Default values of variables were not subject to upper/lower bounds
and step, while setting variables was. Bounds and step are also
applied to defaults now; defaults are corrected quietly, values
given by the user are corrected, and a correction-warning is thrown
as needed. Lastly, very large values could wrap around, starting
from 0 again. They are bounded at the maximum value for the
respective data-type now if no lower maximum is specified in the
variable's definition.
Denormalized DOUBLE-s can't be properly handled by old MIPS processors.
So we need to enable specific mode for them so IRIX will do use
software round to handle such numbers.
When the server was out of memory it crashed because of invalid memory access.
This patch adds detection for failed memory allocations and make the server
output a proper error message.
Bug #31956 auto increment bugs in MySQL Cluster: Added utility method and constant for internal prefetch default
ndb_auto_increment.result:
BitKeeper file /home/marty/MySQL/mysql-5.0-ndb/mysql-test/r/ndb_auto_increment.result
mysqld.cc:
Bug #25176 Trying to set ndb_autoincrement_prefetch_sz always fails: Changed pointer to max value
Bug #31956 auto increment bugs in MySQL Cluster: Changed meaning of ndb_autoincrement_prefetch_sz to specify prefetch between statements, changed default to 1 (with internal prefetch to at least 32 inside a statement)
ndb_insert.test, ndb_insert.result:
Moved auto_increment tests to ndb_auto_increment.test
ndb_auto_increment.test:
BitKeeper file /home/marty/MySQL/mysql-5.0-ndb/mysql-test/t/ndb_auto_increment.test
ha_ndbcluster.cc:
Bug #31956 auto increment bugs in MySQL Cluster: Changed meaning of ndb_autoincrement_prefetch_sz to specify prefetch between statements, changed default to 1 (with internal prefetch to at least 32 inside a statement), added handling of updates of pk/unique key with auto_increment
Bug #32055 Cluster does not handle auto inc correctly with insert ignore statement
doesn't recognize it
This is a 5.0 version of the patch, it will be null-merged to 5.1
Problem:
'log' and 'log_slow_queries' were "fixed" variables, i.e. they showed up
in SHOW VARIABLES, but could not be used in expressions like
"select @@log". Also, using them in the SET statement produced an
incorrect "unknown system variable" error.
Solution:
Make 'log' and 'log_slow_queries' read-only dynamic variables to make
them available for use in expressions, and produce a correct error
about the variable being read-only when used in the SET statement.
Options to mysqld were not processed correctly because switch statement
was missing some "break"s. CS adds them.
No test case; would require .opt file and server restart. Manually tested.
Our web server has been restructured several times, and references
to it in our source code has stayed the same. This patch from Paul
DuBois updates all URLs to modern semantics.
Add --skip-innodb-adaptive-hash-index option, which is a way to
work around the bug (by disabling the adaptive hash feature entirely).
This may be useful even once the bug is fixed, for benchmarking purposes.
There are some workloads for which the adaptive hash index is not effective.
make sure that if builder configured with a non-standard (!= 3306)
default TCP port that value actually gets used throughout. if they
didn't configure a value, assume "use a sensible default", which
will be read from /etc/services or, failing that, from the factory
default. That makes the order of preference
- command-line option
- my.cnf, where applicable
- $MYSQL_TCP_PORT environment variable
- /etc/services (unless configured --with-tcp-port)
- default port (--with-tcp-port=... or factory default)
The patch limits read_buffer_size and read_rnd_buffer_size by 2 GB on all platforms for the following reasons:
- I/O code in mysys, code in mf_iocache.c and in some storage engines do not currently work with sizes > 2 GB for those buffers
- even if the above had been fixed, Windows POSIX read() and write() calls are not 2GB-safe, so setting those buffer to sizes > 2GB would not work correctly on 64-bit Windows.
Problem: logging queries not using indexes we check a special flag which
is set only at the server startup and is not changing with a corresponding
server variable together.
Fix: check the variable value instead of the flag.
long shared-memory-base-names could overflow a static internal buffer
and thus crash mysqld and various clients. change both to dynamic
buffers, show everything but overflowing those buffers still works.
The test case for this would pretty much amount to
mysqld --shared-memory-base-name=HeyMrBaseNameXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX --shared-memory=1 &
mysqladmin --no-defaults --shared-memory-base-name=HeyMrBaseNameXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX shutdown
Unfortunately, we can't just use an .opt file for the
server. The .opt file is used at start-up, before any
include in the actual test can tell mysqltest to skip
this one on non-Windows. As a result, such a test would
break on unices.
Fixing mysql-test-run.pl to export full path for master
and slave would enable us to start a server from within
the test which is ugly and, what's more, doesn't work as
the server blocks (mysqltest offers no fire-and-forget
fork-and-exec), and mysqladmin never gets run.
Making the test rpl_windows_shm or some such so we can
is beyond ugly. As is introducing another file-name based
special case (run "win*.test" only when on Windows). As is
(yuck) coding half the test into mtr (as in, having it
hand out a customized environment conductive to the shm-
thing on Win only).
Situation is exacerbated by the fact that .sh is not
necessary run as expected on Win.
In short, it's just not worth it. No test-case until we
have a new-and-improved test framework.
In many cases, binaries can no longer dump core after calling setuid().
Where the PR_SET_DUMPABLE macro is set, use the prctl() system call
to tell the kernel that it's allowed to dump the core of the server.