column TIMESTAMP NOT NULL
Analysis: Problem was that value->is_null() function is called
even when user had explicitly set the value for timestamp
field. Calling this function had the side effect that
expression was evaluated twice.
Fix: (by Sergei Golubchik) check instead value->null_value.
Structure of the table created by the test to archive mysql.slow_log
data didn't match the structure of mysql.slow_log. The failure only
appeared if the slow_log was not empty, which was very rare.
Updated the structure of the table.
Simply disallowing equality propagation into LIKE.
A more delicate fix is be possible, but it would need too many changes,
which is not desirable in 10.0 at this point.
* adjust viossl.c to take account the new code
(SSL_get_error is used now, cannot simply remap it)
* remove unnecessary version check
* update the test to 10.0
followup:
* explicitly disable SSLv2 and SSLv3, keep other protocols enabled
* fix a compiler warning
* rename the test and combinations to avoid confusion
vio/viossl.c:
fix a compiler warning
When the optimizer considers an option to use Loose Scan, it should
still consider UNIQUE keys (Previously, MDEV-4120 disabled loose scan
for all kinds of unique indexes. That was wrong)
However, we should not use Loose Scan when trying to satisfy
"SELECT DISTINCT col1, col2, .. colN"
when using an index defined as UNIQU(col1, col2, ... colN).
in mysql_upgrade: do FLUSH PRIVILEGES at the end, not together with
mysql_fix_privilege_tables
mysql-test/t/mysql_upgrade-6984.opt:
use a dummy second option to force server restart after the test
use the same restriction for character_set_client on the command line
and from SQL.
Also: remove strange hack from thd_init_client_charset() that contradicted
the manual (collation_connection and character_set_result were not always set)
ALTER TABLE: don't fill default values per row, do it once.
And do it in two places - for copy_data_between_tables() and for online ALTER.
Also, run function_defaults test both for MyISAM and for InnoDB.
change SSL methods to be SSLv23 (according to openssl manpage:
"A TLS/SSL connection established with these methods may understand
the SSLv2, SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1 and TLSv1.2 protocols") from
TLSv1 methods, that go back to the initial SSL implementation
in MySQL in 2001.
OpenSSL default ciphers are different if TLSv1.2 is enabled,
so tests need to take this into account.
MDEV-6789 segfault in Item_func_from_unixtime::get_date on updating table with virtual columns
* prohibit VALUES in partitioning expression
* prohibit user and system variables in virtual column expressions
* fix Item_func_date_format to cache locale (for %M/%W to return the same as MONTHNAME/DAYNAME)
* fix Item_func_from_unixtime to cache time_zone directly, not THD (and not to crash)
* added tests for other incorrectly allowed (in vcols) functions to see that they don't crash
MDEV-6971 Bad results with joins comparing TIME and DOUBLE/DECIMAL columns
Disallow using indexes on non-temporal columns to optimize
ref access, range access and table elimination when the counterpart's
cmp_type is TIME_RESULT, e.g.:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE indexed_int_column=time_expression;
Only index on a temporal column can be used to optimize temporal comparison
operations.
reset default fields not for every modified row, but only once,
at the beginning, as the set of modified fields doesn't change.
exception: INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE - the set of fields
does change per row and in that case we reset default fields per row.
main.information_schema: added a condition to the query to exclude perfschema tables
main.information_schema_all_engines: added a call to the include file to check for the presence of perfschema
When parsing a field declaration, grab type information from LEX before it's overwritten
by further rules. Pass type information through the parser stack to the rule that needs it.
The bug is not very important per se, but it was helpful to move
Item_func_strcmp out of Item_bool_func2 (to Item_int_func),
for the purposes of "MDEV-4912 Add a plugin to field types (column types)".
The test runs a query in one thread, then in another queries the processlist
and expects to find the first thread in the COM_SLEEP state. The problem is
that the thread signals completion to the client before changing to COM_SLEEP
state, so there is a window where the other thread can see the wrong state.
A previous attempt to fix this was ineffective. It set a DEBUG_SYNC to handle
proper waiting, but unfortunately that DEBUG_SYNC point ended up triggering
already at the end of SET DEBUG_SYNC=xxx, so the wait was ineffective.
Fix it properly now (hopefully) by ensuring that we wait for the DEBUG_SYNC
point to trigger at the end of the SELECT SLEEP(), not just at the end of
SET DEBUG_SYNC=xxx.
(Backport to 5.3)
(Attempt #2)
- Don't attempt to use BKA for materialized derived tables. The
table is neither filled nor fully opened yet, so attempt to
call handler->multi_range_read_info() causes crash.
(Backport to 5.3)
(variant #2, with fixed coding style)
- Make Mrr_ordered_index_reader::resume_read() restore index position
only if it was saved before with Mrr_ordered_index_reader::interrupt_read().
- TABLE::create_key_part_by_field() should not set PART_KEY_FLAG in field->flags
= The reason is that it is used by hash join code which calls it to create a hash
table lookup structure. It doesn't create a real index.
= Another caller of the function is TABLE::add_tmp_key(). Made it to set the flag itself.
- The differences in join_cache.result could also be observed before this patch: one
could put "FLUSH TABLES" before the queries and get exactly the same difference.
(Attempt #2)
- Don't attempt to use BKA for materialized derived tables. The
table is neither filled nor fully opened yet, so attempt to
call handler->multi_range_read_info() causes crash.
I think I finally found the problem, managed to reproduce locally using a
sleep in the test case to simulate the particular race condition that causes
the test to fail often in Buildbot.
The test starts an ALTER TABLE that does repair by sort in one thread, then
another thread waits for the sort to be visible in SHOW PROCESSLIST and runs a
SHOW statement in parallel.
The problem happens when the sort manages to run to completion before the
other thread has the time to look at SHOW PROCESSLIST. In this case, the wait
times out because the state looked for has already passed.
Earlier I added some DEBUG_SYNC to prevent this race, but it turns out that
DEBUG_SYNC itself changes the state in the processlist. So when the debug sync
point was hit, the processlist was showing the wrong state, so the wait would
still time out.
Fixed now by looking for the processlist to contain either the "Repair by
sorting" state or the debug sync wait stage.
Also clean up previous attempts to fix it. Set the wait timeout back to
reasonable 60 seconds, and simplify the DEBUG_SYNC operations to work closer
to how the original test case was intended.