TRUNCATE TABLE for InnoDB tables returned a count showing an approximation
of the number of rows affected to gain efficiency.
Now the statement always returns 0 rows affected for clarity.
- In QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT::read_keys_and_merge: when we got table->sort from Unique,
tell init_read_record() not to use rr_from_cache() because a) rowids are already sorted
and b) it might be that the the data is used by filesort(), which will need record rowids
(which rr_from_cache() cannot provide).
- Fully de-initialize the table->sort read in QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT::get_next(). This fixes BUG#35477.
(bk trigger: file as fix for BUG#35478).
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.
binlog_format=mixed
Statement-based replication of DELETE ... LIMIT, UPDATE ... LIMIT,
INSERT ... SELECT ... LIMIT is not safe as order of rows is not
defined.
With this fix, we issue a warning that this statement is not safe to
replicate in statement mode, or go to row-based mode in mixed mode.
Note that we may consider a statement as safe if ORDER BY primary_key
is present. However it may confuse users to see very similiar statements
replicated differently.
Note 2: regular UPDATE statement (w/o LIMIT) is unsafe as well, but
this patch doesn't address this issue. See comment from Kristian
posted 18 Mar 10:55.
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.
a SELECT doesn't cause ROLLBACK of statem".
The idea of the fix is to ensure that we always commit the current
statement at the end of dispatch_command(). In order to not issue
redundant disc syncs, an optimization of the two-phase commit
protocol is implemented to bypass the two phase commit if
the transaction is read-only.
the reason for the failure were incorrect asserts.
Removing asserts altogether as there is no the implication does not hold
(as explained in the comments for the file).
called from a SELECT doesn't cause ROLLBACK of state"
Make private all class handler methods (PSEA API) that may modify
data. Introduce and deploy public ha_* wrappers for these methods in
all sql/.
This necessary to keep track of all data modifications in sql/,
which is in turn necessary to be able to optimize two-phase
commit of those transactions that do not modify data.
cause ROLLBACK of statement", part 1. Review fixes.
Do not send OK/EOF packets to the client until we reached the end of
the current statement.
This is a consolidation, to keep the functionality that is shared by all
SQL statements in one place in the server.
Currently this functionality includes:
- close_thread_tables()
- log_slow_statement().
After this patch and the subsequent patch for Bug#12713, it shall also include:
- ha_autocommit_or_rollback()
- net_end_statement()
- query_cache_end_of_result().
In future it may also include:
- mysql_reset_thd_for_next_command().
error evaluating WHERE"
DELETE with a subquery in WHERE clause would sometimes ignore subquery
evaluation error and proceed with deletion.
The fix is to check for an error after evaluation of the WHERE clause
in DELETE.
Addressed review comments.
Query_log_event::error_code
A query can perform completely having the local var error of mysql_$query
zero, where $query in insert, update, delete, load,
and be binlogged with error_code e.g KILLED_QUERY while there is no
reason do to so.
That can happen because Query_log_event consults thd->killed flag to
evaluate error_code.
Fixed with implementing a scheme suggested and partly implemented at
time of bug@22725 work-on. error_status is cached immediatly after the
control leaves the main rows-loop and that instance always corresponds
to `error' the local of mysql_$query functions. The cached value
is passed to Query_log_event constructor, not the default thd->killed
which can be changed in between of the caching and the constructing.
similar to bug_27716, but it was stressed on in the synopsis on that there is another
side of the artifact affecting behaviour in transaction.
Fixed with deploying multi_delete::send_error() - otherwise never called - and refining its logic
to perform binlogging job if needed.
The changeset includes the following side effects:
- added tests to check bug_23333's scenarios on the mixture of tables for multi_update;
- fixes bug@30763 with two-liner patch and a test coinciding to one added for bug_23333.
Binlogging of the statement with a side effect like a modified non-trans table did not happen.
The artifact involved all binloggable dml queries.
Fixed with changing the binlogging conditions all over the code to exploit thd->transaction.stmt.modified_non_trans_table
introduced by the patch for bug@27417.
Multi-delete case has own specific addressed by another bug@29136. Multi-update case has been addressed by bug#27716 and
patch and will need merging.
Faster thr_alarm()
Added 'Opened_files' status variable to track calls to my_open()
Don't give warnings when running mysql_install_db
Added option --source-install to mysql_install_db
I had to do the following renames() as used polymorphism didn't work with Forte compiler on 64 bit systems
index_read() -> index_read_map()
index_read_idx() -> index_read_idx_map()
index_read_last() -> index_read_last_map()
Bug #27417 thd->no_trans_update.stmt lost value inside of SF-exec-stack
Once had been set the flag might later got reset inside of a stored routine
execution stack.
The reason was in that there was no check if a new statement started at time
of resetting.
The artifact affects most of binlogable DML queries. Notice, that multi-update
is wrapped up within
bug@27716 fix, multi-delete bug@29136.
Fixed with saving parent's statement flag of whether the statement modified
non-transactional table, and unioning (merging) the value with that was gained
in mysql_execute_command.
Resettling thd->no_trans_update members into thd->transaction.`member`;
Asserting code;
Effectively the following properties are held.
1. At the end of a substatement thd->transaction.stmt.modified_non_trans_table
reflects the fact if such a table got modified by the substatement.
That also respects THD::really_abort_on_warnin() requirements.
2. Eventually thd->transaction.stmt.modified_non_trans_table will be computed as
the union of the values of all invoked sub-statements.
That fixes this bug#27417;
Computing of thd->transaction.all.modified_non_trans_table is refined to base to
the stmt's value for all the case including insert .. select statement which
before the patch had an extra issue bug@28960.
Minor issues are covered with mysql_load, mysql_delete, and binloggin of insert in
to temp_table select.
The supplied test verifies limitely, mostly asserts. The ultimate testing is defered
for bug@13270, bug@23333.
Bug#25422 (Hang with log tables)
Bug 17876 (Truncating mysql.slow_log in a SP after using cursor locks the
thread)
Bug 23044 (Warnings on flush of a log table)
Bug 29129 (Resetting general_log while the GLOBAL READ LOCK is set causes
a deadlock)
Prior to this fix, the server would hang when performing concurrent
ALTER TABLE or TRUNCATE TABLE statements against the LOG TABLES,
which are mysql.general_log and mysql.slow_log.
The root cause traces to the following code:
in sql_base.cc, open_table()
if (table->in_use != thd)
{
/* wait_for_condition will unlock LOCK_open for us */
wait_for_condition(thd, &LOCK_open, &COND_refresh);
}
The problem with this code is that the current implementation of the
LOGGER creates 'fake' THD objects, like
- Log_to_csv_event_handler::general_log_thd
- Log_to_csv_event_handler::slow_log_thd
which are not associated to a real thread running in the server,
so that waiting for these non-existing threads to release table locks
cause the dead lock.
In general, the design of Log_to_csv_event_handler does not fit into the
general architecture of the server, so that the concept of general_log_thd
and slow_log_thd has to be abandoned:
- this implementation does not work with table locking
- it will not work with commands like SHOW PROCESSLIST
- having the log tables always opened does not integrate well with DDL
operations / FLUSH TABLES / SET GLOBAL READ_ONLY
With this patch, the fundamental design of the LOGGER has been changed to:
- always open and close a log table when writing a log
- remove totally the usage of fake THD objects
- clarify how locking of log tables is implemented in general.
See WL#3984 for details related to the new locking design.
Additional changes (misc bugs exposed and fixed):
1)
mysqldump which would ignore some tables in dump_all_tables_in_db(),
but forget to ignore the same in dump_all_views_in_db().
2)
mysqldump would also issue an empty "LOCK TABLE" command when all the tables
to lock are to be ignored (numrows == 0), instead of not issuing the query.
3)
Internal errors handlers could intercept errors but not warnings
(see sql_error.cc).
4)
Implementing a nested call to open tables, for the performance schema tables,
exposed an existing bug in remove_table_from_cache(), which would perform:
in_use->some_tables_deleted=1;
against another thread, without any consideration about thread locking.
This call inside remove_table_from_cache() was not required anyway,
since calling mysql_lock_abort() takes care of aborting -- cleanly -- threads
that might hold a lock on a table.
This line (in_use->some_tables_deleted=1) has been removed.