slave
The stored-routine code took the contents of the (lowest) parser
and copied it directly to the binlog, which causes problems if there
is a special case of interpretation at the parser level -- which
there is, in the "/*!VER */" comments. The trailing "*/" caused
errors on the slave, naturally.
Now, since by that point we have /properly/ created parse-tree (as
the rest of the server should do!) for the stored-routine CREATE, we
can construct a perfect statement from that information, instead of
writing uncertain information from an unknown parser state.
Fortunately, there's already a function nearby that does exactly
that.
---
Update for Bug#36570. Qualify routine names with db name when
writing to the binlog ONLY if the source text is qualified.
Problem: in mixed and statement mode, a query that refers to a
system variable will use the slave's value when replayed on
slave. So if the value of a system variable is inserted into a
table, the slave will differ from the master.
Fix: mark statements that refer to a system variable as "unsafe",
meaning they will be replicated by row in mixed mode and produce a warning
in statement mode. There are some exceptions: some variables are actually
replicated. Those should *not* be marked as unsafe.
BUG#34732: mysqlbinlog does not print default values for auto_increment variables
Problem: mysqlbinlog does not print default values for some variables,
including auto_increment_increment and others. So if a client executing
the output of mysqlbinlog has different default values, replication will
be wrong.
Fix: Always print default values for all variables that are replicated.
I need to fix the two bugs at the same time, because the test cases would
fail if I only fixed one of them.
fine
The reason of this bug is that when mysqlbinlog dumps a query, the query is written to
output with a delimeter appended right after it, if the query string ends with a '--'
comment, then the delimeter would be considered as part of the comment, if there are any
statements after this query, then it will cause a syntax error.
Start a newline before appending delimiter after a query string
The reason of this bug is that when mysqlbinlog dumps a query, the query is written to
output with a delimeter appended right after it, if the query string ends with a '--'
comment, then the delimeter would be considered as part of the comment, if there are any
statements after this query, then it will cause a syntax error.
Start a newline before appending delimiter after a query string
The client program 'mysqlbinlog' crashed when trying to print a User_var_log_event holding
a floating-point value since the format specifier for my_b_printf() does not support
floating-point format specifiers.
This patch prints the floating-point number to an internal buffer, and then writes
that buffer to the output instead.
When running mysqlbinlog on a 64-bit machine with a corrupt relay log,
it causes mysqlbinlog to crash. In this case, the crash is caused
because a request for 18446744073709534806U bytes is issued, which
apparantly can be served on a 64-bit machine (speculatively, I assume)
but this causes the memcpy() issued later to copy the data to segfault.
The request for the number of bytes is caused by a computation
of data_len - server_vars_len where server_vars_len is corrupt in such
a sense that it is > data_len. This causes a wrap-around, with the
the data_len given above.
This patch adds a check that if server_vars_len is greater than
data_len before the substraction, and aborts reading the event in
that case marking the event as invalid. It also adds checks to see
that reading the server variables does not go outside the bounds
of the available space, giving a limited amount of integrity check.
restores from mysqlbinlog out
Problem: using "mysqlbinlog | mysql" for recoveries the connection_id()
result may differ from what was used when issuing the statement.
Fix: if there is a connection_id() in a statement, write to binlog
SET pseudo_thread_id= XXX; before it and use the value later on.
Occasionally mysqlbinlog --hexdump failed with error:
ERROR 1064 (42000) at line ...: You have an error in your
SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL
server version for the right syntax to use near
'Query thread_id=... exec_time=... error_code=...
When the length of hexadecimal dump of binlog header was
divisible by 16, commentary sign '#' after header was lost.
The Log_event::print_header function has been modified to always
finish hexadecimal binlog header with "\n# ".
This patch fixes problem that LOAD DATA could use different
character sets when loading files on master and on slave sides:
- Adding replication of thd->variables.collation_database
- Adding optional character set clause into LOAD DATA
Note, the second way, with explicit CHARACTER SET clause
should be the recommended way to load data using an alternative
character set.
The old way, using "SET @@character_set_database=xxx" should be
gradually depricated.
The problem happened because those tests were using "cp932" and "ucs2" without checking whether these character sets are available. This fix moves test parts to make character set specific parts be tested only if they are:
- some parts were moved to "ctype_ucs.test" and "ctype_cp932.test"
- some parts were moved to the newly added tests "innodb-ucs2.test", "mysqlbinglog-cp932.test" and "sp-ucs2.test"
Problem: mysqlbinlog_base64 failed sporadically.
Reason: Missing "flush logs" before running $MYSQL_BINLOG,
which could start dumping the log file before server
has finished writting into it.
Fix:
- implementing --force-if-open option to "mysqlbinlog"
- adding --disable-force-if-open to make $MYSQL_BINLOG
fail on non-closed log files, to garantee that nobody
will forget "flush logs" in the future.
- adding "flush logs" into all affected tests.
Problem: when loading mysqlbinlog dumps, CREATE PROCEDURE having semicolons
in their bodies failed.
Fix: Using safe delimiter "/*!*/;" to dump log entries.
Binlog lacks encoding info about DROPped temporary table.
Idea of the fix is to switch temporary to system_charset_info when a temporary table
is DROPped for binlog. Since that is the server, that automatically, but not the client, who generates the query
the binlog should be updated on the server's encoding for the coming DROP.
The `write_binlog_with_system_charset()' is introduced to replace similar problematic places in the code.
internal charset to one associated with currently being handled query.
To note such a query can come from interactive client either.
There was a discussion within replication team and Monty who's suggestion won.
It avoids straightforward parsing of all `set' queries that could affect client side
character set.
According to the idea, mysql client does not parse `set' queries but rather cares of
`charset new_cs_name' command.
This command is generated by mysqlbinlog in form of exclaiming comment (Lars' suggestion)
so that enlightened clients like `mysql' knows what to do with it.
Interactive human can switch between many multi-byte charsets during the session
providing the command explicitly.
To note that setting new internal mysql's charset does not
trigger sending any `SET' sql statement to the server.