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.
Before this patch, semisync assumed transactions running in parallel
can not be larger than max_connections, but this is not true when
the event scheduler is executing events, and cause semisync run out
of preallocated transaction nodes.
Fix the problem by allocating transaction nodes dynamically.
This patch also fixed a possible deadlock when running UNINSTALL
PLUGIN rpl_semi_sync_master and updating in parallel. Fixed by
releasing the internal Delegate lock before unlock the plugins.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_semi_sync_event.test:
Add test case for bug#49020
plugin/semisync/semisync_master.cc:
Allocating TranxNode dynamically
plugin/semisync/semisync_master.h:
Allocating TranxNode dynamically
sql/rpl_handler.cc:
Unlock plugins after we have released the Delegate lock to avoid possible deadlock when uninstalling semisync master plugin and doing update in parallel.
CMakeLists.txt:
Add plugin/semisync subdirectory
mysql-test/mysql-test-run.pl:
Check for semisync dll for Windows
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_semi_sync.result:
Update result file
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_semi_sync.test:
Test semi-sync on Windows
plugin/semisync/semisync_master.cc:
Define gettimeofday for Windows
Remove functions that no longer needed
Fix warning suppressions
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_semi_sync.test:
Fix warning suppressions
plugin/semisync/semisync_slave.cc:
Remove functions that no longer needed
plugin/semisync/semisync_slave.h:
Remove functions that no longer needed
Add an option to control whether the master should keep waiting
until timeout when it detected that there is no semi-sync slave
available.
The bool option 'rpl_semi_sync_master_wait_no_slave' is 1 by
defalt, and will keep waiting until timeout. When set to 0, the
master will switch to asynchronous replication immediately when
no semi-sync slave is available.
Semi-sync status were not reset by FLUSH STATUS, this was because
all semi-sync status variables are defined as SHOW_FUNC and FLUSH
STATUS could only reset SHOW_LONG type variables.
This problem is fixed by change all status variables that should
be reset by FLUSH STATUS from SHOW_FUNC to SHOW_LONG.
After the fix, the following status variables will be reset by
FLUSH STATUS:
Rpl_semi_sync_master_yes_tx
Rpl_semi_sync_master_no_tx
Note: normally, FLUSH STATUS itself will be written into binlog
and be replicated, so after FLUSH STATS, one of
Rpl_semi_sync_master_yes_tx
Rpl_semi_sync_master_no_tx
can be 1 dependent on the semi-sync status. So it's recommended
to use FLUSH NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG STATUS to avoid this.
Semi-sync uses an extra connection from slave to master to send
replies, this is a normal client connection, and used a normal
SET query to set the reply information on master, which is visible
to user and may cause some confusion and complaining.
This problem is fixed by using the method of sending reply by
using the same connection that is used by master dump thread to
send binlog to slave. Since now the semi-sync plugins are integrated
with the server code, it is not a problem to use the internal net
interfaces to do this.
The master dump thread will mark the event requires a reply and
wait for the reply when the event just sent is the last event
of a transaction and semi-sync status is ON; And the slave will
send a reply to master when it received such an event that requires
a reply.
If an EVENT is created without the DEFINER clause set explicitly or with it set
to CURRENT_USER, the master and slaves become inconsistent. This issue stems from
the fact that in both cases, the DEFINER is set to the CURRENT_USER of the current
thread. On the master, the CURRENT_USER is the mysqld's user, while on the slave,
the CURRENT_USER is empty for the SQL Thread which is responsible for executing
the statement.
To fix the problem, we do what follows. If the definer is not set explicitly,
a DEFINER clause is added when writing the query into binlog; if 'CURRENT_USER' is
used as the DEFINER, it is replaced with the value of the current user before
writing to binlog.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_create_if_not_exists.result:
Updated the result file after fixing bug#44331
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_drop_if_exists.result:
Updated the result file after fixing bug#44331
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_events.result:
Test result of Bug#44331
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_innodb_mixed_dml.result:
Updated the result file after fixing bug#44331
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_events.test:
Added test to verify if the definer is consistent between master and slave
when the event is created without the DEFINER clause set explicitly or the
DEFINER is set to CURRENT_USER
sql/events.cc:
The "create_query_string" function is added to create a new query string
for removing executable comments.
sql/sql_yacc.yy:
The remember_name token was added for recording the offset of EVENT_SYM.
Slave does not correctly handle "expected errors" leading to inconsistencies
between the mater and slave. Specifically, when a statement changes both
transactional and non-transactional tables, the transactional changes are
automatically rolled back on the master but the slave ignores the error and
does not roll them back thus leading to inconsistencies.
To fix the problem, we automatically roll back a statement that fails on
the slave but note that the transaction is not rolled back unless a "rollback"
command is in the relay log file.
mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_mixing_engines.test:
Enabled item 13.e which was disabled because of the bug fixed by the
current and removed item 14 which was introduced by mistake.
binlog
Mixing transactional (T) and non-transactional (N) tables on behalf of a
transaction may lead to inconsistencies among masters and slaves in STATEMENT
mode. The problem stems from the fact that although modifications done to
non-transactional tables on behalf of a transaction become immediately visible
to other connections they do not immediately get to the binary log and therefore
consistency is broken. Although there may be issues in mixing T and M tables in
STATEMENT mode, there are safe combinations that clients find useful.
In this bug, we fix the following issue. Mixing N and T tables in multi-level
(e.g. a statement that fires a trigger) or multi-table table statements (e.g.
update t1, t2...) were not handled correctly. In such cases, it was not possible
to distinguish when a T table was updated if the sequence of changes was N and T.
In a nutshell, just the flag "modified_non_trans_table" was not enough to reflect
that both a N and T tables were changed. To circumvent this issue, we check if an
engine is registered in the handler's list and changed something which means that
a T table was modified.
Check WL 2687 for a full-fledged patch that will make the use of either the MIXED or
ROW modes completely safe.
mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_row_mix_innodb_myisam.result:
Truncate statement is wrapped in BEGIN/COMMIT.
mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_stm_mix_innodb_myisam.result:
Truncate statement is wrapped in BEGIN/COMMIT.
In STATEMENT based replication, a statement that failed on the master but that
updated non-transactional tables is written to binary log with the error code
appended to it. On the slave, the statement is executed and the same error is
expected. However, when an "expected error" did not happen on the slave and was
either ignored or was related to a concurrency issue on the master, the slave
did not rollback the effects of the statement and as such inconsistencies might
happen.
To fix the problem, we automatically rollback a statement that should have
failed on a slave but succeded and whose expected failure is either ignored or
stems from a concurrency issue on the master.
If using statement based replication (SBR), repeatedly calling
statements which are unsafe for SBR will cause a warning message
to be written to the error for each statement. This might lead
to filling up the error log and there is no way to disable this
behavior.
The solution is to only log these message (about statements unsafe
for statement based replication) if the log_warnings option is set.
For example:
SET GLOBAL LOG_WARNINGS = 0;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(UUID());
SET GLOBAL LOG_WARNINGS = 1;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(UUID());
In this case the message will be printed only once:
[Warning] Statement may not be safe to log in statement format.
Statement: INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(UUID())
mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_stm_unsafe_warning.result:
Add test case result for Bug#46265
mysql-test/suite/binlog/t/binlog_stm_unsafe_warning-master.opt:
Make log_error value available.
mysql-test/suite/binlog/t/binlog_stm_unsafe_warning.test:
Add test case for Bug#46265
sql/sql_class.cc:
Print warning only if the log_warnings is enabled.
If the log_bin_trust_function_creators option is not defined, creating a stored
function requires either one of the modifiers DETERMINISTIC, NO SQL, or READS
SQL DATA. Executing a stored function should also follows the same rules if in
STATEMENT mode. However, this was not happening and a wrong error was being
printed out: ER_BINLOG_ROW_RBR_TO_SBR.
The patch makes the creation and execution compatible and prints out the correct
error ER_BINLOG_UNSAFE_ROUTINE when a stored function without one of the modifiers
above is executed in STATEMENT mode.
to wrong result
When using MIXED mode and issuing 'CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t_tmp',
the statement is logged if the current binlogging mode is
STATEMENT. This causes the slave to replay the instruction and
create the temporary table as well. If there is no switch to ROW
mode, and later on a 'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE t_tmp' is issued, then
this statement will also be logged and the slave will
remove/close the temporary table.
However, if there is a switch to ROW mode between the CREATE and
DROP TEMPORARY table, the DROP statement will not be logged,
leaving the slave with a dangling temporary table.
This patch addresses this, by always logging a DROP TEMPORARY
TABLE IF EXISTS when in mixed mode and a drop statement is issued
for temporary table(s).
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_temp_table_mix_row.result:
Updated result file.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_temp_table_mix_row.test:
Added test case.
sql/sql_table.cc:
When dropping table(s) in mixed mode and current statement
logging is ROW, builds an extra DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF
EXISTS for temporary tables that are being dropped. Later,
it logs the extra drop statement.
binlog
The fix for BUG 43929 introduced a regression issue. In a nutshell, when a
statement that changes a non-transactional table fails, it is written to the
binary log with the error code appended. Unfortunately, after BUG 43929, this
failure was flushing the transactional chace causing mismatch between execution
and logging histories. To fix this issue, we avoid flushing the transactional
cache when a commit or rollback is not issued.
The "get_master_version_and_clock(...)" function in sql/slave.cc ignores
error and passes directly when queries fail, or queries succeed
but the result retrieved is empty.
The "get_master_version_and_clock(...)" function should try to reconnect master
if queries fail because of transient network problems, and fail otherwise.
The I/O thread should print a warning if the some system variables do not
exist on master (very old master)
mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_get_master_version_and_clock.test:
Added test file for bug #45214
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_get_master_version_and_clock.result:
Added test result for bug #45214
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_get_master_version_and_clock.test:
Added test file for bug #45214
sql/slave.cc:
The 'is_network_error()' function is added for checking if the error is caused by network.
Added a new return value (2) to 'get_master_version_and_clock()' function result set
to indicate transient network errors when queries fail, and the caller should
try to reconnect in this case.
"create as select" (innodb table)
Problem: code constructing "CREATE TABLE..." statement
doesn't take into account that current database is not set
in some cases. That may lead to a server crash.
Fix: check if current database is set.
mysql-test/extra/binlog_tests/binlog.test:
Fix for bug#45998: database crashes when running
"create as select" (innodb table)
- test case.
mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_row_binlog.result:
Fix for bug#45998: database crashes when running
"create as select" (innodb table)
- test result.
sql/sql_show.cc:
Fix for bug#45998: database crashes when running
"create as select" (innodb table)
- added check if there's current database set.
There is an inconsistency with DROP DATABASE|TABLE|EVENT IF EXISTS and
CREATE DATABASE|TABLE|EVENT IF NOT EXISTS. DROP IF EXISTS statements are
binlogged even if either the DB, TABLE or EVENT does not exist. In
contrast, Only the CREATE EVENT IF NOT EXISTS is binlogged when the EVENT
exists.
This patch fixes the following cases for all the replication formats:
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS.
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS,
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... LIKE,
CREAET TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT.
sql/sql_insert.cc:
Part of the code was moved from the create_table_from_items to select_create::prepare.
When replication is row based, CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS.. SELECT is binlogged if the table exists.
the auto_increment value
This is an alternative patch that instead of allowing RECREATE TABLE
on TRUNCATE TABLE it implements reset_auto_increment that is called
after delete_all_rows.
Note: this bug was fixed by Mattias Jonsson:
Pusing this patch: http://lists.mysql.com/commits/70370
mysql-test/suite/parts/r/partition_auto_increment_memory.result:
Bug#35111: Truncate a MyISAM partitioned table does not reset
the auto_increment value
mysql-test/suite/parts/r/partition_auto_increment_myisam.result:
Bug#35111: Truncate a MyISAM partitioned table does not reset
the auto_increment value
sql/ha_partition.cc:
Bug#35111: Truncate a MyISAM partitioned table does not reset
the auto_increment value
Added reset_auto_increment, to be used after delete_all_rows
to simulate truncate.
storage/heap/ha_heap.cc:
Bug#35111: Truncate a MyISAM partitioned table does not reset
the auto_increment value
Added reset_auto_increment, to be used after delete_all_rows
to simulate truncate
storage/heap/ha_heap.h:
Bug#35111: Truncate a MyISAM partitioned table does not reset
the auto_increment value
Added reset_auto_increment, to be used after delete_all_rows
to simulate truncate
storage/myisam/ha_myisam.cc:
Bug#35111: Truncate a MyISAM partitioned table does not reset
the auto_increment value
Added reset_auto_increment, to be used after delete_all_rows
to simulate truncate.
storage/myisam/ha_myisam.h:
Bug#35111: Truncate a MyISAM partitioned table does not reset
the auto_increment value
Added reset_auto_increment, to be used after delete_all_rows
to simulate truncate.
With ibmdb2i_create_index_option set to 1, creating an IBMDB2I table
with a primary key should produce an additional index that uses EBCDIC
hexadecimal sorting. However, this does not work. Adding indexes that
are not primary keys does work. The ibmdb2i_create_index_option should
be honoured when creating a table with a primary key.
This patch adds code to the create() function to check for the value
of the ibmdb2i_create_index_option variable and, when appropriate, to
generate a *HEX-based shadow index in DB2 for the primary key. Previously
this behavior was limited to secondary indexes.
Additionally, this patch restricts the creation of shadow indexes to
cases in which a non-*HEX sort sequence is used, as the documentation
for ibmdb2i_create_index_option describes. Previously, the shadow index
would in some cases be created even when the MySQL-specific index used
*HEX sorting, leading to redundant indexes.
Finally, the code used to generate the list of fields for indexes
and the code used to generate the SQL statement for the shadow
indexes has been refactored into individual functions.
mysql-test/suite/ibmdb2i/r/ibmdb2i_bug_45983.result:
Bug#45983 ibmdb2i_create_index_option=1 not working for primary key
Result file for the test case.
mysql-test/suite/ibmdb2i/t/ibmdb2i_bug_45983.test:
Bug#45983 ibmdb2i_create_index_option=1 not working for primary key
Add tests to verify that the ibmdb2i_create_index_option is being honoured
when creating a table with a primary key.
storage/ibmdb2i/ha_ibmdb2i.cc:
Bug#45983 ibmdb2i_create_index_option=1 not working for primary key
- Add code to the create() function to check for the value of the
ibmdb2i_create_index_option variable and, when appropriate, to
generate a *HEX-based shadow index in DB2 for the primary key.
- Restrict the creation of shadow indexes to cases in which a
non-*HEX sort sequence is used.
- Refractor code used to generate the list of fields for indexes
and the code used to generate the SQL statement for the shadow
indexes into individual functions.
storage/ibmdb2i/ha_ibmdb2i.h:
Bug#45983 ibmdb2i_create_index_option=1 not working for primary key
Add function prototypes for the functions that.
- Generate the list of fields for indexes
- Generate the SQL statement for the shadow
indexes