Any statement reading corrupt archive data file
(CHECK/REPAIR/SELECT/UPDATE/DELETE) may cause assertion
failure in debug builds. This assertion has been removed
and an error is returned instead.
Also fixed that CHECK/REPAIR returns vague error message
when it mets corruption in archive data file. This is
fixed by returning proper error code.
The reason for the error is incorrectly specified link dependencies
for mysql_embedded, mysqltest_embedded and mysql_client_test_embedded
in CMakeLists.txt (ADD_DEPENDENCIES should be TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES)
become negative
- merged the fix to 5.1
- extended to cover I_S.PROCESSLIST.TIME
- Changed the column type of I_S.PROCESSLIST.TIME from LOGNLONG
UNSIGNED
to LONG (to match the SHOW PROCESSLIST type)
- Added a test case
"Release_lock("hello")" is now also successful when delivering NULL, replaced two sleeps by wait_condition. The last two "sleep 1" have not been replaced as all tried wait conditions leaded to nondeterministic results, especially to succeeding concurrent updates. To replace the sleeps there should be some time planned (or internal knowledge of the server may help).
- Fix valgrind warning on attempt to run a "SET optimizer_switch=number" statement.
Need to call c_ptr_safe() as strings returned by non-string items are not
necessarily null-terminated.
If a sys-var has a base and a block-size>1, and then a
user-supplied value >= minimum ended up below minimum
thanks to block-size alignment, we threw a warning.
This meant for instance that when getting, then setting
the minimum, we'd see a warning. This was needlessly
confusing. (updated patch)
patch enclosed)
One call to my_error_unregister_all() would free pointers, but leave one
pointer to just-freed memory still assigned. That's the bug. Subsequent
calls of this function would try to follow pointers into deallocated,
garbage memory and almost certainly SEGV.
Now, after freeing a linked list, unset the initial pointer.
The problem is issued because we set wrong start position and stop position of query string into binlog.
That two values are stored as part of head info of query string.
When we parse binlog, we first get position values then get the query string according position values.
But seems that two values are not calculated correctly after the parse of Yacc.
We don't want to touch so much of yacc because it may influence other codes.
So just add one space after 'INTO' key word when parsing.
This can easily resolve the problem.
select where .. (col=col and col=col) or ... (false expression)
Problem: optimizer didn't take into account a singular case
when we eliminated all the predicates at the AND level of WHERE.
That may lead to wrong results.
Fix: replace (a=a AND a=a...) with TRUE if we eliminated all the
predicates.
Revised patch incorporating cleaner test code brought up during review.
Removed the use of grep and accomplished same actions via SQL / use of the server.
Runs as before on *nix systems and now runs on Windows without Cygwin as well.
seems to become negative
THD::start_time has a dual meaning : it's either the time since the process
entered a given state or is the transaction time returned by e.g. NOW().
This causes problems, as sometimes THD::start_time may be set to a value
that is correct and needed when used as a base for NOW(), but these times
may be arbitrary (SET @@timestamp) or non-local (coming from the master
through the replication feed).
If one such non-local time is set there's no way to return a correct value
for e.g. SHOW PROCESSLIST or SELECT ... FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PROCESSLIST.
Fixed by making the Time column in SHOW PROCESSLIST SIGNED LONG instead of
UNSIGNED LONG and doing the correct conversions.
Note that no reliable test suite can be constructed, since it would require
knowing the local time and can't be achieved by the means of the current test
suite.
There are some recursive targets that automake generates which reference
DIST_SUBDIRS. It's critical, then, for such subdirs to exist even if they
won't be built as part of SUBDIRS.
During a VPATH build, it is the configure script which creates the subdirs
(when it processes the AC_CONFIG_FILES() for each subdir's Makefile). If
autoconf doesn't create a subdir's Makefile, then the recursive make will fail
when it is unable to cd into that subdir.
This isn't a problem in non-VPATH builds, because the subdirs are all present
in the source tarball. So the problem only shows up during 'make distcheck',
which does a VPATH build.
The fix is to look, when configure is being created by autoconf, for any
plugin subdirectories. These are the dynamic subdirectories which need to be
handled specially. It's enough to tell autoconf to generate a Makefile for
any Makefile.am found in the plugin directory - all plugin subdirectories
using automake (i.e., listed in the plugin's DIST_SUBDIRS) will have a
Makefile.am.
This is done by calling 'find'. This means that 'find' must be in the PATH on
the host that is running autoconf. 'find' is NOT needed when calling
configure, so it is not an additional dependency for the user.
Finally, ha_ndbcluster.m4 had called AC_CONFIG_FILES() on all those subdir
Makefiles, but only when the plugin was actually being built. So it didn't
work in the case that NDB was not being built. All of those Makefiles have to
be removed from this static list, since the plugin machinery is now adding
them automatically. autoconf fails if a file is duplicated in
AC_CONFIG_FILES().