fails after the first time
Two separate problems :
1. When flattening joins the linked list used for name resolution
(next_name_resolution_table) was not updated.
Fixed by updating the pointers when extending the table list
2. The items created by expanding a * (star) as a column reference
were marked as fixed, but no cached table was assigned to them
(unlike what Item_field::fix_fields does).
Fixed by assigning a cached table (so the re-preparation is done
faster).
Note that the fix for #2 hides the fix for #1 in most cases
(except when a table reference cannot be cached).
``FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK''
Concurrent execution of 1) multitable update with a
NATURAL/USING join and 2) a such query as "FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK" or "ALTER TABLE" of updating table led
to a server crash.
The mysql_multi_update_prepare() function call is optimized
to lock updating tables only, so it postpones locking to
the last, and if locking fails, it does cleanup of modified
syntax structures and repeats a query analysis. However,
that cleanup procedure was incomplete for NATURAL/USING join
syntax data: 1) some Field_item items pointed into freed
table structures, and 2) the TABLE_LIST::join_columns fields
was not reset.
Major change:
short-living Field *Natural_join_column::table_field has
been replaced with long-living Item*.
The problem is that when statement-based replication was enabled,
statements such as INSERT INTO .. SELECT FROM .. and CREATE TABLE
.. SELECT FROM need to grab a read lock on the source table that
does not permit concurrent inserts, which would in turn be denied
if the source table is a log table because log tables can't be
locked exclusively.
The solution is to not take such a lock when the source table is
a log table as it is unsafe to replicate log tables under statement
based replication. Furthermore, the read lock that does not permits
concurrent inserts is now only taken if statement-based replication
is enabled and if the source table is not a log table.
columns data types
The "SELECT @lastId, @lastId := Id FROM t" query returns
different result sets depending on the type of the Id column
(INT or BIGINT).
Note: this fix doesn't cover the case when a select query
references an user variable and stored function that
updates a value of that variable, in this case a result
is indeterminate.
The server uses incorrect assumption about a constantness of
an user variable value as a select list item:
The server caches a last query number where that variable
was changed and compares this number with a current query
number. If these numbers are different, the server guesses,
that the variable is not updating in the current query, so
a respective select list item is a constant. However, in some
common cases the server updates cached query number too late.
The server has been modified to memorize user variable
assignments during the parse phase to take them into account
on the next (query preparation) phase independently of the
order of user variable references/assignments in a select
item list.
This patch also fixes bugs 36963 and 35600.
- In many places a view was confused with an anonymous derived
table, i.e. access checking was skipped. Fixed by introducing a
predicate to tell the difference between named and anonymous
derived tables.
- When inserting fields for "SELECT * ", there was no
distinction between base tables and views, where one should be
made. View privileges are checked elsewhere.
- Implementing --base64-format=decode-rows, to display
SQL-alike decoded row events without their BINLOG statements.
- Adding --base64-format=decode-rows into tests when
calling mysqlbinlog to avoid non-deterministic results
- Removing resetting of last_table_id in "RESET MASTER",
which appeared to be dangerous.
Implementing -v command line parameter to mysqlbinlog
to decode and print row events.
mysql-test/include/mysqlbinlog_row_engine.inc
mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog_row.result
mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog_row_big.result
mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog_row_innodb.result
mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog_row_myisam.result
mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog_row_trans.result
mysql-test/t/mysqlbinlog_row.test
mysql-test/t/mysqlbinlog_row_big.test
mysql-test/t/mysqlbinlog_row_innodb.test
mysql-test/t/mysqlbinlog_row_myisam.test
mysql-test/t/mysqlbinlog_row_trans.test
Adding tests
client/Makefile.am
Adding new files to symlink
client/mysqlbinlog.cc
Adding -v option
sql/log_event.cc
Impelentations of the new methods
sql/log_event.h
Declaration of the new methods and member
sql/mysql_priv.h
Adding new function prototype
sql/rpl_tblmap.cc
Adding pre-processor conditions
sql/rpl_tblmap.h
Adding pre-processor conditions
sql/rpl_utility.h
Adding pre-processor conditions
sql/sql_base.cc
Adding reset_table_id_sequence() function.
sql/sql_repl.cc
Resetting table_id on "RESET MASTER"
.bzrignore
Ignoring new symlinked files
Tables in the table definition cache are keeping a cache buffer for blob
fields which can consume a lot of memory.
This patch introduces a maximum size threshold for these buffers.
When flushing tables, there were a slight chance that the flush was occuring
between processing of two table map events. Since the tables are opened
one by one, it might result in that the tables were not valid and that sub-
sequent locking of tables would cause the slave to crash.
The problem is solved by opening and locking all tables at once using
simple_open_n_lock_tables(). Also, the patch contain a change to open_tables()
so that pre-locking only takes place when the trg_event_map is not zero, which
was not the case before (this caused the lock to be placed in thd->locked_tables
instead of thd->lock since the assumption was that triggers would be called
later and therefore the tables should be pre-locked).
WL#4165 Prepared statements: validation
WL#4166 Prepared statements: automatic re-prepare
Fixes
Bug#27430 Crash in subquery code when in PS and table DDL changed after PREPARE
Bug#27690 Re-execution of prepared statement after table was replaced with a view crashes
Bug#27420 A combination of PS and view operations cause error + assertion on shutdown
The basic idea of the patch is to keep track of table metadata between
prepared statement prepare and execute. If some table used in the statement
has changed, the prepared statement is re-prepared before execution.
See WL#4165 and WL#4166 contents and comments in the code for details
of the implementation.
The bool data type was redefined to BOOL (4 bytes on windows).
Removed the #define and fixed some of the warnings that were uncovered
by this.
Note that the fix also disables 2 warnings :
4800 : 'type' : forcing value to bool 'true' or 'false' (performance warning)
4805: 'operation' : unsafe mix of type 'type' and type 'type' in operation
These warnings will be handled in a separate bug, as they are performance related or bogus.
Fixed to int the return type of functions that return more than
2 distinct values.
a SELECT doesn't cause ROLLBACK of statem".
The idea of the fix is to ensure that we always commit the current
statement at the end of dispatch_command(). In order to not issue
redundant disc syncs, an optimization of the two-phase commit
protocol is implemented to bypass the two phase commit if
the transaction is read-only.
pre-locking.
The crash was caused by an implicit assumption in check_table_access() that
table_list parameter is always a part of lex->query_tables.
When iterating over the passed list of tables, check_table_access() used
to stop only when lex->query_tables_last_not_own was reached.
In case of pre-locking, lex->query_tables_last_own is not NULL and points
to some element of lex->query_tables. When the parameter
of check_table_access() was not part of lex->query_tables, loop invariant
could never be violated and a crash would happen when the current table
pointer would point beyond the end of the provided list.
The fix is to change the signature of check_table_access() to also accept
a numeric limit of loop iterations, similarly to check_grant(), and
supply this limit in all places when we want to check access of tables
that are outside lex->query_tables, or just want to check access to one table.
When resolving references we need to take into consideration
the view "fields" and allow qualified access to them.
Fixed by extending the reference resolution to process view
fields correctly.
called from a SELECT doesn't cause ROLLBACK of state"
Make private all class handler methods (PSEA API) that may modify
data. Introduce and deploy public ha_* wrappers for these methods in
all sql/.
This necessary to keep track of all data modifications in sql/,
which is in turn necessary to be able to optimize two-phase
commit of those transactions that do not modify data.
The problem is that some DDL statements (ALTER TABLE, CREATE
TRIGGER, FLUSH TABLES, ...) when under LOCK TABLES need to
momentarily drop the lock, reopen the table and grab the write
lock again (using reopen_tables). When grabbing the lock again,
reopen_tables doesn't pass a flag to mysql_lock_tables in
order to ignore the impending global read lock, which causes a
assertion because LOCK_open is being hold. Also dropping the
lock must not signal to any threads that the table has been
relinquished (related to the locking/flushing protocol).
The solution is to correct the way the table is reopenned
and the locks grabbed. When reopening the table and under
LOCK TABLES, the table version should be set to 0 so other
threads have to wait for the table. When grabbing the lock,
any other flush should be ignored because it's theoretically
a atomic operation. The chosen solution also fixes a potential
discrepancy between binlog and GRL (global read lock) because
table placeholders were being ignored, now a FLUSH TABLES WITH
READ LOCK will properly for table with open placeholders.
It's also important to mention that this patch doesn't fix
a potential deadlock if one uses two GRLs under LOCK TABLES
concurrently.
cause ROLLBACK of statement", part 1. Review fixes.
Do not send OK/EOF packets to the client until we reached the end of
the current statement.
This is a consolidation, to keep the functionality that is shared by all
SQL statements in one place in the server.
Currently this functionality includes:
- close_thread_tables()
- log_slow_statement().
After this patch and the subsequent patch for Bug#12713, it shall also include:
- ha_autocommit_or_rollback()
- net_end_statement()
- query_cache_end_of_result().
In future it may also include:
- mysql_reset_thd_for_next_command().
The patch for Bug 26379 (Combination of FLUSH TABLE and
REPAIR TABLE corrupts a MERGE table) fixed this bug too.
However it revealed a new bug that crashed the server.
Flushing a merge table at the moment when it is between open
and attach of children crashed the server.
The flushing thread wants to abort locks on the flushed table.
It calls ha_myisammrg::lock_count() and ha_myisammrg::store_lock()
on the TABLE object of the other thread.
Changed ha_myisammrg::lock_count() and ha_myisammrg::store_lock()
to accept non-attached children. ha_myisammrg::lock_count() returns
the number of MyISAM tables in the MERGE table so that the memory
allocation done by get_lock_data() is done correctly, even if the
children become attached before ha_myisammrg::store_lock() is
called. ha_myisammrg::store_lock() will not return any lock if the
children are not attached.
This is however a change in the handler interface. lock_count()
can now return a higher number than store_lock() stores locks.
This is more safe than the reverse implementation would be.
get_lock_data() in the SQL layer is adjusted accordingly. It sets
MYSQL_LOCK::lock_count based on the number of locks returned by
the handler::store_lock() calls, not based on the numbers returned
by the handler::lock_count() calls. The latter are only used for
allocation of memory now.
No test case. The test suite cannot reliably run FLUSH between
lock_count() and store_lock() of another thread. The bug report
contains a program that can repeat the problem with some
probability.