On Solaris mktime() adds one extra day to tm_mday field and returns appropriate
value for dates 1600-01-01 and earlier. That is 1600-01-01 becomes 1600-01-02.
Solaris mktime manual excerpts:
...
The tm_year member must be for year 1901 or later. Calendar
times before 20:45:52 UTC, December 13, 1901 or after
03:14:07 UTC, January 19, 2038 cannot be represented. Port-
able applications should not try to create dates before
00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970 or after 00:00:00 UTC, January
1, 2038.
...
The mktime() function assumes Gregorian dates. Times before
the adoption of the Gregorian calendar will not match his-
torial records.
...
According to manual Mroonga only supports dates and datetimes after 1900:
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb/about-mroonga/
Technically these tests cover unsupported values and should fail on all
platforms. Disable tests until the problem is fixed upstream.
- Better error from check_slave_param
- Better error message from TokuDB if it can't be compiled.
- Marked rpl_mixed_drop_create_temp_table and
rpl_stm_drop_create_temp_table as big tests to stop timeout
failures on power8
- Added sync_slave_with_master to semisync_future-7591 to
ensure that slave is up to date with master before calling
rpl_end.
- Disabled compiler warnings from connect and mroonga and on
MacOSX.
Mroonga:
- Fixed bug when testing if file is a normal file that can be deleted
- Marked a lot of date and datetime test to not run on macosx.
This is because mktime() can't handle negative years and this
restricts mroonga so that it can only store dates after the year 1900.
rpl/rpl_mdev382 ; Wrong replace in show_binlog_events2.inc
binlog/database ; Different error on Solaris if file exists
mroonga/repair_table_no_index_file ; Different system error on Solaris
partition_not_blackhole ; Different error on Solaris
partition_myisam ; Different error on Solaris
Some other failures in mroonga was because have_32bit.inc didn't correctly
detect 64 bits on Solaris. Fixed using DEFAULT_MACHINE instead of MACHINE_TYPE
for Sys_version_compile_machine.
In original code, sometimes one got an automatic DEFAULT value in some cases, in other cases not.
For example:
create table t1 (a int primary key) - No default
create table t2 (a int, primary key(a)) - DEFAULT 0
create table t1 SELECT .... - Default for all fields, even if they where defined as NOT NULL
ALTER TABLE ... MODIFY could sometimes add an unexpected DEFAULT value.
The patch is quite big because we had some many test cases that used
CREATE ... SELECT or CREATE ... (...PRIMARY KEY(xxx)) which doesn't have an automatic DEFAULT anymore.
Other things:
- Removed warnings from InnoDB when waiting from semaphore (got this when testing things with --big)
The test has performance-schema in the opt file, so it failed when the server was compiled without performance schema.
Make the option loose, then MTR will be able to reach have_perfschema.inc check and will skip the test gracefully.