on large length
Problem: Most (all) of the numeric inputs were being coerced into
int (32 bit) sized variables. Works OK for sane inputs; any input
larger than 2^32 (or 2^31 for signed vars) exihibited predictable
wrapping behavior (up to about 10^18) and then started having really
strange behaviour past that point (since the conversion to 64 bit int
from the DECIMAL type can do weird things on out of range numbers).
Solution: 1) Add many tests. 2) Convert input from (u)long type to
(u)longlong. 3) Do (sometimes multiple) sanity checks on input,
keeping in mind that sometimes a negative longlong is not a negative
longlong (if the unsigned_flag is set). 4) Emulate existing behavior
w/rt negative and "small" out-of-bounds values.
- When returning metadata for scalar subqueries the actual type of the
column was calculated based on the value type, which limits the actual
type of a scalar subselect to the set of (currently) 3 basic types :
integer, double precision or string. This is the reason that columns
of types other then the basic ones (e.g. date/time) are reported as
being of the corresponding basic type.
Fixed by storing/returning information for the column type in addition
to the result type.
Problem: GROUP_CONCAT on a multi-byte column can truncate
in the middle of a multibyte character when applying
group_concat_max_len limit. It produces an invalid
multi-byte character in the result string.
The second, easier version - reusing old "warning_for_row" flag,
instead of introducing of "result_is_full" - which was
added in the previous commit.
The Item_func_mod objects never had maybe_null set, so users had no reason
to expect that they can be NULL, and may therefore deduce wrong results.
Now, set maybe_null.
The parser is allocating Item_field for references by name in ORDER BY
expressions. Such expressions however may point not only to Item_field
in the select list (or to a table column) but also to an arbitrary Item.
This causes Item_field::fix_fields to throw an error about missing
column.
The fix substitutes Item_field for the reference with an Item_ref when
not pointing to Item_field.
When we write 'query=...' string to a frm file for views on a slave,
indentifiers are not properly quoted due to missing OPTION_QUOTE_SHOW_CREATE
flag in the thd->options.
Fix: properly set thd->options for the slave thread.
Necessary changes if one of the test scripts is to be used with a RPM installation (bug#17194).
This change handles finding the server and the other programs,
but it does not solve the problem to get a writable "var" directory.
If we want to avoid world-writable directories below "/usr/share/mysql-test" (and we do!),
any automatic solution would require fixed decisions which may not match the local installation.
For the Perl script, use "--vardir"; for the shell script, create "mysql-test/var" manually.
(4.1 version, with post-review fixes)
The fix for another Bug (6439) limited FROM_UNIXTIME() to
TIMESTAMP_MAX_VALUE which is 2145916799 or 2037-12-01 23:59:59 GMT,
however unix timestamp in general is not considered to be limited
by this value. All dates up to power(2,31)-1 are valid.
This patch extends allowed TIMESTAMP range so, that max
TIMESTAMP value is power(2,31)-1. It also corrects
FROM_UNIXTIME() and UNIX_TIMESTAMP() functions, so that
max allowed UNIX_TIMESTAMP() is power(2,31)-1. FROM_UNIXTIME()
is fixed accordingly to allow conversion of dates up to
2038-01-19 03:14:07 UTC. The patch also fixes CONVERT_TZ()
function to allow extended range of dates.
The main problem solved in the patch is possible overflows
of variables, used in broken-time representation to time_t
conversion (required for UNIX_TIMESTAMP).
sync using replicate-wild-ignore-table
Problem: changes in character set variables
before an action on an replication-ignored table
makes slave to forget new variable values.
Fix: initialize one_shot variables only when
4.1 -> 5.x replication is running.
This is a performance issue for queries with subqueries evaluation
of which requires filesort.
Allocation of memory for the sort buffer at each evaluation of a
subquery may take a significant amount of time if the buffer is rather big.
With the fix we allocate the buffer at the first evaluation of the
subquery and reuse it at each subsequent evaluation.
Evaluate "NULL IN (SELECT ...)" in a special way: Disable pushed-down
conditions and their "consequences":
= Do full table scans instead of unique_[index_subquery] lookups.
= Change appropriate "ref_or_null" accesses to full table scans in
subquery's joins.
Also cache value of NULL IN (SELECT ...) if the SELECT is not correlated
wrt any upper select.
Item::val_xxx() may be called by the server several times at execute time
for a single query. Calls to val_xxx() may be very expensive and sometimes
(count(distinct), sum(distinct), avg(distinct)) not possible.
To avoid that problem the results of calculation for these aggregate
functions are cached so that val_xxx() methods just return the calculated
value for the second and subsequent calls.
It's not possible to flush the global status variables in 5.0
Update test case so it works by recording the value of handle_rollback
before and compare it to the value after
Problem: SHOW CREATE TABLE printed garbage in table
name for tables having TURKISH I
(i.e. LATIN CAPITABLE LETTER I WITH DOT ABOVE)
when lower-case-table-name=1.
Reason: In some cases during lower/upper conversion in utf8,
the result string can be shorter the original string
(including the above letter). Old implementation of caseup_str()
and casedn_str() didn't handle the result length properly,
assuming that length cannot change.
This fix changes the result type of cs->cset->casedn_str()
and cs->cset->caseup_str() from VOID to UINT, to return
the result length, as well as put '\0' terminator on a
proper place.
Also, my_caseup_str_utf8() and my_casedn_str_utf8() were
rewritten not to use strlen() for performance purposes.
It was done with help of adding of new functions - my_utf8_uni_no_range()
and my_uni_utf8_no_range() - for null terminated strings.
Problem: Too confusing error message when cannot convert
between string and column character sets on INSERT and UPDATE.
Fix: producing a better error message, instead of "Data too long"
in such cases
Additional changes: Adding "DROP TABLE IF EXISTS" into several
tests to be safe against failures in previous tests.
decimal->ulong conversion fixed to assign max possible ULONG if decimal
is bigger
Item_func_unsigned now handles DECIMAL parameter separately as we can't
rely on decimal::val_int result here.
a updatable view.
When there's a VIEW on a base table that have AUTO_INCREMENT column, and
this VIEW doesn't provide an access such column, after INSERT to such
VIEW LAST_INSERT_ID() did not return the value just generated.
This behaviour is intended and correct, because if the VIEW doesn't list
some columns then these columns are effectively hidden from the user,
and so any side effects of inserting default values to them.
However, there was a bug that such statement inserting into a view would
reset LAST_INSERT_ID() instead of leaving it unchanged.
This patch restores the original value of LAST_INSERT_ID() instead of
resetting it to zero.
If the error happens during DELETE IGNORE, nothing could be send to the
client, thus leaving it frozen expecting the reply.
The problem was that if some error occurred, it wouldn't be reported to
the client because of IGNORE, but neither success would be reported.
MySQL 4.1 would not freeze the client, but will report
ERROR 1105 (HY000): Unknown error
instead, which is also a bug.
The solution is to report success if we are in DELETE IGNORE and some
non-fatal error has happened.
select OK.
The SQL parser was using Item::name to transfer user defined function attributes
to the user defined function (udf). It was not distinguishing between user defined
function call arguments and stored procedure call arguments. Setting Item::name
was causing Item_ref::print() method to print the argument as quoted identifiers
and caused views that reference aggregate functions as udf call arguments (and
rely on Item::print() for the text of the view to store) to throw an undefined
identifier error.
Overloaded Item_ref::print to print aggregate functions as such when printing
the references to aggregate functions taken out of context by split_sum_func2()
Fixed the parser to properly detect using AS clause in stored procedure arguments
as an error.
Fixed printing the arguments of udf call to print properly the udf attribute.