For running the Galera tests, the variable my_disable_leak_check
was set to true in order to avoid assertions due to memory leaks
at shutdown.
Some adjustments due to MDEV-13625 (merge InnoDB tests from MySQL 5.6)
were performed. The most notable behaviour changes from 10.0 and 10.1
are the following:
* innodb.innodb-table-online: adjustments for the DROP COLUMN
behaviour change (MDEV-11114, MDEV-13613)
* innodb.innodb-index-online-fk: the removal of a (1,NULL) record
from the result; originally removed in MySQL 5.7 in the
Oracle Bug #16244691 fix
377774689b
* innodb.create-index-debug: disabled due to MDEV-13680
(the MySQL Bug #77497 fix was not merged from 5.6 to 5.7.10)
* innodb.innodb-alter-autoinc: MariaDB 10.2 behaves like MySQL 5.6/5.7,
while MariaDB 10.0 and 10.1 assign different values when
auto_increment_increment or auto_increment_offset are used.
Also MySQL 5.6/5.7 exhibit different behaviour between
LGORITHM=INPLACE and ALGORITHM=COPY, so something needs to be tested
and fixed in both MariaDB 10.0 and 10.2.
* innodb.innodb-wl5980-alter: disabled because it would trigger an
InnoDB assertion failure (MDEV-13668 may need additional effort in 10.2)
- make re-bootstrap run with all extra options, not only InnoDB ones
- re-use previously created bootstrap.sql
- add --console
- fix debian patch to keep it applicable
In Debian, the default install is made more secure by omitting the anonymous
user and by making the root account authenticate by unix socket
authentication instead of the default password-less root. However, Debian
hard-codes this change in mysql_install_db, which breaks that program for
other users.
This commit instead implements new general options for mysql_install_db that
can be used by anyone to similarly perform a more secure install:
--skip-auth-anonymous-user: omits the anonymous user.
--auth-root-authentication-method=normal: Keeps the existing behaviour
with a password-less root account. Currently on by default.
--auth-root-socket-user=USER
--auth-root-authentication-method=socket: creates the MariaDB root user
with the name USER (defaults to 'root') and using unix socket
authentication. This way, only that user has MariaDB root access
after install.
The idea with --auth-root-authentication-method=normal is that
applications that need this behaviour can give that option explicitly.
Then eventually we could make --auth-root-authentication-method=socket
the default, giving a more secure default installation.
Note that it is perfectly possible to do a secure install with
--auth-root-authentication-method=normal. For example, installing a
private server just for local access by a single OS-level user, by
using --skip-networking and putting the connection socket in a
location without public access. So it is important to preserve this
API for backwards compatibility.
* fix debian patch
* update the copyright
* rename include guards to follow conventions
* restore incorectly deleted test file, add clarification in a comment
* capitalize the first letter of the status variable
Fixed debian/ubuntu packages build failure.
debian/patches/33_scripts__mysql_create_system_tables__no_test.dpatch:
tmp_user has now extra column, updated patch accordingly.