In multi_update::send_data(), the counter of matched rows was not correctly incremented, when during insertion of a new row to a temporay table it had to be converted from HEAP to MyISAM.
This fix changes the logic to increment the counter of matched rows in the following cases:
1. If the error returned from write_row() is zero.
2. If the error returned from write_row() is non-zero, is neither HA_ERR_FOUND_DUPP_KEY nor HA_ERR_FOUND_DUPP_UNIQUE, and a call to create_myisam_from_heap() succeeds.
When the ORDER BY clause gets fixed it's allowed to search in the current
item_list in order to find aliased fields and expressions. This is ok for a
SELECT but wrong for an UPDATE statement. If the ORDER BY clause will
contain a non-existing field which is mentioned in the UPDATE set list
then the server will crash due to using of non-existing (0x0) field.
When an Item_field is getting fixed it's allowed to search item list for
aliased expressions and fields only for selects.
it doesn't select.
This bug was fixed along with bug #16861: User defined variable can
have a wrong value if a tmp table was used.
There the fix consisted of Item_func_set_user_var overloading the method
Item::save_in_field. Consider the query from the test case:
INSERT INTO foo( bar, baz )
SELECT
bar,
@newBaz := 1 + baz
FROM
foo
WHERE
quux <= 0.1;
Here the assignment expression '@newBaz := 1 + baz' is represented by an
Item_func_set_user_var. Its member method save_in_field, which writes the
value of this assignment into the result field, writes the val_xxx() value,
which is not updated at this point. In the fix introduced by the patch,
the save_in_field method reads the actual variable value instead.
See also comment for
ChangeSet@1.2368.1.3, 2007-01-09 23:24:56+03:00, evgen@moonbone.local +4 -0
and comment for
Item_func_set_user_var::save_in_field (item_func.cc)
This performance degradation for UPDATEs could be observed in the update
statements for which the search key cannot be converted to any valid
value of the type of the search column, like for a the condition
int_fld=99999999999999999999999999, though it can be guaranteed here
that there is no row with such a key value.
When setup_fields() function finds field named '*' it expands it to the list
of all table fields. It does so by checking that the first char of
field_name is '*', but it doesn't checks that the '* is the only char.
Due to this, when updating table with a field named like '*name', such field
is wrongly treated as '*' and expanded. This leads to making list of fields
to update being longer than list of the new values. Later, the fill_record()
function crashes by dereferencing null when there is left fields to update,
but no more values.
Added check in the setup_fields() function which ensures that the field
expanding will be done only when '*' is the only char in the field name.
depending on table order
multi_update::send_data() was counting updates, not updated rows. Thus if one
record have several updates it will be counted several times in 'rows matched'
but updated only once.
multi_update::send_data() now counts only unique rows.
Date field was declared as not null, thus expression 'datefield is null'
was always false. For SELECT special handling of such cases is used.
There 'datefield is null' converted to 'datefield eq "0000-00-00"'.
In mysql_update() before creation of select added remove_eq_conds() call.
It makes some optimization of conds and in particular performs conversion
from 'is null' to 'eq'.
Also remove_eq_conds() makes some evaluation of conds and if it founds that
conds is always false then update statement is not processed further.
All this allows to perform some update statements process faster due to
optimized conds, and not wasting resources if conds known to be false.
thd->allow_sum_func was left 'true' after previous statement thus allowing
sum funcs to be present in conditions.
thd->allow_sum_func should be set to 0 for each query and each prepared
statement reinitialization. This is done in lex_start() and
reset_stmt_for_execute().
disabled if ref is built with a key from the updated table
Problem was in add_not_null_conds() optimization function.
It contains following code:
JOIN_TAB *referred_tab= not_null_item->field->table->reginfo.join_tab;
...
add_cond_and_fix(&referred_tab->select_cond, notnull);
For UPDATE described in bug report referred_tab is 0 and dereferencing it
crashes the server.
- Print warning that says display width is not supported for datatype TIMESTAMP, if user tries to create a TIMESTAMP column with display width.
- Use display width for TIMESTAMP only in type_timestamp test to make sure warning is displayed correctly.
Don't produce data truncation warnings from within cp_buffer_from_ref(). This function
is only used to make index search tuples and data truncation that occurs here has no
relation with truncated values being saved into tables.