Problem: separator was not converted to the result character set,
so the result was a mixture of two different character sets,
which was especially bad for UCS2.
Fix: convert separator to the result character set.
ALTER VIEW is currently not supported as a prepared statement
and should be disabled as such as they otherwise could cause server crashes.
ALTER VIEW is currently not supported when called from stored
procedures or functions for related reasons and should also be disabled.
This patch disables these DDL statements and adjusts the appropriate test
cases accordingly.
Additional tests has been added to reflect on the fact that we do support
CREATE/ALTER/DROP TABLE for Prepared Statements (PS), Stored Procedures (SP)
and PS within SP.
The reason the "reap;" succeeds unexpectedly is because the query was completing(almost always) and the network buffer was big enough to store the query result (sometimes) on Windows, meaning the response was completely sent before the server thread could be killed.
Therefore we use a much longer running query that doesn't have a chance to fully complete before the reap happens, testing the kill properly.
Occasionally mysqlbinlog --hexdump failed with error:
ERROR 1064 (42000) at line ...: You have an error in your
SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL
server version for the right syntax to use near
'Query thread_id=... exec_time=... error_code=...
When the length of hexadecimal dump of binlog header was
divisible by 16, commentary sign '#' after header was lost.
The Log_event::print_header function has been modified to always
finish hexadecimal binlog header with "\n# ".
The abort happened when a query contained a conjunctive predicate
of the form 'view column = constant' in the WHERE condition and
the grouping list also contained a reference to a view column yet
a different one.
Removed the failing assertion as invalid in a general case.
Also fixed a bug that prevented applying some optimization for grouping
queries using views. If the WHERE condition of such a query contains
a conjunctive condition of the form 'view column = constant' and
this view column is used in the grouping list then grouping by this
column can be eliminated. The bug blocked performing this elimination.
(Part of fix for Bug#25621 Error in my_thread_global_end(): 1 threads didn't exit)
Give correct error message if InnoDB table is not found
(This allows us to drop a an innodb table that is not in the InnoDB registery)
and replicated):
A DROP USER statement with a non-existing user was correctly written to
the binary log (there might be users that were removed, but not all),
but the error code was not set, which caused the slave to stop with an
error.
The error reporting code was moved to before the statement was logged
to ensure that the error information for the thread was correctly set
up. This works since my_error() will set the fields net.last_errno and
net.last_error for the thread that is reporting the error, and this
will then be picked up when the Query_log_event is created and written
to the binary log.
slave_sql thread calls thd->clear_error() to force error to be ignored,
though this method didn't clear thd->killed state, what causes
slave_sql thread to stop.
clear thd->killed state if we ignore an error
For a join query with GROUP BY and/or ORDER BY and a view reference
in the FROM list the metadata erroneously showed empty table aliases
and database names for the view columns.
Changed code to enforce that SQL_CACHE only in the first SELECT is used to turn on caching(as documented), but any SQL_NO_CACHE will turn off caching (not documented, but a useful behaviour, especially for machine generated queries). Added test cases to explicitly test the documented caching behaviour and test cases for the reported bug.
The method select_insert::send_error does two things, it rolls back a statement
being executed and outputs an error message. But when a
nonexistent column is referenced, an error message has been published already and
there is no need to publish another.
Fixed by moving all functionality beyond publishing an error message into
select_insert::abort() and calling only that function.
represented by an expression of the type UNSIGNED INT and this
expression was evaluated to 0 then the function erroneously returned
the value of the first argument instead of an empty string.
This problem was introduced by the patch for bug 10963.
The problem has been resolved by a proper modification of the code of
Item_func_substr::val_str.