Add deprecation warning when variable optimizer_search_depth is given
the value 63.
mysql-test/r/greedy_optimizer.result
Updated with warning text.
mysql-test/r/mysqld--help-notwin.result
Updated with warning from mysqld --help --verbose.
mysql-test/r/mysqld--help-win.result
Updated with warning from mysqld --help --verbose.
sql/sys_vars.cc
Added an update check function to the constructor invocation for
the optimizer_search_depth variable. The function emits a
warning message for the value 63.
There was auto-reconnecting by slave earlier than a prescribed by slave_net_timeout value.
The issue happened on 64bit solaris that spotted rather incorrect casting of
the ulong slave_net_timeout into the uint of mysql.options.read_timeout.
Notice, that there is no reason for slave_net_timeout to be of type of ulong.
Since it's primarily passed as arg to mysql_options the type can be made
as uint to avoid all conversion hassles.
That's what the fixes are made.
A "side" effect of the patch is a new value for the max of slave_net_timeout
to be the max of the unsigned int type (therefore to vary across platforms).
Note, a regression test can't be made to run reliably without making it to last over some
20 secs. That's why it is placed in suite/large_tests.
mysql-test/suite/large_tests/r/rpl_slave_net_timeout.result:
the new test results.
mysql-test/suite/large_tests/t/rpl_slave_net_timeout-slave.opt:
Initialization of the option that yields slave_net_timeout's default.
sql/mysql_priv.h:
changing type for slave_net_timeout from ulong to uint
sql/mysqld.cc:
changing type for slave_net_timeout from ulong to uint
sql/sys_vars.cc:
Refining the max value for slave_net_timeout to be as the max for uint type.
on Windows".
On platforms where read-write lock implementation does not
prefer readers by default (Windows, Solaris) server might
have deadlocked while detecting MDL deadlock.
MDL deadlock detector relies on the fact that read-write
locks which are used in its implementation prefer readers
(see new comment for MDL_lock::m_rwlock for details).
So far MDL code assumed that default implementation of
read/write locks for the system has this property.
Indeed, this turned out ot be wrong, for example, for
Windows or Solaris. Thus MDL deadlock detector might have
deadlocked on these systems.
This fix simply adds portable implementation of read/write
lock which prefer readers and changes MDL code to use this
new type of synchronization primitive.
No test case is added as existing rqg_mdl_stability test can
serve as one.
config.h.cmake:
Check for presence of pthread_rwlockattr_setkind_np to be
able to determine if system natively supports read-write
locks for which we can specify if readers or writers should
be preferred.
configure.cmake:
Check for presence of pthread_rwlockattr_setkind_np to be
able to determine if system natively supports read-write
locks for which we can specify if readers or writers should
be preferred.
configure.in:
Check for presence of pthread_rwlockattr_setkind_np to be
able to determine if system natively supports read-write
locks for which we can specify if readers or writers should
be preferred.
include/my_pthread.h:
Added support for portable read-write locks which prefer
readers.
To do so extended existing my_rw_lock_t implementation to
support selection of whom to prefer depending on a flag.
mysys/thr_rwlock.c:
Extended existing my_rw_lock_t implementation to support
selection of whom to prefer depending on a flag.
Added rw_pr_init() function implementing initialization of
read-write locks preferring readers.
sql/mdl.cc:
Use portable read-write locks which prefer readers instead of
relying on that system implementation of read-write locks has
this property (this was true for Linux/NPTL but was false,
for example, for Windows and Solaris).
Added comment explaining why preferring readers is important
for MDL deadlock detector (thanks to Serg for example!).
sql/mdl.h:
Use portable read-write locks which prefer readers instead of
relying on that system implementation of read-write locks has
this property (this was true for Linux/NPTL but was false,
for example, for Windows and Solaris).
Extend and implement the grammar that allows to FLUSH WITH READ LOCK
a list of tables, rather than all of them.
Incompatible grammar change:
Previously one could perform FLUSH TABLES, HOSTS, PRIVILEGES in a single
statement.
After this change, FLUSH TABLES must always be alone on the list.
Judging by the test suite, however, the old extended syntax
was never or very rarely used.
The new statement requires RELOAD ACL global privilege and
LOCK_TABLES_ACL | SELECT_ACL on individual tables.
In other words, it's an atomic combination of LOCK TALBES <list> READ
and FLUSH TABLES <list>, and requires respective privileges.
For additional information about the semantics, please
see WL#5000 and the comment for flush_tables_with_read_lock()
function in sql_parse.cc
mysql-test/r/flush.result:
Update test results (WL#5000).
mysql-test/t/flush.test:
Add test coverage for WL#5000.
sql/sql_yacc.yy:
Allow FLUSH TABLES <table_list> WITH READ LOCK.
Disallow FLUSH TABLES <table_list>, flush_options.
Before this fix, the performance schema file instrumentation would treat:
- a relative path to a file
- an absolute path to the same file
as two different files.
This would lead to:
- separate aggregation counters
- file leaks when a file is removed.
With this fix, a relative and absolute path are resolved to the same file instrument.
The problem was that ALTER TABLE on a merge table which was locked
using LOCK TABLE ... WRITE, by mistake gave
ER_TABLE_NOT_LOCKED_FOR_WRITE.
During opening of the table to be ALTERed, open_table() tried to
get an upgradable metadata lock. In LOCK TABLEs mode, this lock
must already exist (i.e. taken by LOCK TABLE) as new locks of this
type cannot be acquired for fear of deadlock. So in LOCK TABLEs
mode, open_table() tried to find an existing upgradable lock for
the table to be altered.
The problem was that open_table() also tried to find upgradable
metadata locks for children of merge tables even if no such
locks are needed to execute ALTER TABLE on merge tables.
This patch fixes the problem by making sure that open tables code
only searches for upgradable metadata locks for the merge table
and not for the merge children tables.
The patch also fixes a related bug where an upgradable metadata
lock was aquired outside of LOCK TABLEs mode even if the table in
question was temporary. This bug meant that LOCK TABLES or DDL on
temporary tables by mistake could be blocked/aborted by locks held
on base tables with the same table name by other connections.
Test cases added to merge.test and lock_multi.test.
Attempts to execute RESET statements within a transaction that
had acquired metadata locks, led to an assertion failure on
debug servers. This bug didn't cause any problems on release
builds.
The triggered assert is designed to check that caches are not
flushed or reset while having active transactions. It is triggered
if acquired metadata locks exist that are not from LOCK TABLE or
HANDLER statements.
In this case it was triggered by RESET QUERY CACHE while having
an active transaction that had acquired locks. The reason the
assertion was triggered, was that RESET statements, unlike the
similar FLUSH statements, was not causing an implicit commit.
This patch fixes the problem by making sure RESET statements
commit the current transaction before executing. The commit
causes acquired metadata locks to be released, preventing the
assertion from being triggered.
Incompatible change: This patch changes RESET statements so
that they cause an implicit commit.
Test case added to query_cache.test.
The problem was incorrect escaping used inside a strnig : in \"$MYSQLD\" was written as "\MYSQL\"
(backslash and quote characters transposed), when defining FIND_PROC variable for BSD or SysV
style "ps" command-
Additionally fixed obvious code duplication and random naming in CHECK_PID test.
bool MDL_context::try_acquire_lock(MDL_request*)
This assert was triggered in the following way:
1) HANDLER OPEN t1 from connection 1
2) DROP TABLE t1 from connection 2. This will block due to the metadata lock
held by the open handler in connection 1.
3) DML statement (e.g. INSERT) from connection 1. This will close the table
opened by the HANDLER in 1) and release its metadata lock. This is done due
to the pending exclusive metadata lock from 2).
4) DROP TABLE t1 from connection 2 now completes and removes table t1.
5) HANDLER READ from connection 1. Since the handler table was closed in 3),
the handler code will try to reopen the table. First a new metadata lock on
t1 will be granted before the command fails since the table was removed in 4).
6) HANDLER READ from connection 1. This caused the assert.
The reason for the assert was that the MDL_request's pointer to the lock
ticket was not reset when the statement failed. HANDLER READ then tried to
acquire a lock using the same MDL_request object, triggering the assert.
This bug was only noticeable on debug builds and did not cause any problems
on release builds.
This patch fixes the problem by assuring that the pointer to the metadata
lock ticket is reset when reopening of handler tables fails.
Test case added to handler.inc
Crash happens in dlopen() code when trying to load the library. Crash does not happen when library is
not DTrace instrumented . Additionally, crash does not happen with default Solaris 10 GCC 3.4.3 and
it does not happen if main executable is instrumented.
So , just check for this specific situation (32 bit, GCC3.4.6 , Solaris) and disable Dtrace in shared libraries.
We have only single plugin so far that is instrumented (ha_example)
Two problems addressed here:
Embedded-server linking failure.
sql/sys_vars.cc absents in the libmysqld/CMakeLists.txt
The PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA-related failure of the embedded-server compilation.
We try to disable the PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA in the embedded server
as it's considered useless there. But we do it in wrong way as
we only disable header's links to the PF, not the PF's library itself.
So on Unix-ex the embedded library still contains the PF code and
grows bigger with no reason. On Windows that just fails to compile.
per-file comments:
include/my_global.h
Bug#41103 6.0 Windows embedded-server tests fail
No PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA disabling in the embedded server. User can
just use the --without-perfschema-engine-plugin option to exclude it
from the compilation.
-lthread works fine in most cases, but at least with gcc 3.4.6 on x86, dlopen() crashes when libpthread is not used.
Note : the workaround existed prior and did not work since CMAKE_THREADS_LIBS_INIT was already
in cache. Now, use SET(.. CACHE FORCE) to overwrite the cached value.
- Remove INSTALL-BINARY from installed docs directory, we provide a copy
in the root directory (but perhaps this should be revisited later).
- Disable audit_null and daemon_example plugins.
- Fix the docs directory.
- Remove mysql-test/Makefile.in
- Build and install mysql_tzinfo_to_sql
- Remove share/charsets/languages.html
In the worst case possible scenario (no bzr, in-source build),
make dist produced a package that compiled ok with autotools
but failed to package because extra make_binary_distribution was
found in source package and was not built. make_binary_distribution
contained paths of the build machine.
Fix: exclude some scripts that are produced in cmake build.
Note that there is no good general fix for it in this specific scenario.
it is advisable to build source packages out of source or in bzr repo.
This patch prevents system threads and system table accesses from
using user-specified values for "lock_wait_timeout". Instead all
such accesses are done using the default value (1 year).
This prevents background tasks (such as replication, events,
accessing stored function definitions, logging, reading time-zone
information, etc.) from failing in cases where the global value
of "lock_wait_timeout" is set very low.
The patch also simplifies the open tables API. Rather than adding
another convenience function for opening and locking system tables,
this patch removes most of the existing convenience functions for
open_and_lock_tables_derived(). Before, open_and_lock_tables() was
a convenience function that enforced derived tables handling, while
open_and_lock_tables_derived() was the main function where derived
tables handling was optional. Now, this convencience function is
gone and the main function is renamed to open_and_lock_tables().
No test case added as it would have required the use of --sleep to
check that system threads and system tables have a different timeout
value from the user-specified "lock_wait_timeout" system variable.
HAVE_IBGCC_ATOMIC_BUILTINS=>HAVE_IB_GCC_ATOMIC_BUILTINS.
Due to the typo, detection of atomics was broken.
It also lead to valgrind error during shutdown
(access to freed memory),which is likely present
in all builds where atomics are not used.
Reason: implementation of send/reap in mysqltest uses the same "embedded" connection in a thread different from current, so thread stack has to change when connection is used in different OS thread..