The problem is that creating a event could fail if the value of
the variable server_id didn't fit in the originator column of
the event system table. The cause is two-fold: it was possible
to set server_id to a value outside the documented range (from
0 to 2^32-1) and the originator column of the event table didn't
have enough room for values in this range.
The log tables (general_log and slow_log) also don't have a proper
column type to store the server_id and having a large server_id
value could prevent queries from being logged.
The solution is to ensure that all system tables that store the
server_id value have a proper column type (int unsigned) and that
the variable can't be set to a value that is not within the range.
The method to purge binary log files produces different results in some platforms.
The reason is that the purge time is calculated based on table modified time and
that can't guarantee to purge master-bin.000002 in all platforms.(eg. windows)
Use a new way that sets the time to purge binlog file 1 second after the last modified time of master-bin.000002.
That can be sure that the file is always deleted in any platform.
The reason of the bug is in that the test makes a trick with relay log files and
did not reset fully at the end.
If mtr does not restart the test the new SQL thread tried to work with the old time
session data.
Fixed with deploying RESET slave at the clean-up.
When using mixed mode the record values stored inside the storage
engine differed from the ones computed from the row event. This
happened because the prepare_record function was calling
empty_record macro causing some don't care bits to be left set.
Replacing the empty_record plus explicitly setting defaults with
restore_record to restore the record default values fixes this.
When binlog_format is STATEMENT and the statement is unsafe before,
the unsafe warning/error message was issued without checking
whether the SQL_LOG_BIN was turned on or not.
Fixed with adding a sql_log_bin_toplevel flag in THD to check
whether SQL_LOG_BIN is ON in current session whatever the current is in sp or not.
Set wrong sql_mode when creating a procedure.
So that the sql_mode can't be writen into binary log correctly.
Restore the current session sql_mode right before generating the binlog event
when creating a procedure.
Revised the test to include a test of completion_type = 1 as well as making the test more readable / worthwhile
Removed the master.opt file as it was redundant / unnecessary.
slave.
In mixed mode, if we create a temporary table and do some update which switch to ROW format,
the format will keep in ROW format until the session ends or the table is dropped explicitly.
When the session ends, the temp table is dropped automaticly at cleanup time.
but it checks only current binlog format and so skip insertion of DROP TABLE instructions into binlog.
So the temp table can't be dropped correctly at slave.
Our solution is that when closing temp tables at cleanup time we check both binlog format and binlog mode,
and we could write DROP TABLE instructions into binlog if current binlog format is ROW but in MIX mode.
If secure-file-priv was set on slave, it became unable to execute
LOAD DATA INFILE statements sent from master using mixed or
statement-based replication.
This patch fixes the issue by ignoring this security restriction
and checking if the files are created and read by the slave in the
--slave-load-tmpdir while executing the SQL Thread.
The test case relies on binlog entries for assertion. The problem is that the
binlog does not get cleaned in pushbuild between tests, resulting in extra
entries in the result file, causing the test to fail.
This fix adds a reset master at the beginning of the test, so that we get a
clean binlog file.
TRUNCATE TABLE fails to replicate when stmt-based binlogging is not supported.
Correcting some tests that was failing in pushbuild as well as fixing result
file for some tests that are not executed in the default MTR run.
There is an inconsistency with DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS, DROP
TABLE IF EXISTS and DROP VIEW IF EXISTS: those are binlogged even
if the DB or TABLE does not exist, whereas DROP PROCEDURE IF
EXISTS does not. It would be nice or at least consistent if DROP
PROCEDURE/STATEMENT worked the same too.
Fixed DROP PROCEDURE|FUNCTION IF EXISTS by adding a call to
write_bin_log in mysql_execute_command. Checked also if all
documented "DROP (...) IF EXISTS" get binlogged. Left out DROP
SERVER IF EXISTS because it seems that it only gets binlogged when
using row event (see BUG#25705).
The problem is that a unfiltered user query was being passed as
the format string parameter of sql_print_warning which later
performs printf-like formatting, leading to crashes if the user
query contains formatting instructions (ie: %s). Also, it was
using THD::query as the source of the user query, but this
variable is not meaningful in some situations -- in a delayed
insert, it points to the table name.
The solution is to pass the user query as a parameter for the
format string and use the function parameter query_arg as the
source of the user query.
Path composition for the relay log file that is stored into the relay index
file was not correct for windows.
mysql-test language does not provide primitives for portable path composition.
Fixed with storing only the basename part of the external "fake" relay log into
the relay index file.
Safety of removal of the dirname part of the relaylog is provided by logics of
`setup_fake_relay_log' that places the fake file into @@datadir directory.
TRUNCATE TABLE fails to replicate when stmt-based binlogging is not supported.
There were two separate problems with the code, both of which are fixed with
this patch:
1. An error was printed by InnoDB for TRUNCATE TABLE in statement mode when
the in isolation levels READ COMMITTED and READ UNCOMMITTED since InnoDB
does permit statement-based replication for DML statements. However,
the TRUNCATE TABLE is not transactional, but is a DDL, and should therefore
be allowed to be replicated as a statement.
2. The statement was not logged in mixed mode because of the error above, but
the error was not reported to the client.
This patch fixes the problem by treating TRUNCATE TABLE a DDL, that is, it is
always logged as a statement and not reporting an error from InnoDB for TRUNCATE
TABLE.