- Adding optional qualifiers to data types:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a schema.DATE);
Qualifiers now work only for three pre-defined schemas:
mariadb_schema
oracle_schema
maxdb_schema
These schemas are virtual (hard-coded) for now, but may turn into real
databases on disk in the future.
- mariadb_schema.TYPE now always resolves to a true MariaDB data
type TYPE without sql_mode specific translations.
- oracle_schema.DATE translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- maxdb_schema.TIMESTAMP translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- Fixing SHOW CREATE TABLE to use a qualifier for a data type TYPE
if the current sql_mode translates TYPE to something else.
The above changes fix the reported problem, so this script:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_date_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_date_column mariadb_schema.DATE);
and the slave can unambiguously treat DATE as the true MariaDB DATE
without ORACLE specific translation to DATETIME.
Similar,
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_timestamp_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_timestamp_column mariadb_schema.TIMESTAMP);
so the slave treats TIMESTAMP as the true MariaDB TIMESTAMP
without MAXDB specific translation to DATETIME.
* Fix the crash: IN-to-EXISTS rewrite causes an error (and so
JOIN::optimize() fails with an error, too), don't call
update_used_tables(). Terminate the query execution instead.
* Fix the cause of the error in the IN-to-EXISTS rewrite: don't do
the rewrite if doing it will cause an error of this kind:
This version of MariaDB doesn't yet support 'SUBQUERY in ROW in left
expression of IN/ALL/ANY'
* Fix another issue exposed by this testcase:
JOIN::setup_subquery_caches() may be invoked before any select has
saved its query plan, and will crash because none of the SELECTs
has called create_explain_query_if_not_exists() to create the Explain
Data Structure for this SELECT.
TODO: When merging this to 10.2, remove the poorly-placed call to
create_explain_query_if_not_exists made by fix for M_D_E_V-16153
Allocate space for fields inside the window function (arguments, PARTITION BY and ORDER BY clause)
in the ref pointer array. All fields inside the window function are part of the temporary
table that is required for the window function computation.
The opt_for_user subrule was incorrectly scanned before sp_create_assignment_lex(),
so the user name and the host were created on a wrong memory root.
- Reoganizing the grammar to make sure that sp_create_assignment_lex()
is called immediately after PASSWORD_SYM is scanned, so all attributes
are then allocated on its memory root.
- Moving the semantic code as methods to LEX, so the grammar looks as simple as possible.
- Changing text_or_password to be of the data type USER_AUTH*.
As a side effect, the LEX::definer member is now not used when processing
the SET PASSWORD statement. Everything is done using Bison's stack.
The bug sas introduced by this commit:
commit bf5a144e16
Cause:
In case of version based condtional comments, if the condition evaluates
to false, it is converted to a regular comment for replication by
replacing "!" by " ".
Nested comment in a conditional comment is replicated as is. Nested
comments are supported only in case of conditional comments and when a
the comment on slave is no more a conditional comment, the statement
execution fails on the slave.
Fix:
Convert the nested comment, start from "/*" to "(*" and comment end from
"*/" to "*)" for replication.
Change-Id: I1a8e385a267b2370529eade094f0258fa96886c0
In main.index_merge_myisam we remove the test that was added in
commit a2d24def8c because
it duplicates the test case that was added in
commit 5af12e4635.
This bug could happen only with a stored procedure containing queries with
more than one reference to a CTE that used local variables / parameters.
This bug was the result of an incomplete merge of the fix for the bug
MDEV-17154. The merge covered usage of parameter markers occurred in a CTE
that was referenced more than once, but missed coverage of local variables.
e.g.
- dont -> don't
- occurence -> occurrence
- succesfully -> successfully
- easyly -> easily
Also remove trailing space in selected files.
These changes span:
- server core
- Connect and Innobase storage engine code
- OQgraph, Sphinx and TokuDB storage engines
Related to MDEV-21769.
The existing syntax for renaming a column uses "ALTER TABLE ... CHANGE"
command. This requires full column specification to rename the column.
This patch adds new syntax "ALTER TABLE ... RENAME COLUMN", which do not
expect users to provide full column specification. It means that the new
syntax would pick in-place or copy algorithm in the same way as that of
existing "ALTER TABLE ... CHANGE" command. The existing syntax
"ALTER TABLE ... CHANGE" will continue to work.
Syntax changes
==============
ALTER TABLE tbl_name
[alter_specification [, alter_specification] ...]
[partition_options]
Following is a new <alter_specification> added:
| RENAME COLUMN <oldname> TO <newname>
Where <oldname> and <newname> are identifiers for old name and new
name of the column.
Related to: WL#10761
Rewriting GRANT/REVOKE grammar to use more bison stack and use Sql_cmd_ style
1. Removing a few members from LEX:
- uint grant, grant_to_col, which_columns
- List<LEX_COLUMN> columns
- bool all_privileges
2. Adding classes Grand_object_name, Lex_grant_object_name
3. Adding classes Grand_privilege, Lex_grand_privilege
4. Adding struct Lex_column_list_privilege_st, class Lex_column_list_privilege
5. Rewriting the GRANT/REVOKE grammar to use new classes and pass them through
bison stack (rather than directly access LEX members)
6. Adding classes Sql_cmd_grant* and Sql_cmd_revoke*,
changing GRANT/REVOKE to use LEX::m_sql_cmd.
7. Adding the "sp_handler" grammar rule and removing some duplicate grammar
for GRANT/REVOKE for different kinds of SP objects.
8. Adding a new rule comma_separated_ident_list, reusing it in:
- with_column_list
- colum_list_privilege
with condition_pushdown_from_having
This bug could manifest itself for queries with GROUP BY and HAVING clauses
when the HAVING clause was a conjunctive condition that depended
exclusively on grouping fields and at least one conjunct contained an
equality of the form fld=sq where fld is a grouping field and sq is a
constant subquery.
In this case the optimizer tries to perform a pushdown of the HAVING
condition into WHERE. To construct the pushable condition the optimizer
first transforms all multiple equalities in HAVING into simple equalities.
This has to be done for a proper processing of the pushed conditions
in WHERE. The multiple equalities at all AND/OR levels must be converted
to simple equalities because any multiple equality may refer to a multiple
equality at the upper level.
Before this patch the conversion was performed like this:
multiple_equality(x,f1,...,fn) => x=f1 and ... and x=fn.
When an equality item for x=fi was constructed both the items for x and fi
were cloned. If x happened to be a constant subquery that could not be
cloned the conversion failed. If the conversions of multiple equalities
previously performed had succeeded then the whole condition became in an
inconsistent state that could cause different failures.
The solution provided by the patch is:
1. to use a different conversion rule if x is a constant
multiple_equality(x,f1,...,fn) => f1=x and f2=f1 and ... and fn=f1
2. not to clone x if it's a constant.
Such conversions cannot fail and besides the result of the conversion
preserves the equivalence of f1,...,fn that can be used for other
optimizations.
This patch also made sure that expensive predicates are not pushed from
HAVING to WHERE.
(Variant #2 of the patch, which keeps the sp_head object inside the
MEM_ROOT that sp_head object owns)
(10.3 requires extra work due to sp_package, will commit a separate
patch for it)
sp_head::operator new() and operator delete() were dereferencing sp_head*
pointers to memory that didn't hold a valid sp_head object (it was
not created/already destroyed).
This caused UBSan to crash when looking up type information.
Fixed by providing static sp_head::create() and sp_head::destroy() methods.
(Variant #2 of the patch, which keeps the sp_head object inside the
MEM_ROOT that sp_head object owns)
(10.3 version of the fix, with handling for class sp_package)
sp_head::operator new() and operator delete() were dereferencing sp_head*
pointers to memory that didn't hold a valid sp_head object (it was
not created/already destroyed).
This caused UBSan to crash when looking up type information.
Fixed by providing static sp_head::create() and sp_head::destroy() methods.