It was possible that fetching a record by an exact key value
(including the record pointer) could return a record with a
different key value. This happened only if a concurrent insert
added a record with the searched key value after the fetching
statement locked the table for read.
The search succeded on the key value, but the record was
rejected as it was past the file length that was remembered
at start of the fetching statement. With other words it was
rejected as being a concurrently inserted record.
The action to recover from this problem was to fetch the
record that is pointed at by the next key of the index.
This was repeated until a record below the file length was
found.
I do now avoid this loop if an exact match was searched.
If this match is beyond the file length, it is now treated
as "key not found". There cannot be another key with the
same record pointer.
too many open statements". The patch adds a new global variable
@@max_prepared_stmt_count. This variable limits the total number
of prepared statements in the server. The default value of
@@max_prepared_stmt_count is 16382. 16382 small statements
(a select against 3 tables with GROUP, ORDER and LIMIT) consume
100MB of RAM. Once this limit has been reached, the server will
refuse to prepare a new statement and return ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR
(unfortunately, we can't add new errors to 4.1 without breaking 5.0). The limit is changeable after startup
and can accept any value from 0 to 1 million. In case
the new value of the limit is less than the current
statement count, no new statements can be added, while the old
still can be used. Additionally, the current count of prepared
statements is now available through a global read-only variable
@@prepared_stmt_count.
Version for 4.0.
It fixes two problems:
1. The cause of the bug was that we did not check the table version for
the HANDLER ... READ commands. We did not notice when a table was
replaced by a new one. This can happen during ALTER TABLE, REPAIR
TABLE, and OPTIMIZE TABLE (there might be more cases). I call the fix
for this problem "the primary bug fix".
2. mysql_ha_flush() was not always called with a locked LOCK_open.
Though the function comment clearly said it must.
I changed the code so that the locking is done when required. I call
the fix for this problem "the secondary fix".
Ensure that 'null_value' is not accessed before val() is called in FIELD() functions
Fixed initialization of key maps. This fixes some problems with keys when you have more than 64 keys
Fixed that ROLLUP don't always create a temporary table. This fix ensures that func_gconcat.test results are now predictable
delete is declared. As we don't use exceptions placement delete is never
called and the fix only affects numerous warnings when
compiling with MS Visual C++.
For more info see http://www.gotw.ca/gotw/010.htm.
tables requires privileges for them if some table or column level grants
present" (with after-review fixes).
We should set SELECT_ACL for implicitly opened tables in
my_tz_check_n_skip_implicit_tables() to be able to bypass privilege
checking in check_grant(). Also we should exclude those tables from
privilege checking in multi-update.
Now thd->mem_root is a pointer to thd->main_mem_root and THR_MALLOC is a pointer to thd->mem_root.
This gives us the following benefits:
- Allow us to easily detect if arena has already been swapped before (this fixes a bug in setup_conds() where arena was swaped twice in some cases)
- Faster swaps of arenas (as we don't have to copy the whole MEM_ROOT)
- We don't anymore have to call my_pthread_setspecific_ptr(THR_MALLOC,...) to change where memory is alloced. Now it's enough to set thd->mem_root
New mysqltest that can run mysqltest with PS
Added support for ZEROFILL in PS
Fixed crash when one called mysql_stmt_store_result() without a preceding mysql_stmt_bind_result()
Updated test cases to support --ps-protocol
(Some tests are still run using old protocol)
Fixed crash in PS when using SELECT * FROM t1 NATURAL JOIN t2...
Fixed crash in PS when using sub queries
Create table didn't signal when table was created. This could cause a "DROP TABLE created_table" in another thread to wait "forever"
Fixed wrong permissions check in PS and multi-table updates (one could get permission denied for legal quries)
Fix for PS and SELECT ... PROCEDURE
Reset all warnings when executing a new PS query
group_concat(...ORDER BY) didn't work with PS
Fixed problem with test suite when not using innodb
crashes server." The fix makes Item_func_rand prepared-statements
aware plus it fixes the case when RAND is used in prepared
statements and replication is on (as well as several similar issues).
Until now we did not reset THD before every execution of a prepared
statement, so if some execution had set thd->time_zone_used
or thd->rand_used they would not be reset until next mysql_parse.
Some of post-review fixes done.
crashes server (prepared statements)": the bug was that all boolean
items always recovered its original arguments at statement cleanup
stage.
This collided with Item_subselect::select_transformer, which tries to
permanently change the item tree to use a transformed subselect instead of
original one.
So we had this call sequence for prepare:
mysql_stmt_prepare -> JOIN::prepare ->
Item_subselect::fix_fields -> the item tree gets transformed ->
Item_bool_rowready_func2::cleanup, item tree is recovered to original
state, while it shouldn't have been;
mysql_stmt_execute -> attempts to execute a broken tree -> crash.
Now instead of bluntly recovering all arguments of bool functions in
Item_bool_rowready_func2::cleanup, we recover only those
which were changed, and do it in one place.
There still would exist a possibility for a collision with subselect
tranformation, if permanent and temporary changes were performed at the
same stage.
But fortunately subselect transformation is always done first, so it
doesn't conflict with the optimization done by propogate_cond_constants.
Now we have:
mysql_stmt_prepare -> JOIN::prepare -> subselect transformation
permanently changes the tree -> cleanup doesn't recover anything,
because nothing was registered for recovery.
mysql_stmt_execute -> JOIN::prepare (the tree is already transformed,
so it doesn't change), JOIN::optimize ->
propogate_cond_constants -> temporary changes the item tree
with constants -> JOIN::execute -> cleanup ->
the changes done by propogate_cond_constants are recovered, as
they were registered for recovery.
crashes mysqld": implementation for a generic item tree modifications
registry. Every item tree modification which should be rolled back for
subsequent execution of a prepared statement or stored procedure should
be saved in the registry. All such modifications are rolled back at once
during cleanup stage of PS.
Actual fix for the bug just adds a call to register modifications to
convert_constant_item.
Post review fixes implemented.
BUG#4335 - one name can be handler open'ed many times.
Reworked the HANDLER functions and interface.
Using a HASH to store information on open tables that
survives FLUSH TABLE.
HANDLER tables alias names must now be unique, though it
is allowed in 4.0 to qualify them with the database name
of the base table.
with memory roots in THD/Statement/Item_arena.
Added assertions preventing memory allocation on bzero'ed MEM_ROOT since it is worked by
pure luck and was very ineffective.