Problem was with deleting non existing .frm file for a storage engine that
doesn't have .frm files (yet)
Fixed by not giving an error for non existing .frm files for storage engines
that are using discovery
Fixed also valgrind supression related to the given test case
for the default installation.
It is now defined as "C:/Program Files/MariaDB ${MYSQL_BASE_VERSION}"
which is where installer indeed puts it by default.
It still does not cover every case -32bit installer on 64 bit Windows would put installation
root under "C:/Program Files (x86)", but better than the path used
previously C:/MariaDB${MYSQL_BASE_VERSION}, which was never correct.
in default installation.
Added plugin-dir to the [client] section of the generated my.ini,
so that installed services (MSI or mysql_install_db.exe) would be able to
find plugin directory.
Cherry-pick: f4a0af070ce49abae60040f6f32e1074309c27fb
Author: Dmitry Lenev <dmitry.lenev@oracle.com>
Date: Mon Jul 25 16:06:52 2016 +0300
Fix for bug #16672723 "CAN'T FIND TEMPORARY TABLE".
Attempt to execute prepared CREATE TABLE SELECT statement which used
temporary table in the subquery in FROM clause and stored function
failed with unwarranted ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE error. The same happened
when such statement was used in stored procedure and this procedure
was re-executed.
The problem occurred because execution of such prepared statement/its
re-execution as part of stored procedure incorrectly set
Query_table_list::query_tables_own_last marker, indicating the last
table which is directly used by statement. As result temporary table
used in the subquery was treated as indirectly used/belonging to
prelocking list and was not pre-opened by open_temporary_tables()
call before statement execution. Thus causing ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE errors
since our code assumes that temporary tables need to be correctly
pre-opened before statement execution.
This problem became visible only in version 5.6 after patches related to
bug 11746602/27480 "EXTEND CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES PRIVILEGE TO ALLOW
TEMP TABLE OPERATIONS" since they have introduced pre-opening of temporary
tables for statements.
Incorrect setting of Query_table_list::query_tables_own_last happened
in LEX::first_lists_tables_same() method which is called by CREATE TABLE
SELECT implementation as part of LEX::unlink_first_table(), which temporary
excludes table list element for table being created from the query table
list before handling SELECT part.
LEX::first_lists_tables_same() tries to ensure that global table list of
the statement starts with the first table list element from the first
statement select. To do this it moves such table list element to the head
of the global table list. If this table happens to be last directly-used
table for the statement, query_tables_own_last marker is pointing to it.
Since this marker was not updated when table list element was moved we
ended up with all tables except the first table separated by it as if
they were not directly used by statement (i.e. belonged to prelocked
tables list).
This fix changes code of LEX::first_lists_tables_same() to update
query_tables_own_last marker in cases when it points to the table
being moved. It is set to the table which precedes table being moved
in this case.
Make the slave SQL thread always output to the error log the message "Slave
SQL thread exiting, replication stopped in ..." whenever it previously
outputted "Slave SQL thread initialized, starting replication ...".
Before this patch, it was somewhat inconsistent in which cases the message
would be output and in which not, depending on the exact time and cause of
the condition that caused the SQL thread to stop.
MTR raises default wait_for_pos_timeout from 300 to 1500 when tests
are run with valgrind. The same needs to be done for other
replication-related waits.
The change should fix one of failures mentioned in MDEV-10653
(rpl.rpl_parallel fails in buildbot with timeout), the one
on the valgrind builder; but not all of them
Memory was leaked when ALTER TABLE is attempted on a table
that contains corrupted indexes.
The memory leak was reported by AddressSanitizer for the test
innodb.innodb_corrupt_bit. The leak was introduced into
MariaDB Server 10.0.26, 10.1.15, 10.2.1 by the following:
commit c081c978a2
Merge: 1d21b22155a482e76e65
Author: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
Date: Tue Jun 21 14:11:02 2016 +0200
Merge branch '5.5' into bb-10.0
MariaDB Server 10.0.28 and 10.1.19 merged code from Percona XtraDB
that introduced support for compressed columns. Much but not all
of this code was disabled by placing #ifdef HAVE_PERCONA_COMPRESSED_COLUMNS
around it.
Among the unused but not disabled code is code to access
some new system tables related to compressed columns.
The creation of these system tables SYS_ZIP_DICT and SYS_ZIP_DICT_COLS
would cause a crash in --innodb-read-only mode when upgrading
from an earlier version to 10.0.28 or 10.1.19.
Let us remove all the dead code related to compressed columns.
Users who already upgraded to 10.0.28 and 10.1.19 will have the two
above mentioned empty tables in their InnoDB system tablespace.
Subsequent versions of MariaDB Server will completely ignore those tables.
The patch fixes two test failures:
- on slow builders, sometimes a connection attempt which should
fail due to the exceeded number of thread_pool_max_threads
actually succeeds;
- on even slow builders, MTR sometimes cannot establish the
initial connection, and check-testcase fails prior to the
test start
The problem with check-testcase was caused by connect-timeout=2
which was set for all clients in the test config file. On slow
builders it might be not enough.
There is no way to override it for the pre-test check, so it needed
to be substantially increased or removed.
The other problem was caused by a race condition between sleeps
that the test performs in existing connections and the connect
timeout for the connection attempt which was expected to fail.
If sleeps finished before the connect-timeout was exceeded, it
would allow the connection to succeed.
To solve each problem without making the other one worse,
connect-timeout should be configured dynamically during the test.
Due to the nature of the test (all connections must be busy
at the moment when we need to change the timeout, and cannot execute
SET GLOBAL ...), it needs to be done independently from the server.
The solution:
- recognize 'connect_timeout' as a connection option in mysqltest's
"connect" command;
- remove connect-timeout from the test configuration file;
- use the new connect_timeout option for those connections which
are expected to fail;
- re-arrange the test flow to allow running a huge SLEEP
without affecting the test execution time (because it would be
interrupted after the main test flow is finished).
The test is still subject to false negatives, e.g. if the connection
fails due to timeout rather than due to the exceeded number of
allowed threads, or if the connection on extra port succeeds due
to a race condition and not because the special logic for the extra
port. But those false negatives have always been possible there
on slow builders, they should not be critical because faster builders
should catch such failures if they appear.
Problem:- In replication if slave has extra persistent column then these
column are not computed while applying write-set from master.
Solution:- While applying row events from server, we will generate values
for extra persistent columns.
Essentially revert MDEV-6759, which addressed a double free of memory
by removing the freeing altogether, introducing the memory leaks.
No double free was observed when running the test suite -DWITH_ASAN.
Replace some mem_heap_free(foreign->heap) with dict_foreign_free(foreign)
so that the calls can be located and instrumented more easily when needed.
Role names with trailing whitespaces are truncated in length as of
956e92d908 to fix MDEV-8609. The problem
is that the code that creates role mappings expects the string to be null
terminated.
Add the null terminator to account for that as well. In the future
the rest of the code can be cleaned up to never assume c style strings
but only LEX_STRINGS.
Different fix. Don't allow Item_func_sp to be evaluated unless
all tables are prelocked.
Extend the test case to make sure Item_func_sp::val_str is called
(the table must have at least one row for that).
This reverts commit 035a5ac62a.
Two minor problems and one regression:
1. caching the value in str_result. Other Item methods may use it,
destroying the cache. See, for example, Item::save_in_field, where
str_result is moved to use a local buffer (this failed main.grant)
2. Item_func_conv_charset::safe is now set too late, it's initialized
only in val_str() but checked before that, this failed many tests
in optimized builds.
to fix 1 - use tmp_result instead of str_result, to fix 2, use
the else branch in the Item_func_conv_charset constructor to set
safe purely from charset properties.
But this introduces a regression, constant strings can no longer be
converted, say, from utf8 to latin1 (because 'safe' will be false).
This fails few tests too. There is no way to fix it without reverting
the commit and converting constants, as before, in the constructor.
When JOIN::destroy() is called for a JOIN object that has
- join->tmp_join != NULL
- also has join->table[0]->sort
then the latter was not cleaned up.
This could cause a memory leak and/or asserts in the subsequent queries.
Fixed by adding a cleanup call.
The problem was that null_value was not set to "false" on a well-formed row.
If an ill-formed row was followed by a well-forned row, null_value remained
"true" in the call of Item::send() for the well-formed row.
Check for readline before checking for curses headers, because
MYSQL_CHECK_READLINE fails when curses is not found, but
CHECK_INCLUDE_FILES simply remembers the fact and continues. So if
there's no curses, MYSQL_CHECK_READLINE will abort, the user will then
installs curses and continue the build. Thus, CHECK_INCLUDE_HEADERS
will remember that there is no curses, but other checks from
MYSQL_CHECK_READLINE will remember that curses are there. It will
result in inconsistent HAVE_xxx defines.
be consistent and don't include the table name into the error message,
no other CREATE TABLE error does it.
(the crash happened, because thd->lex->query_tables was NULL)
Due to the collation used on the roles_mapping_hash, key comparison
would work in a case-insensitive manner. This is incorrect from the
roles mapping perspective. Make use of a case-sensitive collation for that hash,
the same one used for the acl_roles hash.
The function Item_func_isnull::update_used_tables() must
handle the case when the predicate is over not nullable
column in a special way.
This is actually a bug of MariaDB 5.3/5.5, but it's probably
hard to demonstrate that it can cause problems there.
Partially backporting MDEV-9874 from 10.2 to 10.0
READ_INFO::read_field() raised the ER_INVALID_CHARACTER_STRING error
when reading an escape character followed by a multi-byte character.
Raising wellformedness errors in READ_INFO::read_field() was wrong,
because the main goal of READ_INFO::read_field() is to *unescape* the
data which was presumably escaped using mysql_real_escape_string(),
using the same character set with the one specified in
"LOAD DATA INFILE ... CHARACTER SET ..." (or assumed by default).
During LOAD DATA, multi-byte characters are not always scanned as a single
entity! In case of escaped data, parts of a multi-byte character can be
scanned on different loop iterations. So the old code erroneously tested
welformedness in the middle of a multi-byte character.
Moreover, the data after unescaping can go into a BLOB field, not a text field.
Wellformedness tests are meaningless in this case.
Ater this patch, wellformedness is only checked later, during
Field::store(str,length,cs) time. The loop that scans bytes only
makes sure to revert the changes made by mysql_real_escape_string().
Note, in some cases users can supply data which did not really go through
mysql_real_escape_string() and was escaped by some other means,
or was not escaped at all. The file reported in this MDEV contains
the string "\ä", which is an example of such improperly escaped data, as
- either there should be two backslashes: "\\ä"
- or there should be no backslashes at all: "ä"
mysql_real_escape_string() could not generate "\ä".
The crash happened when if my_error() was called for any reasons during loading
(e.g. a bad multi-byte sequence or a bad GEOMETRY value was found).
The server sent both error and progress packets, so the client disconnected.
The server then crashed on a assert about a wrong packet order in Debug build.
The server also tried to read from a closed socket when calling
READ_INFO::skip_data_till_eof().
As the crash happened only with "mysql" running in interactive mode,
no tests are possible. The problem was not reproducible with
"mysqltest" or "mysql" in batch mode.