Analysis: This was merge error on file fil0fil.cc. fil_system mutex was taken twice because of this.
Fix: Remove unnecessary mutex_enter and fixed the issue with slow posix_fallocate usage.
Update InnoDB to 5.6.14
Apply MySQL-5.6 hack for MySQL Bug#16434374
Move Aria-only HA_RTREE_INDEX from my_base.h to maria_def.h (breaks an assert in InnoDB)
Fix InnoDB memory leak
support ha_innodb.so as a dynamic plugin.
* remove obsolete *,innodb_plugin.rdiff files
* s/--plugin-load=/--plugin-load-add=/
* MYSQL_PLUGIN_IMPORT glob_hostname[]
* use my_error instead of push_warning_printf(ER_DEFAULT)
* don't use tdc_size and tc_size in a module
update test cases (XtraDB is 5.6.14, InnoDB is 5.6.10)
* copy new tests over
* disable some tests for (old) InnoDB
* delete XtraDB tests that no longer apply
small compatibility changes:
* s/HTON_EXTENDED_KEYS/HTON_SUPPORTS_EXTENDED_KEYS/
* revert unnecessary InnoDB changes to make it a bit closer to the upstream
fix XtraDB to compile on Windows (both as a static and a dynamic plugin)
disable XtraDB on Windows (deadlocks) and where no atomic ops are available (e.g. CentOS 5)
storage/innobase/handler/ha_innodb.cc:
revert few unnecessary changes to make it a bit closer to the original InnoDB
storage/innobase/include/univ.i:
correct the version to match what it was merged from
includes:
* remove some remnants of "Bug#14521864: MYSQL 5.1 TO 5.5 BUGS PARTITIONING"
* introduce LOCK_share, now LOCK_ha_data is strictly for engines
* rea_create_table() always creates .par file (even in "frm-only" mode)
* fix a 5.6 bug, temp file leak on dummy ALTER TABLE
Bug #16754901 PARS_INFO_FREE NOT CALLED IN DICT_CREATE_ADD_FOREIGN_TO_DICTIONARY
Problem:
There are two situations here. The constraint name is explicitly
given by the user and the constraint name is automatically generated
by InnoDB. In the case of generated constraint name, it is formed by
adding table name as prefix. The table names are stored internally in
my_charset_filename. In the case of constraint name explicitly given
by the user, it is stored in UTF8 format itself. So, in some
situations the constraint name is in utf8 and in some situations it is
in my_charset_filename format. Hence this problem.
Solution:
Always store the foreign key constraint name in UTF-8 even when
automatically generated.
Bug #16754901 PARS_INFO_FREE NOT CALLED IN DICT_CREATE_ADD_FOREIGN_TO_DICTIONARY
Problem:
There was a memory leak in the function dict_create_add_foreign_to_dictionary().
The allocated pars_info_t object is not freed in the error code path.
Solution:
Allocate the pars_info_t object after the error checking.
rb#2368 in review
After a clean shutdown, InnoDB will not check the *.ibd file headers,
for maximum performance. This is unchanged before and after this
patch.
What this fix addresses is the case when crash recovery is
needed. Previously, InnoDB could load a corrupted tablespace file.
buf_page_is_corrupted(): Add the parameter check_lsn.
fil_check_first_page(): New function, to perform a consistency check
on the first page of a file. This can be overridden by setting
innodb_force_recovery.
fil_read_first_page(), fil_open_single_table_tablespace(),
fil_load_single_table_tablespace(): Invoke fil_check_first_page().
open_or_create_data_files(): Check the status of
fil_open_single_table_tablespace().
rb#2352 approved by Jimmy Yang
TABLE/KEY RELATIONS
The DICT_FK_MAX_RECURSIVE_LOAD was reduced from 250 to 33 in rb#2058.
But in optimized build, this recursive depth is still too deep and
resulted in stack overflow. So reducing this depth to 20 now.
TABLE/KEY RELATIONS
Problem:
When there are many tables, linked together through the foreign key
constraints, then loading one table will recursively open other tables. This
can sometimes lead to thread stack overflow. In such situations the server
will exit.
I see the stack overflow problem when the thread_stack is 196608 (the default
value for 32-bit systems). I don't see the problem when the thread_stack is
set to 262144 (the default value for 64-bit systems).
Solution:
Currently, in InnoDB, there is a macro DICT_FK_MAX_RECURSIVE_LOAD which defines
the maximum number of tables that will be loaded recursively because of foreign
key relations. This is currently set to 250. We can reduce this number to 33
(anything more than 33 does not solve the problem for the default value). We
can keep it small enough so that thread stack overflow does not happen for the
default values. Reducing the DICT_FK_MAX_RECURSIVE_LOAD will not affect the
functionality of InnoDB. The tables will eventually be loaded.
rb#2058 approved by Marko
TABLE/KEY RELATIONS
Problem:
When there are many tables, linked together through the foreign key
constraints, then loading one table will recursively open other tables. This
can sometimes lead to thread stack overflow. In such situations the server
will exit.
I see the stack overflow problem when the thread_stack is 196608 (the default
value for 32-bit systems). I don't see the problem when the thread_stack is
set to 262144 (the default value for 64-bit systems).
Solution:
Currently, in InnoDB, there is a macro DICT_FK_MAX_RECURSIVE_LOAD which defines
the maximum number of tables that will be loaded recursively because of foreign
key relations. This is currently set to 250. We can reduce this number to 33
(anything more than 33 does not solve the problem for the default value). We
can keep it small enough so that thread stack overflow does not happen for the
default values. Reducing the DICT_FK_MAX_RECURSIVE_LOAD will not affect the
functionality of InnoDB. The tables will eventually be loaded.
rb#2058 approved by Marko
UPDATES
After checking that the table has changed too much in
row_update_statistics_if_needed() and calling dict_update_statistics(),
also check if the same condition holds after acquiring the table stats
latch. This is to avoid multiple threads concurrently entering and
executing the stats update code.
Approved by: Marko (rb:2186)
FROM SHOW CREATE
Problem: The length of the internally generated foreign key name
is not checked.
Solution: The length of the internally generated foreign key name is
checked. If it is greater than the allowed limit, an error message
is reported. Also, the constraint name is printed in the same manner
as the table name, using the system charset information.
rb://1969 approved by Marko.
DEREFERENCING UT_DBG_NULL_PTR
The abort() call is standard C but InnoDB only uses it in GCC
environments. UT_DBG_USE_ABORT is not defined the code crashed
by dereferencing a null pointer instead of calling abort().
Other code throughout MySQL including ndb, sql, mysys and other
places call abort() directly.
This bug also affects innodb.innodb_bug14147491.test which fails
randomly on windows because of this issue.
Approved by marko in http://rb.no.oracle.com/rb/r/1936/
Get rid of O(n^2) scan in dyn array (mtr->memo) operations, accessing
the dyn array blocks directly.
dyn_array_get_last_block(), dyn_array_get_next_block(),
dyn_array_get_prev_block(): Define as a constness-preserving macro.
Add const qualifiers to many dyn_array functions.
mtr_memo_slot_release_func(): Renamed from mtr_memo_slot_release():
Make mtr_t* a debug-only parameter. Assume that slot->object != NULL.
mtr_memo_pop_all(): Access the dyn_array blocks directly, replacing
O(n^2) operation with O(n).
mtr_memo_release(): Access the dyn_array blocks directly, replacing
O(n^2) operation with O(n). This caused the performance problem.
rb#1540 approved by Jimmy Yang