I checked all stack overflow potential problems found with
gcc -Wstack-usage=16384
and
clang -Wframe-larger-than=16384 -no-inline
Fixes:
Added '#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wframe-larger-than="'
to a lot of function to where stack usage large but resonable.
- Added stack check warnings to BUILD scrips when using clang and debug.
Function changed to use malloc instead allocating things on stack:
- read_bootstrap_query() now allocates line_buffer (20000 bytes) with
malloc() instead of using stack. This has a small performance impact
but this is not releant for bootstrap.
- mroonga grn_select() used 65856 bytes on stack. Changed it to use
malloc().
- Wsrep_schema::replay_transaction() and
Wsrep_schema::recover_sr_transactions().
- Connect zipOpen3()
Not fixed:
- mroonga/vendor/groonga/lib/expr.c grn_proc_call() uses
43712 byte on stack. However this is not easy to fix as the stack
used is caused by a lot of code generated by defines.
- Most changes in mroonga/groonga where only adding of pragmas to disable
stack warnings.
- rocksdb/options/options_helper.cc uses 20288 of stack space.
(no reason to fix except to get rid of the compiler warning)
- Causes using alloca() where the allocation size is resonable.
- An issue in libmariadb (reported to connectors).
During the upgrade procedure on Windows mysqld.exe is started with
the named pipe connection protocol. mysqladmin.exe then pings the
server to check if is up and running. Command line looks like:
mysqladmin.exe --protocol=pipe --socket=mysql_upgrade_service_xxx ping
But the "socket" parameter resets the "protocol" which was previously
initialized with the "pipe" value, setting it to "socket".
As a result, connection cannot be established and the upgrade
procedure fails.
"socket" in Windows is used to pass the name of the pipe so resetting
the protocol is not valid in this case.
This commit fixes resetting of the "protocol" parameter with "socket"
parameter in the case when protocol has been previously initialized
to "pipe" value
During the upgrade procedure on Windows mysqld.exe is started with
the named pipe connection protocol. mysqladmin.exe then pings the
server to check if is up and running. Command line looks like:
mysqladmin.exe --protocol=pipe --socket=mysql_upgrade_service_xxx ping
But the "socket" parameter resets the "protocol" which was previously
initialized with the "pipe" value, setting it to "socket".
As a result, connection cannot be established and the upgrade
procedure fails.
"socket" in Windows is used to pass the name of the pipe so resetting
the protocol is not valid in this case.
This commit fixes resetting of the "protocol" parameter with "socket"
parameter in the case when protocol has been previously initialized
to "pipe" value
- Moved view checks after privilege tables are fixed. This is to avoid
warnings about wrongly defined mysql.proc when checking views.
- Don't use stat tables before they have been fixed.
- Don't run mysql_fix_view() if 'FOR MYSQL' is used if the view is
already a MariaDB view.
- Added 'FOR UPGRADE' as an option for 'REPAIR VIEW' to be able to
detect if the REPAIR command comes from mariadb_upgrade. In this
case we get a warning, instead of an error, if a definer of a view
does not exists.
The old code added to 10.6 was inconsisting in how TCP/IP and
socket connection was chosen. One got also a confusing warning
in some cases.
Examples:
> ../client/mysql --print-defaults
../client/mysql would have been started with the following arguments:
--socket=/tmp/mariadbd.sock --port=3307 --no-auto-rehash
> ../client/mysql
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local server through socket '/tmp/mariadbd.sock' (2)
> ../client/mysql --print-defaults
../client/mysql would have been started with the following arguments:
--socket=/tmp/mariadbd.sock --port=3307 --no-auto-rehash
> ../client/mysql --port=3333
WARNING: Forcing protocol to TCP due to option specification. Please explicitly state intended protocol.
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to server on 'localhost' (111)
> ../client/mysql --port=3333 --socket=sss
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local server through socket 'sss' (2)
> ../client/mysql --socket=sss --port=3333
ERROR 2002 (HY000): Can't connect to local server through socket 'sss' (2)
Some notable things:
- One gets a warning if one uses just --port if config file sets socket
- Using port and socket gives no warning
- Using socket and then port still uses socket
This patch changes things the following ways:
If --port= is given on the command line, the the protocol is automatically
changed to "TCP/IP".
- If --socket= is given on the command line, the protocol is automatically
changed to "socket".
- The last option wins
- No warning is given if protocol changes automatically.
This patch adds the correct setting of the "--tls-version" and
"--ssl-verify-server-cert" options in the client-side utilities
such as mysqltest, mysqlcheck and mysqlslap, as well as the correct
setting of the "--ssl-crl" option when executing queries on the
slave side, and also the correct option codes in the "sslopts-logopts.h"
file (in the latter case, incorrect values are not a problem right
now, but may cause subtle test failures in the future, if the option
handling code changes).
If someone on whatever reasons uses --default-character-set=cp850,
this will avoid incorrect display, and inserting incorrect data.
Adjusting console codepage sometimes also needs to happen with
--default-charset=auto, on older Windows. This is because autodetection
is not always exact. For example, console codepage on US editions of
Windows is 437. Client autodetects it as cp850, a rather loose
approximation, given 46 code point differences. We change the console
codepage to cp850, so that there is no discrepancy.
That fix is currently Windows-only, and serves people who used combination
of chcp to achieve WYSIWYG effect (although, this would mostly likely used
with utf8 in the past)
Now, --default-character-set would be a replacement for that.
Fix fs_character_set() detection of current codepage.
This fixed the MySQL bug# 20338 about misuse of double underscore
prefix __WIN__, which was old MySQL's idea of identifying Windows
Replace it by _WIN32 standard symbol for targeting Windows OS
(both 32 and 64 bit)
Not that connect storage engine is not fixed in this patch (must be
fixed in "upstream" branch)
This patch changes the main name of 3 byte character set from utf8 to
utf8mb3. New old_mode UTF8_IS_UTF8MB3 is added and set TRUE by default,
so that utf8 would mean utf8mb3. If not set, utf8 would mean utf8mb4.
Problem:
=======
MariaDB's command line utilities (e.g., mysql,
mysqldump, etc) silently ignore connection
property options (e.g., --port and --socket)
when protocol is not explicitly set via the
command-line for localhost connections.
Fix:
===
If connection properties are specified without a
protocol, override the protocol to be consistent.
For example, if --port is specified, automatically
set protocol=tcp.
Caveats:
=======
* When multiple connection properties are
specified, nothing is overridden
* If protocol is is set via the command-line,
its value is used
Reviewers:
========
Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.com>
Vladislav Vaintroub <wlad@mariadb.com>
One should not change the program arguments!
This change also reduces warnings from the icc compiler.
Almost all changes are just syntax changes (adding const to
'get_one_option function' declarations).
Other changes:
- Added a few cast of 'argument' from 'const char*' to 'char *'. This
was mainly in calls to 'external' functions we don't have control of.
- Ensure that all reset of 'password command line argument' are similar.
(In almost all cases it was just adding a comment and a cast)
- In mysqlbinlog.cc and mysqld.cc there was a few cases that changed
the command line argument. These places where changed to instead allocate
the option in a MEM_ROOT to avoid changing the argument. Some of this
code was changed to ensure that different programs did parsing the
same way. Added a test case for the changes in mysqlbinlog.cc
- Changed a few variables that took their value from command line options
from 'char *' to 'const char *'.