friendly.
#
create table t1 (col1 integer, col2 integer);
insert into t1 values(100,100),(101,101),(102,102),(103,103);
prepare stmt from 'select col1, col2 from t1 where (col1, col2) in ((?,?))';
set @a=100, @b=100;
execute stmt using @a,@b;
set @a=101, @b=101;
execute stmt using @a,@b;
set @a=102, @b=102;
execute stmt using @a,@b;
set @a=102, @b=103;
execute stmt using @a,@b;
deallocate prepare stmt;
drop table t1;
A fix and a test case for Bug#16365 "Prepared Statements: DoS with
too many open statements". The patch adds a new global variable
@@max_prepared_stmt_count. This variable limits the total number
of prepared statements in the server. The default value of
@@max_prepared_stmt_count is 16382. 16382 small statements
(a select against 3 tables with GROUP, ORDER and LIMIT) consume
100MB of RAM. Once this limit has been reached, the server will
refuse to prepare a new statement and return ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
(unfortunately, we can't add new errors to 4.1 without breaking 5.0). The limit is changeable after startup
and can accept any value from 0 to 1 million. In case
the new value of the limit is less than the current
statement count, no new statements can be added, while the old
still can be used. Additionally, the current count of prepared
statements is now available through a global read-only variable
@@prepared_stmt_count.
mysql-test/r/ps.result:
Test results fixed (a test case for Bug#16365)
mysql-test/t/ps.test:
A test case for Bug#16365 "Prepared Statements: DoS with too many
open statements". Also fix statement leaks in other tests.
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Add declarations for new global variables.
sql/mysqld.cc:
Add definitions of max_prepared_stmt_count, prepared_stmt_count.
sql/set_var.cc:
Implement support for @@prepared_stmt_count and
@@max_prepared_stmt_count. Currently these variables are queried
without acquiring LOCK_prepared_stmt_count due to limitations of
the set_var/sys_var class design. Updates are, however, protected
with a lock.
sql/set_var.h:
New declarations to add support for @@max_prepared_stmt_count.
Implement a new class, where the lock to be used when updating
a variable is a parameter.
sql/sql_class.cc:
Add accounting of the total number of prepared statements in the
server to the methods of Statement_map.
sql/sql_class.h:
Add accounting of the total number of prepared statements in the
server to the methods of Statement_map.
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
Statement_map::insert will now send a message in case of an
error.
2006-04-07 21:37:06 +02:00
#
# Bug#16365 Prepared Statements: DoS with too many open statements
# Check that the limit @@max_prpeared_stmt_count works.
#
# Save the old value
set @old_max_prepared_stmt_count= @@max_prepared_stmt_count;
#
# Disable prepared statement protocol: in this test we set
# @@max_prepared_stmt_count to 0 or 1 and would like to test the limit
# manually.
#
--disable_ps_protocol
#
# A. Check that the new variables are present in SHOW VARIABLES list.
#
show variables like 'max_prepared_stmt_count';
show variables like 'prepared_stmt_count';
#
# B. Check that the new variables are selectable.
#
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count, @@prepared_stmt_count;
#
# C. Check that max_prepared_stmt_count is settable (global only),
# whereas prepared_stmt_count is readonly.
#
set global max_prepared_stmt_count=-1;
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count;
set global max_prepared_stmt_count=10000000000000000;
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count;
set global max_prepared_stmt_count=default;
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count;
--error 1229 # ER_GLOBAL_VARIABLE
set @@max_prepared_stmt_count=1;
--error 1229 # ER_GLOBAL_VARIABLE
set max_prepared_stmt_count=1;
--error 1229 # ER_GLOBAL_VARIABLE
set local max_prepared_stmt_count=1;
--error 1229 # ER_GLOBAL_VARIABLE
set local prepared_stmt_count=0;
--error 1229 # ER_GLOBAL_VARIABLE
set @@prepared_stmt_count=0;
--error 1232 # ER_WRONG_TYPE_FOR_VAR
set global prepared_stmt_count=1;
# set to a reasonable limit works
set global max_prepared_stmt_count=1;
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count;
#
# D. Check that the variables actually work.
#
set global max_prepared_stmt_count=0;
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count, @@prepared_stmt_count;
--error 1105 # ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
prepare stmt from "select 1";
select @@prepared_stmt_count;
set global max_prepared_stmt_count=1;
prepare stmt from "select 1";
select @@prepared_stmt_count;
--error 1105 # ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
prepare stmt1 from "select 1";
select @@prepared_stmt_count;
deallocate prepare stmt;
select @@prepared_stmt_count;
#
# E. Check that we can prepare a statement with the same name
# successfully, without hitting the limit.
#
prepare stmt from "select 1";
select @@prepared_stmt_count;
prepare stmt from "select 2";
select @@prepared_stmt_count;
#
# F. We can set the max below the current count. In this case no new
# statements should be allowed to prepare.
#
select @@prepared_stmt_count, @@max_prepared_stmt_count;
set global max_prepared_stmt_count=0;
--error 1105 # ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
prepare stmt from "select 1";
# Result: the old statement is deallocated, the new is not created.
--error 1243 # ER_UNKNOWN_STMT_HANDLER
execute stmt;
select @@prepared_stmt_count;
--error 1105 # ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
prepare stmt from "select 1";
select @@prepared_stmt_count;
#
# G. Show that the variables are up to date even after a connection with all
# statements in it was terminated.
#
set global max_prepared_stmt_count=3;
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count, @@prepared_stmt_count;
prepare stmt from "select 1";
connect (con1,localhost,root,,);
connection con1;
prepare stmt from "select 2";
prepare stmt1 from "select 3";
--error 1105 # ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
prepare stmt2 from "select 4";
connection default;
--error 1105 # ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
prepare stmt2 from "select 4";
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count, @@prepared_stmt_count;
disconnect con1;
connection default;
# Wait for the connection to die: deal with a possible race
deallocate prepare stmt;
let $count= `select @@prepared_stmt_count`;
if ($count)
{
--sleep 2
let $count= `select @@prepared_stmt_count`;
}
select @@max_prepared_stmt_count, @@prepared_stmt_count;
#
# Restore the old value.
#
set global max_prepared_stmt_count= @old_max_prepared_stmt_count;
--enable_ps_protocol
2006-07-06 21:59:04 +02:00
#
# Bug#19399 "Stored Procedures 'Lost Connection' when dropping/creating
# tables"
# Check that multi-delete tables are also cleaned up before re-execution.
#
--disable_warnings
drop table if exists t1;
create temporary table if not exists t1 (a1 int);
--enable_warnings
# exact delete syntax is essential
prepare stmt from "delete t1 from t1 where (cast(a1/3 as unsigned) * 3) = a1";
drop temporary table t1;
create temporary table if not exists t1 (a1 int);
# the server crashed on the next statement without the fix
execute stmt;
drop temporary table t1;
create temporary table if not exists t1 (a1 int);
# the problem was in memory corruption: repeat the test just in case
execute stmt;
drop temporary table t1;
create temporary table if not exists t1 (a1 int);
execute stmt;
drop temporary table t1;
deallocate prepare stmt;
2006-10-10 15:08:47 +02:00
2006-09-16 20:50:00 +02:00
#
# BUG#22085: Crash on the execution of a prepared statement that
# uses an IN subquery with aggregate functions in HAVING
#
CREATE TABLE t1(
ID int(10) unsigned NOT NULL auto_increment,
Member_ID varchar(15) NOT NULL default '',
Action varchar(12) NOT NULL,
Action_Date datetime NOT NULL,
Track varchar(15) default NULL,
User varchar(12) default NULL,
Date_Updated timestamp NOT NULL default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP on update
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
PRIMARY KEY (ID),
KEY Action (Action),
KEY Action_Date (Action_Date)
);
INSERT INTO t1(Member_ID, Action, Action_Date, Track) VALUES
('111111', 'Disenrolled', '2006-03-01', 'CAD' ),
('111111', 'Enrolled', '2006-03-01', 'CAD' ),
('111111', 'Disenrolled', '2006-07-03', 'CAD' ),
('222222', 'Enrolled', '2006-03-07', 'CAD' ),
('222222', 'Enrolled', '2006-03-07', 'CHF' ),
('222222', 'Disenrolled', '2006-08-02', 'CHF' ),
('333333', 'Enrolled', '2006-03-01', 'CAD' ),
('333333', 'Disenrolled', '2006-03-01', 'CAD' ),
('444444', 'Enrolled', '2006-03-01', 'CAD' ),
('555555', 'Disenrolled', '2006-03-01', 'CAD' ),
('555555', 'Enrolled', '2006-07-21', 'CAD' ),
('555555', 'Disenrolled', '2006-03-01', 'CHF' ),
('666666', 'Enrolled', '2006-02-09', 'CAD' ),
('666666', 'Enrolled', '2006-05-12', 'CHF' ),
('666666', 'Disenrolled', '2006-06-01', 'CAD' );
PREPARE STMT FROM
"SELECT GROUP_CONCAT(Track SEPARATOR ', ') FROM t1
WHERE Member_ID=? AND Action='Enrolled' AND
(Track,Action_Date) IN (SELECT Track, MAX(Action_Date) FROM t1
WHERE Member_ID=?
GROUP BY Track
HAVING Track>='CAD' AND
MAX(Action_Date)>'2006-03-01')";
SET @id='111111';
EXECUTE STMT USING @id,@id;
SET @id='222222';
EXECUTE STMT USING @id,@id;
DEALLOCATE PREPARE STMT;
DROP TABLE t1;
2006-10-10 16:14:06 +02:00
2006-10-10 15:08:47 +02:00
#
# BUG#21354: (COUNT(*) = 1) not working in SELECT inside prepared
# statement
#
--disable_warnings
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1;
--enable_warnings
CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT, INDEX(i));
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1);
PREPARE stmt FROM "SELECT (COUNT(i) = 1), COUNT(i) FROM t1 WHERE i = ?";
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 1;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
PREPARE stmt FROM "SELECT (AVG(i) = 1), AVG(i) FROM t1 WHERE i = ?";
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 1;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
PREPARE stmt FROM "SELECT (VARIANCE(i) = 1), VARIANCE(i) FROM t1 WHERE i = ?";
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 1;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
PREPARE stmt FROM "SELECT (STDDEV(i) = 1), STDDEV(i) FROM t1 WHERE i = ?";
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 1;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
PREPARE stmt FROM "SELECT (BIT_OR(i) = 1), BIT_OR(i) FROM t1 WHERE i = ?";
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 1;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
PREPARE stmt FROM "SELECT (BIT_AND(i) = 1), BIT_AND(i) FROM t1 WHERE i = ?";
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 1;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
PREPARE stmt FROM "SELECT (BIT_XOR(i) = 1), BIT_XOR(i) FROM t1 WHERE i = ?";
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 1;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
SET @a = 0;
EXECUTE stmt USING @a;
DEALLOCATE PREPARE stmt;
DROP TABLE t1;
--echo End of 4.1 tests.