added:
include/ctype_numconv.inc
mysql-test/include/ctype_numconv.inc
mysql-test/r/ctype_binary.result
mysql-test/t/ctype_binary.test
Adding tests
modified:
mysql-test/r/bigint.result
mysql-test/r/case.result
mysql-test/r/create.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_cp1251.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_latin1.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_ucs.result
mysql-test/r/func_gconcat.result
mysql-test/r/func_str.result
mysql-test/r/metadata.result
mysql-test/r/ps_1general.result
mysql-test/r/ps_2myisam.result
mysql-test/r/ps_3innodb.result
mysql-test/r/ps_4heap.result
mysql-test/r/ps_5merge.result
mysql-test/r/show_check.result
mysql-test/r/type_datetime.result
mysql-test/r/type_ranges.result
mysql-test/r/union.result
mysql-test/suite/ndb/r/ps_7ndb.result
mysql-test/t/ctype_cp1251.test
mysql-test/t/ctype_latin1.test
mysql-test/t/ctype_ucs.test
mysql-test/t/func_str.test
Fixing tests
@ sql/field.cc
- Return str result using my_charset_numeric.
- Using real multi-byte aware str_to_XXX functions
to handle tricky charset values propely (e.g. UCS2)
@ sql/field.h
- Changing derivation of non-string field types to DERIVATION_NUMERIC.
- Changing binary() for numeric/datetime fields to always
return TRUE even if charset is not my_charset_bin. We need
this to keep ha_base_keytype() return HA_KEYTYPE_BINARY.
- Adding BINARY_FLAG into some fields, because it's not
being set automatically anymore with
"my_charset_bin to my_charset_numeric" change.
- Changing derivation for numeric/datetime datatypes to a weaker
value, to make "SELECT concat('string', field)" use character
set of the string literal for the result of the function.
@ sql/item.cc
- Implementing generic val_str_ascii().
- Using max_char_length() instead of direct read of max_length
to make "tricky" charsets like UCS2 work.
NOTE: in the future we'll possibly remove all direct reads of max_length
- Fixing Item_num::safe_charset_converter().
Previously it alligned binary string to
character string (for example by adding leading 0x00
when doing binary->UCS2 conversion). Now it just
converts from my_charset_numbner to "tocs".
- Using val_str_ascii() in Item::get_time() to make UCS2 arguments work.
- Other misc changes
@ sql/item.h
- Changing MY_COLL_CMP_CONV and MY_COLL_ALLOW_CONV to
bit operations instead of hard-coded bit masks.
- Addding new method DTCollation.set_numeric().
- Adding new methods to Item.
- Adding helper functions to make code look nicer:
agg_item_charsets_for_string_result()
agg_item_charsets_for_comparison()
- Changing charset for Item_num-derived items
from my_charset_bin to my_charset_numeric
(which is an alias for latin1).
@ sql/item_cmpfunc.cc
- Using new helper functions
- Other misc changes
@ sql/item_cmpfunc.h
- Fixing strcmp() to return max_length=2.
Previously it returned 1, which was wrong,
because it did not fit '-1'.
@ sql/item_func.cc
- Using new helper functions
- Other minor changes
@ sql/item_func.h
- Removing unused functions
- Adding helper functions
agg_arg_charsets_for_string_result()
agg_arg_charsets_for_comparison()
- Adding set_numeric() into constructors of numeric items.
- Using fix_length_and_charset() and fix_char_length()
instead of direct write to max_length.
@ sql/item_geofunc.cc
- Changing class for Item_func_geometry_type and
Item_func_as_wkt from Item_str_func to
Item_str_ascii_func, to make them return UCS2 result
properly (when character_set_connection=ucs2).
@ sql/item_geofunc.h
- Changing class for Item_func_geometry_type and
Item_func_as_wkt from Item_str_func to
Item_str_ascii_func, to make them return UCS2 result
properly (when @@character_set_connection=ucs2).
@ sql/item_strfunc.cc
- Implementing Item_str_func::val_str().
- Renaming val_str to val_str_ascii for some items,
to make them work with UCS2 properly.
- Using new helper functions
- All single-argument functions that expect string
result now call this method:
agg_arg_charsets_for_string_result(collation, args, 1);
This enables character set conversion to @@character_set_connection
in case of pure numeric input.
@ sql/item_strfunc.h
- Introducing Item_str_ascii_func - for functions
which return pure ASCII data, for performance purposes,
as well as for the cases when the old implementation
of val_str() was heavily 8-bit oriented and implementing
a UCS2-aware version is tricky.
@ sql/item_sum.cc
- Using new helper functions.
@ sql/item_timefunc.cc
- Using my_charset_numeric instead of my_charset_bin.
- Using fix_char_length(), fix_length_and_charset()
and fix_length_and_charset_datetime()
instead of direct write to max_length.
- Using tricky-charset aware function str_to_time_with_warn()
@ sql/item_timefunc.h
- Using new helper functions for charset and length initialization.
- Changing base class for Item_func_get_format() to make
it return UCS2 properly (when character_set_connection=ucs2).
@ sql/item_xmlfunc.cc
- Using new helper function
@ sql/my_decimal.cc
- Adding a new DECIMAL to CHAR converter
with real multibyte support (e.g. UCS2)
@ sql/mysql_priv.h
- Introducing a new derivation level for numeric/datetime data types.
- Adding macros for my_charset_numeric and MY_REPERTOIRE_NUMERIC.
- Adding prototypes for str_set_decimal()
- Adding prototypes for character-set aware str_to_xxx() functions.
@ sql/protocol.cc
- Changing charsetnr to "binary" client-side metadata for
numeric/datetime data types.
@ sql/time.cc
- Adding to_ascii() helper function, to convert a string
in any character set to ascii representation. In the
future can be extended to understand digits written
in various non-Latin word scripts.
- Adding real multy-byte character set aware versions for str_to_XXXX,
to make these these type of queries work correct:
INSERT INTO t1 SET datetime_column=ucs2_expression;
@ strings/ctype-ucs2.c
- endptr was not calculated correctly. INSERTing of UCS2
values into numeric columns returned warnings about
truncated wrong data.
to string conversions and vice versa"
Initial import of the dtoa.c code and custom wrappers around it
to allow its usage from the server code.
Conversion of FLOAT/DOUBLE values to DECIMAL ones or strings
and vice versa has been significantly reworked. As the new
algoritms are more precise than the older ones, results of such
conversions may not always match those obtained from older
server versions. This in turn may break compatibility for some
applications.
This patch also fixes the following bugs:
- bug #12860 "Difference in zero padding of exponent between
Unix and Windows"
- bug #21497 "DOUBLE truncated to unusable value"
- bug #26788 "mysqld (debug) aborts when inserting specific
numbers into char fields"
- bug #24541 "Data truncated..." on decimal type columns
without any good reason"
DECIMAL and TIMESTAMP used to have NUM_FLAG, but NEWDECIMAL was forgotten.
It's correct that TIMESTAMP does not have the flag nowadays (manual will be updated, connectors
developers will be notified).
Documented behaviour was broken by the patch for bug 33699
that actually is not a bug.
This fix reverts patch for bug 33699 and reverts the
UPDATE of NOT NULL field with NULL query to old
behavior.
Length value is the length of the field,
Max_length is the length of the field value.
So Max_length can not be more than Length.
The fix: fixed calculation of the Item_empty_string item length
(Patch applied and queued on demand of Trudy/Davi.)
columns (default datatype value is assigned).
The mysql_update function has been modified to generate
an error when trying to set a NOT NULL field to NULL rather than a warning
in the set_field_to_null_with_conversions function.
only on some occasions
Referencing an element from the SELECT list in a WHERE
clause is not permitted. The namespace of the WHERE
clause is the table columns only. This was not enforced
correctly when resolving outer references in sub-queries.
Fixed by not allowing references to aliases in a
sub-query in WHERE.
command and reported to a client.
The fact that a timestamp field will be set to NO on UPDATE wasn't shown
by the SHOW COMMAND and reported to a client through connectors. This led to
problems in the ODBC connector and might lead to a user confusion.
A new filed flag called ON_UPDATE_NOW_FLAG is added.
Constructors of the Field_timestamp set it when a field should be set to NOW
on UPDATE.
The get_schema_column_record function now reports whether a timestamp field
will be set to NOW on UPDATE.
No warning was generated when a TIMESTAMP with a non-zero time part
was converted to a DATE value. This caused index lookup to assume
that this is a valid conversion and was returning rows that match
a comparison between a TIMESTAMP value and a DATE keypart.
Fixed by generating a warning on such a truncation.
- Adding variable m_cached_result_type to keep the variable type consistent
during the execution of a statement.
- Before each result set is returned to the client the description of each
column is sent as meta data.
Previously the result type for a column could change if the hash variable
entry changed between statements. This caused the result set of the query
to alternate column types in certain cases which is not supported by MySQL
client-server protocol. Example:
Previously this sequence:
SET @a:=1;
SELECT @a:="text", @a;
would return "text", "text";
After the change the SELECT returns "text", 0
The reson for this is that previously the result set from 'SELECT @a;'
would always be of the type STRING, whereas now the type of the variable
is taken from the last SET statement. However, 'SELECT @a:="text"' will
return type of STRING since the right side of the assignment is used.
Made year 2000 handling more uniform
Removed year 2000 handling out from calc_days()
The above removes some bugs in date/datetimes with year between 0 and 200
Now we get a note when we insert a datetime value into a date column
For default values to CREATE, don't give errors for warning level NOTE
Fixed some compiler failures
Added library ws2_32 for windows compilation (needed if we want to compile with IOCP support)
Removed duplicate typedef TIME and replaced it with MYSQL_TIME
Better (more complete) fix for: Bug#21103 "DATE column not compared as DATE"
Fixed properly Bug#18997 "DATE_ADD and DATE_SUB perform year2K autoconversion magic on 4-digit year value"
Fixed Bug#23093 "Implicit conversion of 9912101 to date does not match cast(9912101 as date)"
DATE and DATETIME can be compared either as strings or as int. Both
methods have their disadvantages. Strings can contain valid DATETIME value
but have insignificant zeros omitted thus became non-comparable with
other DATETIME strings. The comparison as int usually will require conversion
from the string representation and the automatic conversion in most cases is
carried out in a wrong way thus producing wrong comparison result. Another
problem occurs when one tries to compare DATE field with a DATETIME constant.
The constant is converted to DATE losing its precision i.e. losing time part.
This fix addresses the problems described above by adding a special
DATE/DATETIME comparator. The comparator correctly converts DATE/DATETIME
string values to int when it's necessary, adds zero time part (00:00:00)
to DATE values to compare them correctly to DATETIME values. Due to correct
conversion malformed DATETIME string values are correctly compared to other
DATE/DATETIME values.
As of this patch a DATE value equals to DATETIME value with zero time part.
For example '2001-01-01' equals to '2001-01-01 00:00:00'.
The compare_datetime() function is added to the Arg_comparator class.
It implements the correct comparator for DATE/DATETIME values.
Two supplementary functions called get_date_from_str() and get_datetime_value()
are added. The first one extracts DATE/DATETIME value from a string and the
second one retrieves the correct DATE/DATETIME value from an item.
The new Arg_comparator::can_compare_as_dates() function is added and used
to check whether two given items can be compared by the compare_datetime()
comparator.
Two caching variables were added to the Arg_comparator class to speedup the
DATE/DATETIME comparison.
One more store() method was added to the Item_cache_int class to cache int
values.
The new is_datetime() function was added to the Item class. It indicates
whether the item returns a DATE/DATETIME value.
Made year 2000 handling more uniform
Removed year 2000 handling out from calc_days()
The above removes some bugs in date/datetimes with year between 0 and 200
Now we get a note when we insert a datetime value into a date column
For default values to CREATE, don't give errors for warning level NOTE
Fixed some compiler failures
Added library ws2_32 for windows compilation (needed if we want to compile with IOCP support)
Removed duplicate typedef TIME and replaced it with MYSQL_TIME
Better (more complete) fix for: Bug#21103 "DATE column not compared as DATE"
Fixed properly Bug#18997 "DATE_ADD and DATE_SUB perform year2K autoconversion magic on 4-digit year value"
Fixed Bug#23093 "Implicit conversion of 9912101 to date does not match cast(9912101 as date)"
If we compare two items A and B, with B being (a constant) of a
larger type, then A gets promoted to B's type for comparison if
it's a constant, function, or CAST() column, but B gets demoted
to A's type if A is a (not explicitly CAST()) column. This is
counter-intuitive and not mandated by the standard.
Disabling optimisation where it would be lossy so field value
will properly get promoted and compared as binary string (rather
than as integers).
columns
Fixed confusing warning.
Quoting INSERT section of the manual:
----
Inserting NULL into a column that has been declared NOT NULL. For
multiple-row INSERT statements or INSERT INTO ... SELECT statements, the
column is set to the implicit default value for the column data type. This
is 0 for numeric types, the empty string ('') for string types, and the
"zero" value for date and time types. INSERT INTO ... SELECT statements are
handled the same way as multiple-row inserts because the server does not
examine the result set from the SELECT to see whether it returns a single
row. (For a single-row INSERT, no warning occurs when NULL is inserted into
a NOT NULL column. Instead, the statement fails with an error.)
----
This is also true for LOAD DATA INFILE. For INSERT user can specify
DEFAULT keyword as a value to set column default. There is no similiar
feature available for LOAD DATA INFILE.
The problem was that when converting a string to an exact number,
rounding didn't work, because conversion didn't understand
approximate numbers notation.
Fix: a new function for string-to-number conversion was implemented,
which is aware of approxinate number notation (with decimal point
and exponent, e.g. -19.55e-1)
DESCRIBE returned the type BIGINT for a column of a view if the column
was specified by an expression over values of the type INT.
E.g. for the view defined as follows:
CREATE VIEW v1 SELECT COALESCE(f1,f2) FROM t1
DESCRIBE returned type BIGINT for the only column of the view if f1,f2 are
columns of the INT type.
At the same time DESCRIBE returned type INT for the only column of the table
defined by the statement:
CREATE TABLE t2 SELECT COALESCE(f1,f2) FROM t1.
This inconsistency was removed by the patch.
Now the code chooses between INT/BIGINT depending on the
precision of the aggregated column type.
Thus both DESCRIBE commands above returns type INT for v1 and t2.
procedure variable
Second version, after review.
Keep the unsigned_flag in Item_decimal updated. Note that this also changed
the result of several old test results - creating tables from decimal
templates now gives unsigned columns and different sizes. (Several tests
had Length > Max_length before.)
* Provide backwards compatibility extension to name resolution of
coalesced columns. The patch allows such columns to be qualified
with a table (and db) name, as it is in 4.1.
Based on a patch from Monty.
* Adjusted tests accordingly to test both backwards compatible name
resolution of qualified columns, and ANSI-style resolution of
non-qualified columns.
For this, each affected test has two versions - one with qualified
columns, and one without.
"Process NATURAL and USING joins according to SQL:2003".
* Some of the main problems fixed by the patch:
- in "select *" queries the * expanded correctly according to
ANSI for arbitrary natural/using joins
- natural/using joins are correctly transformed into JOIN ... ON
for any number/nesting of the joins.
- column references are correctly resolved against natural joins
of any nesting and combined with arbitrary other joins.
* This patch also contains a fix for name resolution of items
inside the ON condition of JOIN ... ON - in this case items must
be resolved only against the JOIN operands. To support such
'local' name resolution, the patch introduces a stack of
name resolution contexts used at parse time.
NOTICE:
- This patch is not complete in the sense that
- there are 2 test cases that still do not pass -
one in join.test, one in select.test. Both are marked
with a comment "TODO: WL#2486".
- it does not include a new test specific for the task