- Replace "class Repeat_count" with function call.
There is no reason for this class to exists. More complex and more
code than doing a function! In addition the code didn't match what
the val() function was doing.
Other things:
- Fixed compiler failure in print_cached_tables_callback()
The fix consists of three commits backported from 10.3:
1) Cleanup isnan() portability checks
(cherry picked from commit 7ffd7fe962)
2) Cleanup isinf() portability checks
Original problem reported by Wlad: re-compilation of 10.3 on top of 10.2
build would cache undefined HAVE_ISINF from 10.2, whereas it is expected
to be 1 in 10.3.
std::isinf() seem to be available on all supported platforms.
(cherry picked from commit bc469a0bdf)
3) Use std::isfinite in C++ code
This is addition to parent revision fixing build failures.
(cherry picked from commit 54999f4e75)
This change takes into account a column's GENERATED ALWAYS AS
expression dependcy on sql_mode's PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH and
NO_UNSIGNED_SUBTRACTION flags.
Indexed virtual columns as well as persistent generated columns are
now not allowed to have such dependencies to avoid inconsistent data
or index files on sql_mode changes.
So an error is now returned in cases like this:
CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE t1
(
a CHAR(5),
v VARCHAR(5) AS (a) PERSISTENT -- CHAR->VARCHAR or CHAR->TEXT = ERROR
);
Functions RPAD() and RTRIM() can now remove dependency on
PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH. So this can be used instead:
CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE t1
(
a CHAR(5),
v VARCHAR(5) AS (RTRIM(a)) PERSISTENT
);
Note, unlike CHAR->VARCHAR and CHAR->TEXT this still works,
not RPAD(a) is needed:
CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE t1
(
a CHAR(5),
v CHAR(5) AS (a) PERSISTENT -- CHAR->CHAR is OK
);
More sql_mode flags may affect values of generated columns.
They will be addressed separately.
See comments in sql_mode.h for implementation details.
cmake -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
Maintainer mode makes all warnings errors. This patch fix warnings. Mostly about
deprecated `register` keyword.
Too much warnings came from Mroonga and I gave up on it.
The error message modified.
Then the TABLE_SHARE::error_table_name() implementation taken from 10.3,
to be used as a name of the table in this message.
The problem happened because {{Field_xxx::store(longlong nr, bool unsigned_val)}} erroneously passed {{unsigned_flag}} to the {{usec}} parameter of this constructor:
{code:cpp}
Datetime(int *warn, longlong sec, ulong usec, date_conv_mode_t flags)
{code}
1. Changing Time and Datetime constructors to accept data as Sec6 rather than as
longlong/double/my_decimal, so it's not possible to do such mistakes
in the future. Additional good effect of these changes:
- This reduced some amount of similar code (minus ~35 lines).
- The code now does not rely on the fact that "unsigned_flag" is
not important inside Datetime().
The constructor always gets all three parts: sign, integer part,
fractional part. The simple the better.
2. Fixing Field_xxx::store() to use the new Datetime constructor format.
This change actually fixes the problem.
3. Adding "explicit" keyword to all Sec6 constructors,
to avoid automatic hidden conversion from double/my_decimal to Sec6,
as well as from longlong/ulonglong through double to Sec6.
4. Change#1 caused (as a dependency) changes in a few places
with code like this:
bool neg= nr < 0 && !unsigned_val;
ulonglong value= m_neg ? (ulonglong) -nr : (ulonglong) nr;
These fragments relied on a non-standard behavior with
the operator "minus" applied to the lowest possible negative
signed long long value. This can lead to different results
depending on the platform and compilation flags.
We have fixed such bugs a few times already.
So instead of modifying the old wrong code to a new wrong code,
replacing all such fragments to use Longlong_hybrid,
which correctly handles this special case with -LONGLONG_MIN
in its method abs().
This also reduced the amount of similar code
(1 or 2 new lines instead 3 old lines in all 6 such fragments).
5. Removing ErrConvInteger(longlong nr, bool unsigned_flag= false)
and adding ErrConvInteger(Longlong_hybrid) instead, to encourage
use of safe Longlong_hybrid instead of unsafe pairs nr+neg.
6. Removing unused ErrConvInteger from Item_cache_temporal::get_date()
This warning come from a copy() operation of type:
memcpy(ptr, ptr+A, B), which is safe but produces a warning
when run with valgrind.
To avoid the warning, I added copy_or_move() method which uses
memmove() instead of memcpy().
In 10.3 the change in item_strfunc::Item_func_concat() has to be mirroed
in Item_func_concat_oracle() to avoid future valgrind warnings.
After the MDEV-13118 fix there's no code in the server that
wants caseup/casedn to change the argument in place for simple
charsets. Let's remove this logic and always return the result in a
new string for all charsets, both simple and complex.
1. Removing the optimization that *some* character sets used in casedn()
and caseup(), which allowed (and required) to change the case in-place,
overwriting the string passed as the "src" argument.
Now all CHARSET_INFO's work in the same way:
non of them change the source string in-place, all of them now convert
case from the source string to the destination string, leaving
the source string untouched.
2. Adding "const" qualifier to the "char *src" parameter
to caseup() and casedn().
3. Removing duplicate implementations in ctype-mb.c.
Now both caseup() and casedn() implementations for all CJK character sets
use internally the same function my_casefold_mb()
(the former my_casefold_mb_varlen()).
4. Removing the "unused" attribute from parameters of some my_case{up|dn}_xxx()
implementations, as the affected parameters are now *used* in the code.
Previously these parameters were used only in DBUG_ASSERT().
This problem is similar to MDEV-10306.
1. Fixing Item_str_conv::val_str(String *str) to return the result in "str",
and to use tmp_value only as a temporary buffer for args[0]->val_str().
The new code version now guarantees that the result is always returned in
"str". The trick with copy_if_not_alloced() is not used any more.
2. The change #1 revealed the same problem in SUBSTRING_INDEX(),
so some tests with combinations of UPPER()/LOWER() and SUBSTRING_INDEX()
started to fail. Fixing Item_func_substr_index::val_str() the same way,
to return the result in "str" and use tmp_value as a temporary buffer
for args[0]->val_str().