In BUG#49562 we fixed the case where numeric user var events
would not serialize the flag stating whether the value was signed
or unsigned (unsigned_flag). This fixed the case that the slave
would get an overflow while treating the unsigned values as
signed.
In this bug, we find that the unsigned_flag can sometimes change
between the moment that the user value is recorded for binlogging
purposes and the actual binlogging time. Since we take the
unsigned_flag from the runtime variable data, at binlogging time,
and the variable value is comes from the copy taken earlier in
the execution, there may be inconsistency in the
User_var_log_event between the variable value and its
unsigned_flag.
We fix this by also copying the unsigned_flag of the
user_var_entry when its value is copied, for binlogging
purposes. Later, at binlogging time, we use the copied
unsigned_flag and not the one in the runtime user_var_entry
instance.
Split rpl_row_charset into:
- rpl_row_utf16.
- rpl_row_utf32.
This way these tests can run independently if server supports
either one of the charsets but not both.
Cleaned up rpl_row_utf32 which had a spurious instruction:
-- let $reset_slave_type_conversions= 0
In BUG#51787 we were using the wrong charset to print out the
data. We were using the field charset for the string that would
hold the information. This caused the assertion, because the
string length was not aligned with UTF32 bytes requirements for
storage.
We fix this by using &my_charset_latin1 in the string object
instead of the field->charset(). As a side-effect, we needed to
extend the show_sql_type interface so that it took the field
charset is now passed as a parameter, so that one is able to
calculate the correct field size.
In BUG#51716 we had issues with Field_string::pack and
Field_string::unpack. When packing, the length was incorrectly
calculated. When unpacking, the padding the string would be
padded with the wrong bytes (a few bytes less than it should).
We fix this by resorting to charset abstractions (functions) that
calculate the correct length when packing and pad correctly the
string when unpacking.
1. Now test use fake_relay_log primitive
2. Added RESET SLAVE to include/setup_fake_relay_log.inc for removing relay log info file
3. Added RESET SLAVE to include/cleanup_fake_relay_log.inc
4. Test moved to rpl suite as rpl_binlog_auto_inc_bug33029.test
5. Updated result file
We found that there are some tests that are not cleaning
up properly:
1. rpl_tmp_table_and_DDL
2. rpl_do_grant
3. rpl_sync
For #1 and #2 we found that the slave would not, for some
cases, replicate all the instructions the master processed
in the cleanup section. We fix these by deploying some
synchronization commands in the test cases so that slave
processes all clean up instructions.
As for #3, this is tracked as part of another bug
(BUG@50442).
Conflicts:
Text conflict in .bzr-mysql/default.conf
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_slow_query_log.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slow_query_log.test
Conflict adding files to server-tools. Created directory.
Conflict because server-tools is not versioned, but has versioned children. Versioned directory.
Conflict adding files to server-tools/instance-manager. Created directory.
Conflict because server-tools/instance-manager is not versioned, but has versioned children. Versioned directory.
Contents conflict in server-tools/instance-manager/options.cc
Text conflict in sql/mysqld.cc
mysql-test/t/disabled.def:
Restore disabled ssl tests: SSL certificates were updated.
Disable sp_sync.test, the test case can't work in next-4284.
mysql-test/t/partition_innodb.test:
Disable parsing of the test case for Bug#47343,
the test can not work in next-4284.
mysql-test/t/ps_ddl.test:
Update results (CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS takes
into account existence of the temporary table).
into slow log
While processing a statement, down the mysql_parse execution
stack, the thd->enable_slow_log can be assigned to
opt_log_slow_admin_statements, depending whether one is executing
administrative statements, such as ALTER TABLE, OPTIMIZE,
ANALYZE, etc, or not. This can have an impact on slow logging for
statements that are executed after an administrative statement
execution is completed.
When executing statements directly from the user this is fine
because, the thd->enable_slow_log is reset right at the beginning
of the dispatch_command function, ie, everytime a new statement
is set is set to execute.
On the other hand, for slave SQL thread (sql_thd) the story is a
bit different. When in SBR the sql_thd applies statements by
calling mysql_parse. Right after, it calls log_slow_statement
function to log them if they take too long. Calling mysql_parse
directly is fine, but also means that dispatch_command function
is bypassed. As a consequence, thd->enable_slow_log does not get
a chance to be reset before the next statement to be executed by
the sql_thd. If the statement just executed by the sql_thd was an
administrative statement and logging of admin statements was
disabled, this means that sql_thd->enable_slow_log will be set to
0 (disabled) from that moment on. End result: sql_thd stops
logging slow statements.
We fix this by resetting the value of sql_thd->enable_slow_log to
the value of opt_log_slow_slave_statements right after
log_slow_stement is called by the sql_thd.
After merge fixes.
Adjust replication test cases.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_mixed_row_innodb.result:
Update results with a new test.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_stm_loadfile.result:
Add a warning, which I believe is an expected one.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_killed_ddl.test:
Sort results to avoid test failurs under load.
mysql-test/suite/rpl_ndb/r/rpl_ndb_binlog_format_errors.result:
Update results (next-4284 merge).
mysql-test/suite/rpl_ndb/t/rpl_ndb_binlog_format_errors.test:
Adjust test output to the new table opening scheme: decide_logging_format() is now called in CREATE/DROP trigger.
To 5.x Release
Notes
=====
This is a backport of BUG#23300 into 5.1 GA.
Original cset revid (in betony):
luis.soares@sun.com-20090929140901-s4kjtl3iiyy4ls2h
Description
===========
When using replication, the slave will not log any slow query
logs queries replicated from the master, even if the
option "--log-slow-slave-statements" is set and these take more
than "log_query_time" to execute.
In order to log slow queries in replicated thread one needs to
set the --log-slow-slave-statements, so that the SQL thread is
initialized with the correct switch. Although setting this flag
correctly configures the slave thread option to log slow queries,
there is an issue with the condition that is used to check
whether to log the slow query or not. When replaying binlog
events the statement contains the SET TIMESTAMP clause which will
force the slow logging condition check to fail. Consequently, the
slow query logging will not take place.
This patch addresses this issue by removing the second condition
from the log_slow_statements as it prevents slow queries to be
binlogged and seems to be deprecated.
Original revision:
------------------------------------------------------------
revision-id: li-bing.song@sun.com-20100130124925-o6sfex42b6noyc6x
parent: joro@sun.com-20100129145427-0n79l9hnk0q43ajk
committer: <Li-Bing.Song@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-5.1-bugteam
timestamp: Sat 2010-01-30 20:49:25 +0800
message:
Bug #48321 CURRENT_USER() incorrectly replicated for DROP/RENAME USER;
REVOKE/GRANT; ALTER EVENT.
The following statements support the CURRENT_USER() where a user is needed.
DROP USER
RENAME USER CURRENT_USER() ...
GRANT ... TO CURRENT_USER()
REVOKE ... FROM CURRENT_USER()
ALTER DEFINER = CURRENT_USER() EVENT
but, When these statements are binlogged, CURRENT_USER() just is binlogged
as 'CURRENT_USER()', it is not expanded to the real user name. When slave
executes the log event, 'CURRENT_USER()' is expand to the user of slave
SQL thread, but SQL thread's user name always NULL. This breaks the replication.
After this patch, All above statements are rewritten when they are binlogged.
The CURRENT_USER() is expanded to the real user's name and host.
------------------------------------------------------------
Linux x86_64 debug
Two test cases fail because the suppression for the unsafe
warning needs to be updated (BUG@39934 refactored this part and
these changes are only in mysql-next-mr - this is why we notice
them now when merging in next-mr). This is the case for
rpl_nondeterministic_functions and rpl_misc_functions test
cases. rpl_stm_binlog_direct test case is not needed in version >
5.1. The rpl_heartbeat_basic test case fails because patch for
BUG@50397 removed the CHANGE MASTER in the slave that would set
it's period to 1/10 of the master. This would cause the test
assertion to fail.
The fixes for the issues described above are:
- rpl_misc_functions - updated suppression message
- rpl_nondeterministic_functions - updated suppression message
- rpl_stm_binlog_direct - removed the test case (it is not
needed in versions > 5.1)
- rpl_heartbeat_basic - deployed instruction:
CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HEARTBEAT_PERIOD=0.1;
Conflicts:
- mysql-test/r/mysqld--help-win.result
- sql/sys_vars.cc
Original revsion (in next-mr-bugfixing):
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2971 [merge]
revision-id: alfranio.correia@sun.com-20100121210527-rbuheu5rnsmcakh1
committer: Alfranio Correia <alfranio.correia@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-next-mr-bugfixing
timestamp: Thu 2010-01-21 21:05:27 +0000
message:
BUG#46364 MyISAM transbuffer problems (NTM problem)
It is well-known that due to concurrency issues, a slave can become
inconsistent when a transaction contains updates to both transaction and
non-transactional tables.
In a nutshell, the current code-base tries to preserve causality among the
statements by writing non-transactional statements to the txn-cache which
is flushed upon commit. However, modifications done to non-transactional
tables on behalf of a transaction become immediately visible to other
connections but may not immediately get into the binary log and therefore
consistency may be broken.
In general, it is impossible to automatically detect causality/dependency
among statements by just analyzing the statements sent to the server. This
happen because dependency may be hidden in the application code and it is
necessary to know a priori all the statements processed in the context of
a transaction such as in a procedure. Moreover, even for the few cases that
we could automatically address in the server, the computation effort
required could make the approach infeasible.
So, in this patch we introduce the option
- "--binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates" that can be used to bypass
the current behavior in order to write directly to binary log statements
that change non-transactional tables.
Besides, it is used to enable the WL#2687 which is disabled by default.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2970.1.1
revision-id: alfranio.correia@sun.com-20100121131034-183r4qdyld7an5a0
parent: alik@sun.com-20100121083914-r9rz2myto3tkdya0
committer: Alfranio Correia <alfranio.correia@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-next-mr-bugfixing
timestamp: Thu 2010-01-21 13:10:34 +0000
message:
BUG#46364 MyISAM transbuffer problems (NTM problem)
It is well-known that due to concurrency issues, a slave can become
inconsistent when a transaction contains updates to both transaction and
non-transactional tables.
In a nutshell, the current code-base tries to preserve causality among the
statements by writing non-transactional statements to the txn-cache which
is flushed upon commit. However, modifications done to non-transactional
tables on behalf of a transaction become immediately visible to other
connections but may not immediately get into the binary log and therefore
consistency may be broken.
In general, it is impossible to automatically detect causality/dependency
among statements by just analyzing the statements sent to the server. This
happen because dependency may be hidden in the application code and it is
necessary to know a priori all the statements processed in the context of
a transaction such as in a procedure. Moreover, even for the few cases that
we could automatically address in the server, the computation effort
required could make the approach infeasible.
So, in this patch we introduce the option
- "--binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates" that can be used to bypass
the current behavior in order to write directly to binary log statements
that change non-transactional tables.
Besides, it is used to enable the WL#2687 which is disabled by default.
The root cause of the crash is that a TranxNode is freed before it is used.
A TranxNode is allocated and inserted into the active list each time
a log event is written and flushed into the binlog file.
The memory for TranxNode is allocated with thd_alloc and will be freed
at the end of the statement. The after_commit/after_rollback callback
was supposed to be called before the end of each statement and remove the node from
the active list. However this assumption is not correct in all cases(e.g. call
'CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE myisam_t SELECT * FROM innodb_t' in a transaction
and delete all temporary tables automatically when a session closed),
and can cause the memory allocated for TranxNode be freed
before it was removed from the active list. So The TranxNode pointer in the active
list would become a wild pointer and cause the crash.
After this patch, We have a class called a TranxNodeAllocate which manages the memory
for allocating and freeing TranxNode. It uses my_malloc to allocate memory.
sql/rpl_handler.cc:
params are not initialized.
REVOKE/GRANT; ALTER EVENT.
The following statements support the CURRENT_USER() where a user is needed.
DROP USER
RENAME USER CURRENT_USER() ...
GRANT ... TO CURRENT_USER()
REVOKE ... FROM CURRENT_USER()
ALTER DEFINER = CURRENT_USER() EVENT
but, When these statements are binlogged, CURRENT_USER() just is binlogged
as 'CURRENT_USER()', it is not expanded to the real user name. When slave
executes the log event, 'CURRENT_USER()' is expand to the user of slave
SQL thread, but SQL thread's user name always NULL. This breaks the replication.
After this patch, All above statements are rewritten when they are binlogged.
The CURRENT_USER() is expanded to the real user's name and host.