* use sql_mode_for_dates() where appropriate.
* always specify an argument for sql_mode_for_dates()
(future-proof. easier to notice and fix if the caller
will start using thd from a local variable or an argument)
includes:
* remove some remnants of "Bug#14521864: MYSQL 5.1 TO 5.5 BUGS PARTITIONING"
* introduce LOCK_share, now LOCK_ha_data is strictly for engines
* rea_create_table() always creates .par file (even in "frm-only" mode)
* fix a 5.6 bug, temp file leak on dummy ALTER TABLE
Merged all ddl_logging code.
Merged sql_partition.cc
innodb_mysql_lock2.test and partition_cache.test now works.
Changed interface to strconvert() to make it easier to use with not \0 terminated strings.
sql/sql_partition.cc:
Full merge with 5.6
sql/sql_table.cc:
Merged all ddl_logging code
sql/strfunc.cc:
Added from_length argument to strconvert() to make it possible to use without end terminated strings.
sql/strfunc.h:
Added from_length argument to strconvert() to make it possible to use without end terminated strings.
Cleanup: remove TIME_FUZZY_DATE.
Introduce TIME_FUZZY_DATES which means "very fuzzy, the resulting
value is only used for comparison. It can be invalid date, fine, as long as it can be
compared".
Updated many tests results (they're better now).
Item_func_min_max::get_date() did not check the
returned value against the fuzzy_date flags, so
it could return a bad value to the caller that
expects a good date (e.h. CONVERT_TZ).
modified:
mysql-test/r/type_date.result
mysql-test/r/type_datetime.result
mysql-test/r/type_time.result
mysql-test/t/type_date.test
mysql-test/t/type_datetime.test
mysql-test/t/type_time.test
sql/item_func.cc
sql/item_timefunc.cc
sql/mysql_priv.h
sql/time.cc
Also, fixing a bug in STR_TO_DATE(). It erroneously returned
error in strict mode for dates like '0000-01-01'
(zero year, but non-zero month and day).
According to the manual:
- NO_ZERO_DATE disallows 0000-00-00 (all date parts are zeros)
- NO_ZERO_IN_DATE disallows zero month (YYYY-00-DD) or day (YYYY-MM-00).
0000-01-01 is a valid date, even in strict mode.
modified:
mysql-test/r/func_time.result
mysql-test/r/strict.result
mysql-test/t/func_time.test
mysql-test/t/strict.test
sql/item_timefunc.cc
sql/sql_time.h
pending merges:
Alexander Barkov 2013-06-17 MDEV-4635 Crash in UNIX_TIMESTAMP(STR_TO_DAT...
from a MERGE view.
The problem was in the lost ability to be null for the table of a left join if it
is a view/derived table.
It hapenned because setup_table_map(), was called earlier then we merged
the view or derived.
Fixed by propagating new maybe_null flag during Item::update_used_tables().
Change in join_outer.test and join_outer_jcl6.test appeared because
IS NULL reported no used tables (i.e. constant) for argument which could not be
NULL and new maybe_null flag was propagated for IS NULL argument (Item_field)
because table the Item_field belonged to changed its maybe_null status.
1. Field_newdate::get_date should refuse to return a date with zeros when
TIME_NO_ZERO_IN_DATE is set, not when TIME_FUZZY_DATE is unset
2. Item_func_to_days and Item_date_add_interval can only work with valid dates,
no zeros allowed.
fix Item_func_add_time::get_date() to generate valid dates.
Move the validity check inside get_date_from_daynr()
instead of relying on callers
(5 that had it, and 2 that did not, but should've)
This is a followup to the fix for Bug#12340997
get_interval_value() was trying to parse the input string,
looking for leading '-' while skipping whitespace.
The macro my_isspace() does not work for utf32 character set,
since my_charset_utf32_general_ci.ctype == NULL.
Solution: convert input to ASCII before parsing,
and use the character set of the returned ASCII string.
mysql-test/suite/innodb/t/group_commit_crash.test:
remove autoincrement to avoid rbr being used for insert ... select
mysql-test/suite/innodb/t/group_commit_crash_no_optimize_thread.test:
remove autoincrement to avoid rbr being used for insert ... select
mysys/my_addr_resolve.c:
a pointer to a buffer is returned to the caller -> the buffer cannot be on the stack
mysys/stacktrace.c:
my_vsnprintf() is ok here, in 5.5
The table contains one time value: '00:00:32'
This value is converted to timestamp by a subquery.
In convert_constant_item we call (*item)->is_null()
which triggers execution of the Item_singlerow_subselect subquery,
and the string "0000-00-00 00:00:32" is cached
by Item_cache_datetime.
We continue execution and call update_null_value, which calls val_int()
on the cached item, which converts the time value to ((longlong) 32)
Then we continue to do (*item)->save_in_field()
which ends up in Item_cache_datetime::val_str() which fails,
since (32 < 101) in number_to_datetime, and val_str() returns NULL.
Item_singlerow_subselect::val_str isnt prepared for this:
if exec() succeeds, and return !null_value, then val_str()
*must* succeed.
Solution: refuse to cache strings like "0000-00-00 00:00:32"
in Item_cache_datetime::cache_value, and return NULL instead.
This is similar to the solution for
Bug#11766860 - 60085: CRASH IN ITEM::SAVE_IN_FIELD() WITH TIME DATA TYPE
This patch is for 5.5 only.
The issue is not present after WL#946, since a time value
will be converted to a proper timestamp, with the current date
rather than "0000-00-00"
- Reverting the patch for Bug # 12584302
The patch will be reverted in 5.1 and 5.5.
The patch will not be reverted in 5.6, the change will
be properly documented in 5.6.
- Backporting DBUG_ASSERT not to crash on '0000-01-00'
(already fixed in mysql-trunk (5.6))