The function agg_cmp_type in item_cmpfunc.cc neglected the fact that
the first argument in a BETWEEN/IN predicate could be a field of a view.
As a result in the case when the retrieved table was hidden by a view
over it and the arguments in the BETWEEN/IN predicates are of
the date/time type the function did not perform conversion of
the constant arguments to the same format as the first field argument.
If formats of the arguments differed it caused wrong a evaluation of
the predicates.
Idea of the fix is for master to send FD event with `created' as 0
to reconnecting slave (upon slave_net_timeout, no master crash) to avoid destroying temp tables.
In a case of a connect by slave to the master after its crash temp tables have been already
cleaned up so that slave can not keep `orphan' temp tables.
The problem was due to the fact that with --lower-case-table-names set to 1
the function find_field_in_group did not convert the prefix 'HU' in
HU.PROJ.CITY into lower case when looking for it in the group list. Yet the
names in the group list were extended by the database name in lower case.
counter".
When TRUNCATE TABLE was called within an stored procedure the
auto_increment counter was not reset to 0 even if straight
TRUNCATE for this table did this.
This fix makes TRUNCATE in stored procedures to be handled exactly
in the same way as straight TRUNCATE. We achieve this by rolling
back the fix for bug 8850, which is no longer needed since stored
procedures don't require prelocked mode anymore (and TRUNCATE is
not allowed in stored functions or triggers).
The wrong value was being reported as the field_length for BIT
fields, resulting in confusion for at least Connector/J. The
field_length is now always the number of bits in the field, as
it should be.
The bug was caused by wrong behaviour of mysql_insert() which in case
of INSERT DELAYED into a view exited with thd->net.report_error == 0.
This blocked error reporting to the client which started waiting
infinitely for response to the query.
The code in opt_sum_query that prevented the COUNT/MIN/MAX
optimization from being applied to outer joins was not adjusted
after introducing nested joins. As a result if an outer join
contained a reference to a view as an inner table the code of
opt_sum_query missed the presence of an on expressions and
erroneously applied the mentioned optimization.
Multiple equalities were not adjusted after reading constant tables.
It resulted in neglecting good index based methods that could be
used to access of other tables.
The bug was due to a missed case in the detection of whether an index
can be used for loose scan. More precisely, the range optimizer chose
to use loose index scan for queries for which the condition(s) over
an index key part could not be pushed to the index together with the
loose scan.
As a result, loose index scan was selecting the first row in the
index with a given GROUP BY prefix, and was applying the WHERE
clause after that, while it should have inspected all rows with
the given prefix, and apply the WHERE clause to all of them.
The fix detects and skips such cases.