The problem is that during temporary table creation uneven bits
are not taken into account for hidden fields. It leads to incorrect
calculation&allocation of null bytes size for table record. And
if grouped value is null we set wrong bit for this value(see end_update()).
Fixed by adding separate calculation of uneven bit for hidden fields.
mysql-test/r/type_bit.result:
test case
mysql-test/t/type_bit.test:
test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
added separate calculation of uneven bit for hidden fields
This bug is just one facet of stored routines not being able to
detect changes in meta-data (WL#4179). This particular problem
can be triggered within a single session due to the improper
management of the pre-locking list if the view is expanded after
the pre-locking list is calculated.
Since the overall solution for the meta-data detection issue is
planned for a later release, for now a workaround is used to
fix this particular aspect that only involves a single session.
The workaround is to flush the thread-local stored routine cache
every time a view is created or modified, causing locally cached
routines to be re-evaluated upon invocation.
mysql-test/r/sp-bugs.result:
Add test case result for Bug#50624.
mysql-test/t/sp-bugs.test:
Add test case for Bug#50624.
sql/sp_cache.cc:
Update function description.
sql/sql_view.cc:
Invalidate the SP cache if a view is being created or modified.
The problem becomes apparent only if HAVE_purify is undefined.
It related to the part of code placed in open_table_from_share() fuction
where we initialize record buffer only if HAVE_purify is enabled.
So in case of HAVE_purify=OFF record buffer is not initialized
on open table stage.
Next we read key, find NULL value and update appropriate null bit
but do not update record buffer. After that the record is stored
in the join cache(store_record_in_cache). For CHAR fields we
strip trailing spaces and in our case this procedure uses
uninitialized record buffer.
The fix is to skip stripping space procedure in case of null values
for CHAR fields(partially based on 6.0 JOIN_CACHE implementation).
mysql-test/r/join.result:
test case
mysql-test/t/join.test:
test case
sql/field.cc:
code updated according to new CACHE_FIELD struct
sql/sql_select.cc:
code updated according to new CACHE_FIELD struct
sql/sql_select.h:
CACHE_FIELD struct:
added new fields: Field *field, uint type;
removed fields: Field_blob *blob_field, bool strip;
removed in MySQL 6.0
CREATE TABLE... TYPE= returns the warning "The syntax
'TYPE=storage_engine' is deprecated and will be removed in
MySQL 6.0. Please use 'ENGINE=storage_engine' instead"
This syntax is deprecated already from version 5.4.4, so
the message has been changed.
In addition, the deprecation macro was changed to reflect
the ServerPT decision not to include version number in the
warning message.
A number of test result files have been changed as a
consequence of the change in the deprecation macro.
Queries optimized with GROUP_MIN_MAX didn't cleanup KEYREAD
optimization properly. As a result subsequent queries may
return incomplete rows (fields are initialized to default
values).
mysql-test/r/group_min_max.result:
A test case for BUG#49902.
mysql-test/t/group_min_max.test:
A test case for BUG#49902.
sql/opt_range.cc:
Refactor of KEYREAD optimization switch so that KEYREAD
handler state is in sync with st_table::key_read flag.
All SQL code is supposed to switch KEYREAD optimization
via st_table::set_keyread().
sql/opt_sum.cc:
Refactor of KEYREAD optimization switch so that KEYREAD
handler state is in sync with st_table::key_read flag.
All SQL code is supposed to switch KEYREAD optimization
via st_table::set_keyread().
sql/sql_select.cc:
Refactor of KEYREAD optimization switch so that KEYREAD
handler state is in sync with st_table::key_read flag.
All SQL code is supposed to switch KEYREAD optimization
via st_table::set_keyread().
sql/sql_update.cc:
Refactor of KEYREAD optimization switch so that KEYREAD
handler state is in sync with st_table::key_read flag.
All SQL code is supposed to switch KEYREAD optimization
via st_table::set_keyread().
sql/table.cc:
Refactor of KEYREAD optimization switch so that KEYREAD
handler state is in sync with st_table::key_read flag.
All SQL code is supposed to switch KEYREAD optimization
via st_table::set_keyread().
sql/table.h:
Refactor of KEYREAD optimization switch so that KEYREAD
handler state is in sync with st_table::key_read flag.
All SQL code is supposed to switch KEYREAD optimization
via st_table::set_keyread().
Grouping by a subquery in a query with a distinct aggregate
function lead to a wrong result (wrong and unordered
grouping values).
There are two related problems:
1) The query like this:
SELECT (SELECT t1.a) aa, COUNT(DISTINCT b) c
FROM t1 GROUP BY aa
returned wrong result, because the outer reference "t1.a"
in the subquery was substituted with the Item_ref item.
The Item_ref item obtains data from the result_field object
that refreshes once after the end of each group. This data
is not applicable to filesort since filesort() doesn't care
about groups (and doesn't update result_field objects with
copy_fields() and so on). Also that data is not applicable
to group separation algorithm: end_send_group() checks every
record with test_if_group_changed() that evaluates Item_ref
items, but it refreshes those Item_ref-s only after the end
of group, that is a vicious circle and the grouped column
values in the output are shifted.
Fix: if
a) we grouping by a subquery and
b) that subquery has outer references to FROM list
of the grouping query,
then we substitute these outer references with
Item_direct_ref like references under aggregate
functions: Item_direct_ref obtains data directly
from the current record.
2) The query with a non-trivial grouping expression like:
SELECT (SELECT t1.a) aa, COUNT(DISTINCT b) c
FROM t1 GROUP BY aa+0
also returned wrong result, since JOIN::exec() substitutes
references to top-level aliases in SELECT list with Item_copy
caching items. Item_copy items have same refreshing policy
as Item_ref items, so the whole groping expression with
Item_copy inside returns wrong result in filesort() and
end_send_group().
Fix: include aliased items into GROUP BY item tree instead
of Item_ref references to them.
mysql-test/r/group_by.result:
Test case for bug #45640
mysql-test/t/group_by.test:
Test case for bug #45640
sql/item.cc:
Bug #45640: optimizer bug produces wrong results
Item_field::fix_fields() has been modified to resolve
aliases in GROUP BY item trees into aliased items instead
of Item_ref items.
sql/item.h:
Bug #45640: optimizer bug produces wrong results
- Item::find_item_processor() has been introduced.
- Item_ref::walk() has been modified to apply processors
to itself too (not only to referenced item).
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Bug #45640: optimizer bug produces wrong results
fix_inner_refs() has been modified to accept group_list
parameter.
sql/sql_lex.cc:
Bug #45640: optimizer bug produces wrong results
Initialization of st_select_lex::group_fix_field has
been added.
sql/sql_lex.h:
Bug #45640: optimizer bug produces wrong results
The st_select_lex::group_fix_field field has been introduced
to control alias resolution in Itef_fied::fix_fields.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #45640: optimizer bug produces wrong results
- The fix_inner_refs function has been modified to treat
subquery outer references like outer fields under aggregate
functions, if they are included in GROUP BY item tree.
- The find_order_in_list function has been modified to
fix Item_field alias fields included in the GROUP BY item
trees in a special manner.
logging is disabled
The server would hit an assertion because of a DBUG violation.
There was a missing DBUG_RETURN and instead a plain return
was used.
This patch replaces the return with DBUG_RETURN.
into slow log
While processing a statement, down the mysql_parse execution
stack, the thd->enable_slow_log can be assigned to
opt_log_slow_admin_statements, depending whether one is executing
administrative statements, such as ALTER TABLE, OPTIMIZE,
ANALYZE, etc, or not. This can have an impact on slow logging for
statements that are executed after an administrative statement
execution is completed.
When executing statements directly from the user this is fine
because, the thd->enable_slow_log is reset right at the beginning
of the dispatch_command function, ie, everytime a new statement
is set is set to execute.
On the other hand, for slave SQL thread (sql_thd) the story is a
bit different. When in SBR the sql_thd applies statements by
calling mysql_parse. Right after, it calls log_slow_statement
function to log them if they take too long. Calling mysql_parse
directly is fine, but also means that dispatch_command function
is bypassed. As a consequence, thd->enable_slow_log does not get
a chance to be reset before the next statement to be executed by
the sql_thd. If the statement just executed by the sql_thd was an
administrative statement and logging of admin statements was
disabled, this means that sql_thd->enable_slow_log will be set to
0 (disabled) from that moment on. End result: sql_thd stops
logging slow statements.
We fix this by resetting the value of sql_thd->enable_slow_log to
the value of opt_log_slow_slave_statements right after
log_slow_stement is called by the sql_thd.
To 5.x Release
Notes
=====
This is a backport of BUG#23300 into 5.1 GA.
Original cset revid (in betony):
luis.soares@sun.com-20090929140901-s4kjtl3iiyy4ls2h
Description
===========
When using replication, the slave will not log any slow query
logs queries replicated from the master, even if the
option "--log-slow-slave-statements" is set and these take more
than "log_query_time" to execute.
In order to log slow queries in replicated thread one needs to
set the --log-slow-slave-statements, so that the SQL thread is
initialized with the correct switch. Although setting this flag
correctly configures the slave thread option to log slow queries,
there is an issue with the condition that is used to check
whether to log the slow query or not. When replaying binlog
events the statement contains the SET TIMESTAMP clause which will
force the slow logging condition check to fail. Consequently, the
slow query logging will not take place.
This patch addresses this issue by removing the second condition
from the log_slow_statements as it prevents slow queries to be
binlogged and seems to be deprecated.
There was two problems:
The first was the symptom, caused by bad error handling in
ha_partition. It did not handle print_error etc. when
having no partitions (when used by dummy handler).
The second was the real problem that when dropping tables
it reused the table type (storage engine) from when the lock
was asked for, not the table type that it had when gaining
the exclusive name lock. So that it tried to delete tables
from wrong storage engines.
Solutions for the first problem was to accept some handler
calls to the partitioning handler even if it was not setup
with any partitions, and also if possible fallback
to use the base handler's default functions.
Solution for the second problem was to remove the optimization
to reuse the definition from the cache, instead always check
the frm-file when holding the LOCK_open mutex
(updated with a fix for a debug print crash and better
comments as required by reviewer, and removed optimization
to avoid reading the frm-file).
mysql-test/r/partition_debug_sync.result:
Bug#42438: Crash ha_partition::change_table_ptr
New result file using DEBUG_SYNC for deterministic results.
mysql-test/t/partition_debug_sync.test:
Bug#42438: Crash ha_partition::change_table_ptr
New test file using DEBUG_SYNC for deterministic results.
sql/ha_partition.cc:
Bug#42438: Crash ha_partition::change_table_ptr
allow some handler calls, used by error handling, even when
no partitions are setup. Fallback to default handling if possible.
sql/sql_base.cc:
Bug#42438: Crash ha_partition::change_table_ptr
Added DEBUG_SYNC point for deterministic test cases.
sql/sql_table.cc:
Bug#42438: Crash ha_partition::change_table_ptr
Always use the table type written in the .frm-file
(i.e. the current table type) when deleting a table.
Moved the check for log-table to not depend of the cache.
Added DEBUG_SYNC points for deterministic test cases.
Fixed 2 problems :
1. test_if_order_by_key() was continuing on the primary key
as if it has a primary key suffix (as the secondary keys do).
This leads to crashes in ORDER BY <pk>,<pk>.
Fixed by not treating the primary key as the secondary one
and not depending on it being clustered with a primary key.
2. The cost calculation was trying to read the records
per key when operating on ORDER BYs that order on all of the
secondary key + some of the primary key.
This leads to crashes because of out-of-bounds array access.
Fixed by assuming we'll find 1 record per key in such cases.
The problem was that the dbug facility was being used after the
per-thread dbug state had already been finalized. The was present
in a few functions which invoked decrement_handler_count, which
in turn invokes my_thread_end on Windows. In my_thread_end, the
per-thread dbug state is finalized. Any use after the state is
finalized ends up creating a new state.
The solution is to process the exit of a function before the
decrement_handler_count function is called.
sql/mysqld.cc:
Process the function exit before decrement_handler_count is
called, as it can end the per-thread dbug state on Windows.
column is used for ORDER BY
Problem: filesort isn't meant for null length sort data
(e.g. char(0)), that leads to a server crash.
Fix: disregard sort order if sort data record length is 0 (nothing
to sort).
mysql-test/r/select.result:
Fix for bug#49897: crash in ptr_compare when char(0) NOT NULL
column is used for ORDER BY
- test result.
mysql-test/t/select.test:
Fix for bug#49897: crash in ptr_compare when char(0) NOT NULL
column is used for ORDER BY
- test case.
sql/filesort.cc:
Fix for bug#49897: crash in ptr_compare when char(0) NOT NULL
column is used for ORDER BY
- assert added as filesort cannot handle null length sort data.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fix for bug#49897: crash in ptr_compare when char(0) NOT NULL
column is used for ORDER BY
- don't sort null length data e.g. in case of ORDER BY CHAR(0).
The problem was that a DROP TRIGGER statement inside a stored
procedure could cause a crash in subsequent invocations. This
was due to the addition, on the first execution, of a temporary
table reference to the stored procedure query table list. In
a subsequent invocation, there would be a attempt to reinitialize
the temporary table reference, which by then was already gone.
The solution is to backup and reset the query table list each
time a trigger needs to be dropped. This ensures that any temp
changes to the query table list are discarded. It is safe to
do so at this time as drop trigger is restricted from more
complicated scenarios (ie, not allowed within stored functions,
etc).
mysql-test/r/sp-bugs.result:
Add test case result for Bug#50423
mysql-test/t/sp-bugs.test:
Add test case for Bug#50423
sql/sql_trigger.cc:
Backup and reset the query table list.
Remove now unnecessary manual reset of the query table list.
In case of 'CREATE VIEW' subselect transformation does not happen(see JOIN::prepare).
During fix_fields Item_row may call is_null() method for its arugmens which
leads to item calculation(wrong subselect in our case as
transformation did not happen before). This is_null() call
does not make sence for 'CREATE VIEW'.
Note:
Only Item_row is affected because other items don't call is_null()
during fix_fields() for arguments.
mysql-test/r/view.result:
test case
mysql-test/t/view.test:
test case
sql/item_row.cc:
skip is_null() call in case of 'CREATE VIEW' as unnecessary.
SHOW CREATE TABLE on a view (v1) that contains a function whose
statement uses another view (v2), could trigger a infinite loop
if the view referenced within the function causes a warning to
be raised while opening the said view (v2).
The problem was a infinite loop over the stack of internal error
handlers. The problem would be triggered if the stack contained
two or more handlers and the first two handlers didn't handle the
raised condition. In this case, the loop variable would always
point to the second handler in the stack.
The solution is to correct the loop variable assignment so that
the loop is able to iterate over all handlers in the stack.
mysql-test/r/view.result:
Add test case result for Bug#48449.
mysql-test/std_data/bug48449.frm:
Add a incomplete view definition that causes a warning to be
issued.
mysql-test/t/view.test:
Add test case for Bug#48449
sql/sql_class.cc:
Iterate over all handlers in the stack.
The problem was that a failure to open a view wasn't being
properly handled. When opening a view with unknown definer,
the open procedure would be treated as successful and would
later crash when attempting to lock the view (which wasn't
opened to begin with).
The solution is to skip further processing when opening a
table if it fails with a fatal error.
mysql-test/r/view.result:
Add test case result for Bug#47734.
mysql-test/t/view.test:
Add test case for Bug#47734.
sql/sql_base.cc:
Skip further processing if opening a table failed due to
a fatal error (for the statement).
being logged to slow query log
The problem is that the execution time for a multi-statement
stored procedure as a whole may not be accurate, and thus not
be entered into the slow query log even if the total time
exceeds long_query_time. The reason for this is that
THD::utime_after_lock used for time calculation may be reset
at the start of each new statement, possibly leaving the total
SP execution equal to the time spent executing the last
statement in the SP.
This patch stores the utime on start of SP execution, and
restores it on exit of SP execution. A test is added.
mysql-test/suite/sys_vars/r/slow_query_log_func.result:
New test results for #47905.
mysql-test/suite/sys_vars/t/slow_query_log_func.test:
New test case for #47905.
sql/sp_head.cc:
Save and restore the THD::utime_after_lock on entry and
exit of execute_procedure().
error causes debug assertion
The IGNORE option of the multiple-table UPDATE command was
not intended to suppress errors caused by the
sql_safe_updates mode. This flag will raise an error if the
execution of UPDATE does not use a key for row retrieval,
and should continue do so regardless of the IGNORE option.
However the implementation of IGNORE does not support
exceptions to the rule; it always converts errors to
warnings and cannot be extended. The Internal_error_handler
interface offers the infrastructure to handle individual
errors, making sure that the error raised by
sql_safe_updates is not silenced.
Fixed by implementing an Internal_error_handler and using it
for UPDATE IGNORE commands.
printstack() being present
When Bug#47391 was fixed, no assumption was made that support
for Solaris 8 was needed. Solaris 8 lacks printstack(), and
the build breaks because of this.
This patch adds a test for the presence of printstack() to
configure.in for 5.0, and uses HAVE_PRINTSTACK to make
decisions rather than the __sun define.
MySQL's hash functions MD5 and SHA relied on the somewhat slow
sprintf function to convert the digests to hex representations.
This patch replaces the sprintf with a specific and inline hex
conversion function.
Patch contributed by Jan Steemann.
sql/item_strfunc.cc:
Add a hex conversion function.
In RBR, DDL statement will change binlog format to non row-based
format before it is binlogged, but the binlog format was not be
restored, and then manipulating a temporary table can not reset binlog
format to row-based format rightly. So that the manipulated statement
is binlogged with statement-based format.
To fix the problem, restore the state of binlog format after the DDL
statement is binlogged.
mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_tmp_table_and_DDL.test:
Added the test file to verify if executing DDL statement before
trying to manipulate a temporary table causes row-based replication
to break with error 'table does not exist'.
mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_row_mix_innodb_myisam.result:
Correct the test result, all the above binlog event
should be row-based after the bug49132 is fixed IN RBR.
mysql-test/suite/ndb/r/ndb_tmp_table_and_DDL.result:
Test result for bug#49132 base on ndb engine.
mysql-test/suite/ndb/t/ndb_tmp_table_and_DDL.test:
Added the test file to verify if executing DDL statement before
trying to manipulate a temporary table causes row-based replication
to break with error 'table does not exist' base on ndb engine.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_tmp_table_and_DDL.result:
Test result for bug#49132 base on myisam engine.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_tmp_table_and_DDL.test:
Added the test file to verify if executing DDL statement before
trying to manipulate a temporary table causes row-based replication
to break with error 'table does not exist' base on myisam engine.
sql/event_db_repository.cc:
Added code to restore the state of binlog format after the DDL
statement is binlogged.
sql/events.cc:
Added code to restore the state of binlog format after the DDL
statement is binlogged.
sql/sp.cc:
Added code to restore the state of binlog format after the DDL
statement is binlogged.
sql/sql_acl.cc:
Added code to restore the state of binlog format after the DDL
statement is binlogged.
sql/sql_udf.cc:
Added code to restore the state of binlog format after the DDL
statement is binlogged.
cant find record
Some engines return data for the record. Despite the fact that
the null bit is set for some fields, their old value may still in
the row. This can happen when unpacking an AI from the binlog on
top of a previous record in which a field is set to NULL, which
previously contained a value. Ultimately, this may cause the
comparison of records to fail when the slave is doing an index or
range scan.
We fix this by deploying a call to reset() for each field that is
set to null while unpacking a row from the binary log.
Furthermore, we also add mixed mode test case to cover the
scenario where updating and setting a field to null through a
Query event and later searching it through a rows event will
succeed.
Finally, we also change the reset() method, from Field_bit class,
so that it takes into account bits stored among the null bits and
not only the ones stored in the record.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_set_null_innodb.test:
InnoDB test.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_set_null_myisam.test:
MyISAM test.
mysql-test/suite/rpl_ndb/t/rpl_ndb_set_null.test:
NDB test.
sql/field.h:
Changed reset so that it also clears the bits
among the null_bits for the Field_bit class.
sql/rpl_record.cc:
Resetting field after setting it to null when unpacking
row.
Several items said to be deprecated in the 4.1 manual
have never been removed. This worklog adds deprecation
warnings when these items are used, and warns the user
that the items will be removed in MySQL 5.6.
A couple of previously deprecation decision have been
reversed (see single file comments)
client/client_priv.h:
Macro similar to the one in the server (mysql_priv.h)
for printing a deprecation warning message
client/mysql.cc:
no-auto-rehash will not be deprecated
skip-line-numbers will not be deprecated
skip-column-names will not be deprecated
no-pager is deprecated
set-variable is deprecated
no-named-commands is deprecated
client/mysqladmin.cc:
set-variable is deprecated
client/mysqlbinlog.cc:
position is deprecated
client/mysqldump.c:
first-slave is deprecated
no-set-names is deprecated
set-variable is deprecated
mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog.result:
Adding the [Warning] to the test case, just to show that the
deprecation works.
The test case will be changed in Celosia to use --start-position.
mysys/my_getopt.c:
set-variable (include -O) is deprecated
scripts/mysqld_multi.sh:
Warning for mysqld_multi
sql/mysqld.cc:
default-collation is deprecated
log-bin-trust-routine-creators is deprecated
set-variable is deprecated
default-character-set is deprecated
safe-show-database is deprecated
sql/share/errmsg.txt:
Added version number for sql_log_update deprecation message.
It is well-known that due to concurrency issues, a slave can become
inconsistent when a transaction contains updates to both transaction and
non-transactional tables in statement and mixed modes.
In a nutshell, the current code-base tries to preserve causality among the
statements by writing non-transactional statements to the txn-cache which
is flushed upon commit. However, modifications done to non-transactional
tables on behalf of a transaction become immediately visible to other
connections but may not immediately get into the binary log and therefore
consistency may be broken.
In general, it is impossible to automatically detect causality/dependency
among statements by just analyzing the statements sent to the server. This
happen because dependency may be hidden in the application code and it is
necessary to know a priori all the statements processed in the context of
a transaction such as in a procedure. Moreover, even for the few cases that
we could automatically address in the server, the computation effort
required could make the approach infeasible.
So, in this patch we introduce the option
- "--binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates" that can be used to bypass
the current behavior in order to write directly to binary log statements
that change non-transactional tables.
mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_mixing_engines.inc:
Backported this from Celosia to improve the test cases related to the NTM issue.
sql/log.cc:
Checks the --binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates before choosing
to either use the trxn-cache or not.
sql/mysqld.cc:
Introduces the option --binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates.
sql/set_var.cc:
Introduces the option --binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates.
sql/sql_class.h:
Introduces the option --binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates.
Missing ha_rnd_end in copy_partitions, found due to a
DBUG_ASSERT in mysql-pe
sql/ha_partition.cc:
Post-push patch for bug#47343
Must call ha_rnd_end since ha_rnd_init has been called.
'CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT' statement were causing 'CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLE ...' to be written to the binary log in row-based
mode (a.k.a. RBR), when there was a temporary table with the same name.
Because the 'CREATE TABLE ... SELECT' statement was executed as
'INSERT ... SELECT' into the temporary table. Since in RBR mode no
other statements related to temporary tables are written into binary log,
this sometimes broke replication.
This patch changes behavior of 'CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] ... SELECT ...'.
it ignores existence of temporary table with the
same name as table being created and is interpreted
as attempt to create/insert into base table. This makes behavior of
'CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] ... SELECT' consistent with
how ordinary 'CREATE TABLE' and 'CREATE TABLE ... LIKE' behave.
The optimizer must not continue executing the current query
if e.g. the storage engine reports an error.
This is somewhat hard to implement with Item::val_xxx()
because they do not have means to return error code.
This is why we need to check the thread's error state after
a call to one of the Item::val_xxx() methods.
Fixed store_key_item::copy_inner() to return an error state
if an error happened during the call to Item::save_in_field()
because it calls Item::val_xxx().
Also added similar checks to related places.
BUG#49481: RBR: MyISAM and bit fields may cause slave to stop on delete:
cant find record
BUG#49482: RBR: Replication may break on deletes when MyISAM tables +
char field are used
When using MyISAM tables, despite the fact that the null bit is
set for some fields, their old value is still in the row. This
can cause the comparison of records to fail when the slave is
doing an index or range scan.
We fix this by avoiding memcmp for MyISAM tables when comparing
records. Additionally, when comparing field by field, we first
check if both fields are not null and if so, then we compare
them. If just one field is null we return failure immediately. If
both fields are null, we move on to the next field.
In certain rare cases when a process was interrupted
during a FLUSH PRIVILEGES operation the diagnostic
area would be set to an error state but the function
responsible for the operation would still signal
success. This would lead to a debug assertion error
later on when the server would attempt to reset the
DA before sending the error message.
This patch fixes the issue by assuring that
reload_acl_and_cache() always fails if an error
condition is raised.
The second issue was that a KILL could cause
a console error message which referred to a DA
state without first making sure that such a
state existed.
This patch fixes this issue in two different
palces by first checking DA state before
fetching the error message.
sql/sql_acl.cc:
* Make sure that there is an error to print before attempting to do so.
* Minor style change: change 1 to TRUE for clarity.
sql/sql_parse.cc:
* Always fail reload_acl_and_cache() if the query was killed.
sql/sql_servers.cc:
* Make sure that there is an error to print before attempting to do so.