ARE NOT BEING HONORED
max_allowed_packet works in conjunction with net_buffer_length.
max_allowed_packet is an upper bound of net_buffer_length.
So it doesn't make sense to set the upper limit lower than the value.
Added a warning (using ER_UNKNOWN_ERRROR and a specific message)
when this is done (in the log at startup and when setting either
max_allowed_packet or the net_buffer_length variables)
Added a test case.
Fixed several tests that broke the above rule.
Removing the test case from mysql-5.5 list of disabled
test cases for the binlog suite. Actually, the test does
not exist in mysql-5.5, thus this is just a clean up.
The slave was not able to find the correct row in the innodb
table, because the row fetched from the innodb table would not
match the before image. This happened because the (don't care)
bytes in the NULLed fields would change once the row was stored
in the storage engine (from zero to the default value). This
would make bulk memory comparison (using memcmp) to fail.
We fix this by taking a preventing measure and avoiding memcmp
for tables that contain nullable fields. Therefore, we protect
the slave search routine from engines that return arbitrary
values for don't care bytes (in the nulled fields). Instead, the
slave thread will only check null_bits and those fields that are
not set to NULL when comparing the before image against the
storage engine row.
mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_record_compare.test:
Added test case to the include file so that this is tested
with more than one engine.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_row_rec_comp_innodb.result:
Result update.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_row_rec_comp_myisam.result:
Result update.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_row_rec_comp_myisam.test:
Moved the include file last, so that the result from
BUG#11766865 is not intermixed with the result for
BUG#11760454.
sql/log_event.cc:
Skips memory comparison if the table has nullable
columns and compares only non-nulled fields in the
field comparison loop.
configuration wizard to fail
Made the fields mysql.user.plugin and mysql.user.authentication_string
nullable to conform with some older clients doing inserts instead of
using the commands.
Problem: the test had not been updated after BUG#49978 was pushed
Fix: add 'set $rpl_only_running_threads= 1' to the end of the test
and update the result file.
Also, use include/assert.inc for an assertion (instead of relying
on result file comparison).
Also, move 'set @@global.slave_net_timeout' forwards, to get rid
of a warning.
mysql-test/suite/large_tests/r/rpl_slave_net_timeout.result:
updated result file
mysql-test/suite/large_tests/t/rpl_slave_net_timeout.test:
- Got rid of warning "The requested value for the heartbeat period
exceeds the value of `slave_net_timeout' seconds. A sensible
value for the period should be less than the timeout." by
changing order of "set slave_net_timeout" and
"change master to master_heartbeat_period".
- replaced result file comparison by include/assert.inc
- added "let $rpl_only_running_threads= 1"
Currently, rpl_semi_sync is failing in PB due to the warning message:
"Slave SQL: slave SQL thread is being stopped in the middle of "
"applying of a group having updated a non-transaction table; "
"waiting for the group completion ..."
The problem started happening after the fix for BUG#11762407 what was
automatically suppressing some warning messages.
To fix the current issue, we suppress the aforementioned warning message
and exploit the opportunity to make the sentence clearer.
There is a race between two threads: user thread and the dump
thread. The former sets a debug instruction that makes the latter wait
before processing an Xid event. There can be cases that the dump
thread has not yet processed the previous Xid event, causing it to
wait one Xid event too soon, thus causing sync_slave_with_master never
to resume.
We fix this by moving the instructions that set the debug variable
after calling sync_slave_with_master.
Problem: the test failed because errors were found in the error log.
The test case contains suppressions for an old version of the error message,
but the format of the error message has changed without updating the suppression.
Fix: Update the suppression. Also small fixes to improve the test.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_slave_load_remove_tmpfile.result:
update result file
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slave_load_remove_tmpfile-slave.opt:
Use variables instead of .opt files to avoid server restarts.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slave_load_remove_tmpfile.test:
1. To fix the bug, we update the regular expression in mtr.add_suppression
so that it matches the real error text.
2. Use wait_for_slave_sql_error.inc when we wait for an error.
This makes the test easier to understand and will produce better
debug info if the test fails.
3. Use server variables instead of command line options to set
the @@GLOBAL.DEBUG variable. This avoids server restarts when
running the test suite.
4. Clarify the comment at the top of the file and add bug reference.
of service in prepared statements).
sql/sql_prepare.cc:
At mysql_stmt_get_longdata(): instead of pushing an internal
error handler (as done in 5.1-tree) we save, set and restore
the statement's diagnostics area and warning info.
FAILED DROP DATABASE CAN BREAK STATEMENT BASED REPLICATION
The first phase of DROP DATABASE is to delete the tables in the database.
If deletion of one or more of the tables fail (e.g. due to a FOREIGN KEY
constraint), DROP DATABASE will be aborted. However, some tables could
still have been deleted. The problem was that nothing would be written
to the binary log in this case, so any slaves would not delete these tables.
Therefore the master and the slaves would get out of sync.
This patch fixes the problem by making sure that DROP TABLE is written
to the binary log for the tables that were in fact deleted by the failed
DROP DATABASE statement.
Test case added to binlog.binlog_database.test.
This patch corrects the problem by fixing the definition and alterations
of the mysql.user table in the .sql files.
Also included are new result files for tests that examine the name
column of the mysql.user table.
Setting lowercase_table_names to 2 on Windows causing Foreign Key problems
This problem was exposed by the fix for Bug#55222. There was a codepath in dict0load.c,
dict_load_foreigns() that made sure the table name matched case sensitive in order to
load a referenced table into the dictionary as needed. If an engine is rebooted which
accesses a table with foreign keys, and lower_case_table_names=2, then the table with
foreign keys will get an error when it is changed (insert/updated/delete).
Once the referenced tables are loaded into the dictionary cache by a select statement
on those tables, the same change would succeed because the affected code path would
not get followed.
Before this fix, all the performance schema instrumentation for both the binary log
and the relay log would use the following instruments:
- wait/io/file/sql/binlog
- wait/io/file/sql/binlog_index
- wait/synch/mutex/sql/MYSQL_BIN_LOG::LOCK_index
- wait/synch/cond/sql/MYSQL_BIN_LOG::update_cond
This instrumentation is too general and can be more specific.
With this fix, the binlog instrumentation is identical,
and the relay log instrumentation is changed to:
- wait/io/file/sql/relaylog
- wait/io/file/sql/relaylog_index
- wait/synch/mutex/sql/MYSQL_RELAY_LOG::LOCK_index
- wait/synch/cond/sql/MYSQL_RELAY_LOG::update_cond
With this change, the performance instrumentation for the binary log and the relay log,
which share the same structure but have different uses, is more detailed.
This is especially important for hosts in the middle of a replication chain,
that are both masters (binlog) and slaves (relaylog).
IS FAILING".
The problem was that large_tests.lock_tables_big test was
failing due to exceeding open files limit on platforms where
this limit was set too low (this test simultaneously opens
approx. 6000 files).
This patch solves this issue by ensuring that this test is
skipped on such platforms.
With --mem if fails with
+UNEXPECTED ERROR NUMBER: 1290
In var/log/mysqld.2.err we have:
[ERROR] LOAD DATA INFILE in the slave SQL Thread can only read from --slave-load-tmpdir. Please, report a bug.
[ERROR] Slave SQL: Error 'The MySQL server is running with the --slave-load-tmpdir option so it cannot execute this statement' on query. Default database: 'test'. Query: 'LOAD DATA INFILE '../../tmp/SQL_LOAD-2-1-1.data' INTO TABLE `t1` FIELDS TERMINATED BY '\t' ENCLOSED BY '' ESCAPED BY '\\' LINES TERMINATED BY '\n' (`a`, `b`)', Error_code: 1290
getcwd() in the server yields something like: /dev/shm/var_auto_iv5Q/mysqld.2/data
rw_lock_create_func(): Initialize lock->writer_thread, so that Valgrind
will not complain even when Valgrind instrumentation is not enabled.
Flag lock->writer_thread uninitialized, so that Valgrind can complain
when it is used uninitialized.
rw_lock_set_writer_id_and_recursion_flag(): Revert the bogus Valgrind
instrumentation that was pushed in the first attempt to fix this bug.
"set optimizer_switch to e or d causes invalid memory writes/valgrind warnings":
due to prefix support, the argument "e" was overwritten with its full value
"engine_condition_pushdown", which caused a buffer overrun.
This was wrong usage of find_type(); other wrong usages are fixed here too.
Please start reading with the comment of typelib.c.
client/mysqldump.c:
A bug: find_type() expects a bitmap as 3rd argument
(each bit is a flag controlling a behaviour of the function);
here it was instead passed the length of the string to search!
That could give random behaviour of find_type()
depending on the string.
We rather need to pass a correct flag to find_type().
The correct flag is FIND_TYPE_BASIC (0).
Flag 8 is not needed as buff cannot have a comma (see how buff is filled).
Flag 1 looks like a superfluous restriction.
Flag 4 is not user-friendly (why use
--compatible=2 rather than --compatible=mysql40 ?, and
we probably not commit to "2" always meaning "mysql40"
until the end of times).
include/mysql.h.pp:
This isn't a problematic API change as we go from char* to const char*:
existing code will run unchanged.
include/typelib.h:
named constants. Not an enum to not significantly change
the declaration of find_type() which would be an API change
(typelib.h is included in mysql.h).
mysql-test/r/mysqldump.result:
correct result (see the two requested modes in SQL_MODE)
mysql-test/suite/sys_vars/t/optimizer_switch_basic.test:
test for BUG#59894. The second SET used to crash.
mysql-test/t/mysqldump.test:
we had no test for multiple modes in --compatible, which is
supported according to --help
mysys/typelib.c:
Fix for BUG#59894. parse_name() is asked to match "e" with a row
of the TYPELIB (the TYPELIB lists permitted flags of optimizer_switch;
and comes from optimizer_switch_names[] of sys_vars.cc).
find_type() is capable of supporting prefixes, but if it is not
passed flag 2 in third argument, it will overwrite its first
argument (the string to search for) with the complete name,
here overwriting "e" with "engine_condition_pushdown". But
as this "e" was a buffer allocated in an Item, it was not big
enough to host the longer name, thus the crash.
We don't need to know the complete flag's name; the output used
from find_type() is just the flag's number (== function's return
code). So we can pass flag 2 to find_type() in parse_name().
After doing this fix and the other fixes in this patch, all usages
of find_type() were using flag 2; in most usages the string to search for,
is not guaranteed to be long enough to host the complete name
(it is either directly from argv, or from alloc_root/my_malloc
done in an earlier call).
Thus, flag 2 is here made implicit: callers need not pass it anymore,
it is always automatically turned on.
This allows to eliminate an oddity: parse_name() took a const char**,
and then removed "const" before calling find_type(), which could
theoretically modify the pointed data, thus lying on constness.
Last, constants for find_type() are now named.
sql-common/client.c:
Two bugs:
1) The enum was not in sync with the array (due to a bad porting of WL 1054;
the extra OPT_ values are about options present in 5.1 and deleted in 5.5);
added a compile_time_assert() to make sure this doesn't happen again
2) find_type() was writing past the end of opt_arg; as opt_arg was allocated
with alloc_root() with no extra space, this was an overrun; it could be seen
when
** building with -DWITH_VALGRIND -DHAVE_purify -DEXTRA_DEBUG
** making execution go through the faulty code; this faulty
code is executed only if the client asks to read a configuration
file like this:
mysql_options(mysql, MYSQL_READ_DEFAULT_FILE, "/tmp/cnf.cnf");
so by adding such line to the start of mysql_client_test.c::client_connect(),
we could see the valgrind warning:
==30548== Invalid write of size 1
==30548== at 0x4C2624C: strcpy (mc_replace_strmem.c:303)
==30548== by 0x48DC29: find_type (typelib.c:120)
==30548== by 0x465686: mysql_read_default_options (client.c:1344)
==30548== by 0x46830F: mysql_real_connect (client.c:2971)
==30548== by 0x409339: client_connect (mysql_client_test.c:331)
==30548== by 0x463A7F: main (mysql_client_test.c:19902)
==30548== Address 0x61875ad is 0 bytes after a block of size 29 alloc'd
==30548== at 0x4C25153: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:195)
==30548== by 0x49BFF1: my_malloc (my_malloc.c:38)
==30548== by 0x49C65C: alloc_root (my_alloc.c:166)
==30548== by 0x48EF97: handle_default_option (default.c:381)
==30548== by 0x49068C: search_default_file_with_ext (default.c:992)
==30548== by 0x48F929: search_default_file (default.c:670)
==30548== by 0x48EDC4: my_search_option_files (default.c:312)
==30548== by 0x48F4B1: my_load_defaults (default.c:576)
==30548== by 0x46517A: mysql_read_default_options (client.c:1207)
==30548== by 0x46830F: mysql_real_connect (client.c:2971)
==30548== by 0x409339: client_connect (mysql_client_test.c:331)
==30548== by 0x463A7F: main (mysql_client_test.c:19902)
This is fixed by having find_type() not overwrite anymore.
sql/sql_help.cc:
cast not needed anymore.
sql/table.cc:
cast not needed anymore.
privileges".
The first problem was that DROP USER didn't properly remove privileges
on stored functions from in-memory structures. So the dropped user
could have called stored functions on which he had privileges before
being dropped while his connection was still around.
Even worse if a new user with the same name was created he would
inherit privileges on stored functions from the dropped user.
Similar thing happened with old user name and function privileges
during RENAME USER.
This problem stemmed from the fact that the handle_grant_data() function
which handled DROP/RENAME USER didn't take any measures to update
in-memory hash with information about function privileges after
updating them on disk.
This patch solves this problem by adding code doing just that.
The second problem was that RENAME USER didn't properly update in-memory
structures describing table-level privileges and privileges on stored
procedures. As result such privileges could have been lost after a rename
(i.e. not associated with the new name of user) and inherited by a new
user with the same name as the old name of the original user.
This problem was caused by code handling RENAME USER in
handle_grant_struct() which [sic!]:
a) tried to update wrong (tables) hash when updating stored procedure
privileges for new user name.
b) passed wrong arguments to function performing the hash update and
didn't take into account the way in which such update could have
changed the order of the hash elements.
This patch solves this problem by ensuring that a) the correct hash
is updated, b) correct arguments are used for the hash_update()
function and c) we take into account possible changes in the order
of hash elements.
mysql-test/r/grant.result:
Added test coverage for bug#36544 "DROP USER does not remove stored
function privileges".
mysql-test/suite/funcs_1/r/innodb_storedproc_06.result:
Since after fixing bug#36544 "DROP USER does not remove stored function
privileges" in-memory structures are correctly updated by DROP USER,
DROP FUNCTION performed after DROP USER for its definer no longer
produces unwarranted warning/error messages.
mysql-test/suite/funcs_1/r/memory_storedproc_06.result:
Since after fixing bug#36544 "DROP USER does not remove stored function
privileges" in-memory structures are correctly updated by DROP USER,
DROP FUNCTION performed after DROP USER for its definer no longer
produces unwarranted warning/error messages.
mysql-test/suite/funcs_1/r/myisam_storedproc_06.result:
Since after fixing bug#36544 "DROP USER does not remove stored function
privileges" in-memory structures are correctly updated by DROP USER,
DROP FUNCTION performed after DROP USER for its definer no longer
produces unwarranted warning/error messages.
mysql-test/t/grant.test:
Added test coverage for bug#36544 "DROP USER does not remove stored
function privileges".
sql/sql_acl.cc:
Changed handle_grant_data() to also update hash with function
privileges. This allows DROP/RENAME USER correctly keep this
in-memory structure up-to-date.
To do this extended handle_grant_struct() to support updating of this
hash. In addition fixed code in this function which is responsible for
handling of column and routine hashes during RENAME USER, ensured that
we correctly update these hashes after changing user name and that we
don't skip elements while iterating through the hash and doing updates.
There is one part of the test case that needs to break
and re-establish the circular topology. For this the test
stops the slave threads on a couple of servers and restarts
them with START SLAVE. However, no check is done on the
status of the IO or SQL threads before proceeding with
the subsequent commands.
Because rpl_only_running_threads is set to 1 this can lead
to silently not syncing all slave threads as expected,
ultimately resulting in unexpected results (and consequently
on a failing test run).
We fix this by replacing the START SLAVE instructions with
calls to --source include/start_slave.inc, which will wait
for the slave threads to be running (show 'Yes' in
Slave_IO|SQL_Running fields of SHOW SLAVE STATUS) before
proceeding. Additionally, we change rpl_sync.inc to make the
IO thread report that it is running when its running status
is any other than 'No'.
primary_key_no == 0".
Attempt to create InnoDB table with non-nullable column of
geometry type having an unique key with length 12 on it and
with some other candidate key led to server crash due to
assertion failure in both non-debug and debug builds.
The problem was that such a non-candidate key could have
been sorted as the first key in table/.FRM, before any legit
candidate keys. This resulted in assertion failure in InnoDB
engine which assumes that primary key should either be the
first key in table/.FRM or should not exist at all.
The reason behind such an incorrect sorting was an wrong
value of Create_field::key_length member for geometry field
(which was set to its pack_length == 12) which confused code
in mysql_prepare_create_table(), so it would skip marking
such key as a key with partial segments.
This patch fixes the problem by ensuring that this member
gets the same value of Create_field::key_length member as
for other blob fields (from which geometry field class is
inherited), and as result unique keys on geometry fields
are correctly marked as having partial segments.
mysql-test/include/gis_keys.inc:
Added test case for bug #58650 "Failing assertion:
primary_key_no == -1 || primary_key_no == 0".
mysql-test/r/gis.result:
Added test case for bug #58650 "Failing assertion:
primary_key_no == -1 || primary_key_no == 0".
mysql-test/suite/innodb/r/innodb_gis.result:
Added test case for bug #58650 "Failing assertion:
primary_key_no == -1 || primary_key_no == 0".
mysql-test/suite/innodb_plugin/r/innodb_gis.result:
Added test case for bug #58650 "Failing assertion:
primary_key_no == -1 || primary_key_no == 0".
sql/field.cc:
Changed Create_field::create_length_to_internal_length() to
correctly set Create_field::key_length member for geometry
fields. Similar to the blob types key_length for such fields
should be the same as length and not field's packed length
(which is always 12 for geometry).
As result of this change code handling table creation now
always correctly identifies btree/unique keys on geometry
fields as partial keys, so such keys can't be erroneously
treated as candidate keys and sorted in keys array in .FRM
before legit candidate keys.
This fixes bug #58650 "Failing assertion: primary_key_no ==
-1 || primary_key_no == 0" in which incorrect candidate key
sorting led to assertion failure in InnoDB code.