In some rare cases when the value of the system variable join_buffer_size
was set to a number less than 256 the function JOIN_CACHE::set_constants
determined the size of an offset in the join buffer equal to 1 though
the minimal join buffer required more than 256 bytes. This could cause
a crash of the server when records from the join buffer were read.
If the flag 'optimize_join_buffer_size' is set to 'off' and the value
of the system variable 'join_buffer_size' is greater than the value of
the system variable 'join_buffer_space_limit' than no join cache can
be employed to join tables of the executed query.
A bug in the function JOIN_CACHE::alloc_buffer allowed to use join
buffer even in this case while another bug in the function
revise_cache_usage could cause a crash of the server in this case if the
chosen execution plan for the query contained outer join or semi-join
operation.
of mysql-5.6 code line. The bugs could not be reproduced in the latest release
of mariadb-5.3 as they were fixed either when the code of subquery optimization
was back-ported from mysql-6.0 or later when some other bugs were fixed.
If the duplicate elimination strategy is used for a semi-join and potentially
one of the block-based join algorithms can be employed to join the inner
tables of the semi-join then sorting of the head (first non-constant) table
for a query with ORDER BY / GROUP BY cannot be used.
The execution plan cannot use sorting on the first table from the
sequence of the joined tables if it plans to employ the block-based
hash join algorithm.
KEYUSE elements for a possible hash join key are not sorted by field
numbers of the second table T of the hash join operation. Besides
some of these KEYUSE elements cannot be used to build any key as their
key expressions depend on the tables that are planned to be accessed
after the table T.
The code before the patch did not take this into account and, as a result,
execition of a query the employing block-based hash join algorithm could
cause a crash or return a wrong result set.
The function setup_semijoin_dups_elimination erroneously assumed
that if join_cache_level is set to 3 or 4 then the type of the
access to a table cannot be JT_REF or JT_EQ_REF. This could lead
to wrong query result sets.
sql/sql_insert.cc:
CREATE ... IF NOT EXISTS may do nothing, but
it is still not a failure. don't forget to my_ok it.
******
CREATE ... IF NOT EXISTS may do nothing, but
it is still not a failure. don't forget to my_ok it.
sql/sql_table.cc:
small cleanup
******
small cleanup
of the 5.3 code line after a merge with 5.2 on 2010-10-28
in order not to allow the cost to access a joined table to be equal
to 0 ever.
Expanded data sets for many test cases to get the same execution plans
as before.
- Set the default
- Adjust the testcases so that 'new' tests are run with optimizations turned on.
- Pull out relevant tests from "irrelevant" tests and run them with optimizations on.
- Run range.test and innodb.test with both mrr=on and mrr=off
semijoin=on,firstmatch=on,loosescan=on
to
semijoin=off,firstmatch=off,loosescan=off
Adjust the testcases:
- Modify subselect*.test and join_cache.test so that all tests
use the same execution paths as before (i.e. optimizations that
are being tested are enabled)
- Let all other test files run with the new default settings (i.e.
with new optimizations disabled)
- Copy subquery testcases from these files into t/subselect_extra.test
which will run them with new optimizations enabled.
This crashing bug could manifest itself at execution of join queries
over materialized derived tables with IN subquery predicates in the
where clause. If for such a query the optimizer chose to use duplicate
weed-out with duplicates in a materialized derived table and chose to
employ join cache the the execution could cause a crash of the server.
It happened because the JOIN_CACHE::init method assumed that the value
of TABLE::file::ref is set at the moment when the method was called
for the employed join cache. It's true for regular tables, but it's
not true for materialized derived tables that are filled now at the
first access to them, i.e. after the JOIN_CACHE::init has done its job.
To fix this problem for any ROWID field of materialized derived table
the procedure that copies fields from record buffers into the employed
join buffer first checks whether the value of TABLE::file::ref has
been set for the table, and if it's not so the procedure sets this value.
The bug in the function print_keyuse() caused crashes if
hash join could be used. It happened because the function
ignored the fact that KEYUSE structures could be created
for hash joins as well.
even in the cases when there existed range/index-merge scans that
were cheaper than the full table scan.
This was a defect/bug of the implementation of mwl #128.
Now hash join can work not only with full table scan of the joined
table, but also with full index scan, range and index-merge scans.
Accordingly, in the cases when hash join is used the column 'type'
in the EXPLAINs can contain now 'hash_ALL', 'hash_index', 'hash_range'
and 'hash_index_merge'. If hash join is coupled with a range/index_merge
scan then the columns 'key' and 'key_len' contain info not only on
the used hash index, but also on the indexes used for the scan.
This bug could manifest itself when hash join over a varchar column
with NULL values in some rows was used. It happened because the
function key_buf_cmp erroneously returned FALSE when one of the joined
key fields was null while the second was not.
Also fixed two other bugs in the functions key_hashnr and key_buf_cmp
that could possibly lead to wrong results for some queries that
used hash join over several columns with nulls.
Also reverted the latest addition of the test case for bug #45092. It
had been already backported earlier.
One of the hash functions employed by the BNLH join algorithm
calculates the the value of hash index for key value utilizing
every byte of the key buffer. To make this calculation valid
one has to ensure that for any key value unused bytes of the
buffer are filled with with a certain filler. We choose 0 as
a filler for these bytes.
Added an optional boolean parameter with_zerofill to the function
key_copy. If the value of the parameter is TRUE all unused bytes
of the key buffer is filled with 0.
In some cases the function make_cond_for_index() was mistaken
when detecting index only pushdown conditions for a table:
a pushdown condition that was not index only could be marked
as such.
It happened because the procedure erroneously used the markers
for index only conditions that remained from the calls of
this function that extracted the index conditions for other
tables.
Fixed by erasing index only markers as soon as they are need
anymore.