memory issue ?
The mysql command line client could misinterpret some character
sequences as commands under some circumstances.
The upper limit for internal readline buffer was raised to 1 GB
(the same as for server's max_allowed_packet) so that any input
line is processed by add_line() as a whole rather than in
chunks.
The --hexdump option crashed mysqlbinlog when used together
with the --read-from-remote-server option due to use of
uninitialized memory.
Since Log_event::print_header() relies on temp_buf to be
initialized when the --hexdump option is present,
dump_remote_log_entries() was fixed to setup temp_buf to point
to the start of a binlog event as done in
dump_local_log_entries().
The root cause of this bug is identical to the one for
bug #17654. The latter was fixed in 5.1 and up, so this
patch is backport of the patches for bug #17654 to 5.0.
Only 5.0 needs a changelog entry.
When the thread executing a DDL was killed after finished its
execution but before writing the binlog event, the error code in
the binlog event could be set wrongly to ER_SERVER_SHUTDOWN or
ER_QUERY_INTERRUPTED.
This patch fixed the problem by ignoring the kill status when
constructing the event for DDL statements.
This patch also included the following changes in order to
provide the test case.
1) modified mysqltest to support variable for connection command
2) modified mysql-test-run.pl, add new variable MYSQL_SLAVE to
run mysql client against the slave mysqld.
When asking what database is selected, client expected
to *always* get an answer from the server.
We now handle failure more gracefully.
See comments in ticket for a discussion of what happens,
and how things interlock.
When loading dump created by mysqldump tool an error is
thrown saying storage engine for the table doesn't have
an option.
mysqldump tries to re-insert the data into the federated
table which causes the error. Since the data is already
available on the remote server, mysqldump shouldn't try
to dump the data again for FEDERATED tables.
As stated in the bug page, it can be considered similar
to the MERGE ENGINE with "view only" nature.
Fixed by adding the "FEDERATED ENGINE" to the exception
list to ignore the data.
~40Mb after mysqldump/import
When the input string exceeds the maximum allowed size for the
internal buffer, batch_readline() returns a truncated string.
Since there was no way for a caller to determine whether the
string was truncated or not, the command line client assumed
batch_readline() to always return the whole input string and
appended a newline character. This resulted in garbled data
when importing dumps containing strings longer than the
maximum input buffer size.
Fixed by adding a flag to the batch_readline() interface to
signal a truncated string to the caller.
Other minor problems fixed during patch implementation:
- The maximum allowed buffer size for batch_readline() was set
up depending on the client's max_allowed_packet value. It does
not actully make any sense, as those variables are not
related. The input buffer size limit is now always set to 1
MB.
- fill_buffer() did not always set the EOF flag.
- The input buffer could actually grow twice as the specified
limit due to insufficient checks in intern_read_line().
--ignore-table option
mysqldump would correctly omit temporary tables for views, but would
incorrectly still emit all CREATE VIEW statements.
Backport a fix from 5.1, where we capture the names we want to emit
views for in one pass (the placeholder tables) and in the pass where
we actually emit the views, we don't emit a view if it wasn't in that
list.
Took the Xfree implementation (based on the same rewrite as the NDB one)
and added it instead of the current implementation.
Added a macro to make the calls to MD5 more streamlined.
There was a problem when a DELIMITER COMMAND is not the first
command on the line. I this case an extra line feed was added
to the glob buffer and this was causing subsequent attempts
to enter this delimiter to fail.
Fixed by not adding a new line to the glob buffer if the
command being added is a DELIMITER
mysqldump included character_set_client magic
that is unknown before 4.1 even when asked for
an appropriate compatibility mode.
In compatibility (3.23, 4.0) mode, we do not
output charset statements (not even in a
"comment conditional"), nor do we do magic on
the server, even if the server is sufficient
new (4.1+). Table-names will be output converted
to the charset requested by mysqldump; if such
a conversion is not possible (Ivrit -> Latin),
mysqldump will fail.
Typo existed in help-text for command "charset" in mysql
client, making the parameter-name different for long and
short forms of the command for no good reason.
Fixed.
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
date_format functions
String::realloc() did not check whether the existing string data fits in
the newly allocated buffer for cases when reallocating a String object
with external buffer (i.e.alloced == FALSE). This could lead to memory
overruns in some cases.
mysqldump included character_set_client magic
that is unknown before 4.1 even when asked for
an appropriate compatibility mode.
In compatibility (3.23, 4.0) mode, we do not
output charset statements (not even in a
"comment conditional"), nor do we do magic on
the server, even if the server is sufficient
new (4.1+). Table-names will be output converted
to the charset requested by mysqldump; if such
a conversion is not possible (Ivrit -> Latin),
mysqldump will fail.
Various parts of code used different 'precision' arguments for sprintf("%g") when converting
floating point numbers to a string. This led to differences in results in some cases
depending on whether the text-based or prepared statements protocol is used for a query.
Fixed by changing arguments to sprintf("%g") to always be 15 (DBL_DIG) so that results are
consistent regardless of the protocol.
This patch will be null-merged to 6.0 as the problem does not exists there (fixed by the
patch for WL#2934).
Added function to check for diff and return an error message if the utility is not present.
Previously, the way we did this didn't work on Windows, but did work on *Nix systems.
Fix parsing of mysql client commands, especially in relation to
single-line comments when --comments was specified.
This is a little tricky, because we need to allow single-line
comments in the middle of statements, but we don't want to allow
client commands in the middle of statements. So in
comment-preservation mode, we go ahead and send single-line
comments to the server immediately when we encounter them on their
own.
This is still slightly flawed, in that it does not handle a
single-line comment with leading spaces, followed by a client-side
command when --comment has been enabled. But this isn't a new
problem, and it is quite an edge condition. Fixing it would require
a more extensive overall of how the mysql client parses commands.
when InnoDB frm file corruption
Problem: mysqlcheck runs 'SHOW FULL TABLE' queries to get table lists.
The query may fail for some reasons (e.g. null .frm file) then
mysqlcheck doesn't process the database tables.
Fix: try to run 'SHOW TABLES' if 'SHOW FULL TABLES' failed.