will create multiple running events.
A CREATE IF NOT EXIST on an event that existed and was enabled caused
multiple instances of the event to run. Disabling the event didn't help.
If the event was dropped, the event stopped running, but when created
again, multiple instances of the event were still running. The only way
to get out of this situation was to restart the server.
The problem was that Event_db_repository::create_event() didn't return
enough information to discriminate between situation when event didn't
exist and was created and when event did exist and was not created
(but a warning was emitted). As result in the latter case event
was added to in-memory queue of events second time. And this led to
unwarranted multiple executions of the same event.
The solution is to add out-parameter to Event_db_repository::create_event()
method which will signal that event was not created because it already
exists and so it should not be added to the in-memory queue.
HA_INNOBASE::UPDATE_ROW, TEMPORARY TABLE, TABLE LOCK".
Attempt to update an InnoDB temporary table under LOCK TABLES
led to assertion failure in both debug and production builds
if this temporary table was explicitly locked for READ. The
same scenario works fine for MyISAM temporary tables.
The assertion failure was caused by discrepancy between lock
that was requested on the rows of temporary table at LOCK TABLES
time and by update operation. Since SQL-layer requested a
read-lock at LOCK TABLES time InnoDB engine assumed that upcoming
statements which are going to be executed under LOCK TABLES will
only read table and therefore should acquire only S-lock.
An update operation broken this assumption by requesting X-lock.
Possible approaches to fixing this problem are:
1) Skip locking of temporary tables as locking doesn't make any
sense for connection-local objects.
2) Prohibit changing of temporary table locked by LOCK TABLES ...
READ.
Unfortunately both of these approaches have drawbacks which make
them unviable for stable versions of server.
So this patch takes another approach and changes code in such way
that LOCK TABLES for a temporary table will always request write
lock. In 5.1 version of this patch switch from read lock to write
lock is done inside of InnoDBs handler methods as doing it on
SQL-layer causes compatibility troubles with FLUSH TABLES WITH
READ LOCK.
Problem: MYSQL_BIN_LOG::reset_logs acquires mutexes in wrong order.
The correct order is first LOCK_thread_count and then LOCK_log. This function
does it the other way around. This leads to deadlock when run in parallel
with a thread that takes the two locks in correct order. For example, a thread
that disconnects will take the locks in the correct order.
Fix: change order of the locks in MYSQL_BIN_LOG::reset_logs:
first LOCK_thread_count and then LOCK_log.
Assertion happens due to missing NULL value check in
Item_func_round::fix_length_and_dec() function.
The fix: added NULL value check for second parameter.
VM-WIN2003-32-A, SLES10-IA64-A
The test case waits for master_pos_wait not to timeout, which
means that the deadlock between SQL and IO threads was
succesfully and automatically dealt with.
However, very rarely, master_pos_wait reports a timeout. This
happens because the time set for master_pos_wait to wait was
too small (6 seconds). On slow test env this could be a
problem.
We fix this by setting the timeout inline with the one used
in sync_slave_with_master (300 seconds). In addition we
refactored the test case and refined some comments.
There are two problems:
1. There is a missing check for 'year' parameter(year can not be greater than 9999) in
makedate function. fix: added check that year can not be greater than 9999.
2. There is a missing check for zero date in from_days() function.
fix: added zero date check into Item_func_from_days::get_date()
function.
In sql_class.cc, 'row_count', of type 'ha_rows', was used as last argument for
ER_TRUNCATED_WRONG_VALUE_FOR_FIELD which is
"Incorrect %-.32s value: '%-.128s' for column '%.192s' at row %ld".
So 'ha_rows' was used as 'long'.
On SPARC32 Solaris builds, 'long' is 4 bytes and 'ha_rows' is 'longlong' i.e. 8 bytes.
So the printf-like code was reading only the first 4 bytes.
Because the CPU is big-endian, 1LL is 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x01
so the first four bytes yield 0. So the warning message had "row 0" instead of
"row 1" in test outfile_loaddata.test:
-Warning 1366 Incorrect string value: '\xE1\xE2\xF7' for column 'b' at row 1
+Warning 1366 Incorrect string value: '\xE1\xE2\xF7' for column 'b' at row 0
All error-messaging functions which internally invoke some printf-life function
are potential candidate for such mistakes.
One apparently easy way to catch such mistakes is to use
ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT (from my_attribute.h).
But this works only when call site has both:
a) the format as a string literal
b) the types of arguments.
So:
func(ER(ER_BLAH), 10);
will silently not be checked, because ER(ER_BLAH) is not known at
compile time (it is known at run-time, and depends on the chosen
language).
And
func("%s", a va_list argument);
has the same problem, as the *real* type of arguments is not
known at this site at compile time (it's known in some caller).
Moreover,
func(ER(ER_BLAH));
though possibly correct (if ER(ER_BLAH) has no '%' markers), will not
compile (gcc says "error: format not a string literal and no format
arguments").
Consequences:
1) ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT is here added only to functions which in practice
take "string literal" formats: "my_error_reporter" and "print_admin_msg".
2) it cannot be added to the other functions: my_error(),
push_warning_printf(), Table_check_intact::report_error(),
general_log_print().
To do a one-time check of functions listed in (2), the following
"static code analysis" has been done:
1) replace
my_error(ER_xxx, arguments for substitution in format)
with the equivalent
my_printf_error(ER_xxx,ER(ER_xxx), arguments for substitution in
format),
so that we have ER(ER_xxx) and the arguments *in the same call site*
2) add ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT to push_warning_printf(),
Table_check_intact::report_error(), general_log_print()
3) replace ER(xxx) with the hard-coded English text found in
errmsg.txt (like: ER(ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR) is replaced with
"Unknown error"), so that a call site has the format as string literal
4) this way, ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT can effectively do its job
5) compile, fix errors detected by ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT
6) revert steps 1-2-3.
The present patch has no compiler error when submitted again to the
static code analysis above.
It cannot catch all problems though: see Field::set_warning(), in
which a call to push_warning_printf() has a variable error
(thus, not replacable by a string literal); I checked set_warning() calls
by hand though.
See also WL 5883 for one proposal to avoid such bugs from appearing
again in the future.
The issues fixed in the patch are:
a) mismatch in types (like 'int' passed to '%ld')
b) more arguments passed than specified in the format.
This patch resolves mismatches by changing the type/number of arguments,
not by changing error messages of sql/share/errmsg.txt. The latter would be wrong,
per the following old rule: errmsg.txt must be as stable as possible; no insertions
or deletions of messages, no changes of type or number of printf-like format specifiers,
are allowed, as long as the change impacts a message already released in a GA version.
If this rule is not followed:
- Connectors, which use error message numbers, will be confused (by insertions/deletions
of messages)
- using errmsg.sys of MySQL 5.1.n with mysqld of MySQL 5.1.(n+1)
could produce wrong messages or crash; such usage can easily happen if
installing 5.1.(n+1) while /etc/my.cnf still has --language=/path/to/5.1.n/xxx;
or if copying mysqld from 5.1.(n+1) into a 5.1.n installation.
When fixing b), I have verified that the superfluous arguments were not used in the format
in the first 5.1 GA (5.1.30 'bteam@astra04-20081114162938-z8mctjp6st27uobm').
Had they been used, then passing them today, even if the message doesn't use them
anymore, would have been necessary, as explained above.
Impementing Test Review Comment.
Bug test scenario:
SELECT is not returning result set for "equal" (=) and "NULL safe equal
operator" (<=>) on BIT data type. Extending this scenario for all data types
WORK WITH --START-POSITION
If setting --start-position to start after the FD event, mysqlbinlog
will output an error stating that it has not found an FD event.
However, its not that mysqlbinlog does not find it but rather that it
does not processes it in the regular way (i.e., it does not print it).
Given that one is using --base64-output=DECODE-ROWS then not printing
it is actually fine.
To fix this, we make mysqlbinlog not to complain when it has not
printed the FD event, is outputing in base64, but is decoding the
rows.
The problem was that wrong structure of mysql.event was not detected and
the server continued to use wrongly-structured data.
The fix is to check the structure of mysql.event after opening before
any use. That makes operations with events more strict -- some operations
that might work before throw errors now. That seems to be Ok.
Another side-effect of the patch is that if mysql.event is corrupted,
unrelated DROP DATABASE statements issue an SQL warning about inability
to open mysql.event table.
Add extra codes to wait_until_disconnected.inc that are present in 5.5,
but not in 5.1. The missing codes cause innodb_bug59641 to fail in 5.1 on
Windows PB2 runs. The addition of those codes in 5.5 was done in
luis.soares@sun.com-20090930233215-aup3kxy4j6ltvjfp
Partitions can have different ref_length (position data length).
Removed DBUG_ASSERT which crashed debug builds when using
MAX_ROWS on some partitions.
calc_daynr() function returns negative result
if malformed date with zero year and month is used.
Attempt to calculate week day on negative value
leads to crash. The fix is return NULL for
'W', 'a', 'w' specifiers if zero year and month is used.
Additional fix for calc_daynr():
--added assertion that result can not be negative
--return 0 if zero year and month is used
Bug#11764671 57533: UNINITIALISED VALUES IN COPY_AND_CONVERT (SQL_STRING.CC) WITH CERTAIN CHA
When ROUND evaluates decimal result it uses Item::decimal
value as fraction value for the result. In some cases
Item::decimal is greater than real result fraction value
and uninitialised memory of result(decimal) buffer can be
used in further calculations. Issue is introduced by
Bug33143 fix. The fix is to remove erroneous assignment.
With this combination, outoput was directed to .trace but not all
parts of MTR was aware of this.
Replace .err with .trace at the earliest possible place
.0
The bug was fixed by the patch for bug number BUG 11763109 - 55779: SELECT
DOES NOT WORK PROPERLY IN MYSQL SERVER VERSION "5.1.42 SUSE MYSQL (Exact same
fix as was proposed for this bug.) Since the motivation for the two bug
reports was completely different, however, it still makes sense to push the
test case.
This patch contains only the test case.
Some multibyte sequences could be considered by my_mbcharlen() functions
as multibyte character but more exact my_ismbchar() does not think so.
In such a case this multibyte sequences is pushed into 'stack' buffer which
is too small to accommodate the sequence.
The fix is to allocate stack buffer in
compliance with max character length.
Fix for --vs-config applied
Find.pm incorrectly tested an unitialized local variable instead
of the global, corrected.
Find.pm is also wrong in 5.5: uses a non-existent global variable. Fix when
merging up.
There are two problems with ANALYSE():
1. Memory leak
it happens because do_select() can overwrite
JOIN::procedure field(with zero value in our case) and
JOIN destructor don't free the memory allocated for
JOIN::procedure. The fix is to save original JOIN::procedure
before do_select() call and restore it after do_select
execution.
2. Wrong result
If ANALYSE() procedure is used for the statement with LIMIT clause
it could retrun empty result set. It happens because of missing
analyse::end_of_records() call. First end_send() function call
returns NESTED_LOOP_QUERY_LIMIT and second call of end_send() with
end_of_records flag enabled does not happen. The fix is to return
NESTED_LOOP_OK from end_send() if procedure is active.
When we create temporary result table for UNION
incorrect max_length for YEAR field is used and
it leads to incorrect field value and incorrect
result string length as YEAR field value calculation
depends on field length.
The fix is to use underlying item max_length for
Item_sum_hybrid::max_length intialization.
Valgrind warning happens due to early null values check
in Item_func_in::fix_length_and_dec(before item evaluation).
As result null value items with uninitialized values are
placed into array and it leads to valgrind warnings during
value array sorting.
The fix is to check null value after item evaluation, item
is evaluated in in_array::set() method.
Select from a view with the underlying HAVING clause failed with a
message: "1356: View '...' references invalid table(s) or column(s)
or function(s) or definer/invoker of view lack rights to use them"
The bug is a regression of the fix for bug 11750328 - 40825 (similar
case, but the HAVING cause references an aliased field).
In the old fix for bug 40825 the Item_field::name_length value has
been used in place of the real length of Item_field::name. However,
in some cases Item_field::name_length is not in sync with the
actual name length (TODO: combine name and name_length into a
solid String field).
The Item_ref::print() method has been modified to calculate actual
name length every time.