- Removed not used variables
- Changed some ulong parameters/variables to ulonglong (possible serious bug)
- Added casts to get rid of safe assignment from longlong to long (and similar)
- Added casts to function parameters
- Fixed signed/unsigned compares
- Added some constructores to structures
- Removed some not portable constructs
Better fix for bug Bug #21428 "skipped 9 bytes from file: socket (3)" on "mysqladmin shutdown"
(Added new parameter to net_clear() to define when we want the communication buffer to be emptied)
prepared statement and subquery.
When a field of a view from an outer select is resolved the find_field_in_view
function creates an Item_direct_view_ref object that references the
corresponding view underlying field. After that the view_ref is marked
as a dependent one. While resolving view underlying field it also get
marked as a dependent one due to current_select still points to the subselect.
Marking the view underlying field is wrong and lead to attaching conditions
to a wrong table and thus to the wrong result of the whole statement.
Now mark_select_range_as_dependent() function isn't called for fields from a
view underlying table.
Problems (appear only under some circumstances):
1. we get a reference to a deleted table searching in the
thd->handler_tables_hash in the mysql_ha_read().
2. DBUG_ASSERT(table->file->inited == handler::NONE); assert fails in the
close_thread_table().
Fix: end open index scans and table scans and remove references to the
tables from the handler tables hash. After this preparation it is safe
to close the tables. The close can no longer fail on open index/table
scans and the closed table will not be used again by handler functions.
Added missing DBUG_RETURN statements (in mysqldump.c)
Added missing enums
Fixed a lot of wrong DBUG_PRINT() statements, some of which could cause crashes
Removed usage of %lld and %p in printf strings as these are not portable or produces different results on different systems.
Fixed some possible fatal wrong arguments to printf() style functions
Initialized some not initialized variables
Fixed bug in stored procedure and continue handlers
(Fixes Bug#22150)
This is a performance issue for queries with subqueries evaluation
of which requires filesort.
Allocation of memory for the sort buffer at each evaluation of a
subquery may take a significant amount of time if the buffer is rather big.
With the fix we allocate the buffer at the first evaluation of the
subquery and reuse it at each subsequent evaluation.
account predicates that become sargable after reading const tables.
In some cases this resulted in choosing non-optimal execution plans.
Now info of such potentially saragable predicates is saved in
an array and after reading const tables we check whether this
predicates has become saragable.
When resolving unqualified name references MySQL was not
checking what is the item type for the reference. Thus
e.g a string literal item that has by convention a name
equal to its string value will also work as a reference to
a SELECT list item or a table field.
Fixed by allowing only Item_ref or Item_field to referenced by
(unqualified) name.
In a trigger or a function used in a statement it is possible to do
SELECT from a table being modified by the statement. However,
encapsulation of such SELECT into a view and selecting from a view
instead of direct SELECT was not possible.
This happened because tables used by views (which in their turn
were used from functions/triggers) were not excluded from checks
in unique_table() routine as it happens for the rest of tables
added to the statement table list for prelocking.
With this fix we ignore all such tables in unique_table(), thus
providing consistency: inside a trigger or a functions SELECT from
a view may be used where plain SELECT is allowed. Modification of
the same table from function or trigger is still disallowed. Also,
this patch doesn't affect the case where SELECT from the table being
modified is done outside of function of trigger, such SELECTs are
still disallowed (this limitation and visibility problem when function
select from a table being modified are subjects of bug 21326). See
also bug 22427.
On an INSERT into an updatable but non-insertable view an error message was
issued stating the view being not updatable. This can lead to a confusion of a
user.
A new error message is introduced. Is is showed when a user tries to insert
into a non-insertable view.
The cause of the bug was an incomplete fix for bug 18080.
The problem was that setup_tables() unconditionally reset the
name resolution context to its 'tables' argument, which pointed
to the first table of an SQL statement.
The bug fix limits resetting of the name resolution context in
setup_tables() only in the cases when the context was not set
by earlier parser/optimizer phases.
from cache" and #21216 "Simultaneous DROP TABLE and SHOW OPEN TABLES causes
server to crash".
Crash happened when one ran DROP DATABASE or SHOW OPEN TABLES statements
while concurrently doing DROP TABLE (or RENAME TABLE, CREATE TABLE LIKE
or any other command that takes name-lock) in other connection.
This problem was caused by the fact that table placeholders which were
added to table cache in order to obtain name-lock on table had
TABLE_SHARE::db and table_name set to 0. Therefore they broke assumption
that these members are non-0 for all tables in table cache on which some
of our code relies.
The fix sets these members for such placeholders to appropriate value making
this assumption true again. As attempt to avoid such problems in future
we introduce auxiliary TABLE_SHARE::set_table_cache_key() methods which
should be used when one wants to set TABLE_SHARE::table_cache_key and which
ensure that TABLE_SHARE::table_name/db are set properly.
Test cases for these bugs were added to 5.0 test-suite (with 5.0-specific
fix for bug #21216).
SELECT right instead of INSERT right was required for an insert into to a view.
This wrong behaviour appeared after the fix for bug #20989. Its intention was
to ask only SELECT right for all tables except the very first for a complex
INSERT query. But that patch has done it in a wrong way and lead to asking
a wrong access right for an insert into a view.
The setup_tables_and_check_access() function now accepts two want_access
parameters. One will be used for the first table and the second for other
tables.
Due to incorrect handling of FLUSH TABLES, log tables were marked for flush,
but not reopened. Later we started to wait for the log table to be closed
(disabled) after the flush. And as nobody disabled logs in concurrent treads,
the command lasted forever.
After internal consultations it was decided to skip logs during FLUSH TABLES.
The reasoning is that logging is done in the "log device", whatever it is
which is always active and controlled by FLUSH LOGS. So, to flush logs
one should use FLUSH LOGS, and not FLUSH TABLES.
Continued implementation of WL#1324 (table name to filename encoding)
The intermediate (not temporary) files of the new table
during ALTER TABLE was visible for SHOW TABLES. These
intermediate files are copies of the original table with
the changes done by ALTER TABLE. After all the data is
copied over from the original table, these files are renamed
to the original tables file names. So they are not temporary
files. They persist after ALTER TABLE, but just with another
name.
In 5.0 the intermediate files are invisible for SHOW TABLES
because all file names beginning with "#sql" were suppressed.
This failed since 5.1.6 because even temporary table names were
converted when making file names from them. The prefix became
converted to "@0023sql". Converting the prefix during SHOW TABLES
would suppress the listing of user tables that start with "#sql".
The solution of the problem is to continue the implementation of
the table name to file name conversion feature. One requirement
is to suppress the conversion for temporary table names.
This change is straightforward for real temporary tables as there
is a function that creates temporary file names.
But the generated path names are located in TMPDIR and have no
relation to the internal table name. This cannot be used for
ALTER TABLE. Its intermediate files need to be in the same
directory as the old table files. And it is necessary to be
able to deduce the same path from the same table name repeatedly.
Consequently the intermediate table files must be handled like normal
tables. Their internal names shall start with tmp_file_prefix
(#sql) and they shall not be converted like normal table names.
I added a flags parameter to all relevant functions that are
called from ALTER TABLE. It is used to suppress the conversion
for the intermediate table files.
The outcome is that the suppression of #sql in SHOW TABLES
works again. It does not suppress user tables as these are
converted to @0023sql on file level.
This patch does also fix ALTER TABLE ... RENAME, which could not
rename a table with non-ASCII characters in its name.
It does also fix the problem that a user could create a table like
`#sql-xxxx-yyyy`, where xxxx is mysqld's pid and yyyy is the thread
ID of some other thread, which prevented this thread from running
ALTER TABLE.
Some of the above problems are mentioned in Bug 1405, which can
be closed with this patch.
This patch does also contain some minor fixes for other forgotten
conversions. Still known problems are reported as bugs 21370,
21373, and 21387.
- Add prelocking for stored procedures that uses sp or sf
- Update test result for sp_error(reported as bug#21294)
- Make note about new error message from sp-error(bug#17244)
When executing INSERT over a view with calculated columns it was assuming all
elements of the fields collection are actually Item_field instances.
This may not be true when inserting into a view and that view has columns that are
such expressions that allow updating (like setting a collation for example).
Corrected to access field information through the filed_for_view_update() function and
retrieve correctly the field info even for "update-friendly" non-Item_field items.
The problem was that store_top_level_join_columns() incorrectly assumed
that the left/right neighbor of a nested join table reference can be only
at the same level in the join tree.
The fix checks if the current nested join table reference has no immediate
left/right neighbor, and if so chooses the left/right neighbors of the
nearest upper level, where these references are != NULL.