into magare.gmz:/home/kgeorge/mysql/autopush/B26261-5.0-opt
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Auto merged
sql/sql_insert.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
Auto merged
mysql-test/r/insert_update.result:
SCCS merged
mysql-test/t/insert_update.test:
SCCS merged
INSERT uses query_id to verify what fields are
mentioned in the fields list of the INSERT command.
However the check for that is made after the
ON DUPLICATE KEY is processed. This causes all
the fields mentioned in ON DUPLICATE KEY to be
considered as mentioned in the fields list of
INSERT.
Moved the check up, right after processing the
fields list.
mysql-test/r/insert_update.result:
Bug #26261: test case
mysql-test/t/insert_update.test:
Bug #26261: test case
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Bug #26261: moved the check inside mysql_prepare_insert
sql/sql_insert.cc:
Bug #26261: move the check inside mysql_prepare_insert
before setting up the ON DUPLICATE KEY part
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
Bug #26261: moved the check inside mysql_prepare_insert
The crash happens when 'skip-grant-tables' is enabled.
We skip the filling of I_S privilege tables
if acl_cache is not initialized.
mysql-test/r/skip_grants.result:
test result
mysql-test/t/skip_grants.test:
test case
sql/sql_acl.cc:
skip filling of I_S privilege tables
if acl_cache is not initialized
into dev3-240.dev.cn.tlan:/home/justin.he/mysql/mysql-5.0/mysql-5.0-ndb-bj-merge
ndb/src/mgmclient/CommandInterpreter.cpp:
Auto merged
ndb/src/mgmsrv/ConfigInfo.cpp:
Auto merged
ndb/src/ndbapi/NdbScanFilter.cpp:
Auto merged
- test suites developed by QA
- additional 'fast' test options
Makefile.am:
Added test options to cover
- test suites developed by QA
- additional 'fast' test options
touched but not actually changed.
The LAST_INSERT_ID() is reset to 0 if no rows were inserted or changed.
This is the case when an INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE updates a row
with the same values as the row contains.
Now the LAST_INSERT_ID() values is reset to 0 only if there were no rows
successfully inserted or touched.
The new 'touched' field is added to the COPY_INFO structure. It holds the
number of rows that were touched no matter whether they were actually
changed or not.
sql/sql_class.h:
Bug#27033: 0 as LAST_INSERT_ID() after INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE if rows were
touched but not actually changed.
The new 'touched' field is added to the COPY_INFO structure. It holds the
number of rows that were touched no matter whether they were actually
changed or not.
mysql-test/r/insert_update.result:
Added a test case for the bug#27033: 0 as LAST_INSERT_ID() after INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE if rows were
touched but not actually changed.
mysql-test/t/insert_update.test:
Added a test case for the bug#27033: 0 as LAST_INSERT_ID() after INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE if rows were
touched but not actually changed.
sql/sql_insert.cc:
Bug#27033: 0 as LAST_INSERT_ID() after INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE if rows were
touched but not actually changed.
Now the LAST_INSERT_ID() values is reset to 0 only if there were no rows
successfully inserted or touched.
TABLE ... WRITE".
Memory and CPU hogging occured when connection which had to wait for table
lock was serviced by thread which previously serviced connection that was
killed (note that connections can reuse threads if thread cache is enabled).
One possible scenario which exposed this problem was when thread which
provided binlog dump to replication slave was implicitly/automatically
killed when the same slave reconnected and started pulling data through
different thread/connection.
The problem also occured when one killed particular query in connection
(using KILL QUERY) and later this connection had to wait for some table
lock.
This problem was caused by the fact that thread-specific mysys_var::abort
variable, which indicates that waiting operations on mysys layer should
be aborted (this includes waiting for table locks), was set by kill
operation but was never reset back. So this value was "inherited" by the
following statements or even other connections (which reused the same
physical thread). Such discrepancy between this variable and THD::killed
flag broke logic on SQL-layer and caused CPU and memory hogging.
This patch tries to fix this problem by properly resetting this member.
There is no test-case associated with this patch since it is hard to test
for memory/CPU hogging conditions in our test-suite.
sql/mysqld.cc:
We should not forget to reset THD::mysys_var::abort after kill operation
if we are going to use thread to which this operation was applied for
handling of other connections.
sql/sp_head.cc:
We should not forget to reset THD::mysys_var::abort after kill operation
if we are going to use thread to which this operation was applied for
handling of further statements.
sql/sql_parse.cc:
We should not forget to reset THD::mysys_var::abort after kill operation
if we are going to use thread to which this operation was applied for
handling of further statements.
TABLE ... WRITE".
CPU hogging occured when connection which had to wait for table lock was
serviced by thread which previously serviced connection that was killed
(note that connections can reuse threads if thread cache is enabled).
One possible scenario which exposed this problem was when thread which
provided binlog dump to replication slave was implicitly/automatically
killed when the same slave reconnected and started pulling data through
different thread/connection.
In 5.* versions memory hogging was added to CPU hogging. Moreover in
those versions the problem also occured when one killed particular query
in connection (using KILL QUERY) and later this connection had to wait for
some table lock.
This problem was caused by the fact that thread-specific mysys_var::abort
variable, which indicates that waiting operations on mysys layer should
be aborted (this includes waiting for table locks), was set by kill
operation but was never reset back. So this value was "inherited" by the
following statements or even other connections (which reused the same
physical thread). Such discrepancy between this variable and THD::killed
flag broke logic on SQL-layer and caused CPU and memory hogging.
This patch tries to fix this problem by properly resetting this member.
There is no test-case associated with this patch since it is hard to test
for memory/CPU hogging conditions in our test-suite.
sql/mysqld.cc:
We should not forget to reset THD::mysys_var::abort after kill operation
if we are going to use thread to which this operation was applied for
handling of other connections.
Altering to a decimal field we get double value then store it
that may cause data loss.
Fix: use store_decimal() instead.
mysql-test/r/type_newdecimal.result:
Fix for bug #24558: Increasing decimal column length causes data loss
- test result.
mysql-test/t/type_newdecimal.test:
Fix for bug #24558: Increasing decimal column length causes data loss
- test case.
sql/field_conv.cc:
Fix for bug #24558: Increasing decimal column length causes data loss
- if target field's result type is DECIMAL_RESULT
use store_decimal(val_decimal()) in order not to loss data.
Before this fix, the parser would accept illegal code in SQL exceptions
handlers, that later causes the runtime to crash when executing the code,
due to memory violations in the exception handler stack.
The root cause of the problem is instructions within an exception handler
that jumps to code located outside of the handler. This is illegal according
to the SQL 2003 standard, since labels located outside the handler are not
supposed to be visible (they are "out of scope"), so any instruction that
jumps to these labels, like ITERATE or LEAVE, should not parse.
The section of the standard that is relevant for this is :
SQL:2003 SQL/PSM (ISO/IEC 9075-4:2003)
section 13.1 <compound statement>,
syntax rule 4
<quote>
The scope of the <beginning label> is CS excluding every <SQL schema
statement> contained in CS and excluding every
<local handler declaration list> contained in CS. <beginning label> shall
not be equivalent to any other <beginning label>s within that scope.
</quote>
With this fix, the C++ class sp_pcontext, which represent the "parsing
context" tree (a.k.a symbol table) of a stored procedure, has been changed
as follows:
- constructors have been cleaned up, so that only building a root node for
the tree is public; building nodes inside a tree is not public.
- a new member, m_label_scope, indicates if a given syntactic context
belongs to a DECLARE HANDLER block,
- label resolution, in the method find_label(), has been changed to
implement the restriction of scope regarding labels used in a compound
statement.
The actions in the parser, when parsing the body of a SQL exception handler,
have been changed as follows:
- the implementation of an exception handler (DECLARE HANDLER) now creates
explicitly a new sp_pcontext, to isolate the code inside the handler from
the containing compound statement context.
- registering exception handlers as a result occurs in the parent context,
see the rule sp_hcond_element
- the code in sp_hcond_list has been cleaned up, to avoid code duplication
In addition, the flags IN_SIMPLE_CASE and IN_HANDLER, declared in sp_head.h
have been removed, since they are unused and broken by design (as seen with
Bug 19194 (Right recursion in parser for CASE causes excessive stack usage,
limitation), representing a stack in a single flag is not possible.
Tests in sp-error have been added to show that illegal constructs are now
rejected.
Tests in sp have been added for code coverage, to show that ITERATE or LEAVE
statements are legal when jumping to a label in scope, inside the body of
an exception handler.
mysql-test/r/sp-error.result:
SQL Exception handlers define a parsing context for label resolution.
mysql-test/r/sp.result:
SQL Exception handlers define a parsing context for label resolution.
mysql-test/t/sp-error.test:
SQL Exception handlers define a parsing context for label resolution.
mysql-test/t/sp.test:
SQL Exception handlers define a parsing context for label resolution.
sql/sp_head.cc:
Minor cleanup
sql/sp_head.h:
Minor cleanup
sql/sp_pcontext.cc:
SQL Exception handlers define a parsing context for label resolution.
sql/sp_pcontext.h:
SQL Exception handlers define a parsing context for label resolution.
sql/sql_yacc.yy:
SQL Exception handlers define a parsing context for label resolution.
my_seek: Assertion `fd != -1' failed"
In difficult optimize/repair situations the server could crash.
Under some circumstances the server retries an optimize/repair
with more elaborate options. But it did not check if the first
attempt failed so badly that a second one must not be tried.
This could happen when a new data file has been created
but it was not possible to open it. In this case the
repair leaves behind a table with closed data file.
This must not be used for another repair attempt.
We do now detect the closed data file and do not try
another repair attempt in this situation.
No test case. The required table corruption can not be
repeated easily. There is a test program attached to
bug 25433.
sql/ha_myisam.cc:
Bug#25289 - repair table causes "my_seek.c:56:
my_seek: Assertion `fd != -1' failed"
Added code to detect a closed data file. It could be closed
by a preceeding repair attempt. We must not try another
repair then.
Different set of conditions is used to verify
the validity of index definitions over a GEOMETRY
column in ALTER TABLE and CREATE TABLE.
The difference was on how sub-keys notion validity
is checked.
Fixed by extending the CREATE TABLE condition to
support the cases allowed in ALTER TABLE.
Made the SHOW CREATE TABLE not to display spatial
indexes using the sub-key notion.
mysql-test/r/alter_table.result:
Bug #26794: test case
mysql-test/r/gis-rtree.result:
Bug #26794: fixed SHOW CREATE TABLE output.
mysql-test/t/alter_table.test:
Bug #26794: test case
sql/field.cc:
Bug #26794: Allow sub-keys for GEOMETRY
sql/sql_show.cc:
Bug #26794: Don't show sub-key notion
in SHOW CREATE TABLE for SPATIAL indexes.
sql/sql_table.cc:
Bug #26794: Allow sub-keys for GEOMETRY
into mysql.com:/home/svoj/devel/mysql/BUG26881/mysql-5.0-engines
myisam/mi_create.c:
Auto merged
mysql-test/t/merge.test:
Auto merged
sql/ha_myisam.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_parse.cc:
Use local.
mysql-test/r/merge.result:
SCCS merged
differences in tables
Certain merge tables were wrongly reported as having incorrect definition:
- Some fields that are 1 byte long (e.g. TINYINT, CHAR(1)), might
be internally casted (in certain cases) to a different type on a
storage engine layer. (affects 4.1 and up)
- If tables in a merge (and a MERGE table itself) had short VARCHAR column (less
than 4 bytes) and at least one (but not all) tables were ALTER'ed (even to an
identical table: ALTER TABLE xxx ENGINE=yyy), table definitions went ouf of
sync. (affects 4.1 only)
This is fixed by relaxing a check for underlying conformance and setting
field type to FIELD_TYPE_STRING in case varchar is shorter than 4
when a table is created.
myisam/mi_create.c:
Added a comment.
mysql-test/r/merge.result:
A test case for bug#26881.
mysql-test/t/merge.test:
A test case for bug#26881.
sql/ha_myisam.cc:
Relaxed some checks performed by check_definition():
As comparing of fulltext keys (and key segments) is not yet implemented,
only return an error in case one of keys is fulltext and other is not.
Otherwise, if both keys are fulltext, accept them as is.
As comparing of spatial keys (and key segments) is not yet implemented,
only return an error in case one of keys is spatial and other is not.
Otherwise, if both keys are spatial, accept them as is.
A workaround to handle situation when field is casted from FIELD_SKIP_ZERO
to FIELD_NORMAL. This could happen only in case field length is 1 and row
format is fixed.
sql/sql_parse.cc:
When a table that has varchar field shorter than 4 is created, field type is
set to FIELD_TYPE_VAR_STRING. Later, when a table is modified using alter
table, field type is changed to FIELD_TYPE_STRING (see Field_string::type).
That means HA_OPTION_PACK_RECORD flag might be lost and thus null_bit might
be shifted by alter table, in other words alter table doesn't create 100%
equal table definition.
This is usually not a problem, since when a table is created/altered,
definition on a storage engine layer is based on one that is passed from
sql layer. But it is a problem for merge engine - null_bit is shifted when
a table (merge or underlying) is altered.
Set field type to FIELD_TYPE_STRING in case FIELD_TYPE_VAR_STRING is shorter
than 4 when a table is created as it is done in Field::type.
For systems running MySQL through heartbeat, it is imperitive that the startup scripts
not only return correct return values, but do not return until success or failure has been
determined. This is a different behavior than is typically wanted for the startup
of a normal machine.
This patch adds support for a timeout variable for mysql.server. Read from my.cnf, this
variable defaults to 900 (the current default). A value of 0 means not to wait at all for
startup confirmation. A negative value means to wait forever.
support-files/mysql.server.sh:
Added support for a timeout variable to control timing out our wait for server startup. BUG#26952