Problem:
========
Checksum for the encrypted temporary tablespace is not stored in the page
for full crc32 format.
Solution:
========
Made temporary tablespace in full crc32 format irrespective of encryption
parameter.
buf_tmp_page_encrypt(), buf_tmp_page_decrypt() - Both follows full_crc32
format.
Fixed the following issues:
- Call info with HA_STATUS_CONST to ensure that (key_info->rec_per_key)
contains latest data
- Don't access rec_per_key if key_info->algorithm == HA_KEY_ALG_LONG_HASH
is in this case the rec_per_key points to uninitialized data
- Cleaned up code to avoid some extra 'if' and to make things more readable
- Updated test cases that used 'old' rec_per_key values
Since the client host can be extracted from the network connection, it can
always be printed. This makes it easier to find out where a slave is
replicating from. It could also be used to automatically discover slaves
that are replicating from a master.
MDEV-5589 commit set up a policy to skip DROP TEMPORARY TABLE binary logging
in case the target table has not been "CREATEed" in binlog (no CREATE
Query-log-event was logged into the binary log).
It turns out that
1. the rule did not cover non-existing table DROPped with IF-EXISTS clause.
The logged-create knowledge for the non-existing one does not even need
MDEV-5589 patch, and
2. connection close disobeys it to trigger automatic DROP-IF-EXISTS
binlogging.
Either 1 or 2 or even both is/are also responsible for unexpected binlog
records observed in MDEV-17863, actually rendering a referred
@@global.read_only irrelevant as far as the described stored procedure
definition *and* the ROW binlog-format are concerned.
Analysis
========
Point in time recovery using mysqlbinlog containing queries
operating on temporary tables results in an error.
While writing the query log event in the binary log, the
thread id used for execution of DROP TABLE and DELETE commands
were incorrect. The thread variable 'thread_specific_used'
is used to determine whether a specific thread id is to used
while executing the statements i.e using 'SET
@@session.pseudo_thread_id'. This variable was not set
correctly for DROP TABLE query and was never set for DELETE
query. The thread id is important for temporary tables
since the tables are session specific. DROP TABLE and DELETE
queries executed using a wrong thread id resulted in errors
while applying the queries generated by mysqlbinlog utility.
Fix
===
Set the 'thread_specific_used' THD variable for DROP TABLE and
DELETE queries.
ReviewBoard: 21833
There is one directly applicable change to InnoDB:
commit 739f5239f1 in the
5.5 branch will be merged before the next MariaDB releases.
Another potentially applicable change will be tracked
separately as MDEV-20126.
Thus, here we only update the InnoDB version number and do
not change anything else.
Problem: Clients running different values for auto_increment_increment
and doing concurrent inserts leads to "Duplicate key error" in one of them.
Analysis:
When auto_increment_increment value is reduced in a session,
InnoDB uses last auto_increment_increment value
to recalculate the autoinc value.
In case, some other session has inserted a value
with different auto_increment_increment, InnoDB recalculate
autoinc values based on current session previous auto_increment_increment
instead of considering the auto_increment_increment used for last insert
across all session
Fix:
revert 7acdf29cb4
a.k.a. 7c12a9e5c3
as it causing the bug.
Reviewed By:
Bin <bin.x.su@oracle.com>
Kevin <kevin.lewis@oracle.com>
RB#21777
Note: In MariaDB Server, earlier changes in
ae5bc05988
for MDEV-533 require that the original test in
mysql/mysql-server@1ccd472d63
be adjusted for MariaDB.
Also, ef47b62551 (MDEV-8827)
had to be reverted after the upstream fix had been backported.
Problem:
=======
Autoincrement value gives duplicate values because of the following reasons.
(1) In InnoDB handler function, current autoincrement value is not changed
based on newly set auto_increment_increment or auto_increment_offset variable.
(2) Handler function does the rounding logic and changes the current
autoincrement value and InnoDB doesn't aware of the change in current
autoincrement value.
Solution:
========
Fix the problem(1), InnoDB always respect the auto_increment_increment
and auto_increment_offset value in case of current autoincrement value.
By fixing the problem (2), handler layer won't change any current
autoincrement value.
Reviewed-by: Jimmy Yang <jimmy.yang@oracle.com>
RB: 13748
This is a regression due to MDEV-16515 that affects some versions in
the MariaDB 10.1 server series starting with 10.1.35, and possibly
all versions starting with 10.2.17, 10.3.8, and 10.4.0.
The idea of MDEV-16515 is to allow DROP TABLE to be interrupted,
in case it was stuck due to some concurrent activity. We already
made some cases of internal DROP TABLE immune to kill in MDEV-18237,
MDEV-16647, MDEV-17470. We must include the cleanup of
CREATE TABLE...SELECT in the list of such internal DROP TABLE.
ha_innobase::delete_table(): Pass create_failed=true if the current
SQL statement is CREATE, so that the table will be dropped.
row_drop_table_for_mysql(): If create_failed=true, do not allow
the operation to be interrupted.
btr_push_update_extern_fields(): Add a parameter for the original number
of fields in the record before btr_cur_trim(). Assume that this function
will only be called for the clustered index, which is the only index
that can contain off-page columns.
trx_undo_prev_version_build(), btr_cur_pessimistic_update():
Only invoke btr_push_update_extern_fields() for the clustered index.