CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT let you insert into an existing
table as long as you had the CREATE privilege. CREATE ... SELECT
variants now always require INSERT privilege on target table.
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT let you insert into an existing
table as long as you had the CREATE privilege. CREATE ... SELECT
variants now always require INSERT privilege on target table.
Problem: lying to the optimizer that a function (Item_func_inet_ntoa)
cannot return NULL values leads to unexpected results (in the case group
keys creation/comparison is broken).
Fix: Item_func_inet_ntoa::maybe_null should be set properly.
"CSV does not work with NULL value in datetime fields"
Attempting to insert a row with a NULL value for a DATETIME field
results in a CSV file which the storage engine cannot read.
Don't blindly assume that "0" is acceptable for all field types,
Since CSV does not support NULL, we find out from the field the
default non-null value.
Do not permit the creation of a table with a nullable columns.
The general log write function (general_log_print) uses printf style
arguments which need to be pre-processed, meaning that the all arguments
are copied to a single buffer and the problem is that the buffer size is
constant (1022 characters) but queries can be much larger then this.
The solution is to introduce a new log write function that accepts a
buffer and it's length as arguments. The function is to be used when
a formatted output is not required, which is the case for almost all
query write-to-log calls.
This is a incompatible change with respect to the log format of prepared
statements.
Previously, UDF *_init functions were passed constant strings with erroneous lengths. The length came from the containing variable's size, not the length of the value itself.
Now the *_init functions get the constant as a null terminated string with the correct length supplied too.
The problem was that the RETURNS column in the mysql.proc was of
CHAR(64). That was not enough for storing long-named datatypes.
The fix is to change CHAR(64) to LONGBLOB, and to throw warnings
at the time a stored routine is created if some data is truncated
during writing into mysql.proc.
The problem is that currently there is no way to test the behavior
of the mysql_change_user() function using the mysqltest suite because
there is no internal command for it.
The solution is to introduce a change_user command that can be used
to test aspects of the MySQL client function mysql_change_user().
The embedded version of the server doesn't use column level grants, and
the compile directive NO_EMBEDDED_ACCESS_CHECKS should be checked instead of
the redundant HAVE_QUERY_CACHE (which is always the case) to determine if
column level grants should be compiled or not.
Problem: we don't evaluate given expression checking values of the
slow_query_log_file/general_log_file, don't check it for NULL.
Fix: evaluate the expression, check result returned.
The root cause of the issue was that the CREATE FUNCTION grammar,
for User Defined Functions, was using the sp_name rule.
The sp_name rule is intended for fully qualified stored procedure names,
like either ident.ident, or just ident but with a default database
implicitly selected.
A UDF does not have a fully qualified name, only a name (ident), and should
not use the sp_name grammar fragment during parsing.
The fix is to re-organize the CREATE FUNCTION grammar, to better separate:
- creating UDF (no definer, can have AGGREGATE, simple ident)
- creating Stored Functions (definer, no AGGREGATE, fully qualified name)
With the test case provided, another issue was exposed which is also fixed:
the DROP FUNCTION statement was using sp_name and also failing when no database
is implicitly selected, when droping UDF functions.
The fix is also to change the grammar so that DROP FUNCTION works with
both the ident.ident syntax (to drop a stored function), or just the ident
syntax (to drop either a UDF or a Stored Function, in the current database)
Problem:
my_strntoull10rnd_8bit() handled incorrectly cases when the input
string contains a decimal point and is long enough to overrun the
'unsigned long long' type. The position of the decimal point was not
taken into account which resulted in miscalculated numbers and
truncation to appropriate SQL data type limits.
Solution:
Fix my_strntoull10rnd_8bit() to take the position of a decimal point
into account in such cases.