InnoDB: Remove HAVE_purify, UNIV_INIT_MEM_TO_ZERO, UNIV_SET_MEM_TO_ZERO.
The compile-time setting HAVE_purify can mask potential bugs.
It is being set in PB2 Valgrind runs. We should simply get rid of it,
and replace it with UNIV_MEM_INVALID() to declare uninitialized memory
as such in Valgrind-instrumented binaries.
os_mem_alloc_large(), ut_malloc_low(): Remove the parameter set_to_zero.
ut_malloc(): Define as a macro that invokes ut_malloc_low().
buf_pool_init(): Never initialize the buffer pool frames. All pages
must be initialized before flushing them to disk.
mem_heap_alloc(): Never initialize the allocated memory block.
os_mem_alloc_nocache(), ut_test_malloc(): Unused function, remove.
rb:813 approved by Jimmy Yang
Fixed memory leak printing when doing 'mysqld --version', 'mysqld --debug --help' and 'mysqld --debug --help --verbose'
mysys/my_init.c:
Moved checking if we should call DBUG_END() before my_thread_end() as otherwise we will not free DBUG variables and files.
mysys/thr_lock.c:
Fixed compiler warning
sql/mysqld.cc:
Fixed memory leaks when using mysqld --help and mysqld --version
Added --debug as an option that works for all builds. For non debug builds we now get a warning.
strings/dtoa.c:
Fixed valgrind warning (c could contain data outside of the given string)
Contributed by Maarten Vanraes (AL13N)
Fix things so that chains of certificates work in the server and client
certificate files.
This only really works for OpenSSL-based builds, as yassl is unable to read
multiple certificates from a file. The patch below to yassl/src/ssl.cpp
doesn't fix that, but just arranges that the viosslfactories.c patch won't
have any ill effects in a yassl build.
it is a static library that links with shared libraries, so strictly speaking it should
have -fPIC or equivalent flags. Also, it must always build as static no matter
whether BUILD_SHARED_LIBS is set.
fixed several defects in the greedy optimization:
1) The greedy optimizer calculated the 'compare-cost' (CPU-cost)
for iterating over the partial plan result at each level in
the query plan as 'record_count / (double) TIME_FOR_COMPARE'
This cost was only used locally for 'best' calculation at each
level, and *not* accumulated into the total cost for the query plan.
This fix added the 'CPU-cost' of processing 'current_record_count'
records at each level to 'current_read_time' *before* it is used as
'accumulated cost' argument to recursive
best_extension_by_limited_search() calls. This ensured that the
cost of a huge join-fanout early in the QEP was correctly
reflected in the cost of the final QEP.
To get identical cost for a 'best' optimized query and a
straight_join with the same join order, the same change was also
applied to optimize_straight_join() and get_partial_join_cost()
2) Furthermore to get equal cost for 'best' optimized query and a
straight_join the new code substrcated the same '0.001' in
optimize_straight_join() as it had been already done in
best_extension_by_limited_search()
3) When best_extension_by_limited_search() aggregated the 'best' plan a
plan was 'best' by the check :
'if ((search_depth == 1) || (current_read_time < join->best_read))'
The term '(search_depth == 1' incorrectly caused a new best plan to be
collected whenever the specified 'search_depth' was reached - even if
this partial query plan was more expensive than what we had already
found.
--FLUSH-LOG BREAKS CONSISTENCY
The transaction started by mysqldump gets committed
implicitly when flush-log is specified along with
single-transaction option, and hence can break
consistency.
This is because, COM_REFRESH is executed in order
to flush logs and starting from 5.5 this command
performs an implicit commit.
Fixed by making sure that COM_REFRESH is executed
before the transaction has started and not after it.
Note : This patch triggers following behavioral
changes in mysqldump :
1) After this patch we no longer flush logs before
dumping each database if --single-transaction
option is given like it was done before (in the
absence of --lock-all-tables and --master-data
options).
2) Also, after this patch, we start acquiring
FTWRL before flushing logs in cases when only
--single-transaction and --flush-logs are given.
It becomes safe to use mysqldump with these two
options and without --master-data parameter for
backups.
client/mysqldump.c:
Bug#12809202 61854: MYSQLDUMP --SINGLE-TRANSACTION
--FLUSH-LOG BREAKS CONSISTENCY
Added logic to make sure that, if flush-log option
is specified, mysql_refresh() is never executed after
the transaction has started.
Added verbose messages for all the executions of
mysql_refresh() in order to track its invocation.
mysql-test/r/mysqldump.result:
Added test case for Bug#12809202.
mysql-test/t/mysqldump.test:
Added test case for Bug#12809202.
COMMUNICATION PACKETS, ERROR_CODE: 1160
If idle FEDERATED table is evicted from the table cache when
a connection to remote server is lost, query that initiated
eviction may fail.
If this query is executed by slave SQL thread it may fail as well.
An error of close was stored in diagnostics area, which was later
attributed to the statement that caused eviction.
With this patch FEDERATED clears an error of close.
unix_timestamp() is implemented in this part of the code in place of current_time().
Also, since the pb2 machines may be extremely fast, instead of looping through the code,
we use sleep(1.1) so that the variables t0 and t1 have different values.
The time comparison using current_time() stored in an int variable was giving wrong results as
the current_time() format as an int implementation has been changed in mysql-trunk but not in mysql-5.5.
The time is stored in the format hh:mm:ss as 'time' datatype.But as an int, it is stored as hhmmss,
but only on the trunk. On mysql-5.5,as an int, it is stored as hh.
Hence, the current_time() function has been changed to unix_timestamp() function.
The patch differs from the original MySQL patch as follows:
- All test case differences have been reviewed one by one, and
care has been taken to restore the original plan so that each
test case executes the code path it was designed for.
- A bug was found and fixed in MariaDB 5.3 in
Item_allany_subselect::cleanup().
- ORDER BY is not removed because we are unsure of all effects,
and it would prevent enabling ORDER BY ... LIMIT subqueries.
- ref_pointer_array.m_size is not adjusted because we don't do
array bounds checking, and because it looks risky.
Original comment by Jorgen Loland:
-------------------------------------------------------------
WL#5953 - Optimize away useless subquery clauses
For IN/ALL/ANY/SOME/EXISTS subqueries, the following clauses are
meaningless:
* ORDER BY (since we don't support LIMIT in these subqueries)
* DISTINCT
* GROUP BY if there is no HAVING clause and no aggregate
functions
This WL detects and optimizes away these useless parts of the
query during JOIN::prepare()
- The problem was that const-table-reading code would try to evaluate MATCH()
before init_ftfuncs() was called.
- Fixed by making MATCH function "expensive" so that nobody tries to evaluate it
at optimization phase.