tv_usec is a (suseconds_t) so we cast to it. Prevents the AIX(gcc-10) warning:
include/my_time.h: In function 'void my_timeval_trunc(timeval*, uint)':
include/my_time.h:249:65: warning: conversion from 'long int' to 'suseconds_t' {aka 'int'} may change value [-Wconversion]
249 | tv->tv_usec-= my_time_fraction_remainder(tv->tv_usec, decimals);
|
macOS is: conversion from 'long int' to '__darwin_suseconds_t' {aka 'int'} may change value
On Windows suseconds_t isn't defined so we use the existing
long return type of my_time_fraction_remainder.
Reviewed by Marko Mäkelä
Closes: #2079
The MemorySanitizer implementation in clang includes some built-in
instrumentation (interceptors) for GNU libc. In GNU libc 2.33, the
interface to the stat() family of functions was changed. Until the
MemorySanitizer interceptors are adjusted, any MSAN code builds
will act as if that the stat() family of functions failed to initialize
the struct stat.
A fix was applied in
https://reviews.llvm.org/rG4e1a6c07052b466a2a1cd0c3ff150e4e89a6d87a
but it fails to cover the 64-bit variants of the calls.
For now, let us work around the MemorySanitizer bug by defining
and using the macro MSAN_STAT_WORKAROUND().
The sys_var class has the deprecation_substitute member to mark the
deprecated variables. As it's set, the server produces warnings when
these variables are used. However, the plugin has no means to utilize
that functionality.
So, the PLUGIN_VAR_DEPRECATED flag is introduced to set the
deprecation_substitute with the empty string. A non-empty string can
make the warning more informative, but there's no nice way seen to
specify it, and not that needed at the moment.
- compile wolfcrypt with kdf.c, to avoid undefined symbols in tls13.c
- define WOLFSSL_HAVE_ERROR_QUEUE to avoid endless loop SSL_get_error
- Do not use SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh/get_dh2048, this would require additional
compilation options in WolfSSL. Disable it for WolfSSL build, it works
without it anyway.
- fix "macro already defined" Windows warning.
The InnoDB DATA DIRECTORY attribute is not implemented via
symbolic links but something similar, *.isl files that contain
the names of data files.
InnoDB failed to ignore the DATA DIRECTORY attribute even though
the server was started with --skip-symbolic-links.
Native ALTER TABLE in InnoDB will retain the DATA DIRECTORY attribute
of the table, no matter if the table will be rebuilt or not.
Generic ALTER TABLE (with ALGORITHM=COPY) as well as TRUNCATE TABLE
will discard the DATA DIRECTORY attribute.
All tests have been run with and without the ./mtr option
--mysqld=--skip-symbolic-links
and some tests that use the InnoDB DATA DIRECTORY attribute
have been adjusted for this.
SET PASSWORD = PASSWORD('foo') would fail for pam plugin with
ERROR HY000: SET PASSWORD is ignored for users authenticating via pam plugin
but SET PASSWORD = 'foo' would not.
Now it will.
LIMIT history switching requires the number of history partitions to
be marked for read: from first to last non-empty plus one empty. The
least we can do is to fail with error message if the needed partition
was not marked for read. As this is handler interface we require new
handler error code to display user-friendly error message.
Switching by INTERVAL works out-of-the-box with
ER_ROW_DOES_NOT_MATCH_GIVEN_PARTITION_SET error.
This commit contains a fix, where the replication write set for a CREATE TABLE
will contain, as certification keys, table names for all FK references.
With this, all DML for the FK parent tables will conflict with the CREATE TABLE
statement.
There is also new test galera.MDEV-27276 to verify the fix.
Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
This commit has a mtr test where two two transactions delete a row from
two separate tables, which will cascade a FK delete for the same row in
a third table. Second replica node is configured with 2 applier threads,
and the test will fail if these two transactions are applied in parallel.
The actual fix, in this commit, is to mark a transaction as unsafe for
parallel applying when it traverses into cascade delete operation.
Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
bzip2/lz4/lzma/lzo/snappy compression is now provided via *services*
they're almost like normal services, but in include/providers/
and they're supposed to provide exactly the same interface
as original compression libraries (but not everything,
only enough of if for the code to compile).
the services are implemented via dummy functions that return
corresponding error values (LZMA_PROG_ERROR, LZO_E_INTERNAL_ERROR, etc).
the actual compression libraries are linked into corresponding
provider plugins. Providers are daemon plugins that when loaded
replace service pointers to point to actual compression functions.
That is, run-time dependency on compression libraries is now on plugins,
and the server doesn't need any compression libraries to run, but
will automatically support the compression when a plugin is loaded.
InnoDB and Mroonga use compression plugins now. RocksDB doesn't,
because it comes with standalone utility binaries that cannot
load plugins.