If an EVENT is created without the DEFINER clause set explicitly or with it set
to CURRENT_USER, the master and slaves become inconsistent. This issue stems from
the fact that in both cases, the DEFINER is set to the CURRENT_USER of the current
thread. On the master, the CURRENT_USER is the mysqld's user, while on the slave,
the CURRENT_USER is empty for the SQL Thread which is responsible for executing
the statement.
To fix the problem, we do what follows. If the definer is not set explicitly,
a DEFINER clause is added when writing the query into binlog; if 'CURRENT_USER' is
used as the DEFINER, it is replaced with the value of the current user before
writing to binlog.
The test case relies on binlog entries for assertion. The problem is that the
binlog does not get cleaned in pushbuild between tests, resulting in extra
entries in the result file, causing the test to fail.
This fix adds a reset master at the beginning of the test, so that we get a
clean binlog file.
There is an inconsistency with DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS, DROP
TABLE IF EXISTS and DROP VIEW IF EXISTS: those are binlogged even
if the DB or TABLE does not exist, whereas DROP PROCEDURE IF
EXISTS does not. It would be nice or at least consistent if DROP
PROCEDURE/STATEMENT worked the same too.
Fixed DROP PROCEDURE|FUNCTION IF EXISTS by adding a call to
write_bin_log in mysql_execute_command. Checked also if all
documented "DROP (...) IF EXISTS" get binlogged. Left out DROP
SERVER IF EXISTS because it seems that it only gets binlogged when
using row event (see BUG#25705).