When dumping database from a 4.x server, the mysqldump client
inserted a delimiter sign inside special commentaries of the form:
/*!... CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS ... ;*/
During restoration that dump file was splitten by delimiter signs on
the client side, and the rest of some commentary strings was prepended
to following statements.
The 4x_server_emul test case option has been added for use with the
DBUG_EXECUTE_IF debugging macro. This option affects debug server
builds only to emulate particular behavior of a 4.x server for
the mysqldump client testing. Non-debugging builds are not affected.
mysql-test/r/mysqldump-compat.result:
Added test case for bug #30126.
mysql-test/t/mysqldump-compat.opt:
Added test case for bug #30126.
mysql-test/t/mysqldump-compat.test:
Added test case for bug #30126.
sql/sql_parse.cc:
Fixed bug #30126.
The mysqldump client uses the "SHOW CREATE DATABASE" query to
obtain the "CREATE DATABASE" statement from that database.
The 4.x server doesn't recognise that query, and mysqldump
forms the "CREATE DATABASE" statement from scratch.
That statement was formed incorrectly.
To enforce the mysqldump client to create that statement from
scratch, debugging code has been added to the mysql_execute_command
function: in tcase of the --loose-debug=d,4x_server_emul option,
the server returns parse error to client to emulate old behaviour.
The 4x_server_emul test case option has been added for use with the
DBUG_EXECUTE_IF debugging macro. This option affects debug server
builds only to emulate particular behavior of a 4.x server for
the mysqldump client testing. Non-debugging builds are not affected.
client/mysqldump.c:
Fixed bug #30126.
The init_dumping_tables function has been modified to output semicolon
outside of commentaries.
Problem:
In cases when a client-side macro appears inside a server-side comment, the add_line() function in mysql.cc discarded all characters until the next delimiter to remove macro arguments from the query string. This resulted in broken queries being sent to the server when the next delimiter character appeared past the comment's boundaries, because the comment closing sequence ('*/') was discarded.
Fix:
If a client-side macro appears inside a server-side comment, discard all characters in the comment after the macro (that is, until the end of the comment rather than the next delimiter).
This is a minimal fix to allow only simple cases used by the mysqlbinlog utility. Limitations that are worth documenting:
- Nested server-side and/or client-side comments are not supported by mysql.cc
- Using client-side macros in multi-line server-side comments is not supported
- All characters after a client-side macro in a server-side comment will be omitted from the query string (and thus, will not be sent to server).
client/mysql.cc:
If a client-side macro appears inside a server-side comment, discard all characters in the comment after the macro.
mysql-test/r/mysql.result:
Added a test case for bug #30164.
mysql-test/t/mysql.test:
Added a test case for bug #30164.
comments)
Before this fix, the server would accept queries that contained comments,
even when the comments were not properly closed with a '*' '/' marker.
For example,
select 1 /* + 2 <EOF>
would be accepted as
select 1 /* + 2 */ <EOF>
and executed as
select 1
With this fix, the server now rejects queries with unclosed comments
as syntax errors.
Both regular comments ('/' '*') and special comments ('/' '*' '!') must be
closed with '*' '/' to be parsed correctly.
mysql-test/r/comments.result:
Unbalanced comments are a syntax error.
mysql-test/t/comments.test:
Unbalanced comments are a syntax error.
sql/sql_lex.cc:
Unbalanced comments are a syntax error.
seems to be converted as varbinary.
The bug has been already fixed. This CS just adds a test case for it.
mysql-test/r/sp.result:
Update result file.
mysql-test/t/sp.test:
Test case for BUG#13675.
into linux-st28.site:/home/martin/mysql/src/bugx/my50-bugx
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test:
Auto merged
sql/sql_select.cc:
Auto merged
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
SCCS merged
This is a performance bug, affecting in particular the bison generated code
for the parser.
Prior to this fix, the grammar used a long chain of reduces to parse an
expression, like:
bit_expr -> bit_term
bit_term -> bit_factor
bit_factor -> value_expr
value_expr -> term
term -> factor
etc
This chain of reduces cause the internal state automaton in the generated
parser to execute more state transitions and more reduces, so that the
generated MySQLParse() function would spend a lot of time looping to execute
all the grammar reductions.
With this patch, the grammar has been reorganized so that rules are more
"flat", limiting the depth of reduces needed to parse <expr>.
Tests have been written to enforce that relative priorities and properties
of operators have not changed while changing the grammar.
See the bug report for performance data.
mysql-test/r/parser_precedence.result:
Improved test coverage for operator precedence
mysql-test/t/parser_precedence.test:
Improved test coverage for operator precedence
sql/sql_yacc.yy:
Simplified the grammar to improve performances
Currently the Last_query_cost session status variable shows
only the cost of a single flat subselect. For complex queries
(with subselects or unions etc) Last_query_cost is not valid
as it was showing the cost for the last optimized subselect.
Fixed by reseting to zero Last_query_cost when the complete
cost of the query cannot be determined.
Last_query_cost will be non-zero only for single flat queries.
mysql-test/r/status.result:
Bug #30377: test case
mysql-test/t/status.test:
Bug #30377: test case
sql/sql_lex.h:
Bug #30377: helper function
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #30377: don't assign cost if not on single level statement
- Merge sslaccept and sslconnect.
- Atomically "reset" vio to VIO_TYPE_SSL when the SSL connection has
succeeded, this avoids having to revert anything and thus protects
against "close_active_vio" in the middle.
- Add some variance to the testcase
mysql-test/t/rpl_ssl.test:
Add some variance by running two selects before stopping the slave
Check that number of records in t1 are equal on master and slave
vio/viossl.c:
Rewrite sslconnect and sslaccept to automically "reset" the vio
to VIO_TYPE_SSL. Also use the fd from 'SSL_get_fd' to avoid
setting vio->sd to -1, that previously occured when "close_active_vio"
was called during connect/accept.
Merge the two function since they were exactly the same except for one line.
Update the DBUG printouts to be generic(i.e use peer instead of client/server).
The optimization that uses a unique index to remove GROUP BY, did not
ensure that the index was actually used, thus violating the ORDER BY
that is impled by GROUP BY.
Fixed by replacing GROUP BY with ORDER BY if the GROUP BY clause contains
a unique index. In case GROUP BY ... ORDER BY null is used, GROUP BY is
simply removed.
BitKeeper/etc/ignore:
Added support-files/mysqld_multi.server tests/bug25714 cscope.in.out cscope.out cscope.po.out to the ignore list
mysql-test/r/distinct.result:
Bug#30596: Changed test case.
Prior to Bug#16458, These queries use temp table and filesort. The
bug was that they used a temp table. However, that patch removed
filesort also, in which case we can no longer gurantee correct ordering.
mysql-test/r/group_by.result:
Bug#30596: Correct result
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
Bug#30596: Test case for innodb. Here, as opposed to for MyISAM, row
lookup is done using index whenever the index covers the group list.
mysql-test/t/group_by.test:
Bug#30596: Test case
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test:
Bug#30596: Test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#30596: The fix, replacing GROUP BY with ORDER BY unless
ORDER BY [NULL|<constant>]
If, after the tables are locked, one of the conditions to read from a
HANDLER table is not met, the handler code wrongly jumps to a error path
that won't unlock the tables.
The user-visible effect is that after a error in a handler read command,
all subsequent handler operations on the same table will hang.
The fix is simply to correct the code to jump to the (same) error path that
unlocks the tables.
mysql-test/r/handler.result:
Bug#30632 test case result
mysql-test/t/handler.test:
Bug#30632 test case
sql/sql_handler.cc:
Always unlock the internal and external table level locks if any of the conditions
(including errors) to read from a HANDLER table are not met.
The problem from a user's perspective: user creates table A, and then tries
to CREATE TABLE a SELECT from A - and this causes a deadlock error, a hang,
or fails with a debug assert, but only if the storage engine is InnoDB.
The origin of the problem: InnoDB uses case-insensitive collation
(system_charset_info) when looking up the internal table share, thus returning
the same share for 'a' and 'A'.
Cause of the user-visible behavior: since the same share is returned to SQL
locking subsystem, it assumes that the same table is first locked (within the
same session) for WRITE, and then for READ, and returns a deadlock error.
However, the code is wrong in not properly cleaning up upon an error, leaving
external locks in place, which leads to assertion failures and hangs.
Fix that has been implemented: the SQL layer should properly propagate the
deadlock error, cleaning up and freeing all resources.
Further work towards a more complete solution: InnoDB should not use case
insensitive collation for table share hash if table names on disk honor the case.
mysql-test/r/innodb-deadlock.result:
Bug#25164 test case result
mysql-test/t/innodb-deadlock.test:
Bug#25164 test case. The CREATE TABLE may fail depending on the character set
of the system and filesystem, but it should never hang.
sql/lock.cc:
Unlock the storage engine "external" table level locks, if the MySQL thr_lock
locking subsystem detects a deadlock error.
This is a performance bug, related to the parsing or 'OR' and 'AND' boolean
expressions.
Let N be the number of expressions involved in a OR (respectively AND).
When N=1
For example, "select 1" involve only 1 term: there is no OR operator.
In 4.0 and 4.1, parsing expressions not involving OR had no overhead.
In 5.0, parsing adds some overhead, with Select->expr_list.
With this patch, the overhead introduced in 5.0 has been removed,
so that performances for N=1 should be identical to the 4.0 performances,
which are optimal (there is no code executed at all)
The overhead in 5.0 was in fact affecting significantly some operations.
For example, loading 1 Million rows into a table with INSERTs,
for a table that has 100 columns, leads to parsing 100 Millions of
expressions, which means that the overhead related to Select->expr_list
is executed 100 Million times ...
Considering that N=1 is by far the most probable expression,
this case should be optimal.
When N=2
For example, "select a OR b" involves 2 terms in the OR operator.
In 4.0 and 4.1, parsing expressions involving 2 terms created 1 Item_cond_or
node, which is the expected result.
In 5.0, parsing these expression also produced 1 node, but with some extra
overhead related to Select->expr_list : creating 1 list in Select->expr_list
and another in Item_cond::list is inefficient.
With this patch, the overhead introduced in 5.0 has been removed
so that performances for N=2 should be identical to the 4.0 performances.
Note that the memory allocation uses the new (thd->mem_root) syntax
directly.
The cost of "is_cond_or" is estimated to be neglectable: the real problem
of the performance degradation comes from unneeded memory allocations.
When N>=3
For example, "select a OR b OR c ...", which involves 3 or more terms.
In 4.0 and 4.1, the parser had no significant cost overhead, but produced
an Item tree which is difficult to evaluate / optimize during runtime.
In 5.0, the parser produces a better Item tree, using the Item_cond
constructor that accepts a list of children directly, but at an extra cost
related to Select->expr_list.
With this patch, the code is implemented to take the best of the two
implementations:
- there is no overhead with Select->expr_list
- the Item tree generated is optimized and flattened.
This is achieved by adding children nodes into the Item tree directly,
with Item_cond::add(), which avoids the need for temporary lists and memory
allocation
Note that this patch also provide an extra optimization, that the previous
code in 5.0 did not provide: expressions are flattened in the Item tree,
based on what the expression already parsed is, and not based on the order
in which rules are reduced.
For example : "(a OR b) OR c", "a OR (b OR c)" would both be represented
with 2 Item_cond_or nodes before this patch, and with 1 node only with this
patch. The logic used is based on the mathematical properties of the OR
operator (it's associative), and produces a simpler tree.
sql/item_cmpfunc.h:
Improved performances for parsing boolean expressions
sql/sql_yacc.yy:
Improved performances for parsing boolean expressions
mysql-test/r/parser_precedence.result:
Added test cases to cover boolean operator precedence
mysql-test/t/parser_precedence.test:
Added test cases to cover boolean operator precedence
into adventure.(none):/home/thek/Development/cpp/mysql-5.0-runtime
mysql-test/r/query_cache.result:
Auto merged
mysql-test/t/query_cache.test:
Auto merged
Although the query cache doesn't support retrieval of statements containing
column level access control, it was still possible to cache such statements
thus wasting memory.
This patch extends the access control check on the target tables to avoid
caching a statement with column level restrictions.
Views are excepted and can be cached but only retrieved by super user account.
mysql-test/t/query_cache_with_views.test:
Rename: mysql-test/t/view_query_cache.test -> mysql-test/t/query_cache_with_views.test
mysql-test/r/query_cache_with_views.result:
Rename: mysql-test/r/view_query_cache.result -> mysql-test/r/query_cache_with_views.result
mysql-test/r/query_cache.result:
Modified test case to allow caching of views
mysql-test/t/query_cache.test:
Modified test case to allow caching of views
sql/sql_cache.cc:
Allow caching of views
added SUPER_ACL check for I_S.TRIGGERS
mysql-test/r/information_schema.result:
result fix
mysql-test/r/information_schema_db.result:
result fix
mysql-test/t/information_schema.test:
test case
sql/sql_show.cc:
added SUPER_ACL check for I_S.TRIGGERS
into adventure.(none):/home/thek/Development/cpp/mysql-5.0-runtime
mysql-test/r/query_cache.result:
Auto merged
mysql-test/t/query_cache.test:
Auto merged
Although the query cache doesn't support retrieval of statements containing
column level access control, it was still possible to cache such statements
thus wasting memory.
This patch extends the access control check on the target tables to avoid
caching a statement with column level restrictions.
mysql-test/r/query_cache.result:
Added test
mysql-test/t/query_cache.test:
Added test
sql/sql_cache.cc:
The function check_table_access leaves the artifact
grant.want_privileges= 1, if a statement refers to tables with column level
privileges. To avoid the statement from being stored into the query cache,
it is enough to check this flag and set 'safe_to_cache_query' to zero.
sql/sql_cache.h:
- Removed 'static' attribute or class methods
- Added THD parameter to process_and_count_tables
HEAP tables can't index BIT fields. Due to this when grouping by such fields is
needed they are converted to a fields of the LONG type when temporary table
is being created. But a side effect of this is that a wrong type of BIT
fields is returned to a client.
Now the JOIN::prepare and the create_distinct_group functions are create
additional hidden copy of BIT fields to preserve original fields untouched.
New hidden fields are used for grouping instead.
mysql-test/t/type_bit.test:
Added a test case for the bug#30245: A wrong type of a BIT field is reported when grouped by it.
mysql-test/r/type_bit.result:
Added a test case for the bug#30245: A wrong type of a BIT field is reported when grouped by it.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#30245: A wrong type of a BIT field is reported when grouped by it.
Now the JOIN::prepare and the create_distinct_group functions are create
additional hidden copy of BIT fields to preserve original fields untouched.
New hidden fields are used for grouping instead.
The bug caused memory corruption for some queries with top OR level
in the WHERE condition if they contained equality predicates and
other sargable predicates in disjunctive parts of the condition.
The corruption happened because the upper bound of the memory
allocated for KEY_FIELD and SARGABLE_PARAM internal structures
containing info about potential lookup keys was calculated incorrectly
in some cases. In particular it was calculated incorrectly when the
WHERE condition was an OR formula with disjuncts being AND formulas
including equalities and other sargable predicates.
mysql-test/r/select.result:
Added a test case for bug #30396.
mysql-test/t/select.test:
Added a test case for bug #30396.
sql/item_cmpfunc.h:
Removed max_members from the COND_EQUAL class as not useful anymore.
sql/sql_base.cc:
Added the max_equal_elems field to the st_select_lex structure.
sql/sql_lex.cc:
Added the max_equal_elems field to the st_select_lex structure.
sql/sql_lex.h:
Added the max_equal_elems field to the st_select_lex structure.
The field contains the maximal number of elements in multiple equalities
built for the query conditions.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fixed bug #30396.
The bug caused memory corruption for some queries with top OR level
in the WHERE condition if they contained equality predicates and
other sargable predicates in disjunctive parts of the condition.
The corruption happened because the upper bound of the memory
allocated for KEY_FIELD and SARGABLE_PARAM internal structures
containing info about potential lookup keys was calculated incorrectly
in some cases. In particular it was calculated incorrectly when the
WHERE condition was an OR formula with disjuncts being AND formulas
including equalities and other sargable predicates.
The max_equal_elems field to the st_select_lex structure is used now
to calculate the above mentioned upper bound. The field contains the
maximal number of elements in multiple equalities built for the query
conditions.