This test is not slow, but it reliably produces an EXPLAIN difference
(number of rows) on the Valgrind builder. A possible explanation could be
that the purge threads are not being scheduled. Valgrind runs all threads
in a single thread.
When f.ex. table is partitioned by HASH(a) and we rename column `a' to
`b' partitioning filter stays unchanged: HASH(a). That's the wrong
behavior.
The patch updates partitioning filter in accordance to the new columns
names. That includes partition/subpartition expression and
partition/subpartition field list.
Let us disable Valgrind on tests that would fail because a
server shutdown or a STOP SLAVE command would take longer,
causing the test harness to forcibly and silently kill the server
due to an exceeded timeout.
row_purge_get_partial(): Replaces trx_undo_rec_get_partial_row().
Also copy the purge_node_t::ref to the purge_node_t::row.
In this way, the clustered index key fields will always be
available, even if thanks to
commit d384ead0f0 (MDEV-14799)
they would no longer be repeated in the remaining part of the
undo log record.
This commit adds automation that will reduce the possibility
of user errors when customizing wsrep_notify.sh (in particular
caused by user-specified parameters). Now all leading and trailing
spaces are removed from the user-specified parameters and automatic
port and host address substitution has been added to scripts, as
well as automatic password substitution to the client command line,
only if it is specified in the wsrep_notify.sh and not as empty
strings. Also added support for automatic substitution of the all
SSL-related parameters and improved parsing for ipv6 addresses
(to allow "[...]" notation for ipv6 addresses). Also added a
test to check if the wsrep notify script will works with SSL.
The problem is that if table definition cache (TDC) is full of real tables
which are in tables cache, view definition can not stay there so will be
removed by its own underlying tables.
In situation above old mechanism of detection matching definition in PS
and current version always require reprepare and so prevent executing
the PS.
One work around is to increase TDC, other - improve version check for
views/triggers (which is done here). Now in suspicious cases we check:
- timestamp (microseconds) of the view to be sure that version really
have changed;
- time (microseconds) of creation of a trigger related to time
(microseconds) of statement preparation.
- Added missing information about database of corresponding table for various types of commands
- Update some typos
- Reviewed by: <vicentiu@mariadb.org>
This patch resolves the problem of improper name resolution of table
references to embedded CTEs for some queries. This improper binding could
lead to
- infinite sequence of calls of recursive functions
- crashes due to resolution of null pointers
- wrong result sets returned by queries
- bogus error messages
If the definition of a CTE contains with clauses then such CTE is called
embedding CTE while CTEs from the with clauses are called embedded CTEs.
If a table reference used in the definition of an embedded CTE cannot be
resolved within the unit that contains this reference it still may be
resolved against a CTE definition from the with clause with one of the
embedding CTEs.
A table reference can be resolved against a CTE definition if it used in
the the scope of this definition and it refers to the name of the CTE.
Table reference t is in the scope of the CTE definition of CTE cte if
- the definition of cte is an element of a with clause declared as
RECURSIVE and the reference t belongs either to the unit to which
this with clause is attached or to one of the elements of this clause
- the definition of cte is an element of a with clause without RECURSIVE
specifier and the reference t belongs either to the unit to which this
with clause is attached or to one of the elements from this clause that
are placed before the definition of cte.
If a table reference can be resolved against several CTE definitions then
it is bound to the most embedded.
The code before this patch not always resolved table references used in
embedded CTE according to the above rules.
Approved by Oleksandr Byelkin <sanja@mariadb.com>
Nowdays subquery in a UNION's ORDER BY placed correctly in fake select,
the only problem was incorrect Name_resolution_contect is fixed by this
patch in parsing, so we do not need scanning/reseting of ORDER BY of
a union.
There are separate flags DBUG_OFF for disabling the DBUG facility
and ENABLED_DEBUG_SYNC for enabling the DEBUG_SYNC facility.
Let us allow debug builds without DEBUG_SYNC.
Note: For CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug, CMakeLists.txt will continue to
define ENABLED_DEBUG_SYNC.
In commit 28325b0863
a compile-time option was introduced to disable the macros
DBUG_ENTER and DBUG_RETURN or DBUG_VOID_RETURN.
The parameter name WITH_DBUG_TRACE would hint that it also
covers DBUG_PRINT statements. Let us do that: WITH_DBUG_TRACE=OFF
shall disable DBUG_PRINT() as well.
A few InnoDB recovery tests used to check that some output from
DBUG_PRINT("ib_log", ...) is present. We can live without those checks.
Reviewed by: Vladislav Vaintroub
Tests with checking metadata or that cannot be run with
the view-protocol are excluded from --view-protocol.
For tests that do not allow the use of an additional connection,
the util connection is disabled with "--disable_service_connection".
Also cases with bugs for --view-protocol are disabled.
row_log_table_apply_update(): Free the pcur.old_rec_buf before returning.
It may be allocated by btr_pcur_store_position() inside
btr_blob_log_check_t::check() and btr_store_big_rec_extern_fields().
This memory leak was introduced in
commit 2e814d4702 (MariaDB Server 10.2.2)
via mysql/mysql-server@ce0a1e85e2
(MySQL 5.7.5).
The rpl_row_img_sequence test can fail on resource
constrained buildbot machines due to its high
space consumption. To reduce this footprint, the
test is split into three parts, one for each value
of the binlog_row_img variable.
The issue manifests due to a bug in mysql_routine_grant. This was a side
effect of e46eea8660 which fixed the problem of not giving appropriate error
message (ER_NONEXISTING_PROC_GRANT) when a routine grant existed due to role
inheritance.
When granting a routine privilege, it is possible to have a GRANT_NAME
entry already created from an inherited role, but with it's init_privs
set to 0.
In this case we must not create a *new* grant entry, but we must edit
this grant entry to set its init_privs.
Note that this case was already covered by MDEV-29458, however due to a
forgotten "flush privileges;" the actual code path never got hit.
Remove the flush privilege command as it was never intended to be there
in the first place.
There was an issue in updating in-memory role datastructures when
propagating role grants.
The issue is that changing a particular role's privilege (on any
privilege level, global, database, etc.)
was done such that it overwrote the entire set of bits for that
particular level of privileges.
For example:
grant select on *.* to r1 -> sets the access bits to r1 to select,
regardless of what bits were present for role r1 (inherited from any
other roles).
Before this fix, the rights of role r1 were propagated to any roles r1
was granted to, however the propagated rights did *not* include the
complete rights r1 inherited from its own grants.
For example:
grant r2 to r1;
grant select on *.* to r2;
grant insert on *.* to r1; # This command completely disregards the
# select privilege from r2.
In order to correct this, ensure that before rights are propagated
onwards, that the current's role rights have been updated from its
grants.
Additionally, the patch exposed a flaw in the DROP ROLE code.
When deleting a role we removed all its previous grants, but what
remained was the actual links of roles granted to the dropped role.
Having these links present when propagating grants meant that we would
have leftover ACL_xxx entries.
Ensure that the links are removed before propagating grants.
There was a bug in the ACL internal data structures GRANT_TABLE and
GRANT_COLUMN. The semantics are: GRANT_TABLE::init_cols and
GRANT_COLUMN::init_privs represent the bits that correspond to the
privilege bits stored in the physical tables. The other struct members
GRANT_TABLE::cols and GRANT_COLUMN::privs represent the actual access
bits, as they may be modified through role grants.
The error in logic was mixing the two fields and thus we ended up
storing the logical access bits in the physical tables, instead of the
physical (init_xxx) bits.
This caused subsequent DBUG_ASSERT failures when dropping the involved
roles.
xb_read_delta_metadata(): For ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables, initialize
the info.zip_size with the physical page size and let info.page_size
remain the logical page size, like xb_delta_open_matching_space()
expects it to be ever since
commit 0a1c3477bf (MDEV-18493).
Recording test results according to MDEV-29446 changes:
mysql-test/suite/galera/r/MDEV-25494.result
mysql-test/suite/galera/r/galera_ctas.result
mysql-test/suite/galera/r/galera_schema.result
mysql-test/suite/galera_3nodes/r/galera_wsrep_schema.result
mysql-test/suite/galera_sr/r/galera_sr_create_drop.result
btr_lift_page_up(): If the leaf page only contains a hidden metadata
record for MDEV-11369 instant ADD COLUMN, convert the table to the
canonical format like we are supposed to do whenever the table
becomes empty.
lock_place_prdt_page_lock(): Do not place locks on temporary tables.
Temporary tables can only be accessed from one connection, so
it does not make any sense to acquire any transactional locks on them.
Use suspend thread syncpoint instead of include/wait_condition.inc to
make sure DELETE created waiting lock before the next UPDATE begins
locking.
This is backport of commit 0fa4dd0747
from 10.6.
- During shutdown, InnoDB fts fails to update synced doc id
when there is only one doc id about to sync. While starting
the server, InnoDB fetches the already synced doc id from
config table. In the subsequent sync operation, InnoDB fails
with DB_DUPLICATE_KEY error.