~40Mb after mysqldump/import
When the input string exceeds the maximum allowed size for the
internal buffer, batch_readline() returns a truncated string.
Since there was no way for a caller to determine whether the
string was truncated or not, the command line client assumed
batch_readline() to always return the whole input string and
appended a newline character. This resulted in garbled data
when importing dumps containing strings longer than the
maximum input buffer size.
Fixed by adding a flag to the batch_readline() interface to
signal a truncated string to the caller.
Other minor problems fixed during patch implementation:
- The maximum allowed buffer size for batch_readline() was set
up depending on the client's max_allowed_packet value. It does
not actully make any sense, as those variables are not
related. The input buffer size limit is now always set to 1
MB.
- fill_buffer() did not always set the EOF flag.
- The input buffer could actually grow twice as the specified
limit due to insufficient checks in intern_read_line().
- Client side readline functions unconditionally search for Unix '\n' line
endings. In this case, the delimiter statement was set to '//\r' instead
of the intended '//'. When removing the '\n' check for and remove
preceeding '\r' character as well.
allow several -e on the command line
clarify --help text
make -B to work as advertised
in force mode execute the rest of multi-statement line in case of error in one statement
Fixes for building MySQL with gcc 3.0
Added SIGNED / UNSIGNED casts
Fixed core dump bug in net_clear() with libmysqld.
Back to using semaphores in query cache.
Added 'Null' and 'Index_type' to SHOW INDEX.