If a binlog file is manually replaced with a namesake directory the internal purging did
not handle the error of deleting the file so that eventually
a post-execution guards fires an assert.
Fixed with reusing a snippet of code for bug@18199 to tolerate lack of the file but no other error
at an attempt to delete it.
The same applied to the index file deletion.
The cset carries pieces of manual merging.
improving a test that shows a failure.
the wait condition was for data in tables but the
log positions are updates after the data are unlocked.
So there was a time window
[after_table_unlock_for_select, log_pos_updated] where the
orig cond was true but log position might be changed.
the correct one is to expect the last pos of the
slave's insert in the output of show_slave_status on the
master.
The bug allow multiple executing transactions working with non-transactional
to interfere with each others by interleaving the events of different trans-
actions.
Bug is fixed by writing non-transactional events to the transaction cache and
flushing the cache to the binary log at statement commit. To mimic the behavior
of normal statement-based replication, we flush the transaction cache in row-
based mode when there is no committed statements in the transaction cache,
which means we are committing the first one. This means that it will be written
to the binary log as a "mini-transaction" with just the rows for the statement.
Note that the changes here does not take effect when building the server with
HAVE_TRANSACTIONS set to false, but it is not clear if this was possible before
this patch either.
For row-based logging, we also have that when AUTOCOMMIT=1, the code now always
generates a BEGIN/COMMIT pair for single statements, or BEGIN/ROLLBACK pair in the
case of non-transactional changes in a statement that was rolled back. Note that
for the case where changes to a non-transactional table causes a rollback due
to error, the statement will now be logged with a BEGIN/ROLLBACK pair, even
though some changes has been committed to the non-transactional table.
binlog_format=mixed
Statement-based replication of DELETE ... LIMIT, UPDATE ... LIMIT,
INSERT ... SELECT ... LIMIT is not safe as order of rows is not
defined.
With this fix, we issue a warning that this statement is not safe to
replicate in statement mode, or go to row-based mode in mixed mode.
Note that we may consider a statement as safe if ORDER BY primary_key
is present. However it may confuse users to see very similiar statements
replicated differently.
Note 2: regular UPDATE statement (w/o LIMIT) is unsafe as well, but
this patch doesn't address this issue. See comment from Kristian
posted 18 Mar 10:55.
using a trig in SP
For all 5.0 and up to 5.1.12 exclusive, when a stored routine or
trigger caused an INSERT into an AUTO_INCREMENT column, the
generated AUTO_INCREMENT value should not be written into the
binary log, which means if a statement does not generate
AUTO_INCREMENT value itself, there will be no Intvar event (SET
INSERT_ID) associated with it even if one of the stored routine
or trigger caused generation of such a value. And meanwhile, when
executing a stored routine or trigger, it would ignore the
INSERT_ID value even if there is a INSERT_ID value available set
by a SET INSERT_ID statement.
Starting from MySQL 5.1.12, the generated AUTO_INCREMENT value is
written into the binary log, and the value will be used if
available when executing the stored routine or trigger.
Prior fix of this bug in MySQL 5.0 and prior MySQL 5.1.12
(referenced as the buggy versions in the text below), when a
statement that generates AUTO_INCREMENT value by the top
statement was executed in the body of a SP, all statements in the
SP after this statement would be treated as if they had generated
AUTO_INCREMENT by the top statement. When a statement that did
not generate AUTO_INCREMENT value by the top statement but by a
function/trigger called by it, an erroneous Intvar event would be
associated with the statement, this erroneous INSERT_ID value
wouldn't cause problem when replicating between masters and
slaves of 5.0.x or prior 5.1.12, because the erroneous INSERT_ID
value was not used when executing functions/triggers. But when
replicating from buggy versions to 5.1.12 or newer, which will
use the INSERT_ID value in functions/triggers, the erroneous
value will be used, which would cause duplicate entry error and
cause the slave to stop.
The patch for 5.1 fixed it to ignore the SET INSERT_ID value when
executing functions/triggers if it is replicating from a master
of buggy versions, another patch for 5.0 fixed it not to generate
the erroneous Intvar event.
ChangeSet@1.2565, 2008-03-11 20:20:49+01:00
Merge five.local.lan:/work/merge/mysql-5.0-funcs_1
into five.local.lan:/work/merge/mysql-5.1-funcs_1
MERGE: 1.1810.3473.26
ChangeSet@1.1810.3473.26, 2008-03-11 19:54:35+01:00
Post fix for
WL#4203 Reorganize and fix the data dictionary tests of
testsuite funcs_1
The final fix of
Bug#34532 Some funcs_1 tests do not clean up at end of testing
and some minor additional modifications are for
happens here
WL#4203 Reorganize and fix the data dictionary tests of
testsuite funcs_1
because the goal to fix
Bug#34532 Some funcs_1 tests do not clean up at end of testing
was partially missed.
Some minor additional modifications are for
WL#4304 Cleanup in funcs_1 tests
Problem: rpl_variables_stm.test used a character set and a collation which
are not included on all platforms.
Fix: replace the character set and collation by ones that are included on
all platforms. (rpl_variables_stm does not rely on which character set is
used, the only important aspect is the fact that it changes.)
The reason is that we are using a sleep to wait for slave to reach the
slave_transaction_retries limit.
Fix: wait for the slave to stop instead. This is what we want to do, since
the slave stops when the limit is reached.