Changed patch to Mats suggestion from review. Patch is for Bug#30209
.del-wait_for_slave_running_off.inc:
Delete: mysql-test/include/wait_for_slave_running_off.inc
This patch adds functionality to row-based replication to ensure the
slave's column sizes are >= to that of the master.
It also includes some refactoring for the code from WL#3228.
Updated test to use new include function
wait_for_slave_running_off.inc:
Created new include to resolve the timing issue recorded by Bug#30209
rpl_events.inc:
The issue shown in Bug#30128 is that 'from er' shows up in a part of the test that it should not show up in. This event really is not created until later in the test, yet since the test runs row and then turns around and runs statement, I am guessing that the first run may not have cleaned up like it should, so I am adding a sync with master after the drop of table t1 to ensure that both master and slave are clean.
Fixing tests and results to work when replicating to fewer columns on
slave than on master. One test that previously should fail, now works,
and some log positions have changed as a result of adding metadata to
the events.
"getGeneratedKeys() does not work with FEDERATED table"
mysql_insert() expected the storage engine to update the row data
during the write_row() operation with the value of the new auto-
increment field. The field must be updated when only one row has
been inserted as mysql_insert() would ignore the thd->last_insert.
This patch implements HA_STATUS_AUTO support in ha_federated::info()
and ensures that ha_federated::write_row() does update the row's
auto-increment value.
The test case was written in C as the protocol's 'id' value is
accessible through libmysqlclient and not via SQL statements.
mysql-test-run.pl was extended to enable running the test binary.
internal data dictionary
- re-enabled innodb_mysql test;
- added a rule to through away expected warning to mtr_report.pl;
- fixed a test case to produce unique warning.
After applying the snapshots, ensure that code conforms to the final version
of WL 3914.
It is signficant that, after these changes, InnoDB does not define MYSQL_SERVER,
and can be built as an independent storage engine plugin.
Fixes:
Bug#9709: InnoDB inconsistensy causes "Operating System Error 32/33"
Bug#18828: If InnoDB runs out of undo slots, it returns misleading 'table is full'
Bug#20090: InnoDB: Error: trying to declare trx to enter InnoDB
Bug#20352: Make ibuf_contract_for_n_pages tunable
Bug#21101: Wrong error on exceeding max row size for InnoDB table
Bug#21293: Deadlock detection prefers to kill long running FOR UPDATE queries
Bug#22819: SHOW INNODB STATUS crashes the server with an assertion failure under high load
Bug#25078: Make the replication thread to ignore innodb_thread_concurrency
Bug#25645: Assertion failure in file srv0srv.c
Bug#28138: indexing column prefixes produces corruption in InnoDB
When a table is being updated it has two set of fields - fields required for
checks of conditions and fields to be updated. A storage engine is allowed
not to retrieve columns marked for update. Due to this fact records can't
be compared to see whether the data has been changed or not. This makes the
server always update records independently of data change.
Now when an auto-updatable timestamp field is present and server sees that
a table handle isn't going to retrieve write-only fields then all of such
fields are marked as to be read to force the handler to retrieve them.
- BUG#11986: Stored routines and triggers can fail if the code
has a non-ascii symbol
- BUG#16291: mysqldump corrupts string-constants with non-ascii-chars
- BUG#19443: INFORMATION_SCHEMA does not support charsets properly
- BUG#21249: Character set of SP-var can be ignored
- BUG#25212: Character set of string constant is ignored (stored routines)
- BUG#25221: Character set of string constant is ignored (triggers)
There were a few general problems that caused these bugs:
1. Character set information of the original (definition) query for views,
triggers, stored routines and events was lost.
2. mysqldump output query in client character set, which can be
inappropriate to encode definition-query.
3. INFORMATION_SCHEMA used strings with mixed encodings to display object
definition;
1. No query-definition-character set.
In order to compile query into execution code, some extra data (such as
environment variables or the database character set) is used. The problem
here was that this context was not preserved. So, on the next load it can
differ from the original one, thus the result will be different.
The context contains the following data:
- client character set;
- connection collation (character set and collation);
- collation of the owner database;
The fix is to store this context and use it each time we parse (compile)
and execute the object (stored routine, trigger, ...).
2. Wrong mysqldump-output.
The original query can contain several encodings (by means of character set
introducers). The problem here was that we tried to convert original query
to the mysqldump-client character set.
Moreover, we stored queries in different character sets for different
objects (views, for one, used UTF8, triggers used original character set).
The solution is
- to store definition queries in the original character set;
- to change SHOW CREATE statement to output definition query in the
binary character set (i.e. without any conversion);
- introduce SHOW CREATE TRIGGER statement;
- to dump special statements to switch the context to the original one
before dumping and restore it afterwards.
Note, in order to preserve the database collation at the creation time,
additional ALTER DATABASE might be used (to temporary switch the database
collation back to the original value). In this case, ALTER DATABASE
privilege will be required. This is a backward-incompatible change.
3. INFORMATION_SCHEMA showed non-UTF8 strings
The fix is to generate UTF8-query during the parsing, store it in the object
and show it in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.
Basically, the idea is to create a copy of the original query convert it to
UTF8. Character set introducers are removed and all text literals are
converted to UTF8.
This UTF8 query is intended to provide user-readable output. It must not be
used to recreate the object. Specialized SHOW CREATE statements should be
used for this.
The reason for this limitation is the following: the original query can
contain symbols from several character sets (by means of character set
introducers).
Example:
- original query:
CREATE VIEW v1 AS SELECT _cp1251 'Hello' AS c1;
- UTF8 query (for INFORMATION_SCHEMA):
CREATE VIEW v1 AS SELECT 'Hello' AS c1;