------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2597.4.17
revision-id: sp1r-davi@mysql.com/endora.local-20080328174753-24337
parent: sp1r-anozdrin/alik@quad.opbmk-20080328140038-16479
committer: davi@mysql.com/endora.local
timestamp: Fri 2008-03-28 14:47:53 -0300
message:
Bug#15192 "fatal errors" are caught by handlers in stored procedures
The problem is that fatal errors (e.g.: out of memory) were being
caught by stored procedure exception handlers which could cause
the execution to not be stopped due to a continue handler.
The solution is to not call any exception handler if the error is
fatal and send the fatal error to the client.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2597.37.3
revision-id: sp1r-davi@mysql.com/endora.local-20080328123626-16430
parent: sp1r-anozdrin/alik@quad.opbmk-20080327125300-11290
committer: davi@mysql.com/endora.local
timestamp: Fri 2008-03-28 09:36:26 -0300
message:
Bug#10374 GET_LOCK does not let connection to close on the server side if it's aborted
The problem is that the server doesn't detect aborted connections which
are waiting on a lock or sleeping (user sleep), wasting system resources
for a connection that is already dead.
The solution is to peek at the connection every five seconds to verify if
the connection is not aborted. A aborted connection is detect by polling
the connection socket for available data to be read or end of file and in
case of eof, the wait is aborted and the connection killed.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2572.2.1
revision-id: sp1r-davi@mysql.com/endora.local-20080227225948-16317
parent: sp1r-anozdrin/alik@quad.-20080226165712-10409
committer: davi@mysql.com/endora.local
timestamp: Wed 2008-02-27 19:59:48 -0300
message:
Bug#27525 table not found when using multi-table-deletes with aliases over several databas
Bug#30234 Unexpected behavior using DELETE with AS and USING
The multi-delete statement has a documented limitation that
cross-database multiple-table deletes using aliases are not
supported because it fails to find the tables by alias if it
belongs to a different database. The problem is that when
building the list of tables to delete from, if a database
name is not specified (maybe an alias) it defaults to the
name of the current selected database, making impossible to
to properly resolve tables by alias later. Another problem
is a inconsistency of the multiple table delete syntax that
permits ambiguities in a delete statement (aliases that refer
to multiple different tables or vice-versa).
The first step for a solution and proper implementation of
the cross-databse multiple table delete is to get rid of any
ambiguities in a multiple table statement. Currently, the parser
is accepting multiple table delete statements that have no obvious
meaning, such as:
DELETE a1 FROM db1.t1 AS a1, db2.t2 AS a1;
DELETE a1 AS a1 FROM db1.t1 AS a1, db2.t2 AS a1;
The solution is to resolve the left part of a delete statement
using the right part, if the a table on right has an alias,
it must be referenced in the left using the given alias. Also,
each table on the left side must match unambiguously only one
table in the right side.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2630.39.3
revision-id: davi.arnaut@sun.com-20081210215359-i876m4zgc2d6rzs3
parent: kostja@sun.com-20081208222938-9es7wl61moli71ht
committer: Davi Arnaut <Davi.Arnaut@Sun.COM>
branch nick: 36649-6.0
timestamp: Wed 2008-12-10 19:53:59 -0200
message:
Bug#36649: Condition area is not properly cleaned up after stored routine invocation
The problem is that the diagnostics area of a trigger is not
isolated from the area of the statement that caused the trigger
invocation. In MySQL terms, it means that warnings generated
during the execution of the trigger are not removed from the
"warning area" at the end of the execution.
Before this fix, the rules for MySQL message list life cycle (see
manual entry for SHOW WARNINGS) did not apply to statements
inside stored programs:
- The manual says that the list of messages is cleared by a
statement that uses a table (any table). However, such
statement, if run inside a stored program did not clear the
message list.
- The manual says that the list is cleared by a statement that
generates a new error or a warning, but this was not the case
with stored program statements either and is changed to be the
case as well.
In other words, after this fix, a statement has the same effect
on the message list regardless of whether it's executed inside a
stored program/sub-statement or not.
This introduces an incompatible change:
- before this fix, a, e.g. statement inside a trigger could
never clear the global warning list
- after this fix, a trigger that generates a warning or uses a
table, clears the global warning list
- however, when we leave a trigger or a function, the caller's
warning information is restored (see more on this below).
This change is not backward compatible as it is intended to make
MySQL behavior similar to the SQL standard behavior:
A stored function or trigger will get its own "warning area" (or,
in standard terminology, diagnostics area). At the beginning of
the stored function or trigger, all messages from the caller area
will be copied to the area of the trigger. During execution, the
message list will be cleared according to the MySQL rules
described on the manual (SHOW WARNINGS entry). At the end of the
function/trigger, the "warning area" will be destroyed along with
all warnings it contains, except that if the last statement of
the function/trigger generated messages, these are copied into
the "warning area" of the caller.
Consequently, statements that use a table or generate a warning
*will* clear warnings inside the trigger, but that will have no
effect to the warning list of the calling (outer) statement.
Added this option, named as "--dump-slave". The purpose of this option is to be
able to produce a dump from a slave used for making backups of the master. Originally,
dumping from the main master was fine, but as more data accumulated, the dump process
would take over 30 minutes, locking up the master database hence website for 30 minutes.
A slave dedicated to producing backups was the answer, but I needed a dump that could be
used to restore a slave instantly and in order to do that, it has to have three things
contained in the dump:
1. "STOP SLAVE;" at the beginning
2. "CHANGE MASTER TO ...<the master - info from 'show slave status'>"
3. "START SLAVE;" at the end
These options in this changeset contain this.
--stop-slave adds "STOP SLAVE" to the beginning of the dump and "STOP SLAVE"
to the end of the dump.
--include-host gives the user the option to have the host explicitely added
to the "CHANGE MASTER TO ..." line.
--dump-slave adds the "CHANGE MASTER ..." to the dump representing not the slave's
master binlog info, but the slave's master's info from "SHOW SLAVE STATUS"
Feature from Eric Bergen, CLA signed 2007-06-27.
Adds new mysql client option "--auto-vertical-output", which causes
the client to test whether a result table is too wide for the current
window (where available) and emit vertical results in that case.
Otherwise, it sends normal tabular results.
deadlocks
Backport of revno: 2617.68.35
The problem was that if one connection is running a multi-statement
transaction which involves a single partitioned table, and another
connection attempts to alter the table to drop a non-existing partition,
(which of course will fail), the first connection still gets
ER_LOCK_DEADLOCK and cannot proceed anymore.
This bug is no longer reproducable. This has also been tested with the
patch for Bug#46654 "False deadlock on concurrent DML/DDL with partitions,
inconsistent behavior" which concerned a similar problem but where the
ALTER TABLE is semantically correct.
Test case added in partition_sync.test.
Bug#42662: maketime() and signedness
Item_time_typecast::val_int() dropped sign from
MYSQL_TIME gotten using from get_time().
Propagates sign now.
Backported to 5.5.0 (6.0-codebase revid: 1810.3897.1)
When less than six places are given for microseconds, we zerofill from
the right (leftmost place is always 1/10s). We only did this when all
announced date/time fields were given; now we also format fractional
seconds when more significant fields are left out.
Backport for 5.5
In non debug builds, the statements:
- SHOW PROCEDURE CODE
- SHOW FUNCTION CODE
used to fail with a "syntax error", which is misleading.
These statements have been changed to return the following error for non
debug builds:
ERROR HY000: The 'SHOW PROCEDURE|FUNCTION CODE' feature is disabled; you
need MySQL built with '--with-debug' to have it working
For debug builds (./configure --with-debug), nothing is changed.
(backport)
mysql_upgrade script accepts --upgrade-system-tables option,
fixing only system tables in this case.
per-file comments:
client/mysql_upgrade.c
WL#4991 mysql_upgrade --fix-privilege-tables
--upgrade-system-tables option added.
if it is set, the tool won't look for the mysqlcheck then
run_mysqlcheck_fixnames() and run_mysqlcheck_upgrade won't be called.
mysql-test/r/mysql_upgrade.result
WL#4991 mysql_upgrade --fix-privilege-tables
test result added
mysql-test/t/mysql_upgrade.test
WL#4991 mysql_upgrade --fix-privilege-tables
test case added
Concurrent execution of statements which require non-table-level
write locks on several instances of the same table (such as
SELECT ... FOR UPDATE which uses same InnoDB table twice or a DML
statement which invokes trigger which tries to update same InnoDB
table directly and through stored function) and statements which
required table-level locks on this table (e.g. LOCK TABLE ... WRITE,
ALTER TABLE, ...) might have resulted in a deadlock.
The problem occured when a thread tried to acquire write lock
(TL_WRITE_ALLOW_WRITE) on the table but had to wait since there was
a pending write lock (TL_WRITE, TL_WRITE_ALLOW_READ) on this table
and we failed to detect that this thread already had another instance
of write lock on it (so in fact we were trying to acquire recursive
lock) because there was also another thread holding write lock on the
table (also TL_WRITE_ALLOW_WRITE). When the latter thread released
its lock neither the first thread nor the thread trying to acquire
TL_WRITE/TL_WRITE_ALLOW_READ were woken up (as table was still write
locked by the first thread) so we ended up with a deadlock.
This patch solves this problem by ensuring that thread which
already has write lock on the table won't wait when it tries
to acquire second write lock on the same table.
Conflicts
=========
Text conflict in .bzr-mysql/default.conf
Text conflict in libmysqld/CMakeLists.txt
Text conflict in libmysqld/Makefile.am
Text conflict in mysql-test/collections/default.experimental
Text conflict in mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_row_sp006.test
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_tmp_table.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_loaddata.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_loaddata_fatal.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_row_create_table.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_row_sp006_InnoDB.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_stm_log.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl_ndb/r/rpl_ndb_circular_simplex.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl_ndb/r/rpl_ndb_sp006.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/t/mysqlbinlog.test
Text conflict in sql/CMakeLists.txt
Text conflict in sql/Makefile.am
Text conflict in sql/log_event_old.cc
Text conflict in sql/rpl_rli.cc
Text conflict in sql/slave.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_binlog.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_lex.h
21 conflicts encountered.
NOTE
====
mysql-5.1-rpl-merge has been made a mirror of mysql-next-mr:
- "mysql-5.1-rpl-merge$ bzr pull ../mysql-next-mr"
This is the first cset (merge/...) committed after pulling
from mysql-next-mr.
to 5.1 partially. This patch brings what was left to mysql-next-mr.
Original revisions in 6.0:
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.31.26
committer: Alexander Nozdrin <alik@sun.com>
branch nick: 6.0-rt-bug43138.3
timestamp: Thu 2009-04-30 19:31:30 +0400
message:
Fix for Bug#43138: DROP DATABASE failure does not clean up message list.
The problem was that the high-level function mysql_rm_db() invoked
low-level mysql_rm_table_part2(), which reported low-level error
(Unknown table) if SE refused to delete a table. Also when
mysql_rm_table_part2() reported an error, it didn't add corresponding
warning into the list (because it is used from other places where such
behaviour is required).
The fix is to
1. Remove no_warnings_for_error usage from sql_table.cc
2. Improve internal error handler support in THD, so that
a stack of error handlers is allowed.
3. Create an internal error handler (Drop_table_error_handler)
to silence useless warnings.
4. Use the handler in DROP DATABASE and DROP TABLE statements.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.69.38
committer: Alexander Nozdrin <alik@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-next-bugfixing-bug37431
timestamp: Mon 2009-08-24 21:52:09 +0400
message:
A test case for Bug#37431 (DROP TABLE does not report errors correctly).
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.31.29
committer: Dmitry Lenev <dlenev@mysql.com>
branch nick: mysql-6.0-runtime
timestamp: Fri 2009-05-01 17:37:34 +0400
message:
Follow-up for fix for bug "Bug#43138: DROP DATABASE failure
does not clean up message list".
Fixed drop.test failure under non-debug server by moving part
of test dependent on debug-only feature to separate .test file,
which won't be run for non-debug versions of server.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.45.17
committer: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mysql.com>
branch nick: 6.0-maria
timestamp: Wed 2009-05-13 20:08:58 +0200
message:
followup for bug#43138
if delete fails with a permission denied error, we want to show it
------------------------------------------------------------
The patch was backported to 5.1 in scope of Bug#42364 by
the following revision:
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2497.975.3
committer: Sergey Glukhov <Sergey.Glukhov@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-5.1-bugteam
timestamp: Fri 2009-07-03 13:22:06 +0500
message:
Bug#42364 SHOW ERRORS returns empty resultset after dropping non existent table
enabled message storing into error message list
for 'drop table' command
------------------------------------------------------------
allows SHOW CREATE TABLE) from 6.0. Original revisions:
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.31.8
committer: Alexander Nozdrin <alik@sun.com>
branch nick: 6.0-rt-bug38347
timestamp: Thu 2009-03-26 09:08:24 +0300
message:
Patch for Bug#38347: ALTER ROUTINE privilege allows SHOW CREATE TABLE.
If a user has any of the following privileges for a table (or the database
if the table), he should be able to issue SHOW CREATE TABLE for the table:
- CREATE
- DROP
- ALTER
- DELETE
- INDEX
- INSERT
- SELECT
- UPDATE
- TRIGGER
- REFERENCES
- GRANT OPTION
- CREATE VIEW
- SHOW VIEW
Any other privilege (even SUPER) should not allow SHOW CREATE TABLE.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.31.11
committer: Alexander Nozdrin <alik@sun.com>
branch nick: 6.0-rt
timestamp: Fri 2009-03-27 21:36:34 +0300
message:
Additional patch for Bug#38347 (ALTER ROUTINE privilege
allows SHOW CREATE TABLE).
The problem was that information_schema.test,
information_schema_parameters.test and information_schema_routines.test
failed with the first patch. That happened due to limitation in check_access():
it allows only SELECT_ACL privilege for INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables.
The patch is to request only SELECT_ACL privilege for INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables.
------------------------------------------------------------
2630.39.1, 2630.28.29, 2630.34.3, 2630.34.2, 2630.34.1, 2630.29.29,
2630.29.28, 2630.31.1, 2630.28.13, 2630.28.10, 2617.23.14 and
some other minor revisions.
This patch implements:
WL#4264 "Backup: Stabilize Service Interface" -- all the
server prerequisites except si_objects.{h,cc} themselves (they can
be just copied over, when needed).
WL#4435: Support OUT-parameters in prepared statements.
(and all issues in the initial patches for these two
tasks, that were discovered in pushbuild and during testing).
Bug#39519: mysql_stmt_close() should flush all data
associated with the statement.
After execution of a prepared statement, send OUT parameters of the invoked
stored procedure, if any, to the client.
When using the binary protocol, send the parameters in an additional result
set over the wire. When using the text protocol, assign out parameters to
the user variables from the CALL(@var1, @var2, ...) specification.
The following refactoring has been made:
- Protocol::send_fields() was renamed to Protocol::send_result_set_metadata();
- A new Protocol::send_result_set_row() was introduced to incapsulate
common functionality for sending row data.
- Signature of Protocol::prepare_for_send() was changed: this operation
does not need a list of items, the number of items is fully sufficient.
The following backward incompatible changes have been made:
- CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS is now enabled by default in the client;
- CLIENT_PS_MULTI_RESUTLS is now enabled by default in the client.
push_warning(MYSQL_ERROR::WARN_LEVEL_ERROR)).
The Signal/Resignal patch changes the push_warning() API: now
it silently downgrades WARN_LEVEL_ERROR to WARN_LEVEL_WARN.
This patch should be rolled back when Bug#47233 is fixed.
During insert, we are not reading the rows in a referring table but
instead using the last read row that happens to be in table->record[0].
Now INSERT into such view is denied.