removed in MySQL 6.0
CREATE TABLE... TYPE= returns the warning "The syntax
'TYPE=storage_engine' is deprecated and will be removed in
MySQL 6.0. Please use 'ENGINE=storage_engine' instead"
This syntax is deprecated already from version 5.4.4, so
the message has been changed.
In addition, the deprecation macro was changed to reflect
the ServerPT decision not to include version number in the
warning message.
A number of test result files have been changed as a
consequence of the change in the deprecation macro.
Grouping by a subquery in a query with a distinct aggregate
function lead to a wrong result (wrong and unordered
grouping values).
There are two related problems:
1) The query like this:
SELECT (SELECT t1.a) aa, COUNT(DISTINCT b) c
FROM t1 GROUP BY aa
returned wrong result, because the outer reference "t1.a"
in the subquery was substituted with the Item_ref item.
The Item_ref item obtains data from the result_field object
that refreshes once after the end of each group. This data
is not applicable to filesort since filesort() doesn't care
about groups (and doesn't update result_field objects with
copy_fields() and so on). Also that data is not applicable
to group separation algorithm: end_send_group() checks every
record with test_if_group_changed() that evaluates Item_ref
items, but it refreshes those Item_ref-s only after the end
of group, that is a vicious circle and the grouped column
values in the output are shifted.
Fix: if
a) we grouping by a subquery and
b) that subquery has outer references to FROM list
of the grouping query,
then we substitute these outer references with
Item_direct_ref like references under aggregate
functions: Item_direct_ref obtains data directly
from the current record.
2) The query with a non-trivial grouping expression like:
SELECT (SELECT t1.a) aa, COUNT(DISTINCT b) c
FROM t1 GROUP BY aa+0
also returned wrong result, since JOIN::exec() substitutes
references to top-level aliases in SELECT list with Item_copy
caching items. Item_copy items have same refreshing policy
as Item_ref items, so the whole groping expression with
Item_copy inside returns wrong result in filesort() and
end_send_group().
Fix: include aliased items into GROUP BY item tree instead
of Item_ref references to them.
Several items said to be deprecated in the 4.1 manual
have never been removed. This worklog adds deprecation
warnings when these items are used, and warns the user
that the items will be removed in MySQL 5.6.
A couple of previously deprecation decision have been
reversed (see single file comments)
Invalid (old?) table or database name in logs
Problem was still not completely fixed, due to
qouting.
This is the server side only fix (in explain_filename),
the change from filename_to_tablename to use explain_filename
in the InnoDB code must be done before the bug is
fixed.
Invalid (old?) table or database name in logs
Post push patch.
Bug was that a non partitioned table file was not
converted to system_charset, (due to table_name_len was not set).
Also missing DBUG_RETURN.
And Innodb adds quotes after calling the function,
so I added one more mode where explain_filename does not
add quotes. But it still appends the [sub]partition name
as a comment.
Also caught a minor quoting bug, the character '`' was
not quoted in the identifier. (so 'a`b' was quoted as `a`b`
and not `a``b`, this is mulitbyte characters aware.)
or database name in logs
Problem was that InnoDB used filenam_to_tablename,
which do not handle partitions (due to the '#' in
the filename).
Solution is to add a new function for explaining
what the filename means: explain_filename.
It expands the database, table, partition and subpartition
parts and uses errmsg.txt for localization.
It also converts from my_charset_filename to system_charset_info
(i.e. human readable form for non ascii characters).
http://lists.mysql.com/commits/70370
2773 Mattias Jonsson 2009-03-25
It has three different output styles.
NOTE: This is the server side ONLY part (introducing the explain_filename
function). There will be a patch for InnoDB using this function to solve
the bug.
old_password() functions
The PASSWORD() and OLD_PASSWORD() functions could lead to
memory reads outside of an internal buffer when used with BLOB
arguments.
String::c_ptr() assumes there is at least one extra byte
in the internally allocated buffer when adding the trailing
'\0'. This, however, may not be the case when a String object
was initialized with externally allocated buffer.
The bug was fixed by adding an additional "length" argument to
make_scrambled_password_323() and make_scrambled_password() in
order to avoid String::c_ptr() calls for
PASSWORD()/OLD_PASSWORD().
However, since the make_scrambled_password[_323] functions are
a part of the client library ABI, the functions with the new
interfaces were implemented with the 'my_' prefix in their
names, with the old functions changed to be wrappers around
the new ones to maintain interface compatibility.
always rollsback.
The global variable max_binlog_cache_size cannot be set more than 4GB on
32 bit systems, limiting transactions of all storage engines to 4G of changes.
The problem is max_binlog_cache_size is declared as ulong which is 4 bytes
on 32 bit and 8 bytes on 64 bit machines.
Fixed by using ulonglong for max_binlog_cache_size which is 8bytes on 32
and 64 bit machines.The range for max_binlog_cache_size on 32 bit and 64 bit
systems is 4096-18446744073709547520 bytes.
UNION could convert fixed-point FLOAT(M,D)/DOUBLE(M,D) columns
to FLOAT/DOUBLE when aggregating data types from the SELECT
substatements. While there is nothing particularly wrong with
this behavior, especially when M is greater than the hardware
precision limits, it could be confusing in cases when all
SELECT statements in a union have the same
FLOAT(M,D)/DOUBLE(M,D) columns with equal precision
specifications listed in the same position.
Since the manual is quite vague on what data type should be
returned in such cases, the bug was fixed by implementing the
most 'expected' behavior: do not convert FLOAT(M,D)/DOUBLE(M,D)
to anything else if all SELECT statements in a UNION have the
same precision for that column.
When the thread executing a DDL was killed after finished its
execution but before writing the binlog event, the error code in
the binlog event could be set wrongly to ER_SERVER_SHUTDOWN or
ER_QUERY_INTERRUPTED.
This patch fixed the problem by ignoring the kill status when
constructing the event for DDL statements.
This patch also included the following changes in order to
provide the test case.
1) modified mysqltest to support variable for connection command
2) modified mysql-test-run.pl, add new variable MYSQL_SLAVE to
run mysql client against the slave mysqld.
- Add support for setting it as a server commandline argument
- Add support for those switches:
= no_index_merge
= no_index_merge_union
= no_index_merge_sort_union
= no_index_merge_intersection
bug#33094: Error in upgrading from 5.0 to 5.1 when table contains
triggers
and
#41385: Crash when attempting to repair a #mysql50# upgraded table
with triggers.
Problem:
1. trigger code didn't assume a table name may have
a "#mysql50#" prefix, that may lead to a failing ASSERT().
2. "ALTER DATABASE ... UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAME" failed
for databases with "#mysql50#" prefix if any trigger.
3. mysqlcheck --fix-table-name didn't use UTF8 as a default
character set that resulted in (parsing) errors for tables with
non-latin symbols in their names and definitions of triggers.
Fix:
1. properly handle table/database names with "#mysql50#" prefix.
2. handle --default-character-set mysqlcheck option;
if mysqlcheck is launched with --fix-table-name or --fix-db-name
set default character set to UTF8 if no --default-character-set
option given.
Note: if given --fix-table-name or --fix-db-name option,
without --default-character-set mysqlcheck option
default character set is UTF8.
The problem is that the query cache stores packets containing
the server status of the time when the cached statement was run.
This might lead to a wrong transaction status in the client side
if a statement is cached during a transaction and is later served
outside a transaction context (and vice-versa).
The solution is to take into account the transaction status when
storing in and serving from the query cache.
The problem is that we cannot insert new record into memory table
when table size exceeds max memory table size.
The fix is to use schema_table_store_record() function which
converts memory table into MyISAM in case of table size exceeding.
Note:
There is no test case for this bug, the reason is that
1. The code that was added already is checked(i.e. works) with existing tests
2. Correct work of schema_table_store_record() is checked with other test cases
(information_schema tests)
So new code is fully covered with existing test cases.
The MONTHNAME/DAYNAME functions
returns binary string, so the LOWER/UPPER functions
are not effective on the result of MONTHNAME/DAYNAME call.
Character set of the MONTHNAME/DAYNAME function
result has been changed to connection character set.