Two threads both try a shutdown sequence which creates a race to the
de-init/free of certain resources.
This exists in similar form in the client as 17926: "mysql.exe crashes
when ctrl-c is pressed in windows."
Replaced COND_refresh with COND_global_read_lock becasue of a bug in NTPL threads when using different mutexes as arguments to pthread_cond_wait()
The original code caused a hang in FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK in some circumstances because pthread_cond_broadcast() was not delivered to other threads.
This fixes:
Bug#16986: Deadlock condition with MyISAM tables
Bug#20048: FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK causes a deadlock
- A segfault occured when the function 'kill_server' called
'my_sigset' with signal number 0. 'my_sigset' is a macro which
uses 'sigaction' to install the signal handler with an invalid
signal number will on most platforms return EINVAL but yields
a segfauilt on IRIX 6.5
- The server crash was detected by mysqld_safe and it was restarted although
a shutdown was requested.
- Semantics of kill_server(0) is not known, leaving it intact
Bug #19606: ssl variables are not displayed in show variables
Bug #19616: log_queries_not_using_indexes is not listed in show variables
Make basedir, datadir, tmpdir, log_queries_not_using_indexes, ssl_ca,
ssl_capath, ssl_cert, ssl_cipher, and ssl_key all available both from
SHOW VARIABLES and as @@variables.
As a side-effect of this change, log_queries_not_using_indexes can
be changed at runtime (but only globally, not per-connection).
too many open statements". The patch adds a new global variable
@@max_prepared_stmt_count. This variable limits the total number
of prepared statements in the server. The default value of
@@max_prepared_stmt_count is 16382. 16382 small statements
(a select against 3 tables with GROUP, ORDER and LIMIT) consume
100MB of RAM. Once this limit has been reached, the server will
refuse to prepare a new statement and return ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
(unfortunately, we can't add new errors to 4.1 without breaking 5.0). The limit is changeable after startup
and can accept any value from 0 to 1 million. In case
the new value of the limit is less than the current
statement count, no new statements can be added, while the old
still can be used. Additionally, the current count of prepared
statements is now available through a global read-only variable
@@prepared_stmt_count.
After FLUSH STATUS max_used_connections was reset to 0, and haven't
been updated while cached threads were reused, until the moment a new
thread was created.
The first suggested fix from original bug report was implemented:
a) On flushing the status, set max_used_connections to
threads_connected, not to 0.
b) Check if it is necessary to increment max_used_connections when
taking a thread from the cache as well as when creating new threads
¨MySQL server crashes if you try to access to InnoDB table¨
crash caused by schizophrenic mysqld - 2 memory locations for logically same function
with conflicting values.
Fixed by backporting from 5.1 changes to have_xyz_db declarations.
After the ChangeSet 1.1892.20.1 2005/08/24 (Bug #12562) SYSDATE() is not an alias
of NOW() and is unsafe for replication.
`SYSDATE()' backward compatible aliasing clashes with the idea #12562
fix. To make it safe-replicatable we have to either use RBR or to restore
the pre-5.0 style.
--sysdate-is-now command line flag was introduced to provide backward compatibility.
if the function, invoked in a non-binlogged caller (e.g. SELECT, DO), failed half-way on the master,
slave would stop and complain that error code between him and master mismatch.
To solve this, when a stored function is invoked in a non-binlogged caller (e.g. SELECT, DO), we binlog the function
call as SELECT instead of as DO (see revision comment of sp_head.cc for more).
And: minor wording change in the help text.
This cset will cause conflicts in 5.1, I'll merge.