Bug#40181 Made use of tdc_remove_table instead of just
setting share->version to 0 to make sure all unused table
instances go away as part of CREATE/ALTER TABLE.
backport for bug#44059 from mysql-pe to mysql-5.1-bugteam
Using the partition with most rows instead of first partition
to estimate the cardinality of indexes.
INSERT ... SELECT ...
Problem was that when bulk insert is used on an empty
table/partition, it disables the indexes for better
performance, but in this specific case it also tries
to read from that partition using an index, which is
not possible since it has been disabled.
Solution was to allow index reads on disabled indexes
if there are no records.
Also reverted the patch for bug#38005, since that was a workaround
in the partitioning engine instead of a fix in myisam.
when partition is reoganized.
Problem was that table->timestamp_field_type was not changed
before copying rows between partitions.
fixed by setting it to TIMESTAMP_NO_AUTO_SET as the first thing
in fast_alter_partition_table, so that all if-branches is covered.
column on partitioned table
An assertion 'ASSERT_COULUMN_MARKED_FOR_READ' is failed if the query
is executed with index containing double column on partitioned table.
The problem is that assertion expects all the fields which are read,
to be in the read_set.
In this query only the field 'a' is in the readset as the tables in
the query are joined by the field 'a' and so the assertion fails
expecting other field 'b'.
Since the function cmp() is just comparison of two parameters passed,
the assertion is not required.
Fixed by removing the assertion in the double fields comparision
function and also fixed the index initialization to do ordered
index scan with RW LOCK which ensures all the fields from a key are in
the read_set.
Note: this bug is not reproducible with other datatypes because the
assertion doesn't exist in comparision function for other
datatypes.
We disallow the partitioning of a log table. You could however
partition a table first, and then point logging to it. This is
not only against the docs, it also crashes the server.
We catch this case now.
contains ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
The partitioning code needs to issue a Item::fix_fields()
on the partitioning expression in order to prepare
it for being evaluated.
It does this by creating a special table and a table list
for the scope of the partitioning expression.
But when checking ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY the
Item_field::fix_fields() was relying that there always be
cached_table set and was trying to use it to get the
select_lex of the SELECT the field's table is in.
But the cached_table was not set by the partitioning code
that creates the artificial TABLE_LIST used to resolve the
partitioning expression and this resulted in a crash.
Fixed by rectifying the following errors :
1. Item_field::fix_fields() : the code that check for
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY relies on having tables with
cacheable_table set. This is mostly true, the only
two exceptions being the partitioning context table
and the trigger context table.
Fixed by taking the current parsing context if no pointer
to the TABLE_LIST instance is present in the cached_table.
2. fix_fields_part_func() :
2a. The code that adds the table being created to the
scope for the partitioning expression is mostly a copy
of the add_table_to_list and friends with one exception :
it was not marking the table as cacheable (something that
normal add_table_to_list is doing). This caused the
problem in the check for ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY in
Item_field::fix_fields() to appear.
Fixed by setting the correct members to make the table
cacheable.
The ideal structural fix for this is to use a unified
interface for adding a table to a table list
(add_table_to_list?) : noted in a TODO comment
2b. The Item::fix_fields() was called with a NULL destination
pointer. This causes uninitalized memory reads in the
overloaded ::fix_fields() function (namely
Item_field::fix_fields()) as it expects a non-zero pointer
there. Fixed by passing the source pointer similarly to how
it's done in JOIN::prepare().
Backport from 6.0
Changed error message to show that it is partitioning
that does not support foreign keys yet.
Changed spelling from British english to American english.
Problem: Many test cases don't clean up after themselves (fail
to drop tables or fail to reset variables). This implies that:
(1) check-testcase in the new mtr that currently lives in
5.1-rpl failed. (2) it may cause unexpected results in
subsequent tests.
Fix: make all tests clean up.
Also: cleaned away unnecessary output in rpl_packet.result
Also: fixed bug where rpl_log called RESET MASTER with a running
slave. This is not supposed to work.
Also: removed unnecessary code from rpl_stm_EE_err2 and made it
verify that an error occurred.
Also: removed unnecessary code from rpl_ndb_ctype_ucs2_def.
order by
Problem was that the first index read was unordered,
and the next was ordered, resulting in use of
uninitialized data.
Solution was to use the correct variable to see if
the 'next' call should be ordered or not.
The partitioning clause is only a very long single line, which is very
hard to interpret for a human. This patch breaks the partitioning
syntax into one line for the partitioning type, and one line per
partition/subpartition.
MyISAM blocks index usage for bulk insert into zero-records tables.
See ha_myisam::start_bulk_insert() lines from
...
if (file->state->records == 0 ...
...
That causes problems for partition engine when some partitions have records some not
as the engine uses same access method for all partitions.
Now partition engine doesn't call index_first/index_last
for empty tables.
per-file comments:
mysql-test/r/partition.result
Bug#38005 Partitions: error with insert select.
test result
mysql-test/t/partition.test
Bug#38005 Partitions: error with insert select.
test case
sql/ha_partition.cc
Bug#38005 Partitions: error with insert select.
ha_engine::index_first and
ha_engine::index_last not called for empty tables.
problems are located in the sql_partition.cc where functions calculation
partition_id don't expect error returned from item->val_int().
Fixed by adding checks to these functions.
Note - it tries to fix more problems than just the reported bug.
per-file comments:
modified:
mysql-test/r/partition.result
Bug#38083 Error-causing row inserted into partitioned table despite error
test result
mysql-test/t/partition.test
Bug#38083 Error-causing row inserted into partitioned table despite error
test case
sql/opt_range.cc
Bug#38083 Error-causing row inserted into partitioned table despite error
get_part_id() call fixed
sql/partition_info.h
Bug#38083 Error-causing row inserted into partitioned table despite error
get_subpart_id_func interface changed.
sql/sql_partition.cc
Bug#38083 Error-causing row inserted into partitioned table despite error
various functions calculationg partition_id and subpart_id didn't expect
an error returned from item->val_int(). Error checks added.
update accross partitions.
It's not Innodb-specific bug.
ha_partition::update_row() didn't set
table->timestamp_field_type= TIMESTAMP_NO_AUTO_SET when
orig_timestamp_type == TIMESTAMP_AUTO_SET_ON_INSERT.
So that a partition sets the timestamp field when a record
is moved to a different partition.
Fixed by doing '= TIMESTAMP_NO_AUTO_SET' unconditionally.
Also ha_partition::write_row() is fixed in same way as now
Field_timestamp::set() is called twice in SET_ON_INSERT case.
(Chad queues this patch on demand by Trudy/Davi.)
partition is corrupt
The main problem was that ALTER TABLE t ANALYZE/CHECK/OPTIMIZE/REPAIR
PARTITION took another code path (over mysql_alter_table instead of
mysql_admin_table) which differs in two ways:
1) alter table opens the tables in a different way than admin tables do
resulting in returning with error before it tried the command
2) alter table does not start to send any diagnostic rows to the client
which the lower admin functions continue to use -> resulting in
assertion crash
The fix:
Remapped ALTER TABLE t ANALYZE/CHECK/OPTIMIZE/REPAIR PARTITION to use
the same code path as ANALYZE/CHECK/OPTIMIZE/REPAIR TABLE t.
Adding check in mysql_admin_table to setup the partition list for
which partitions that should be used.
Partitioned tables will still not work with
REPAIR TABLE/PARTITION USE_FRM, since that requires moving partitions
to tables, REPAIR TABLE t USE_FRM, and check that the data still
fulfills the partitioning function and then move the table back to
being a partition.
NOTE: I have removed the following functions from the handler
interface:
analyze_partitions, check_partitions, optimize_partitions,
repair_partitions
Since they are not longer needed.
THIS ALTERS THE STORAGE ENGINE API
problem was that ha_partition::records was not implemented, thus
using the default handler::records, which is not correct if the engine
does not support HA_STATS_RECORDS_IS_EXACT.
Solution was to implement ha_partition::records as a wrapper around
the underlying partitions records.
The rows column in explain partitions will now include the total
number of records in the partitioned table.
(recommit after removing out-commented code)
returns erroneous results
Used the wrong function when fixing 30480 which lead to
no stop on end_key resulting in duplicate results from index scan
Includes test cases for the duplicates 37327 and 37329,
Duplicate rows and bad performance/High Handler_read_next values
Recommit after merge issues
Fixed a missed case in the patch for Bug#31931.
Also makes Bug#33722 a duplicate of Bug#31931.
Added tests for better coverage.
Replaced some legacy function calls.
Problem was that the mix of handlers was not consistent between
CREATE and ALTER
changed so that it works like:
- All partitions must use the same engine
AND it must be the same as the table.
- if one does NOT specify an engine on the table level
then one must either NOT specify any engine on any
partition/subpartition OR for ALL partitions/subpartitions
Note: that after a table have been created, the storage engine
is specified for all parts of the table (table/partition/subpartition)
and so when using alter, one does not need to specify it (unless one
wants to change the storage engine, then one have to specify it on the
table level)
Problem was that there are no support for symlinked files on Windows for
mysqld. So we fail when trying to create them.
Solution: Ignore the DATA/INDEX DIRECTORY clause for partitions and push
a warning. (Just like a MyISAM table)
ha_partition::update_create_info() just calls update_create_info
of a first partition, so only get the autoincrement maximum
of the first partition, so SHOW CREATE TABLE can show
small AUTO_INCREMENT parameters.
Fixed by implementing ha_partition::update_create_info() in a way
other handlers work.
HA_ARCHIVE:stats.auto_increment handling made consistent with other engines