Commit graph

4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Marko Mäkelä
5e996fbad9 Merge 10.9 into 10.10 2022-09-21 10:59:56 +03:00
Alexander Barkov
f1544424de MDEV-29446 Change SHOW CREATE TABLE to display default collation 2022-09-12 22:10:39 +04:00
Sergei Golubchik
45e0373a78 MDEV-28632 Change default of explicit_defaults_for_timestamp to ON 2022-08-10 15:03:22 +02:00
Alexander Barkov
d63631c3fa MDEV-19632 Replication aborts with ER_SLAVE_CONVERSION_FAILED upon CREATE ... SELECT in ORACLE mode
- Adding optional qualifiers to data types:
    CREATE TABLE t1 (a schema.DATE);
  Qualifiers now work only for three pre-defined schemas:

    mariadb_schema
    oracle_schema
    maxdb_schema

  These schemas are virtual (hard-coded) for now, but may turn into real
  databases on disk in the future.

- mariadb_schema.TYPE now always resolves to a true MariaDB data
  type TYPE without sql_mode specific translations.

- oracle_schema.DATE translates to MariaDB DATETIME.

- maxdb_schema.TIMESTAMP translates to MariaDB DATETIME.

- Fixing SHOW CREATE TABLE to use a qualifier for a data type TYPE
  if the current sql_mode translates TYPE to something else.

The above changes fix the reported problem, so this script:

    SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
    CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_date_column FROM t1;

is now replicated as:

    SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
    CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_date_column mariadb_schema.DATE);

and the slave can unambiguously treat DATE as the true MariaDB DATE
without ORACLE specific translation to DATETIME.

Similar,

    SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
    CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_timestamp_column FROM t1;

is now replicated as:

    SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
    CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_timestamp_column mariadb_schema.TIMESTAMP);

so the slave treats TIMESTAMP as the true MariaDB TIMESTAMP
without MAXDB specific translation to DATETIME.
2020-08-01 07:43:50 +04:00