It was later disabled because the test failed with timeout on one testing box.
The reason for this failing test could not be found because we do not have informations about the conditions on the box during this test.
Jeb and I tried this test on other boxes and it passed.
My experience is that
- tests using NDB need in general often significant more runtime
than comparable tests of other storage engines
- the actual load of the box where the test is running and the
filesystem (nfs could be extreme slow) where the tests are
executed might have a huge impact on the test performance
(runtime * 2 till 3)
- there are sometimes problems with the ports most probably
caused by OS properties (NDB+RPL need many ports) or
parallel tests accidently running with the same ports.
AFAIK these are the reasons why the NDB tests fail sometimes with timeout.
Conclusion: We enable rpl_ndb_ddl again because the failure happens in rare cases
and seems not to be caused by errors within the server or test code.
- both for data schema operations
- also make sure schema events vet the right server id when injected into the binlog
- use same mechanism to signal server_id in bug#17095, and reserve some "id's" for flagging special conditions on the event, in this case do not log it
- enable printing of server ids in the testcases to show that we cot it right
(Removes some warnings about UNIX_TIMESTAMP from the slave.err logs)
Marked federated_server as a '--big-test'
Change error in net_clear to 'Note', as it interfered with mysql-test-run.
Change to use remove_file instead of 'system rm' in a lot of tests. (Should fix some windows test problems)
Removed memory leak in mysql_test if sync_with_master fails.
Do not terminate ndb_cluster_binary_log before the util thread has finnished. This should fix a shutdown bug where a thread is accessing injector_mutex after it's freed.
Patch may fix Bug#27622 "mysqld shutdown, util thread continues, while binlog thread exits"
The Item_outer_ref class based on the Item_direct_ref class was always used
to represent an outer field. But if the outer select is a grouping one and the
outer field isn't under an aggregate function which is aggregated in that
outer select an Item_ref object should be used to represent such a field.
If the outer select in which the outer field is resolved isn't grouping then
the Item_field class should be used to represent such a field.
This logic also should be used for an outer field resolved through its alias
name.
Now the Item_field::fix_outer_field() uses Item_outer_field objects to
represent aliased and non-aliased outer fields for grouping outer selects
only.
Now the fix_inner_refs() function chooses which class to use to access outer
field - the Item_ref or the Item_direct_ref. An object of the chosen class
substitutes the original field in the Item_outer_ref object.
The direct_ref and the found_in_select_list fields were added to the
Item_outer_ref class.
Problem: single byte do_varstring1() function was called, which didn't
check limit on "number of character", and checked only "number of bytes".
Fix: adding a multi-byte aware function do_varstring1_mb(),
to limit on "number of characters"
Support of views wasn't implemented for the TRUNCATE statement.
Now TRUNCATE on views has the same semantics as DELETE FROM view:
mysql_truncate() checks whether the table is a view and falls back
to delete if so.
In order to initialize properly the LEX::updatable for a view
st_lex::can_use_merged() now allows usage of merged views for the
TRUNCATE statement.