The problem was that LOAD DATA code (sql_load.cc) didn't take into
account that there may be items, representing references to other
columns. This is a usual case in views. The crash happened because
Item_direct_view_ref was casted to Item_user_var_as_out_param,
which is not a base class.
The fix is to
1) Handle references properly;
2) Ensure that an item is treated as a user variable only when
it is a user variable indeed;
3) Report an error if LOAD DATA is used to load data into
non-updatable column.
Mixing aggregate functions and non-grouping columns is not allowed in the
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY mode. However in some cases the error wasn't thrown because
of insufficient check.
In order to check more thoroughly the new algorithm employs a list of outer
fields used in a sum function and a SELECT_LEX::full_group_by_flag.
Each non-outer field checked to find out whether it's aggregated or not and
the current select is marked accordingly.
All outer fields that are used under an aggregate function are added to the
Item_sum::outer_fields list and later checked by the Item_sum::check_sum_func
function.
Bug#21413
"Engine table handler used by multiple threads in REPLACE DELAYED"
When executing a REPLACE DELAYED statement, the storage engine
::extra() method was invoked by a different thread than the thread
which has acquired the handler instance.
This did not cause problems within the current server and with
the current storage engines.
But it has the potential to confuse future storage engines.
Added code to avoid surplus calls to extra() method in case of DELAYED
which avoids calling storage engine from a different thread than
expected.
No test case.
This change does not change behavior in conjunction with current
storage engines. So it cannot be tested by the regression test suite.
View definition as SELECT ... FROM DUAL WHERE ... has
valid syntax, but use of such view in SELECT or
SHOW CREATE VIEW syntax causes unexpected syntax error.
Server omits FROM DUAL clause when storing view body
string in a .frm file for further evaluation.
However, syntax of SELECT-witout-FROM query is more
restrictive than SELECT FROM DUAL syntax, and doesn't
allow the WHERE clause.
NOTE: this syntax difference is not documented.
View registration procedure has been modified to
preserve original structure of view's body.
localhost/default port
When creating federated table that points to unspecified host or
localhost on unspecified port or port is 0, small memory leak occurs.
This happens because we make a copy of unix socket path, which is
never freed.
With this fix we do not make a copy of unix socket path, instead
share->socket points to MYSQL_UNIX_ADDR constant directly.
This fix is covered by a test case for BUG34788.
Affects 5.0 only.
The bool data type was redefined to BOOL (4 bytes on windows).
Removed the #define and fixed some of the warnings that were uncovered
by this.
Note that the fix also disables 2 warnings :
4800 : 'type' : forcing value to bool 'true' or 'false' (performance warning)
4805: 'operation' : unsafe mix of type 'type' and type 'type' in operation
These warnings will be handled in a separate bug, as they are performance related or bogus.
Fixed to int the return type of functions that return more than
2 distinct values.
correctly - crashes server !
Creating federated table with connect string containing empty
(zero-length) host name and port is evaluated as 0 (port is
incorrect, omitted or 0) crashes server.
This happens because federated calls strcmp() with NULL pointer.
Fixed by avoiding strcmp() call if hostname is set to NULL.
When swapping out heap I_S tables to disk, this is done after plan refinement.
Thus, READ_RECORD::file will still point to the (deleted) heap handler at start
of execution. This causes segmentation fault if join buffering is used and the
query is a star query where the result is found to be empty before accessing
some table. In this case that table has not been initialized (i.e. had its
READ_RECORD re-initialized) before the cleanup routine tries to close the handler.
Fixed by updating READ_RECORD::file when changing handler.
The problem was that the COM_STMT_SEND_LONG_DATA was sending a response
packet if the prepared statement wasn't found in the server (due to
reconnection). The commands COM_STMT_SEND_LONG_DATA and COM_STMT_CLOSE
should not send any packets, even error packets should not be sent since
they are not expected by the client API.
The solution is to clear generated during the execution of the aforementioned
commands and to skip resend of prepared statement commands. Another fix is
that if the connection breaks during the send of prepared statement command,
the command is not sent again since the prepared statement is no longer in the
server.
Queries like:
SELECT ROW(1, 2) IN (SELECT t1.a, 2)
FROM t1 GROUP BY t1.a
or
SELECT ROW(1, 2) IN (SELECT t1.a, 2 FROM t2)
FROM t1 GROUP BY t1.a
lead to assertion failure in the
Item_in_subselect::row_value_transformer method in debugging
build, or to unexpected error message in release build:
ERROR 1247 (42S22): Reference '<list ref>' not supported (forward
reference in item list)
Unexpected error message and assertion failure have been
eliminated.
When there are no underlying tables specified for a merge table,
SHOW CREATE TABLE outputs a statement that cannot be executed. The
same is true for mysqldump (it generates dumps that cannot be
executed).
This happens because SQL parser does not accept empty UNION() clause.
This patch changes the following:
- it is now possible to execute CREATE/ALTER statement with
empty UNION() clause.
- the same as above, but still worth noting: it is now possible to
remove underlying tables mapping using ALTER TABLE ... UNION=().
- SHOW CREATE TABLE does not output UNION() clause if there are
no underlying tables specified for a merge table. This makes
mysqldump slightly smaller.
When concurrent inserts were disabled, statements after an INSERT
were not put into the query cache. This happened because we do not
save the current data file length at statement start when
concurrent inserts are disabled. But we checked the always zero
local length against the real file length anyway.
Fixed by doing the check only if concurrent inserts are not diabled.
In cases when TRUNCATE was executed by invoking mysql_delete() rather
than by table recreation (for example, when TRUNCATE was issued on
InnoDB table with is referenced by foreign key) triggers were invoked.
In debug builds this also led to crash because of an assertion, which
assumes that some preliminary actions take place before trigger
invocation, which doesn't happen in case of TRUNCATE.
The fix is not to execute triggers in mysql_delete() when this
function is used by TRUNCATE.
Problem: if the IO slave thread is attempting to connect,
STOP SLAVE waits for the attempt to finish.
It may take a long time.
Fix: don't wait, stop the slave immediately.
WHERE f1 < n ignored row if f1 was indexed integer column and
f1 = TYPE_MAX ^ n = TYPE_MAX+1. The latter value when treated
as TYPE overflowed (obviously). This was not handled, it is now.