schemas
The function check_one_table_access() called to check access to tables in
SELECT/INSERT/UPDATE was doing additional checks/modifications that don't hold
in the context of setup_tables_and_check_access().
That's why the check_one_table() was split into two : the functionality needed by
setup_tables_and_check_access() into check_single_table_access() and the rest of
the functionality stays in check_one_table_access() that is made to call the new
check_single_table_access() function.
The length of the prefix of the pattern string in the LIKE predicate that
determined the index range to be scanned was calculated incorrectly for
multi-byte character sets.
As a result of this in 4. 1 the the scanned range was wider then necessary
if the prefix contained not only one-byte characters.
In 5.0 additionally it caused missing some rows from the result set.
function crashes server".
Attempts to execute prepared multi-delete statement which involved trigger or
stored function caused server crashes (the same happened for such statements
included in stored procedures in cases when one tried to execute them more
than once).
The problem was caused by yet another incorrect usage of check_table_access()
routine (the latter assumes that table list which it gets as argument
corresponds to value LEX::query_tables_own_last). We solve this problem by
juggling with LEX::query_tables_own_last value when we call
check_table_access() for LEX::auxilliary_table_list (better solution is too
intrusive and should be done in 5.1).
Added test case for bug#18759 Incorrect string to numeric conversion.
select.test:
Added test case for bug#18759 Incorrect string to numeric conversion.
item_cmpfunc.cc:
Cleanup after fix for bug#18360 removal
Fixes bug#17264, for alter table on win32 for successfull operation completion
it is used TL_WRITE(=10) lock instead of TL_WRITE_ALLOW_READ(=6), however here
in innodb handler TL_WRTIE is lifted to TL_WRITE_ALLOW_WRITE, which causes
race condition when several clients do alter table simultaneously.
There was an incomplete reset of the name resolution context, that caused
INSERT ... SELECT ... JOIN statements to resolve not by joint row type calculated
for the join.
Removed the redundant re-initialization of the context, because
mysql_insert_select_prepare() now correctly saves/restores the context.
tables
Currently in INSERT ... SELECT ... LIMIT ... the compiler uses a
temporary table to store the results of SELECT ... LIMIT .. and then
uses that table as a source for INSERT. The problem is that in some cases
it actually skips the LIMIT clause in doing that and materializes the
whole SELECT result set regardless of the LIMIT.
This fix is limiting the process of filling up the temp table with only
that much rows that will be actually used by propagating the LIMIT value.
Certain updates of table joined to self results in unexpected
behavior.
The problem was that record cache was mistakenly enabled for
self-joined table updates. Normally record cache must be disabled
for such updates.
Fixed wrong condition in code that determines whether to use
record cache for self-joined table updates.
Only MyISAM tables were affected.
INSERT triggers".
In cases when REPLACE was internally executed via update and table had
on update (on delete) triggers defined we exposed the fact that such
optimization used by callng on update (not calling on delete) triggers.
Such behavior contradicts our documentation which describes REPLACE as
INSERT with optional DELETE.
This fix just disables this optimization for tables with on delete triggers.
The optimization is still applied for tables which have on update but have
no on delete triggers, we just don't invoke on update triggers in this case
and thus don't expose information about optimization to user.
Also added test coverage for values returned by ROW_COUNT() function (and
thus for values returned by mysql_affected_rows()) for various forms of
INSERT.