Added missing DBUG_RETURN statements (in mysqldump.c)
Added missing enums
Fixed a lot of wrong DBUG_PRINT() statements, some of which could cause crashes
Removed usage of %lld and %p in printf strings as these are not portable or produces different results on different systems.
(Mostly in DBUG_PRINT() and unused arguments)
Fixed bug in query cache when used with traceing (--with-debug)
Fixed memory leak in mysqldump
Removed warnings from mysqltest scripts (replaced -- with #)
The problem was that some functions (namely IN() starting with 4.1, and
CHAR() starting with 5.0) were returning NULL in certain conditions,
while they didn't set their maybe_null flag. Because of that there could
be some problems with 'IS NULL' check, and statements that depend on the
function value domain, like CREATE TABLE t1 SELECT 1 IN (2, NULL);.
The fix is to set maybe_null correctly.
Fixed some possible fatal wrong arguments to printf() style functions
Initialized some not initialized variables
Fixed bug in stored procedure and continue handlers
(Fixes Bug#22150)
Evaluate "NULL IN (SELECT ...)" in a special way: Disable pushed-down
conditions and their "consequences":
= Do full table scans instead of unique_[index_subquery] lookups.
= Change appropriate "ref_or_null" accesses to full table scans in
subquery's joins.
Also cache value of NULL IN (SELECT ...) if the SELECT is not correlated
wrt any upper select.
account predicates that become sargable after reading const tables.
In some cases this resulted in choosing non-optimal execution plans.
Now info of such potentially saragable predicates is saved in
an array and after reading const tables we check whether this
predicates has become saragable.
result
The IN function aggregates result types of all expressions. It uses that
type in comparison of left expression and expressions in right part.
This approach works in most cases. But let's consider the case when the
right part contains both strings and integers. In that case this approach may
cause wrong results because all strings which do not start with a digit are
evaluated as 0.
CASE uses the same approach when a CASE expression is given thus it's also
affected.
The idea behind this fix is to make IN function to compare expressions with
different result types differently. For example a string in the left
part will be compared as string with strings specified in right part and
will be converted to real for comparison to int or real items in the right
part.
A new function called collect_cmp_types() is added. It collects different
result types for comparison of first item in the provided list with each
other item in the list.
The Item_func_in class now can refer up to 5 cmp_item objects: 1 for each
result type for comparison purposes. cmp_item objects are allocated according
to found result types. The comparison of the left expression with any
right part expression is now based only on result types of these expressions.
The Item_func_case class is modified in the similar way when a CASE
expression is specified. Now it can allocate up to 5 cmp_item objects
to compare CASE expression with WHEN expressions of different types.
The comparison of the CASE expression with any WHEN expression now based only
on result types of these expressions.
Removed changes to the Item_func_between::fix_length_and_dec() made in the fix for bug#16377
query_cache.result:
Corrected a test case after removing a fix for bug#16377
- Honor unsigned_flag in the corresponding functions
- Use compare_int_signed_unsigned()/compare_int_unsigned_signed() instead of explicit comparison in GREATEST() and LEAST()
Corrected test case after removal of fix for bug#16377
type_date.test:
Corrected test case after removal of fix for bug#16377
item_cmpfunc.cc:
Removed changes to the agg_cmp_type() made in the for bug#16377
equal constant under any circumstances.
In fact this substitution can be allowed if the field is
not of a type string or if the field reference serves as
an argument of a comparison predicate.
A date can be represented as an int (like 20060101) and as a string (like
"2006.01.01"). When a DATE/TIME field is compared in one SELECT against both
representations the constant propagation mechanism leads to comparison
of DATE as a string and DATE as an int. In this example it compares 2006 and
20060101 integers. Obviously it fails comparison although they represents the
same date.
Now the Item_bool_func2::fix_length_and_dec() function sets the comparison
context for items being compared. I.e. if items compared as strings the
comparison context is STRING.
The constant propagation mechanism now doesn't mix items used in different
comparison contexts. The context check is done in the
Item_field::equal_fields_propagator() and in the change_cond_ref_to_const()
functions.
Also the better fix for bug 21159 is introduced.
This bug is a side-effect of bug fix#16377. NOW() is optimized in
BETWEEN to integer constants to speed up query execution. When view is being
created it saves already modified query and thus becomes wrong.
The agg_cmp_type() function now substitutes constant result DATE/TIME functions
for their results only if the current query isn't CREATE VIEW or SHOW CREATE
VIEW.
Two functions have different ideas of what a string should look like;
one of them reads memory it assumes the other one may have written.
And "if you assume ..."
We now use a more defensive variety of the assuming function, this fixes
a warning thrown by the valgrind tool.
In some functions dealing with strings and character sets, the wrong
pointers were saved for restoration in THD::rollback_item_tree_changes().
This could potentially cause random corruption or crashes.
Fixed by passing the original Item ** locations, not local stack copies.
Also remove unnecessary use of default arguments.
Added test case for bug#18759 Incorrect string to numeric conversion.
select.test:
Added test case for bug#18759 Incorrect string to numeric conversion.
item_cmpfunc.cc:
Cleanup after fix for bug#18360 removal