Detailed revision comments:
r6489 | sunny | 2010-01-21 02:57:50 +0200 (Thu, 21 Jan 2010) | 2 lines
branches/5.1: Factor out test for bug#44030 from innodb-autoinc.test
into a separate test/result files.
Detailed revision comments:
r6488 | sunny | 2010-01-21 02:55:08 +0200 (Thu, 21 Jan 2010) | 2 lines
branches/5.1: Factor out test for bug#44030 from innodb-autoinc.test
into a separate test/result files.
Several items said to be deprecated in the 4.1 manual
have never been removed. This worklog adds deprecation
warnings when these items are used, and warns the user
that the items will be removed in MySQL 5.6.
A couple of previously deprecation decision have been
reversed (see single file comments)
subselect_single_select_engine::exec()
When a subquery doesn't need to be evaluated because
it returns only aggregate functions and these aggregates
can be calculated from the metadata about the table it
was not updating all the relevant members of the JOIN
structure to reflect that this is a constant query.
This caused problems to the enclosing subquery
('<> SOME' in the test case above) trying to read some
data about the tables.
Fixed by setting const_tables to the number of tables
when the SELECT is optimized away.
REORGANIZE PARTITION
There were several problems which lead to this this,
all related to bad error handling.
1) There was several bugs preventing the ddl-log to be used for
cleaning up created files on error.
2) The error handling after the copy partition rows did not close
and unlock the tables, resulting in deletion of partitions
which were in use, which lead InnoDB to put the partition to
drop in a background queue.
error in the query.
Fixes a leak after materializing a GROUP BY subquery to a
temp table when the subquery has a blob column in the SELECT
list.
Fixed by correctly destructing temporary buffers after doing
the conversion.
'CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT' statement were causing 'CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLE ...' to be written to the binary log in row-based
mode (a.k.a. RBR), when there was a temporary table with the same name.
Because the 'CREATE TABLE ... SELECT' statement was executed as
'INSERT ... SELECT' into the temporary table. Since in RBR mode no
other statements related to temporary tables are written into binary log,
this sometimes broke replication.
This patch changes behavior of 'CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] ... SELECT ...'.
it ignores existence of temporary table with the
same name as table being created and is interpreted
as attempt to create/insert into base table. This makes behavior of
'CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] ... SELECT' consistent with
how ordinary 'CREATE TABLE' and 'CREATE TABLE ... LIKE' behave.
Selecting of the CONCAT_WS(...<PS parameter>...) result into
a user variable may return wrong data.
Item_func_concat_ws::val_str contains a number of memory
allocation-saving optimization tricks. After the fix
for bug 46815 the control flow has been changed to a
branch that is commented as "This is quite uncommon!":
one of places where we are trying to concatenate
strings inplace. However, that "uncommon" place
didn't care about PS parameters, that have another
trick in Item_sp_variable::val_str(): they use the
intermediate Item_sp_variable::str_value field,
where they may store a reference to an external
argument's buffer.
The Item_func_concat_ws::val_str function has been
modified to take into account val_str functions
(such as Item_sp_variable::val_str) that return a
pointer to an internal Item member variable that
may reference to a buffer provided.
MySQL handles the join syntax "JOIN ... USING( field1,
... )" and natural joins by building the same parse tree as
a corresponding join with an "ON t1.field1 = t2.field1 ..."
expression would produce. This parse tree was not cleaned up
properly in the following scenario. If a thread tries to
lock some tables and finds that the tables were dropped and
re-created while waiting for the lock, it cleans up column
references in the statement by means a per-statement free
list. But if the statement was part of a stored procedure,
column references on the stored procedure's free list weren't
cleaned up and thus contained pointers to freed objects.
Fixed by adding a call to clean up the current prepared
statement's free list.
Problem was when calculating the range of partitions for
pruning.
Solution was to get the calculation correct. I also simplified
it a bit for easier understanding.
Several problems fixed :
1. Non constant expressions in UNION ... ORDER BY were not correctly cleaned up
in st_select_lex_unit::cleanup() causing crashes in EXPLAIN EXTENDED because of
fields quoted by these expressions pointing to the already freed temporary table
used to calculate the UNION.
Fixed by correctly cleaning up expressions of any depth.
2. Subqueries in the order by part of UNION ... ORDER BY ... caused a crash in
EXPLAIN EXTENDED because of a transformation attempt made during EXPLAIN EXTENDED
execution. Fixed by not doing the transformation when in EXPLAIN.
3. Fulltext functions caused crash when in the ORDER BY part of an un-parenthesized
UNION that gets "promoted" to be valid for the whole union, e.g.
SELECT * FROM t1 UNION SELECT * FROM t2 ORDER BY MATCHES (a) AGAINST ('abc' IN BOOLEAN MODE).
This is a case that demonstrates a more general problem of parts of the query being
moved to another level. When doing such transformation late in the optimization run
when most of the flags about the contents of the query are already aggregated it's possible
to "split" the flags so that they correctly reflect the new queries after the transformation.
In specific the ST_SELECT_LEX::ftfunc_list is holding all the free text function for all the
parts of the second SELECT in the UNION and we don't know what part of that is in the ORDER BY
that we're to move to the UNION level and what part is about the other parts of the second SELECT.
Fixed by throwing and error when such statements are about to be processed by adding a check
for the presence of MATCH() inside the ORDER BY clause that's going to get promoted to UNION.
To workaround this new limitation one must parenthesize the UNION SELECTs and provide a real
global ORDER BY for the UNION outside of the parenthesis.
At the end of execution top level join execution
we cleanup this join with true argument.
It leads to underlying join cleanup(subquery) with true argument too
and to tmp_table_param->field array cleanup which is required later.
The problem is that Item_func_set_user_var does not set
result_filed which leads to unnecessary repeated excution of subquery
on final stage.
The fix is to set result_field for Item_func_set_user_var.
on re-execution of prepared statement
Problem: some (see eq_ref_table()) ORDER BY/GROUP BY optimization
is called before each PS execution. However, we don't properly
initialize its stucture every time before the call.
Fix: properly initialize the sturture used.
freezes (win) the server
The check for equality was assuming the field object is always
created. If it's not it was de-referencing a NULL pointer.
Fixed to use the data in the create object instead.
If first call of the procedure is failed on
the open_table stage stmt_arena->state is set to
EXECUTED state. On second call(if no errors on
open_table stage) it leads to use of worng memory arena
in find_field_in_view() function as
thd->stmt_arena->is_stmt_prepare_or_first_sp_execute()
returns FALSE for EXECUTED state. The item is created
not in its own arena and it leads to crash on further
calls of the procedure.
The fix:
change state of arena only if
no errors on open_table stage happens.
Detailed revision comments:
r6306 | calvin | 2009-12-14 15:12:46 +0200 (Mon, 14 Dec 2009) | 5 lines
branches/5.1: fix bug#49267: innodb-autoinc.test fails on windows
because of different case mode
There is no change to the InnoDB code, only to fix test case by
changing "T1" to "t1".
The test allowed random coincidence of connection ids for two concurrent
sessions performing CREATE/DROP temp tables.
Fixed with correcting the test. The sessions connection ids are not changed
from their defaults anymore.
When compressed myisam files are opened, they are always memory mapped
sometimes causing memory swapping problems.
When we mmap the myisam compressed tables of size greater than the memory
available, the kswapd0 process utilization is very high consuming 30-40% of
the cpu. This happens only with linux kernels older than 2.6.9
With newer linux kernels, we don't have this problem of high cpu consumption
and this option may not be required.
The option 'myisam_mmap_size' is added to limit the amount of memory used for
memory mapping of myisam files. This option is not dynamic.
The default value on 32 bit system is 4294967295 bytes and on 64 bit system it
is 18446744073709547520 bytes.
Note: Testcase only tests the option variable. The actual bug has be to
tested manually.
returns incorrect results with where
An outer join of a const table (outer) and a normal table
(inner) with GROUP BY on a field from the outer table would
optimize away GROUP BY, and thus trigger the optimization to
do away with a temporary table if grouping was performed on
columns from the const table, hence executing the query with
filesort without temporary table. But this should not be
done if there is a non-indexed access to the inner table,
since filesort does not handle joins. It expects either ref
access, range ditto or table scan. The join condition will
thus not be applied.
Fixed by always forcing execution with temporary table in
the case of ROLLUP with a query involving an outer join. This
is a slightly broader class of queries than need fixing, but
it is hard to ascertain the position of a ROLLUP field wrt
outer join with current query representation.
Problem: inserting a record we don't set unused null bits in the
record buffer if no default field values used.
That may lead to wrong live checksum calculation.
Fix: set unused null bits in the record buffer in such cases.
int join_read_key(JOIN_TAB*)
The eq_ref access method TABLE_REF (accessed through
JOIN_TAB) to save state and to track if this is the
first row it finds or not.
This state was not reset on subquery re-execution
causing an assert.
Fixed by resetting the state before the subquery
re-execution.
NULLable BIGINT and INT columns in comparison
Problem: a consequence of the fix for 43668.
Some Arg_comparator inner initialization missed,
that may lead to unpredictable (wrong) comparison
results.
Fix: always properly initialize Arg_comparator
before its usage.
int join_read_key(JOIN_TAB*)
The eq_ref access method TABLE_REF (accessed through
JOIN_TAB) to save state and to track if this is the
first row it finds or not.
This state was not reset on subquery re-execution
causing an assert.
Fixed by resetting the state before the subquery
re-execution.
timestamp primary key
Since TIMESTAMP values are adjusted by the current time zone
settings in both numeric and string contexts, using any
expressions involving TIMESTAMP values as a
(sub)partitioning function leads to undeterministic behavior of
partitioned tables. The effect may vary depending on a storage
engine, it can be either incorrect data being retrieved or
stored, or an assertion failure. The root cause of this is the
fact that the calculated partition ID may differ from a
previously calculated ID for the same data due to timezone
adjustments of the partitioning expression value.
Fixed by disabling any expressions involving TIMESTAMP values
to be used in partitioning functions with the follwing two
exceptions:
1. Creating or altering into a partitioned table that violates
the above rule is not allowed, but opening existing such tables
results in a warning rather than an error so that such tables
could be fixed.
2. UNIX_TIMESTAMP() is the only way to get a
timezone-independent value from a TIMESTAMP column, because it
returns the internal representation (a time_t value) of a
TIMESTAMP argument verbatim. So UNIX_TIMESTAMP(timestamp_column)
is allowed and should be used to fix existing tables if one
wants to use TIMESTAMP columns with partitioning.