OLD VALUE OF INPUT PARAMETER.
The user-visible problem was that CASE-control-flow function
(not CASE-statement) misbehaved in stored routines under some
circumstances. The problem resulted in a crash or wrong data
returned. The error happened when expressions in CASE-function
were not of the same character set.
A CASE-function should return values of the same character set
for all branches. Internally, that means a new Item-instance
for the CONVERT(... USING <some charset>)-function is added
to the item tree when needed. The problem was that such changes
were not properly recorded using THD::change_item_tree(),
thus dangling pointers remain in the item tree after
THD::rollback_item_tree_changes(), which lead to undefined
behavior (i.e. crash / wrong data) for subsequent executions of
the stored routine.
This bug was introduced by a patch for Bug 11753363
(44793 - CHARACTER SETS: CASE CLAUSE, UCS2 OR UTF32, FAILURE).
The fixed function is Item_func_case::fix_length_and_dec().
New CONVERT-items are added in agg_item_set_converter(),
which calls THD::change_item_tree().
The problem was that an intermediate array was passed
to agg_item_set_converter(). Thus, THD::change_item_tree() there
was called on intermediate objects.
Note: those intermediate objects are allocated on THD's
memory root, so it's Ok to put them into "changed item lists".
The fix is to track changes on the correct objects.
(SUBSTRING inside a stored function works too slow).
Background:
- THD classes derives from Query_arena, thus inherits the 'state'
attribute and related operations (is_stmt_prepare() & co).
- Although these operations are available in THD, they must not
be used. THD has its own attribute to point to the active
Query_arena -- stmt_arena.
- So, instead of using thd->is_stmt_prepare(),
thd->stmt_arena->is_stmt_prepare() must be used. This was the root
cause of Bug 60025.
This patch enforces the proper way of calling those operations.
is_stmt_prepare() & co are declared as private operations
in THD (thus, they are hidden from being called on THD instance).
The patch tries to minimize changes in 5.5.
Valgrind warning happens due to early null values check
in Item_func_in::fix_length_and_dec(before item evaluation).
As result null value items with uninitialized values are
placed into array and it leads to valgrind warnings during
value array sorting.
The fix is to check null value after item evaluation, item
is evaluated in in_array::set() method.
Problem: in case of string CASE/WHEN arguments with different
character sets, Item_func_case::find_item() called comparator
cmp_items[x] on mixed character set Items, so a 8-bit value could
be errouneously referenced to as being utf16/utf32 value,
which led to crash on DBUG_ASSERT() because of wrong value length.
This was wrong, as string comparator expects arguments in the same
character set.
Fix: modify Item_func_case's argument list after calling
agg_arg_charsets_for_comparison() - put the Items in "agg" array
back to "args", because some of the Items in the "agg" array might
have been changed to character set converters:
- to Item_func_conv_charset for non-constant items
- to Item_string for constant items
In other words, perform the same substitution which is done in
all other operations string comparison or string result operations:
Replace
CASE latin1_item WHEN utf16_item THEN ... END
to
CASE CONVERT(latin1_item USING utf16) WHEN utf16_item THEN ... END
Replace
CASE utf16_item WHEN latin1_item THEN ... END
to
CASE utf16_item WHEN CONVERT(latin1_item USING utf16) THEN ... END
@ mysql-test/r/ctype_utf16.result
@ mysql-test/r/ctype_utf32.result
@ mysql-test/t/ctype_utf16.test
@ mysql-test/t/ctype_utf32.test
Adding tests
@ sql/item_cmpfunc.cc
Put "agg" back to "args".
@ sql/sql_string.cc
Backporting a fix for String::set_or_copy_aligned() from 5.6,
for better test coverage:
"SELECT _utf16 0x61" should expand the string to 0x0061 rather
than to 0x000061.
This fix was made in 5.6 under terms of "WL#4616 Implement UTF16-LE".
Problem:
IF() did not copy collation derivation and repertoire from
an argument if the opposite argument was NULL:
IF(cond, res1, NULL)
IF(cond, NULL, res2)
only CHARSET_INFO pointer was copied.
This resulted in illegal mix of collations error.
Fix:
copy all collation parameters from the non-NULL argument:
CHARSET_INFO pointer, derivation, repertoire.
ZERO
When dates are represented internally as strings, i.e. when a string constant
is compared to a date value, both values are converted to long integers,
ostensibly for fast comparisons. DATE typed integer values are converted to
DATETIME by multiplying by 1,000,000 (each digit pair representing hour,
minute and second, respectively). But the mechanism did not distuinguish
cached INTEGER values, already in correct format, from newly converted
strings.
Fixed by marking the INTEGER cache as being of DATETIME format.
get_year_value() contains code to convert 2-digits year to
4-digits. The fix for Bug#49910 added a check on the size of
the underlying field so that this conversion is not done for
YEAR(4) values. (Since otherwise one would convert invalid
YEAR(4) values to valid ones.)
The existing check does not work when Item_cache is used, since
it is not detected when the cache is based on a Field. The
reported change in behavior is due to Bug#58030 which added
extra cached items in min/max computations.
The elegant solution would be to implement
Item_cache::real_item() to return the underlying Item.
However, some side effects are observed (change in explain
output) that indicates that such a change is not straight-
forward, and definitely not appropriate for an MRU.
Instead, a Item_cache::field() method has been added in order
to get access to the underlying field. (This field() method
eliminates the need for Item_cache::eq_def() used in
test_if_ref(), but in order to limit the scope of this fix,
that code has been left as is.)
Item_equal::val_int() checked for NULL-values by checking Item::null_value
*before* the respective ::store_value() and ::cmp(Item*) metods where called.
As Item::null_value is set by these metods, the value of 'null_value'
is not valid until *after* ::store_value() or ::cmp() has
been called for the Item object.
Fix is to swap order of ::store_value()/::cmp() and checking of Item::null_value.
This pattern is widely used other places inside item_cmpfunc.cc .
- Removed files specific to compiling on OS/2
- Removed files specific to SCO Unix packaging
- Removed "libmysqld/copyright", text is included in documentation
- Removed LaTeX headers for NDB Doxygen documentation
- Removed obsolete NDB files
- Removed "mkisofs" binaries
- Removed the "cvs2cl.pl" script
- Changed a few GPL texts to use "program" instead of "library"
--Bug#52157 various crashes and assertions with multi-table update, stored function
--Bug#54475 improper error handling causes cascading crashing failures in innodb/ndb
--Bug#57703 create view cause Assertion failed: 0, file .\item_subselect.cc, line 846
--Bug#57352 valgrind warnings when creating view
--Recently discovered problem when a nested materialized derived table is used
before being populated and it leads to incorrect result
We have several modes when we should disable subquery evaluation.
The reasons for disabling are different. It could be
uselessness of the evaluation as in case of 'CREATE VIEW'
or 'PREPARE stmt', or we should disable subquery evaluation
if tables are not locked yet as it happens in bug#54475, or
too early evaluation of subqueries can lead to wrong result
as it happened in Bug#19077.
Main problem is that if subquery items are treated as const
they are evaluated in ::fix_fields(), ::fix_length_and_dec()
of the parental items as a lot of these methods have
Item::val_...() calls inside.
We have to make subqueries non-const to prevent unnecessary
subquery evaluation. At the moment we have different methods
for this. Here is a list of these modes:
1. PREPARE stmt;
We use UNCACHEABLE_PREPARE flag.
It is set during parsing in sql_parse.cc, mysql_new_select() for
each SELECT_LEX object and cleared at the end of PREPARE in
sql_prepare.cc, init_stmt_after_parse(). If this flag is set
subquery becomes non-const and evaluation does not happen.
2. CREATE|ALTER VIEW, SHOW CREATE VIEW, I_S tables which
process FRM files
We use LEX::view_prepare_mode field. We set it before
view preparation and check this flag in
::fix_fields(), ::fix_length_and_dec().
Some bugs are fixed using this approach,
some are not(Bug#57352, Bug#57703). The problem here is
that we have a lot of ::fix_fields(), ::fix_length_and_dec()
where we use Item::val_...() calls for const items.
3. Derived tables with subquery = wrong result(Bug19077)
The reason of this bug is too early subquery evaluation.
It was fixed by adding Item::with_subselect field
The check of this field in appropriate places prevents
const item evaluation if the item have subquery.
The fix for Bug19077 fixes only the problem with
convert_constant_item() function and does not cover
other places(::fix_fields(), ::fix_length_and_dec() again)
where subqueries could be evaluated.
Example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT, j BIGINT);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1, 2), (2, 2), (3, 2);
SELECT * FROM (SELECT MIN(i) FROM t1
WHERE j = SUBSTRING('12', (SELECT * FROM (SELECT MIN(j) FROM t1) t2))) t3;
DROP TABLE t1;
4. Derived tables with subquery where subquery
is evaluated before table locking(Bug#54475, Bug#52157)
Suggested solution is following:
-Introduce new field LEX::context_analysis_only with the following
possible flags:
#define CONTEXT_ANALYSIS_ONLY_PREPARE 1
#define CONTEXT_ANALYSIS_ONLY_VIEW 2
#define CONTEXT_ANALYSIS_ONLY_DERIVED 4
-Set/clean these flags when we perform
context analysis operation
-Item_subselect::const_item() returns
result depending on LEX::context_analysis_only.
If context_analysis_only is set then we return
FALSE that means that subquery is non-const.
As all subquery types are wrapped by Item_subselect
it allow as to make subquery non-const when
it's necessary.
ESCAPE argument might be empty string. It leads
to server crash under some circumstances.
The fix:
-added check if ESCAPE argument result is not empty string
Problem: CASE didn't work with a mixture of different character
sets in THEN/ELSE in some cases.
This happened because after character set aggregation
newly created Item_func_conv_charset items corresponding
to THEN/ELSE arguments were not put back to args[] array.
Fix:
put all Item_func_conv_charset back to args[].
@ mysql-test/include/ctype_numconv.inc
@ mysql-test/r/ctype_ucs.result
Adding tests
@ sql/item_cmpfunc.cc
Put "agg" back to args[] after character set aggregation.
result
Row subqueries producing no rows were not handled as UNKNOWN
values in row comparison expressions.
That was a result of the following two problems:
1. Item_singlerow_subselect did not mark the resulting row
value as NULL/UNKNOWN when no rows were produced.
2. Arg_comparator::compare_row() did not take into account that
a whole argument may be NULL rather than just individual scalar
values.
Before bug#34384 was fixed, the above problems were hidden
because an uninitialized (i.e. without any stored value) cached
object would appear as NULL for scalar values in a row subquery
returning an empty result. After the fix
Arg_comparator::compare_row() would try to evaluate
uninitialized cached objects.
Fixed by removing the aforementioned problems.
The EXISTS transformation has additional switches to catch the known corner
cases that appear when transforming an IN predicate into EXISTS. Guarded
conditions are used which are deactivated when a NULL value is seen in the
outer expression's row. When the inner query block supplies NULL values,
however, they are filtered out because no distinction is made between the
guarded conditions; guarded NOT x IS NULL conditions in the HAVING clause that
filter out NULL values cannot be de-activated in isolation from those that
match values or from the outer expression or NULL's.
The above problem is handled by making the guarded conditions remember whether
they have rejected a NULL value or not, and index access methods are taking
this into account as well.
The bug consisted of
1) Not resetting the property for every nested loop iteration on the inner
query's result.
2) Not propagating the NULL result properly from inner query to IN optimizer.
3) A hack that may or may not have been needed at some point. According to a
comment it was aimed to fix#2 by returning NULL when FALSE was actually
the result. This caused failures when #2 was properly fixed. The hack is
now removed.
The fix resolves all three points.
file .\dtoa.c
The assertion failure was correct because the 'width' argument
of my_gcvt() has the signed integer type, whereas the unsigned
value UINT_MAX32 was being passed by the caller
(Field_double::val_str()) leading to a negative width in
my_gcvt().
The following chain of problems was found by further analysis:
1. The display width for a floating point number is calculated
in Field_double::val_str() as either field_length or the
maximum possible length of string representation of a floating
point number, whichever is greater. Since in the bug's test
case field_length is UINT_MAX32, we get the same value as the
display width. This does not make any sense because for numeric
values field_length only matters for ZEROFILL columns,
otherwise it does not make sense to allocate that much memory
just to print a number. Field_float::val_str() has a similar
problem.
2. Even if the above wasn't the case, we would still get a
crash on a slightly different test case when trying to allocate
UINT_MAX32 bytes with String::alloc() because the latter does
not handle such large input values correctly due to alignment
overflows.
3. Even when String::alloc() is fixed to return an error when
an alignment overflow occurs, there is still a problem because
almost no callers check its return value, and
Field_double::val_str() is not an exception (same for
Field_float::val_str()).
4. Even if all of the above wasn't the case, creating a
Field_double object with UINT_MAX32 as its field_length does
not make much sense either, since the .frm code limits it to
MAX_FIELD_CHARLENGTH (255) bytes. Such a beast can only be
created by create_tmp_field_from_item() from an Item with
REAL_RESULT as its result_type() and UINT_MAX32 as its
max_length.
5. For the bug's test case, the above condition (REAL_RESULT
Item with max_length = UINT_MAX32) was a result of
Item_func_if::fix_length_and_dec() "shortcutting" aggregation
of argument types when one of the arguments was a constant
NULL. In this case, the attributes of the aggregated type were
simply copied from the other, non-NULL argument, but max_length
was still calculated as per the general, non-shortcut case, by
choosing the greatest of argument's max_length, which is
obviously not correct.
The patch addresses all of the above problems, even though
fixing the assertion failure for the particular test case would
require only a subset of the above problems to be solved.
Problem: a few functions did not calculate their max_length correctly.
This is an after-fix for WL#2649 Number-to-string conversions".
Fix: changing the buggy functions to calculate max_length
using fix_char_length() introduced in WL#2649,
instead of setting max_length directly
mysql-test/include/ctype_numconv.inc
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_binary.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_cp1251.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_latin1.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_ucs.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_utf8.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/t/ctype_utf8.test
Including ctype_numconv
sql/item.h
- Introducing new method fix_char_length_ulonglong(),
for the cases when length is potentially greater
than UINT_MAX32. This method removes a few
instances of duplicate code, e.g. in item_strfunc.cc.
- Setting collation in Item_copy properly. This change
fixes wrong metadata on client side in some cases, when
"binary" instead of the real character set was reported.
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc
- Using fix_char_length() and max_char_length() methods,
instead of direct access to max_length, to calculate
item length properly.
- Moving count_only_length() in COALESCE after
agg_arg_charsets_for_string_result(). The old
order was incorrect and led to wrong length
calucation in case of multi-byte character sets.
sql/item_func.cc
Fixing that count_only_length() didn't work
properly for multi-byte character sets.
Using fix_char_length() and max_char_length()
instead of direct access to max_length.
sql/item_strfunc.cc
- Using fix_char_length(), fix_char_length_ulonglong(),
max_char_length() instead of direct access to max_length.
- Removing wierd condition: "if (collation.collation->mbmaxlen > 0)",
which is never FALSE.
file .\item_subselect.cc, line 836
IN quantified predicates are never executed directly. They are rather wrapped
inside nodes called IN Optimizers (Item_in_optimizer) which take care of the
execution. However, this is not done during query preparation. Unfortunately
the LIKE predicate pre-evaluates constant right-hand side arguments even
during name resolution. Likely this is meant as an optimization.
Fixed by not pre-evaluating LIKE arguments in view prepare mode.
This bug is a design flaw of the fix for the bug#33546. It assumed that an
item can be used only in one comparison context, but actually it isn't the
case. Item_cache_datetime is used to store result for MIX/MAX aggregate
functions. Because Arg_comparator always compares datetime values as INTs when
possible the Item_cache_datetime most time caches only INT value. But
since all datetime values has STRING result type MIN/MAX functions are asked
for a STRING value when the result is being sent to a client. The
Item_cache_datetime was designed to avoid conversions and get INT/STRING
values from an underlying item, but at the moment the values is asked
underlying item doesn't hold it anymore thus wrong result is returned.
Beside that MIN/MAX aggregate functions was wrongly initializing cached result
and this led to a wrong result.
The Item::has_compatible_context helper function is added. It checks whether
this and given items has the same comparison context or can be compared as
DATETIME values by Arg_comparator. The equality propagation optimization is
adjusted to take into account that items which being compared as DATETIME
can have different comparison contexts.
The Item_cache_datetime now converts cached INT value to a correct STRING
DATETIME value by means of number_to_datetime & my_TIME_to_str functions.
The Arg_comparator::set_cmp_context_for_datetime helper function is added.
It sets comparison context of items being compared as DATETIMEs to INT if
items will be compared as longlong.
The Item_sum_hybrid::setup function now correctly initializes its result
value.
In order to avoid unnecessary conversions Item_sum_hybrid now states that it
can provide correct longlong value if the item being aggregated can do it
too.
Incorrect handling of NULL arguments could lead to a crash on
the IN or CASE operations when either NULL arguments were
passed explicitly as arguments (IN) or implicitly generated by
the WITH ROLLUP modifier (both IN and CASE).
Item_func_case::find_item() assumed all necessary comparators
to be instantiated in fix_length_and_dec(). However, in the
presence of WITH ROLLUP modifier, arguments could be
substituted with an Item_null leading to an "unexpected"
STRING_RESULT comparator being invoked.
In addition to the problem identical to the above,
Item_func_in::val_int() could crash even with explicitly passed
NULL arguments due to an optimization in fix_length_and_dec()
leading to NULL arguments being ignored during comparators
creation.
Problem: a flaw (derefencing a NULL pointer) in the LIKE optimization
code may lead to a server crash in some rare cases.
Fix: check the pointer before its dereferencing.
when it should use index
Sometimes the LEFT/RIGHT JOIN with an empty table caused an
unnecessary filesort.
Sample query, where t1.i1 is indexed and t3 is empty:
SELECT t1.*, t2.* FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON t1.i1 = t2.i2
LEFT JOIN t3 ON t2.i2 = t3.i3
ORDER BY t1.i1 LIMIT 5;
The server erroneously used an item of empty outer-joined
table as a common constant of a Item_equal (multi-equivalence
expression).
By the fix for the bug 16590 the constant status of such
an item has been propagated to st_table::const_key_parts
map bits related to other Item_equal argument-related
key parts (those are obviously not constant in our case).
As far as test_if_skip_sort_order function skips constant
prefixes of testing keys, this caused an ignorance of
available indices, since some prefixes were marked as
constant by mistake.
This patch:
- Moves all definitions from the mysql_priv.h file into
header files for the component where the variable is
defined
- Creates header files if the component lacks one
- Eliminates all include directives from mysql_priv.h
- Eliminates all circular include cycles
- Rename time.cc to sql_time.cc
- Rename mysql_priv.h to sql_priv.h
Conflicts:
Text conflict in client/mysqlbinlog.cc
Text conflict in mysql-test/Makefile.am
Text conflict in mysql-test/collections/default.daily
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog_row_innodb.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_typeconv_innodb.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_get_master_version_and_clock.test
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_row_create_table.test
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slave_skip.test
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_typeconv_innodb.test
Text conflict in mysys/charset.c
Text conflict in sql/field.cc
Text conflict in sql/field.h
Text conflict in sql/item.h
Text conflict in sql/item_func.cc
Text conflict in sql/log.cc
Text conflict in sql/log_event.cc
Text conflict in sql/log_event_old.cc
Text conflict in sql/mysqld.cc
Text conflict in sql/rpl_utility.cc
Text conflict in sql/rpl_utility.h
Text conflict in sql/set_var.cc
Text conflict in sql/share/Makefile.am
Text conflict in sql/sql_delete.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_plugin.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_select.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_table.cc
Text conflict in storage/example/ha_example.h
Text conflict in storage/federated/ha_federated.cc
Text conflict in storage/myisammrg/ha_myisammrg.cc
Text conflict in storage/myisammrg/myrg_open.c
(Original patch by Sinisa Milivojevic)
The YEAR(4) value of 2000 was equal to the "bad" YEAR(4) value of 0000.
The get_year_value() function has been modified to not adjust bad
YEAR(4) value to 2000.
SunStudio
SunStudio compilers of late warn about methods that might hide
methods in base classes due to the use of overloading combined
with overriding. SunStudio also warns about variables defined
in local socpe or method arguments that have the same name as
a member attribute of the class.
This patch renames methods that might hide base class methods,
to make it easier both for humans and compilers to see what is
actually called. It also renames variables in local scope.
It appears that stack overflow checks for recusrive stored procedure
calls, that run in the normal server, did not work in embedded and were
dummified with preprocessor magic( #ifndef EMBEDDED_SERVER ).
The fix is to remove ifdefs, there is no reason not to run overflow checks
and crash in deeply recursive calls.
Note: Start of the stack (thd->thread_stack variable) in embedded is not
necessarily exact but stil provides the best guess. Unless the caller of
mysql_read_connect() is already deep in the stack, thd->thread_stack
variable should approximate stack start address well.
added:
include/ctype_numconv.inc
mysql-test/include/ctype_numconv.inc
mysql-test/r/ctype_binary.result
mysql-test/t/ctype_binary.test
Adding tests
modified:
mysql-test/r/bigint.result
mysql-test/r/case.result
mysql-test/r/create.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_cp1251.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_latin1.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_ucs.result
mysql-test/r/func_gconcat.result
mysql-test/r/func_str.result
mysql-test/r/metadata.result
mysql-test/r/ps_1general.result
mysql-test/r/ps_2myisam.result
mysql-test/r/ps_3innodb.result
mysql-test/r/ps_4heap.result
mysql-test/r/ps_5merge.result
mysql-test/r/show_check.result
mysql-test/r/type_datetime.result
mysql-test/r/type_ranges.result
mysql-test/r/union.result
mysql-test/suite/ndb/r/ps_7ndb.result
mysql-test/t/ctype_cp1251.test
mysql-test/t/ctype_latin1.test
mysql-test/t/ctype_ucs.test
mysql-test/t/func_str.test
Fixing tests
@ sql/field.cc
- Return str result using my_charset_numeric.
- Using real multi-byte aware str_to_XXX functions
to handle tricky charset values propely (e.g. UCS2)
@ sql/field.h
- Changing derivation of non-string field types to DERIVATION_NUMERIC.
- Changing binary() for numeric/datetime fields to always
return TRUE even if charset is not my_charset_bin. We need
this to keep ha_base_keytype() return HA_KEYTYPE_BINARY.
- Adding BINARY_FLAG into some fields, because it's not
being set automatically anymore with
"my_charset_bin to my_charset_numeric" change.
- Changing derivation for numeric/datetime datatypes to a weaker
value, to make "SELECT concat('string', field)" use character
set of the string literal for the result of the function.
@ sql/item.cc
- Implementing generic val_str_ascii().
- Using max_char_length() instead of direct read of max_length
to make "tricky" charsets like UCS2 work.
NOTE: in the future we'll possibly remove all direct reads of max_length
- Fixing Item_num::safe_charset_converter().
Previously it alligned binary string to
character string (for example by adding leading 0x00
when doing binary->UCS2 conversion). Now it just
converts from my_charset_numbner to "tocs".
- Using val_str_ascii() in Item::get_time() to make UCS2 arguments work.
- Other misc changes
@ sql/item.h
- Changing MY_COLL_CMP_CONV and MY_COLL_ALLOW_CONV to
bit operations instead of hard-coded bit masks.
- Addding new method DTCollation.set_numeric().
- Adding new methods to Item.
- Adding helper functions to make code look nicer:
agg_item_charsets_for_string_result()
agg_item_charsets_for_comparison()
- Changing charset for Item_num-derived items
from my_charset_bin to my_charset_numeric
(which is an alias for latin1).
@ sql/item_cmpfunc.cc
- Using new helper functions
- Other misc changes
@ sql/item_cmpfunc.h
- Fixing strcmp() to return max_length=2.
Previously it returned 1, which was wrong,
because it did not fit '-1'.
@ sql/item_func.cc
- Using new helper functions
- Other minor changes
@ sql/item_func.h
- Removing unused functions
- Adding helper functions
agg_arg_charsets_for_string_result()
agg_arg_charsets_for_comparison()
- Adding set_numeric() into constructors of numeric items.
- Using fix_length_and_charset() and fix_char_length()
instead of direct write to max_length.
@ sql/item_geofunc.cc
- Changing class for Item_func_geometry_type and
Item_func_as_wkt from Item_str_func to
Item_str_ascii_func, to make them return UCS2 result
properly (when character_set_connection=ucs2).
@ sql/item_geofunc.h
- Changing class for Item_func_geometry_type and
Item_func_as_wkt from Item_str_func to
Item_str_ascii_func, to make them return UCS2 result
properly (when @@character_set_connection=ucs2).
@ sql/item_strfunc.cc
- Implementing Item_str_func::val_str().
- Renaming val_str to val_str_ascii for some items,
to make them work with UCS2 properly.
- Using new helper functions
- All single-argument functions that expect string
result now call this method:
agg_arg_charsets_for_string_result(collation, args, 1);
This enables character set conversion to @@character_set_connection
in case of pure numeric input.
@ sql/item_strfunc.h
- Introducing Item_str_ascii_func - for functions
which return pure ASCII data, for performance purposes,
as well as for the cases when the old implementation
of val_str() was heavily 8-bit oriented and implementing
a UCS2-aware version is tricky.
@ sql/item_sum.cc
- Using new helper functions.
@ sql/item_timefunc.cc
- Using my_charset_numeric instead of my_charset_bin.
- Using fix_char_length(), fix_length_and_charset()
and fix_length_and_charset_datetime()
instead of direct write to max_length.
- Using tricky-charset aware function str_to_time_with_warn()
@ sql/item_timefunc.h
- Using new helper functions for charset and length initialization.
- Changing base class for Item_func_get_format() to make
it return UCS2 properly (when character_set_connection=ucs2).
@ sql/item_xmlfunc.cc
- Using new helper function
@ sql/my_decimal.cc
- Adding a new DECIMAL to CHAR converter
with real multibyte support (e.g. UCS2)
@ sql/mysql_priv.h
- Introducing a new derivation level for numeric/datetime data types.
- Adding macros for my_charset_numeric and MY_REPERTOIRE_NUMERIC.
- Adding prototypes for str_set_decimal()
- Adding prototypes for character-set aware str_to_xxx() functions.
@ sql/protocol.cc
- Changing charsetnr to "binary" client-side metadata for
numeric/datetime data types.
@ sql/time.cc
- Adding to_ascii() helper function, to convert a string
in any character set to ascii representation. In the
future can be extended to understand digits written
in various non-Latin word scripts.
- Adding real multy-byte character set aware versions for str_to_XXXX,
to make these these type of queries work correct:
INSERT INTO t1 SET datetime_column=ucs2_expression;
@ strings/ctype-ucs2.c
- endptr was not calculated correctly. INSERTing of UCS2
values into numeric columns returned warnings about
truncated wrong data.