MATCH() function accepts column list as an argument. It was possible to override
this requirement with aliased non-column select expression. Which results in
server crash.
With this fix aliased non-column select expressions are not accepted by MATCH()
function, returning an error.
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.
The parser was not using the correct fully-qualified-name
production for DROP FUNCTION.
Fixed by copying the production from DROP PROCEDURE.
Tested in the windows specific suite to make sure it's
tested on a case-insensitive file system.
Bug#42003 tests missing the disconnect of connections <> default
second slice
Content:
1. wait_until_count_sessions.inc
- One PB run of a test using this routine failed because
5 seconds timeout were exceeded. Although I have some doubts
if the assigned timeout was really too small, I increase the
value to 10. We waste the additional 5 seconds only if the
tests fails anyway.
- Print the content of the PROCESSLIST if the poll routine fails
2. minor improvements of formatting
3. query_cache_notembedded:
Activate the wait_until_count_sessions.inc routine which was
unfortunately forgotten in the changeset before.
In 37553 we declared longlong results for
class Item_str_timefunc as per comments/docs,
but didn't add a method for that. And the
default just wasn't good enough for some
cases.
Changeset adds dedicated val_int() to class.
- If missing: add "disconnect <session>"
- If physical disconnect of non "default" sessions is not finished
at test end: add routine which waits till this happened
+ additional improvements
- remove superfluous files created by the test
- replace error numbers by error names
- remove trailing spaces, replace tabs by spaces
- unify writing of bugs within comments
- correct comments
- minor changes of formatting
Fixed tests:
backup
check
compress
grant
information_schema
multi_update
overflow
packet
query_cache_not_embedded
sp-threads
subselect
synchronization
timezone_grant
Problem: some queries using NAME_CONST(.. COLLATE ...)
lead to server crash due to failed type cast.
Fix: return the underlying item's type in case of
NAME_CONST(.. COLLATE ...) to avoid wrong casting.
Accessing well defined MERGE table may return an error
stating that the merge table is incorrectly defined. This
happens if MERGE child tables were accessed before and we
failed to open another incorrectly defined MERGE table in
this connection.
myrg_open() internally used my_errno as a variable for determining
failure, and thus could be tricked into a wrong decision by other
uses of my_errno.
With this fix we use function local boolean flag instead of my_errno
to determine failure.
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.
The original symptoms of this bug have been fixed as a consequence of other bug fixes.
Taking this time to correct some formatting, such as replacing error numbers with names.
Beginning this with 5.0
- If missing: add "disconnect <session>"
- If physical disconnect of non "default" sessions is not finished
at test end: add routine which waits till this happened
+ additional improvements like
- remove superfluous files created by the test
- replace error numbers by error names
- remove trailing spaces, replace tabs by spaces
- unify writing of bugs within comments
- correct comments
- minor changes of formatting
Modifications according to the code review are included.
Fixed tests:
grant2
grant3
lock_tables_lost_commit
mysqldump
openssl_1
outfile
When storing a NULL to a TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT ...,
NULL returned from some functions threw a 'cannot be NULL error.'
NULL-returns now correctly result in the timestamp-field being
assigned its default value.
messed up
"ROW(...) IN (SELECT ... FROM DUAL)" always returned TRUE.
Item_in_subselect::row_value_transformer rewrites "ROW(...)
IN SELECT" conditions into the "EXISTS (SELECT ... HAVING ...)"
form.
For a subquery from the DUAL pseudotable resulting HAVING
condition is an expression on constant values, so further
transformation with optimize_cond() eliminates this HAVING
condition and resets JOIN::having to NULL.
Then JOIN::exec treated that NULL as an always-true-HAVING
and that caused a bug.
To distinguish an optimized out "HAVING TRUE" clause from
"HAVING FALSE" we already have the JOIN::having_value flag.
However, JOIN::exec() ignored JOIN::having_value as described
above as if it always set to COND_TRUE.
The JOIN::exec method has been modified to take into account
the value of the JOIN::having_value field.
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).
The problem is that the query cache was storing partial results
if the statement failed when sending the results to the client.
This could cause clients to hang when trying to read the results
from the cache as they would, for example, wait indefinitely for
a eof packet that wasn't saved.
The solution is to always discard the caching of a query that
failed to send its results to the associated client.
The problem is that the query cache stores packets containing
the server status of the time when the cached statement was run.
This might lead to a wrong transaction status in the client side
if a statement is cached during a transaction and is later served
outside a transaction context (and vice-versa).
The solution is to take into account the transaction status when
storing in and serving from the query cache.
The greedy optimizer tracks the current level of nested joins and the position
inside these by setting and maintaining a state that's global for the whole FROM
clause.
This state was correctly maintained inside the selection of the next partial plan
table (in best_extension_by_limited_search()).
greedy_search() also moves the current position by adding the last partial match
table when there's not enough tables in the partial plan found by
best_extension_by_limited_search().
This may require update of the global state variables that describe the current
position in the plan if the last table placed by greedy_search is not a top-level
join table.
Fixed by updating the state after placing the partial plan table in greedy_search()
in the same way this is done on entering the best_extension_by_limited_search().
Fixed the signature of the function called to update the state :
check_interleaving_with_nj
When substituting system constant functions with a constant result
the server was not expecting that the function may return NULL.
Fixed by checking for NULL and returning Item_null (in the relevant
collation) if the result of the system constant function was NULL.
Passing dubious "year zero" in non-zero date (not "0000-00-00") could
lead to negative value for year internally, while variable was unsigned.
This led to Really Bad Things further down the line.
Now doing calculations with signed type for year internally.
Added global status variable 'Queries' which represents
total amount of queries executed by server including
statements executed by SPs.
note: It's old behaviour of 'Questions' variable.
Table could be marked dependent because it is
either 1) an inner table of an outer join, or 2) it is a part of
STRAIGHT_JOIN. In case of STRAIGHT_JOIN table->maybe_null should not
be assigned. The fix is to set st_table::maybe_null to 'true' only
for those tables which are used in outer join.
The MONTHNAME/DAYNAME functions
returns binary string, so the LOWER/UPPER functions
are not effective on the result of MONTHNAME/DAYNAME call.
Character set of the MONTHNAME/DAYNAME function
result has been changed to connection character set.
- QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT deinitializes its rnd_pos() scan when it reaches EOF, but we
need to make the deinitialization in QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT destructor also. This is because
certain execution strategies can stop scanning without reaching EOF, then then try to do a full
table scan on this table. Failure to deinitialize caused the full scan to use (already empty)
table->sort and produce zero records.