The problem appears often in conjuction with temp files, when temp-pool is used, so that names of temp files are not unique.
The reason is that rapid deletiion and creation of fiiles with the same name on Windows is not guaranteed to succeed. File disappears from the file system only when the last handle to it is closed. If for example a virus scanner, a backup or indexing application opens the temp file just before MySQL deletes it, the file will enter "delete pending" state. In this state,it is not possible to open the file , or create a file with the same name (CreateFile returns ERROR_ACCESS_DENED, posix open returns EACESS)
Fix (rather a cheap workarounf) is not to use temp-pool when working with temporary files- this will make filenames unique.
With this patch , temp- pool setting will be ignored on anything but Linux(the option only made sense for Linux since its invention anyway).
The problem here is that embedded server starts handle_thread manager
thread on mysql_library_init() does not stop it on mysql_library_end().
At shutdown, my_thread_global_end() waits for thread count to become 0,
but since we did not stop the thread it will give up after 5 seconds.
Solution is to move shutdown for handle_manager thread from kill_server()
(mysqld specific) to clean_up() that is used by both embedded and mysqld.
This patch also contains some refactorings - to avoid duplicate code,
start_handle_manager() and stop_handle_manager() functions are introduced.
Unused variables are eliminated. handle_manager does not rely on global
variable abort_loop anymore to stop (abort_loop is not set for embedded).
Note: Specifically on Windows and when using DBUG version of libmysqld,
the complete solution requires removing obsolete code my_thread_init()
from my_thread_var(). This has a side effect that a DBUG statement
after my_thread_end() can cause thread counter to be incremented, and
embedded will hang for some seconds. Or worse, my_thread_init() will
crash if critical sections have been deleted by the global cleanup
routine that runs in a different thread.
This patch also fixes and revert prior changes for Bug#38293
"Libmysqld crash in mysql_library_init if language file missing".
Root cause of the crash observed in Bug#38293 was bug in my_thread_init()
described above
Bug #41173 rpl_packet fails sporadically on pushbuild: query 'DROP TABLE t1' failed
The both issues appeared to be a race between the SQL thread executing CREATE table t1
and the IO thread that is expected to stop at the consequent big size event.
The two events need serialization which is implemented.
The early bug required back-porting a part fixes for bug#38350 exclusively for 5.0 version.
after rollback on master
When starting a transaction with a statement containing changes
to both transactional tables and non-transactional tables, the
statement is considered as non-transactional and is therefore
written directly to the binary log. This behaviour was present
in 5.0, and has propagated to 5.1.
If a trigger containing a change of a non-transactional table is
added to a transactional table, any changes to the transactional
table is "tainted" as non-transactional.
This patch solves the problem by removing the existing "hack" that
allows non-transactional statements appearing first in a transaction
to be written directly to the binary log. Instead, anything inside
a transaction is treaded as part of the transaction and not written
to the binary log until the transaction is committed.
bigint' fails on windows.
Visual Studio does not take into account some x86 hardware limitations
which leads to incorrect results when converting large DOUBLE values
to BIGINT UNSIGNED ones.
Fixed by adding a workaround for double->ulonglong conversion on
Windows.
A transaction could result in having an extra event after a query that
errored e.g because of a dup key. Such a query is rolled back in
innodb, as specified, but has not been in binlog.
It appeares that the binlog engine did not always register for a query
(statement) because the previous query had not reset at its statement
commit time. Because of that fact there was no roll-back to the
trx_data->before_stmt_pos position and a the pending event of the
errorred query could become flushed to the binlog file.
Fixed with deploying the reset of trx_data->before_stmt_pos at the end
of the query processing.
The "show status" may be received by the server in a startup state, where it only can reject the statement, so that the client then react with 2013.
So, adding 2013 to the list of errors may help, as the "show status" will be repeated then.
with non-RSA-requesting client if server uses RSA key
matchSuite() may not find a match.
It will return error in this case.
Added a error checking code that will prevent using uninitialized
memory in the code based on the assumption
that matchSuite() has found a match.
The minimum value differs depending on the OS and mysqld build, so that the test fail spradically.
The check of this value has been changed from check of concrete values to the check of a range that is near by the expected value.
Updated MySQL time handling code to react correctly on UTC leap second additions.
MySQL functions that return the OS current time, like e.g. CURDATE(), NOW() etc
will return :59:59 instead of :59:60 or 59:61.
As a result the reader will receive :59:59 for 2 or 3 consecutive seconds
during the leap second.
This fix will not affect the values returned by UNIX_TIMESTAMP() for leap seconds.
But note that when converting the value returned by UNIX_TIMESTAMP() to broken
down time the correction of leap seconds will still be applied.
Note that this fix will make a difference *only* if the OS is specially configured
to return leap seconds from the OS time calls or when using a MySQL time zone
defintion that has leap seconds.
Even after this change date/time literals (or other broken down time
representations) with leap seconds (ending on :59:60 or 59:61) will still be
considered illegal and discarded by the server with an error or
a warning depending on the sql mode.
Added a test case to demonstrate the effect of the fix.
which were determined by the server depending on the os. The solution is to disable warnings in general.
The check of the values only have been done for Linux and Windows. Now, the check has been changed to the check of
ranges (not more concrete values) being near by the expected (set) values.
TABLE_LIST doesn't free Strings in its string lists
(TABLE_LIST::use_index and TABLE_liST::ignore_index), so
calling c_ptr_safe() on that Strings leads to memleaks.
OTOH "safe" c_ptr_safe() is not necessary there and we can
replace it with c_ptr().
column
When the storage engine uses secondary keys clustered with the primary key MySQL was
adding the primary key parts to each secondary key.
In doing so it was not checking whether the index was on full columns and this
resulted in the secondary keys being added to the list of covering keys even if
they have partial columns.
Fixed by not adding a primary key part to the list of columns that can be used
for index read of the secondary keys when the primary key part is a partial key part.
leads to an assertion failure
Any run-time error in stored function (like recursive function
call or update of table that is already updating by statement
which invoked this stored function etc.) that was used in some
expression of the single-table UPDATE statement caused an
assertion failure.
Multiple-table UPDATE (as well as INSERT and both single- and
multiple-table DELETE) are not affected.
an error
Even after the fix for bug 28701 visible behaviors of
SELECT FROM a view and SELECT FROM a regular table are
little bit different:
1. "SELECT FROM regular table USE/FORCE/IGNORE(non
existent index)" fails with a "ERROR 1176 (HY000):
Key '...' doesn't exist in table '...'"
2. "SELECT FROM view USING/FORCE/IGNORE(any index)" fails
with a "ERROR 1221 (HY000): Incorrect usage of
USE/IGNORE INDEX and VIEW". OTOH "SHOW INDEX FROM
view" always returns empty result set, so from the point
of same behaviour view we trying to use/ignore non
existent index.
To harmonize the behaviour of USE/FORCE/IGNORE(index)
clauses in SELECT from a view and from a regular table the
"ERROR 1221 (HY000): Incorrect usage of USE/IGNORE INDEX
and VIEW" message has been replaced with the "ERROR 1176
(HY000): Key '...' doesn't exist in table '...'" message
like for tables and non existent keys.
The SHOW VARIABLES LIKE .../SELECT @@/SELECT ... FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VARIABLES
were assuming that all the system variables are in system charset (UTF-8).
However the variables that are settable through command line will have a different
character set (character_set_filesystem).
Fixed the server to remember the correct character set of basedir, datadir, tmpdir,
ssl, plugin_dir, slave_load_tmpdir, innodb variables; init_connect and init_slave
variables and use it when processing data.