RESULT CONSISTED OF MORE THAN ONE ROW
MySQL converts incorrect DATEs and DATETIMEs to '0000-00-00' on
insertion by default. This means that this sequence is possible:
CREATE TABLE t1(date_notnull DATE NOT NULL);
INSERT INTO t1 values (NULL);
SELECT * FROM t1;
0000-00-00
At the same time, ODBC drivers do not (or at least did not in the
90's) understand the DATE and DATETIME value '0000-00-00'. Thus,
to be able to query for the value 0000-00-00 it was decided in
MySQL 4.x (or maybe even before that) that for the special case
of DATE/DATETIME NOT NULL columns, the query "SELECT ... WHERE
date_notnull IS NULL" should return rows with date_notnull ==
'0000-00-00'. This is documented misbehavior that we do not want
to change.
The hack used to make MySQL return these rows is to convert
"date_notnull IS NULL" to "date_notnull = 0". This is, however,
only done if the table date_notnull belongs to is not an inner
table of an outer join. The rationale for this seems to be that
if there is no join match for the row in the outer table,
null-complemented rows would otherwise not be returned because
the null-complemented DATE value is actually NULL. On the other
hand, this means that the "return rows with 0000-00-00 when the
query asks for IS NULL"-hack is not in effect for outer joins.
In this bug, we have a LEFT JOIN that does not misbehave like
the documentation says it should. The fix is to rewrite
"date_notnull IS NULL" to "date_notnull IS NULL OR
date_notnull = 0"
if dealing with an OUTER JOIN, otherwise
"date_notnull IS NULL" to "date_notnull = 0"
as was done before.
Note:
The bug was originally reported as different result on first
and second execution of SP. The reason was that during first
execution the query was correctly rewritten to an inner join
due to a null-rejecting predicate. On second execution the
"IS NULL" -> "= 0" rewrite was done because there was no outer
join. The real problem, though, was incorrect date/datetime
IS NULL handling for OUTER JOINs.
mysql-test/r/type_datetime.result:
Add test for BUG#12561818
mysql-test/t/type_datetime.test:
Add test for BUG#12561818
sql/sql_select.cc:
Special handling of NULL for DATE/DATETIME NOT NULL columns:
In the case of outer join,
"date_notnull IS NULL"
is now rewritten to
"date_notnull IS NULL OR date_notnull = 0"
Before sorting HAVING condition is split into two parts,
first part is a table related condition and the rest of is
HAVING part. Extraction of HAVING part does not take into account
the fact that some of conditions might be non-const but
have 'used_tables' == 0 (independent subqueries)
and because of that these conditions are cut off by
make_cond_for_table() function.
The fix is to use (table_map) 0 instead of used_tables in
third argument for make_cond_for_table() function.
It allows to extract elements which belong to sorted
table and in addition elements which are independend
subqueries.
mysql-test/r/having.result:
test case
mysql-test/t/having.test:
test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
The fix is to use (table_map) 0 instead of used_tables in
third argument for make_cond_for_table() function.
It allows to extract elements which belong to sorted
table and in addition elements which are independend
subqueries.
Valgrind warnings were caused by comparing index values to an un-initialized field.
mysql-test/r/subselect.result:
New test cases.
mysql-test/t/subselect.test:
New test cases.
sql/opt_sum.cc:
Add thd to opt_sum_query enabling it to test for errors.
If we have a non-nullable index, we cannot use it to match null values,
since set_null() will be ignored, and we might compare uninitialized data.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Add thd to opt_sum_query, enabling it to test for errors.
sql/sql_select.h:
Add thd to opt_sum_query, enabling it to test for errors.
There are two problems with ANALYSE():
1. Memory leak
it happens because do_select() can overwrite
JOIN::procedure field(with zero value in our case) and
JOIN destructor don't free the memory allocated for
JOIN::procedure. The fix is to save original JOIN::procedure
before do_select() call and restore it after do_select
execution.
2. Wrong result
If ANALYSE() procedure is used for the statement with LIMIT clause
it could retrun empty result set. It happens because of missing
analyse::end_of_records() call. First end_send() function call
returns NESTED_LOOP_QUERY_LIMIT and second call of end_send() with
end_of_records flag enabled does not happen. The fix is to return
NESTED_LOOP_OK from end_send() if procedure is active.
mysql-test/r/analyse.result:
test case
mysql-test/t/analyse.test:
test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
--save original JOIN::procedure before do_select() call and
restore it after do_select execution.
--return NESTED_LOOP_OK from end_send() if procedure is active
The loop that was looping over subqueries' references to outer field used a
local boolean variable to tell whether the field was grouped or not. But the
implementor failed to reset the variable after each iteration. Thus a field
that was not directly aggregated appeared to be.
Fixed by resetting the variable upon each new iteration.
Also fix bug#59110: Memory leak of QUICK_SELECT_I allocated memory.
Includes Jørgen Lølands review comments.
Root cause of these bugs are that test_if_skip_sort_order() decided to
revert the 'skip_sort_order' descision (and use filesort) after the
query plan has been updated to reflect a 'skip' of the sort order.
This might happen in 'check_reverse_order:' if we have a
select->quick which could not be made descending by appending
a QUICK_SELECT_DESC. ().
The original 'save_quick' was then restored after the QEP has been modified,
which caused:
- An incorrect 'precomputed_group_by= TRUE' may have been set,
and not reverted, as part of the already modifified QEP (Bug#59308)
- A 'select->quick' might have been created which we fail to delete (bug#59110).
This fix is a refactorication of test_if_skip_sort_order() where all logic
related to modification of QEP (controlled by argument 'bool no_changes'), is
moved to the end of test_if_skip_sort_order(), and done after *all* 'test_if_skip'
checks has been performed - including the 'check_reverse_order:' checks.
The refactorication above contains now intentional changes to the logic which
has been moved to the end of the function.
Furthermore, a smaller part of the fix address the handling of the
select->quick objects which may already exists when we call
'test_if_skip_sort_order()' (save_quick) -and
new select->quick's created during test_if_skip_sort_order():
- Before new select->quick may be created by calling ::test_quick_select(), we
set 'select->quick= 0' to avoid that ::test_quick_select() prematurely
delete the save_quick's. (After this call we may have both a 'save_quick'
and 'select->quick')
- All returns from ::test_if_skip_sort_order() where we may have both a
'save_quick' and a 'select->quick' has been changed to goto's to the
exit points 'skiped_sort_order:' or 'need_filesort:' where we
decide which of the QUICK_SELECT's to keep, and delete the other.
Root cause for this bug is that the optimizer try to detect&
optimize the special case:
'<field> BETWEEN c1 AND c1' and handle this as the condition '<field> = c1'
This was implemented inside add_key_field(.. *field, *value[]...)
which assumed field to refer key Field, and value[] to refer a [low...high]
constant pair. value[0] and value[1] was then compared for equality.
In a 'normal' BETWEEN condition of the form '<field> BETWEEN val1 and val2' the
BETWEEN operation is represented with an argementlist containing the
values [<field>, val1, val2] - add_key_field() is then called with
parameters field=<field>, *value=val1.
However, if the BETWEEN predicate specified:
1) '<const1> BETWEEN<const2> AND<field>
the 'field' and 'value' arguments to add_key_field() had to be swapped.
This was implemented by trying to cheat add_key_field() to handle it like:
2) '<const1> GE<const2> AND<const1> LE<field>'
As we didn't really replace the BETWEEN operation with 'ge' and 'le',
add_key_field() still handled it as a 'BETWEEN' and compared the (swapped)
arguments<const1> and<const2> for equality. If they was equal, the
condition 1) was incorrectly 'optimized' to:
3) '<field> EQ <const1>'
This fix moves this optimization of '<field> BETWEEN c1 AND c1' into
add_key_fields() which then calls add_key_equal_fields() to collect
key equality / comparison for the key fields in the BETWEEN condition.
tmptable needed
The function DEFAULT() works by modifying the the data buffer pointers (often
referred to as 'record' or 'table record') of its argument. This modification
is done during name resolution (fix_fields().) Unfortunately, the same
modification is done when creating a temporary table, because default values
need to propagate to the new table.
Fixed by skipping the pointer modification for fields that are arguments to
the DEFAULT function.
in combination with IS NULL'
As this bug is a duplicate of bug#49322, it also includes test cases
covering this bugreport
Qualifying an OUTER JOIN with the condition 'WHERE <column> IS NULL',
where <column> is declared as 'NOT NULL' causes the
'not_exists_optimize' to be enabled by the optimizer.
In evaluate_join_record() the 'not_exists_optimize' caused
'NESTED_LOOP_NO_MORE_ROWS' to be returned immediately
when a matching row was found.
However, as the 'not_exists_optimize' is derived from
'JOIN_TAB::select_cond', the usual rules for condition guards
also applies for 'not_exist_optimize'. It is therefore incorrect
to check 'not_exists_optimize' without ensuring that all guards
protecting it is 'open'.
This fix uses the fact that 'not_exists_optimize' is derived from
a 'is_null' predicate term in 'tab->select_cond'. Furthermore,
'is_null' will evaluate to 'false' for any 'non-null' rows
once all guards protecting the is_null is open.
We can use this knowledge as an implicit guard check for the
'not_exists_optimize' by moving 'if (...not_exists_optimize)'
inside the handling of 'select_cond==false'. It will then
not take effect before its guards are open.
We also add an assert which requires that a
'not_exists_optimize' always comes together with
a select_cond. (containing 'is_null').
to crash mysqld".
handler::pushed_cond was not always properly reset when table objects where
recycled via the table cache.
handler::pushed_cond is now set to NULL in handler::ha_reset(). This should
prevent pushed conditions from (incorrectly) re-apperaring in later queries.
Fixed incorrect checks in join_read_const_table() for when to
accept a non-existing, or empty const-row as a part of the const'ified
set of tables.
Intention of this test is to only accept NULL-rows if this table is outer joined
into the resultset. (In case of an inner-join we can conclude at this point that
resultset will be empty, end we want to return 'error' to signal this.)
Initially 'maybe_null' is set to the same value as 'outer_join' in
setup_table_map(), mysql_priv.h ~line 2424. Later simplify_joins() will
attemp to replace outer joins by inner join whenever possible. This
will cause 'outer_join' to be updated. However, 'maybe_null' is *not* updated
to reflect this rewrite as this field is used to currectly set the 'nullability'
property for the columns in the resultset.
We should therefore change join_read_const_table() to check the 'outer_join'
property instead of 'maybe_null', as this correctly reflect the nullability of
the *execution plan* (not *resultset*).
An incorrect 'table_map' containing both the table itself,
and possible any outer-refs if this was the last table in
the subquery, was presented to make_cond_for_table().
As a pushed condition is only able to refer column from the table
the condition is pushed to, nothing else than columns from the
table itself (tab->table->map) may be refered in the pushed condition
constructed by 'push_cond= make_cond_for_table()'.
Also fix a minor 'copy and paste' bug in a comment
inside make_cond_for_table().
No testcase is possible on mainbranch as the NDB engine is not available (yet)
on mysql >= 5.5
- Removed files specific to compiling on OS/2
- Removed files specific to SCO Unix packaging
- Removed "libmysqld/copyright", text is included in documentation
- Removed LaTeX headers for NDB Doxygen documentation
- Removed obsolete NDB files
- Removed "mkisofs" binaries
- Removed the "cvs2cl.pl" script
- Changed a few GPL texts to use "program" instead of "library"
in sql_select.cc
Follow-up patch. Add sanity check for quick select when it is
decided that it should be used.
sql/opt_range.h:
Add is_valid() to QUICK_SELECT*
sql/sql_select.cc:
Add sanity check for quick select when it is decided that it should be used.
make_join_select() in sql_select.cc
Caused by incorrect ASSERT introduced by BUG#58456. Quick selects
may have index == MAX_KEY if it merges indices.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Removed ASSERT. Quick selects may have index == MAX_KEY if it merges indices.
in opt_range.h
In this bug, there are two alternative access plans:
* Index merge range access
* Const ref access
best_access_path() decided that the ref access was preferrable,
but make_join_select() still decided to point
SQL_SELECT::quick to the index merge because the table had
type==JT_CONST which was not handled.
At the same time the table's ref.key still referred to the
index the ref access would use indicating that ref access
should be used. In this state, different parts of the
optimizer code have different perceptions of which access path
is in use (ref or range).
test_if_skip_sort_order() was called to check if the ref access
needed ordering, but test_if_skip_sort_order() got confused and
requested the index merge to return records in sorted order.
Index merge cannot do this, and fired an ASSERT.
The fix is to take join_tab->type==JT_CONST into concideration
when make_join_select() decides whether or not to use the
range access method.
mysql-test/r/join_outer_innodb.result:
Add test for BUG#58456
mysql-test/t/join_outer_innodb.test:
Add test for BUG#58456
--Bug#52157 various crashes and assertions with multi-table update, stored function
--Bug#54475 improper error handling causes cascading crashing failures in innodb/ndb
--Bug#57703 create view cause Assertion failed: 0, file .\item_subselect.cc, line 846
--Bug#57352 valgrind warnings when creating view
--Recently discovered problem when a nested materialized derived table is used
before being populated and it leads to incorrect result
We have several modes when we should disable subquery evaluation.
The reasons for disabling are different. It could be
uselessness of the evaluation as in case of 'CREATE VIEW'
or 'PREPARE stmt', or we should disable subquery evaluation
if tables are not locked yet as it happens in bug#54475, or
too early evaluation of subqueries can lead to wrong result
as it happened in Bug#19077.
Main problem is that if subquery items are treated as const
they are evaluated in ::fix_fields(), ::fix_length_and_dec()
of the parental items as a lot of these methods have
Item::val_...() calls inside.
We have to make subqueries non-const to prevent unnecessary
subquery evaluation. At the moment we have different methods
for this. Here is a list of these modes:
1. PREPARE stmt;
We use UNCACHEABLE_PREPARE flag.
It is set during parsing in sql_parse.cc, mysql_new_select() for
each SELECT_LEX object and cleared at the end of PREPARE in
sql_prepare.cc, init_stmt_after_parse(). If this flag is set
subquery becomes non-const and evaluation does not happen.
2. CREATE|ALTER VIEW, SHOW CREATE VIEW, I_S tables which
process FRM files
We use LEX::view_prepare_mode field. We set it before
view preparation and check this flag in
::fix_fields(), ::fix_length_and_dec().
Some bugs are fixed using this approach,
some are not(Bug#57352, Bug#57703). The problem here is
that we have a lot of ::fix_fields(), ::fix_length_and_dec()
where we use Item::val_...() calls for const items.
3. Derived tables with subquery = wrong result(Bug19077)
The reason of this bug is too early subquery evaluation.
It was fixed by adding Item::with_subselect field
The check of this field in appropriate places prevents
const item evaluation if the item have subquery.
The fix for Bug19077 fixes only the problem with
convert_constant_item() function and does not cover
other places(::fix_fields(), ::fix_length_and_dec() again)
where subqueries could be evaluated.
Example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT, j BIGINT);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 2), (2, 2), (3, 2);
SELECT * FROM (SELECT MIN(i) FROM t1
WHERE j = SUBSTRING('12', (SELECT * FROM (SELECT MIN(j) FROM t1) t2))) t3;
DROP TABLE t1;
4. Derived tables with subquery where subquery
is evaluated before table locking(Bug#54475, Bug#52157)
Suggested solution is following:
-Introduce new field LEX::context_analysis_only with the following
possible flags:
#define CONTEXT_ANALYSIS_ONLY_PREPARE 1
#define CONTEXT_ANALYSIS_ONLY_VIEW 2
#define CONTEXT_ANALYSIS_ONLY_DERIVED 4
-Set/clean these flags when we perform
context analysis operation
-Item_subselect::const_item() returns
result depending on LEX::context_analysis_only.
If context_analysis_only is set then we return
FALSE that means that subquery is non-const.
As all subquery types are wrapped by Item_subselect
it allow as to make subquery non-const when
it's necessary.
mysql-test/r/derived.result:
test case
mysql-test/r/multi_update.result:
test case
mysql-test/r/view.result:
test case
mysql-test/suite/innodb/r/innodb_multi_update.result:
test case
mysql-test/suite/innodb/t/innodb_multi_update.test:
test case
mysql-test/suite/innodb_plugin/r/innodb_multi_update.result:
test case
mysql-test/suite/innodb_plugin/t/innodb_multi_update.test:
test case
mysql-test/t/derived.test:
test case
mysql-test/t/multi_update.test:
test case
mysql-test/t/view.test:
test case
sql/item.cc:
--removed unnecessary code
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc:
--removed unnecessary checks
--THD::is_context_analysis_only() is replaced with LEX::is_ps_or_view_context_analysis()
sql/item_func.cc:
--refactored context analysis checks
sql/item_row.cc:
--removed unnecessary checks
sql/item_subselect.cc:
--removed unnecessary code
--added DBUG_ASSERT into Item_subselect::exec()
which asserts that subquery execution can not happen
if LEX::context_analysis_only is set, i.e. at context
analysis stage.
--Item_subselect::const_item()
Return FALSE if LEX::context_analysis_only is set.
It prevents subquery evaluation in ::fix_fields &
::fix_length_and_dec at context analysis stage.
sql/item_subselect.h:
--removed unnecessary code
sql/mysql_priv.h:
--Added new set of flags.
sql/sql_class.h:
--removed unnecessary code
sql/sql_derived.cc:
--added LEX::context_analysis_only analysis intialization/cleanup
sql/sql_lex.cc:
--init LEX::context_analysis_only field
sql/sql_lex.h:
--New LEX::context_analysis_only field
sql/sql_parse.cc:
--removed unnecessary code
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
--removed unnecessary code
--added LEX::context_analysis_only analysis intialization/cleanup
sql/sql_select.cc:
--refactored context analysis checks
sql/sql_show.cc:
--added LEX::context_analysis_only analysis intialization/cleanup
sql/sql_view.cc:
--added LEX::context_analysis_only analysis intialization/cleanup
when semijoin=on
When setting the aggregate function as having no rows to report
the function no_rows_in_result() was calling Item_sum::reset().
However this function in addition to cleaning up the aggregate
value by calling aggregator_clear() was also adding the current
value to the aggregate value by calling aggregator_add().
Fixed by making no_rows_in_result() to call aggregator_clear()
directly.
Renamed Item_sum::reset to Item_sum::reset_and_add() to
and added a comment to avoid misinterpretation of what the
function does.
and related small fixes.
mysql-test/t/user_var.test:
test for bug
sql/field_conv.cc:
From the C standard, memcpy() has undefined behaviour if to->ptr==from->ptr
sql/item_func.cc:
In the case of BUG#56138, entry->value==ptr in which case memcpy()
has undefined results per the C standard.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Work around a bug in old gcc
by a function and column
The bugreport reveals two different bugs about grouping
on a function:
1) grouping by the TIME_TO_SEC function result caused
a server crash or wrong results and
2) grouping by the function returning a blob caused
an unexpected "Duplicate entry" error and wrong
result.
Details for the 1st bug:
TIME_TO_SEC() returns NULL if its argument is invalid (empty
string for example). Thus its nullability depends not only
on the nullability of its arguments but also on their values.
Fixed by (overoptimistically) setting TIME_TO_SEC() to be
nullable despite the nullability of its arguments.
Details for the 2nd bug:
The server is unable to create indices on blobs without
explicit blob key part length. However, this fact was
ignored for blob function result fields of GROUP BY
intermediate tables.
Fixed by disabling GROUP BY index creation for blob
function result fields like regular blob fields.
mysql-test/r/func_time.result:
Test case for bug #52160.
mysql-test/r/type_blob.result:
Test case for bug #52160.
mysql-test/t/func_time.test:
Test case for bug #52160.
mysql-test/t/type_blob.test:
Test case for bug #52160.
sql/item_timefunc.h:
Bug #52160: crash and inconsistent results when grouping
by a function and column
TIME_TO_SEC() returns NULL if its argument is invalid (empty
string for example). Thus its nullability depends not only
Fixed by (overoptimistically) setting TIME_TO_SEC() to be
nullable despite the nullability of its arguments.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #52160: crash and inconsistent results when grouping
by a function and column
The server is unable to create indices on blobs without
explicit blob key part length. However, this fact was
ignored for blob function result fields of GROUP BY
intermediate tables.
Fixed by disabling GROUP BY index creation for blob
function result fields like regular blob fields.
Lines below which were added in the patch for Bug#56814 cause this crash:
+ if (table->table)
+ table->table->maybe_null= FALSE;
Consider following test case:
--
CREATE TABLE t1(f1 INT NOT NULL);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (16777214),(0);
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1 LEFT JOIN t1 t2
ON 1 WHERE t2.f1 > 1 GROUP BY t2.f1;
DROP TABLE t1;
--
We set TABLE::maybe_null to FALSE for t2 table
and in create_tmp_field() we create appropriate tmp table field
using create_tmp_field_from_item() function instead of
create_tmp_field_from_field. As a result we have
LONGLONG field. As we have GROUP BY clause we calculate
group buffer length, see calc_group_buffer().
Item from group list which is used for calculation
refer to the field from real tables and have LONG type.
So group buffer length become insufficient for storing of
LONGLONG value. It leads to overwriting of wrong memory
area in do_field_int() function which is called from
end_update().
After some investigation I found out that
create_tmp_field_from_item() is used only for OLAP
grouping and can not be used for common grouping
as it could be an incompatibility between tmp
table fields and group buffer length.
We can not remove create_tmp_field_from_item() call from
create_tmp_field as OLAP needs it and we can not use this
function for common grouping. So we should remove setting
TABLE::maybe_null to FALSE from simplify_joins().
In this case we'll get wrong behaviour of
list_contains_unique_index() back. To fix it we
could use Field::real_maybe_null() check instead of
Field::maybe_null() and add addition check of
TABLE_LIST::outer_join.
mysql-test/r/group_by.result:
test case
mysql-test/r/join_outer.result:
test case
mysql-test/t/group_by.test:
test case
mysql-test/t/join_outer.test:
test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
--remove wrong code
--use Field::real_maybe_null() check instead of
Field::maybe_null() and add addition check of
TABLE_LIST::outer_join
- A prerequisite cleanup patch for making KILL reliable.
The test case main.kill did not work reliably.
The following problems have been identified:
1. A kill signal could go lost if it came in, short before a
thread went reading on the client connection.
2. A kill signal could go lost if it came in, short before a
thread went waiting on a condition variable.
These problems have been solved as follows. Please see also
added code comments for more details.
1. There is no safe way to detect, when a thread enters the
blocking state of a read(2) or recv(2) system call, where it
can be interrupted by a signal. Hence it is not possible to
wait for the right moment to send a kill signal. It has been
decided, not to fix it in the code. Instead, the test case
repeats the KILL statement until the connection terminates.
2. Before waiting on a condition variable, we register it
together with a synchronizating mutex in THD::mysys_var. After
this, we need to test THD::killed again. At some places we did
only test it in a loop condition before the registration. When
THD::killed had been set between this test and the registration,
we entered waiting without noticing the killed flag. Additional
checks ahve been introduced where required.
In addition to the above, a re-write of the main.kill test
case has been done. All sleeps have been replaced by Debug
Sync Facility synchronization. A couple of sync points have
been added to the server code.
To avoid further problems, if the test case fails in spite of
the fixes, the test case has been added to the "experimental"
list for now.
- Most of the work on this patch is authored by Ingo Struewing
mysql-test/t/kill.test:
Re-wrote test case to use Debug Sync points instead of sleeps
sql/event_queue.cc:
Fixed kill detection in Event_queue::cond_wait() by adding a check
after enter_cond().
sql/lock.cc:
Moved Debug Sync points behind enter_cond().
Fixed comments.
sql/slave.cc:
Fixed kill detection in start_slave_thread() by adding a check
after enter_cond().
sql/sql_class.cc:
Swapped order of kill and close in THD::awake().
Added comments.
sql/sql_class.h:
Added a comment to THD::killed.
sql/sql_parse.cc:
Added a sync point in do_command().
sql/sql_select.cc:
Added a sync point in JOIN::optimize().
create_sort_index() function overwrites original JOIN_TAB::type field.
At re-execution of subquery overwritten JOIN_TAB::type(JT_ALL) is
used instead of JT_FT. It misleads test_if_skip_sort_order() and
the function tries to find suitable key for the order that should
not be allowed for FULLTEXT(JT_FT) table.
The fix is to restore JOIN_TAB strucures for subselect on re-execution
for EXPLAIN.
Additional fix:
Update TABLE::maybe_null field which
affects list_contains_unique_index() behaviour as it
could have the value(maybe_null==TRUE) based on the
assumption that this join is outer
(see setup_table_map() func).
mysql-test/r/explain.result:
test case
mysql-test/t/explain.test:
test case
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Make subquery uncacheable in case of EXPLAIN. It allows to keep
original JOIN_TAB::type(see JOIN::save_join_tab) and restore it
on re-execution.
sql/sql_select.cc:
-restore JOIN_TAB strucures for subselect on re-execution for EXPLAIN
-Update TABLE::maybe_null field as it could have
the value(maybe_null==TRUE) based on the assumption
that this join is outer(see setup_table_map() func).
This change is not related to the crash problem but
affects EXPLAIN results in the test case.
Subquery executes twice, at top level JOIN::optimize and ::execute stages.
At first execution create_sort_index() function is called and
FT_SELECT object is created and destroyed. HANDLER::ft_handler is cleaned up
in the object destructor and at second execution FT_SELECT::get_next() method
returns error.
The fix is to reinit HANDLER::ft_handler field before re-execution of subquery.
mysql-test/r/fulltext.result:
test case
mysql-test/t/fulltext.test:
test case
sql/item_func.cc:
reinit ft_handler before re-execution of subquery
sql/item_func.h:
Fixed method name
sql/sql_select.cc:
reinit ft_handler before re-execution of subquery
ORDER BY computed col
GROUP BY implies ORDER BY in the MySQL dialect of SQL. Therefore, when an
index on the first table in the query is used, and that index satisfies
ordering according to the GROUP BY clause, the query optimizer estimates the
number of tuples that need to be read from this index. If there is a LIMIT
clause, table statistics on tables following this 'sort table' are employed.
There may be a separate ORDER BY clause however, which mandates reading the
whole 'sort table' anyway. But the previous estimate was left untouched.
Fixed by removing the estimate from EXPLAIN output if GROUP BY is used in
conjunction with an ORDER BY clause that mandates using a temporary table.