Server starts any binlog dump from Format_description_log_event,
this shifted all offset calculations in mysqlbinlog and made it
to stop the dump earlier than --stop-position. Now mysqlbinlog
takes Format_description_log_event into account
when it was printing a Query event, it produced invalid SQL (missing
the BINLOG keyword, so the SQL started with the base64 string, which
is incorrect).
Note: no testcase; I have a .test which shows that the bugfix works,
but it triggers BUG#26361 and so gives Valgrind warnings. I'm sending
this test to the fixer of BUG#26361 for her/him to push when she/he
fixes BUG#26361.
around the original functions. These will ensure that error
message is always in unique form, reduce code and print the
right alternatives automatically in an error case.
mysqlbinlog prints all row-based events of a single statement as a
single "BINLOG" statement containing the concatenation of those events.
Big (i.e. >64k) concatenations of row-based events
(e.g. Write_rows_log_event) caused mysqlbinlog's IO_CACHE to overflow
to a temporary file but the IO_CACHE had not been inited with
open_cached_file(), so it tried to create a temporary file in
an uninitialized directory (thus failing to create, then to write;
some OS errors were printed, and it finally segfaulted).
After fixing this, it appeared that mysqlbinlog was printing only
a piece of big concatenations of row-based events (it printed
at most the size of the IO_CACHE's buffer i.e. 64k); that caused data
loss at restore. We fix and test that.
Last, mysqlbinlog's printouts looked a bit strange with the informative
header (#-prefixed) of groupped Rows_log_event all on one line,
so we insert \n. After that, a small bug in the --hexdump code appeared
(only if the string to hex-print had its length a multiple of 16),
we fix it.
Fixed compile-pentium64 scripts
Fixed wrong estimate of update_with_key_prefix in sql-bench
Merge bk-internal.mysql.com:/home/bk/mysql-5.1 into mysql.com:/home/my/mysql-5.1
Fixed unsafe define of uint4korr()
Fixed that --extern works with mysql-test-run.pl
Small trivial cleanups
This also fixes a bug in counting number of rows that are updated when we have many simultanous queries
Move all connection handling and command exectuion main loop from sql_parse.cc to sql_connection.cc
Split handle_one_connection() into reusable sub functions.
Split create_new_thread() into reusable sub functions.
Added thread_scheduler; Preliminary interface code for future thread_handling code.
Use 'my_thread_id' for internal thread id's
Make thr_alarm_kill() to depend on thread_id instead of thread
Make thr_abort_locks_for_thread() depend on thread_id instead of thread
In store_globals(), set my_thread_var->id to be thd->thread_id.
Use my_thread_var->id as basis for my_thread_name()
The above changes makes the connection we have between THD and threads more soft.
Added a lot of DBUG_PRINT() and DBUG_ASSERT() functions
Fixed compiler warnings
Fixed core dumps when running with --debug
Removed setting of signal masks (was never used)
Made event code call pthread_exit() (portability fix)
Fixed that event code doesn't call DBUG_xxx functions before my_thread_init() is called.
Made handling of thread_id and thd->variables.pseudo_thread_id uniform.
Removed one common 'not freed memory' warning from mysqltest
Fixed a couple of usage of not initialized warnings (unlikely cases)
Suppress compiler warnings from bdb and (for the moment) warnings from ndb
Removed a lot of compiler warnings
Removed not used variables, functions and labels
Initialize some variables that could be used unitialized (fatal bugs)
%ll -> %l
- Removed not used variables and functions
- Added #ifdef around code that is not used
- Renamed variables and functions to avoid conflicts
- Removed some not used arguments
Fixed some class/struct warnings in ndb
Added define IS_LONGDATA() to simplify code in libmysql.c
I did run gcov on the changes and added 'purecov' comments on almost all lines that was not just variable name changes
Problem: mysqlbinlog_base64 failed sporadically.
Reason: Missing "flush logs" before running $MYSQL_BINLOG,
which could start dumping the log file before server
has finished writting into it.
Fix:
- implementing --force-if-open option to "mysqlbinlog"
- adding --disable-force-if-open to make $MYSQL_BINLOG
fail on non-closed log files, to garantee that nobody
will forget "flush logs" in the future.
- adding "flush logs" into all affected tests.
- Windows opens stdin in text mode by default. Certain characters
such as CTRL-Z are interpeted as events and the read() method
will stop. CTRL-Z is the EOF marker in Windows. to get past this
you have to open stdin in binary mode. Setmode() is used to set
stdin in binary mode. Errors on setting this mode result in
halting the function and printing an error message to stderr.
Problem: when loading mysqlbinlog dumps, CREATE PROCEDURE having semicolons
in their bodies failed.
Fix: Using safe delimiter "/*!*/;" to dump log entries.
Moved .progress files into the log directory
Moved 'cluster' database tables into the MySQL database, to not have 'cluster' beeing a reserved database name
Fixed bug where mysqld got a core dump when trying to use a table created by MySQL 3.23
Fixed some compiler warnings
Fixed small memory leak in libmysql
Note that this doesn't changeset doesn't include the new mysqldump.c code required to run some tests. This will be added when I merge 5.0 to 5.1
(Mostly in DBUG_PRINT() and unused arguments)
Fixed bug in query cache when used with traceing (--with-debug)
Fixed memory leak in mysqldump
Removed warnings from mysqltest scripts (replaced -- with #)
crash for, e.g., NDB):
Before, mysqlbinlog printed table map events as a separate statement, so
when executing the event, the opened table was subsequently closed
when the statement ended. Instead, the row-based events that make up
a statement are now printed as *one* BINLOG statement, which means
that the table maps and the following *_rows_log_event events are
executed fully before the statement ends.
Changing implementation of BINLOG statement to be able to read the
emitted format, which now consists of several chunks of BASE64-encoded
data.
when calling a SP from C API"
The bug was caused by lack of checks for misuse in mysql_real_query.
A stored procedure always returns at least one result, which is the
status of execution of the procedure itself.
This result, or so-called OK packet, is similar to a result
returned by INSERT/UPDATE/CREATE operations: it contains the overall
status of execution, the number of affected rows and the number of
warnings. The client test program attached to the bug did not read this
result and ivnoked the next query. In turn, libmysql had no check for
such scenario and mysql_real_query was simply trying to send that query
without reading the pending response, thus messing up the communication
protocol.
The fix is to return an error from mysql_real_query when it's called
prior to retrieval of all pending results.