HOUR(), MINUTE(), ... returned spurious results when used on a DATE-cast.
This happened because DATE-cast object did not overload get_time() method
in superclass Item. The default method was inappropriate here and
misinterpreted the data.
Patch adds missing method; get_time() on DATE-casts now returns SQL-NULL
on NULL input, 0 otherwise. This coincides with the way DATE-columns
behave.
variable in where clause.
Problem: the new_item() method of Item_uint used an incorrect
constructor. "new Item_uint(name, max_length)" calls
Item_uint::Item_uint(const char *str_arg, uint length) which assumes the
first argument to be the string representation of the value, not the
item's name. This could result in either a server crash or incorrect
results depending on usage scenarios.
Fixed by using the correct constructor in new_item():
Item_uint::Item_uint(const char *str_arg, longlong i, uint length).
tables or more
The problem was that the optimizer used the join buffer in cases when
the result set is ordered by filesort. This resulted in the ORDER BY
clause being ignored, and the records being returned in the order
determined by the order of matching records in the last table in join.
Fixed by relaxing the condition in make_join_readinfo() to take
filesort-ordered result sets into account, not only index-ordered ones.
With certain data sets (when compressed record length gets bigger than
uncompressed) myisamchk --unpack may corrupt data file.
Fixed that record length was wrongly restored from compressed table.
RENAME TABLE against a table with DATA/INDEX DIRECTORY overwrites
the file to which the symlink points.
This is security issue, because it is possible to create a table with
some name in some non-system database and set DATA/INDEX DIRECTORY
to mysql system database. Renaming this table to one of mysql system
tables (e.g. user, host) would overwrite the system table.
Return an error when the file to which the symlink points exist.
Disabling and enabling indexes on a non-empty table grows the
index file.
Disabling indexes just sets a flag per non-unique index and does not
free the index blocks of the affected indexes. Re-enabling indexes
creates new indexes with new blocks. The old blocks remain unused
in the index file.
Fixed by dropping and re-creating all indexes if non-empty disabled
indexes exist when enabling indexes. Dropping all indexes resets
the internal end-of-file marker to the end of the index file header.
It also clears the root block pointers of every index and clears the
deleted blocks chains. This way all blocks are declared as free.
bug #26215: mysql command line client should not strip comments
from SQL statements
and
bug #11230: Keeping comments when storing stored procedures
With the introduction of multiline comments support in the command line
client (mysql) in MySQL 4.1, it became impossible to preserve
client-side comments within single SQL statements or stored routines.
This feature was useful for monitoring tools and maintenance.
The patch adds a new option to the command line client
('--enable-comments', '-c') which allows to preserve SQL comments and
send them to the server for single SQL statements, and to keep comments
in the code for stored procedures / functions / triggers.
The patch is a modification of the contributed patch from bug #11230
with the following changes:
- code style changes to conform to the coding guidelines
- changed is_prefix() to my_strnncoll() to detect the DELIMITER
command, since the first one is case-sensitive and not charset-aware
- renamed t/comments-51.* to t/mysql_comments.*
- removed tests for comments in triggers since 5.0 does not have SHOW
CREATE TRIGGER (those tests will be added back in 5.1).
The test cases are only for bug #11230. No automated test case for bug
#26215 is possible due to the test suite deficiencies (though the cases
from the bug report were tested manually).
The HAVING clause is subject to the same rules as the SELECT list
about using aggregated and non-aggregated columns.
But this was not enforced when processing implicit grouping from
using aggregate functions.
Fixed by performing the same checks for HAVING as for SELECT.
fulltext index
Having a table with broken multibyte characters may cause fulltext
parser dead-loop.
Since normally it is not possible to insert broken multibyte sequence
into a table, this problem may arise only if table is damaged.
Affected statements are:
- CHECK/REPAIR against damaged table with fulltext index;
- boolean mode phrase search against damaged table with or
without fulltext inex;
- boolean mode searches without index;
- nlq searches.
No test case for this fix. Affects 5.0 only.
Dropping users causes huge increase in memory usage because field values were
allocated on the server memory root for temporary usage but never deallocated.
This patch changes the target memory root to be that of the thread handler
instead since this root is cleared between each statement.
Item_in_subselect's only externally callable method is val_bool().
However the nullability in the wrapper class (Item_in_optimizer) is
established by calling the "forbidden" method val_int().
Fixed to use the correct method (val_bool() ) to establish nullability
of Item_in_subselect in Item_in_optimizer.
Fulltext boolean mode phrase search may crash server on platforms
where size of pointer is not equal to size of unsigned integer
(in other words some 64-bit platforms).
The problem was integer overflow.
Affects 4.1 only.
Item_func_inet_ntoa and Item_func_conv inherit 'maybe_null' flag from an
argument, which is wrong.
Both can be NULL with notnull arguments, so that's fixed.