'LOAD DATA CONCURRENT [LOCAL] INFILE ...' statment only is binlogged as
'LOAD DATA [LOCAL] INFILE ...' in SBR and MBR. As a result, if replication is on,
queries on slaves will be blocked by the replication SQL thread.
This patch write code to write 'CONCURRENT' into the log event if 'CONCURRENT' option
is in the original statement in SBR and MBR.
timestamp primary key
Since TIMESTAMP values are adjusted by the current time zone
settings in both numeric and string contexts, using any
expressions involving TIMESTAMP values as a
(sub)partitioning function leads to undeterministic behavior of
partitioned tables. The effect may vary depending on a storage
engine, it can be either incorrect data being retrieved or
stored, or an assertion failure. The root cause of this is the
fact that the calculated partition ID may differ from a
previously calculated ID for the same data due to timezone
adjustments of the partitioning expression value.
Fixed by disabling any expressions involving TIMESTAMP values
to be used in partitioning functions with the follwing two
exceptions:
1. Creating or altering into a partitioned table that violates
the above rule is not allowed, but opening existing such tables
results in a warning rather than an error so that such tables
could be fixed.
2. UNIX_TIMESTAMP() is the only way to get a
timezone-independent value from a TIMESTAMP column, because it
returns the internal representation (a time_t value) of a
TIMESTAMP argument verbatim. So UNIX_TIMESTAMP(timestamp_column)
is allowed and should be used to fix existing tables if one
wants to use TIMESTAMP columns with partitioning.
This fix changes the character set used within the
IBMDB2I handler to hash table names to information
about open tables. Previously, tables with names
that differed only in letter case would hash to the
same data structure. This caused incorrect behavior
or errors when two such tables were in use simultaneously.
SPATIAL and FULLTEXT indexes don't support algorithm
selection.
Disabled by creating a special grammar rule for these
in the parser.
Added some encasulation of duplicate parser code.
A few problems were found in the fix for bug 43668:
1) Comparison of the YEAR column with NULL always returned TRUE;
2) Comparison of the YEAR column with constants always returned
unpredictable result;
3) Unnecessary conversion warnings when comparing a non-integer
constant with a NULL value in the YEAR column;
The problems described above have been resolved with an
exception: zero (i.e. invalid) YEAR column value comparison
with 00 or 2000 still fail (it is not a regression and it was
not a regression), so MIN/MAX on YEAR column containing zero
value still fail.
Arg_comparator uses Item_cache objects to store constants being compared when
they're need a type conversion. Because this cache wasn't initialized properly
Arg_comparator might produce wrong comparison result.
The Arg_comparator::cache_converted_constant function now initializes cache
prior to usage.
There are three issues that caused rpl_killed_ddl fails sporadically
in pb2:
1) thd->clear_error() was not called before create Query event
if operation is executed successfully.
2) DATABASE d2 might do exist because the statement to CREATE or
ALTER it was killed
3) because of bug 43353, kill the query that do DROP FUNCTION or
DROP PROCEDURE can result in SP not found
This patch fixed all above issues by:
1) Called thd->clear_error() if the operation succeeded.
2) Add IF EXISTS to the DROP DATABASE d2 statement
3) Temporarily disabled testing DROP FUNCTION/PROCEDURE IF EXISTS.
Part 2 :
There was a special optimization on the ref access method for
ORDER BY ... DESC that was set without actually looking on the type of the
selected index for ORDER BY.
Fixed the SELECT ... ORDER BY .. DESC (it uses a different code path compared
to the ASC that has been fixed with the previous fix).
{PROCEDURE|FUNCTION} FROM ...'
The master would hit an assertion when binary log was
active. This was due to the fact that the thread's diagnostics
area was being cleared before writing to the binlog,
independently of mysql_routine_grant returning an error or
not. When mysql_routine_grant was to return an error, the return
value and the diagnostics area contents would
mismatch. Consequently, neither my_ok would be called nor an
error would be signaled in the diagnostics area, eventually
triggering the assertion in net_end_statement.
We fix this by not clearing the diagnostics area at binlogging
time.
field='const1' AND field='const2' in some cases
Building multiple equality predicates containing
a constant which is compared as a datetime (with a field)
we should take this fact into account and compare the
constant with another possible constatns as datetimes
as well.
E.g. for the
SELECT ... WHERE a='2001-01-01' AND a='2001-01-01 00:00:00'
we should compare '2001-01-01' with '2001-01-01 00:00:00' as
datetimes but not as strings.
The problem was that the multiple evaluations of a ENCODE or
DECODE function within a single statement caused the random
generator to be reinitialized at each evaluation, even though
the parameters were constants.
The solution is to initialize the random generator only once
if the password (seed) parameter is constant.
This patch borrows code and ideas from Georgi Kodinov's patch.
This patch fixes three bugs as follows. First, aborting the server while purging
binary logs might generate orphan files due to how the purge operation was
implemented:
(purge routine - sql/log.cc - MYSQL_BIN_LOG::purge_logs)
1 - register the files to be removed in a temporary buffer.
2 - update the log-bin.index.
3 - flush the log-bin.index.
4 - erase the files whose names where register in the temporary buffer
in step 1.
Thus a failure while executing step 4 would generate an orphan file. Second,
a similar issue might happen while creating a new binary as follows:
(create routine - sql/log.cc - MYSQL_BIN_LOG::open)
1 - open the new log-bin.
2 - update the log-bin.index.
Thus a failure while executing step 1 would generate an orphan file.
To fix these issues, we record the files to be purged or created before really
removing or adding them. So if a failure happens such records can be used to
automatically remove dangling files. The new steps might be outlined as follows:
(purge routine - sql/log.cc - MYSQL_BIN_LOG::purge_logs)
1 - register the files to be removed in the log-bin.~rec~ placed in
the data directory.
2 - update the log-bin.index.
3 - flush the log-bin.index.
4 - delete the log-bin.~rec~.
(create routine - sql/log.cc - MYSQL_BIN_LOG::open)
1 - register the file to be created in the log-bin.~rec~
placed in the data directory.
2 - open the new log-bin.
3 - update the log-bin.index.
4 - delete the log-bin.~rec~.
(recovery routine - sql/log.cc - MYSQL_BIN_LOG::open_index_file)
1 - open the log-bin.index.
2 - open the log-bin.~rec~.
3 - for each file in log-bin.~rec~.
3.1 Check if the file is in the log-bin.index and if so ignore it.
3.2 Otherwise, delete it.
The third issue can be described as follows. The purge operation was allowing
to remove a file in use thus leading to the loss of data and possible
inconsistencies between the master and slave. Roughly, the routine was only
taking into account the dump threads and so if a slave was not connect the
file might be delete even though it was in use.
"mysql_upgrade (ver 5.1) add 3 fields to mysql.proc table but does
not set values".
mysql_upgrade (ver 5.1) adds 3 fields (character_set_client,
collation_connection and db_collation) to the mysql.proc table, but
does not set any values. When we run stored procedures, which were
created with mysql 5.0, a warning is logged into the error log.
The solution to this is for mysql_upgrade to set default best guess
values for these fields. A warning is also written during upgrade, to
make the user aware that default values are set.
When checking for an error after removing the special view error handler the code
was not taking into account that open_tables() may fail because of the current
statement being killed.
Added a check for thd->killed.
Added a client program to test it.
Problem: Item_char_typecast reported wrong max_length when
casting to BINARY, which lead, in particular, in wrong
"ORDER BY BINARY(char_column)" results.
Fix: making Item_char_typecast report correct max_length.
@ mysql-test/r/ctype_utf16.result
Fixing old incorrect test result.
@ mysql-test/r/ctype_utf32.result
Fixing old incorrect test result.
@ mysql-test/r/ctype_utf8.result
Adding new test
@ mysql-test/t/ctype_utf8.test
Adding new test
@ sql/item_timefunc.cc
Making Item_char_typecast report correct max_length
when cast is done to BINARY.
Problem: SHOW CREATE FUNCTION and SELECT DTD_IDENTIFIER FROM I_S.ROUTINES
returned wrong values in case of ENUM return data type and UCS2
character set.
Fix: the string to collect returned data type was incorrectly set to
"binary" character set, therefore UCS2 values where returned with
extra '\0' characters.
Setting string character set to creation_ctx->get_client_cs()
in sp_find_routine(), and to system_charset_info in sp_create_routine
fixes the problem.
Adding tests:
- the original test with Latin letters
- an extra test with non-Latin letters
Actually there is two different bugs.
The first one caused crash on queries with WHERE condition over views
containing WHERE condition. A wrong check for prepared statement phase led
to items for view fields being allocated in the execution memory and freed
at the end of execution. Thus the optimized WHERE condition refers to
unallocated memory on the second execution and server crashed.
The second one caused by the Item_cond::compile function not saving changes
it made to the item tree. Thus on the next execution changes weren't
reverted and server crashed on dereferencing of unallocated space.
The new helper function called is_stmt_prepare_or_first_stmt_execute
is added to the Query_arena class.
The find_field_in_view function now uses
is_stmt_prepare_or_first_stmt_execute() to check whether
newly created view items should be freed at the end of the query execution.
The Item_cond::compile function now saves changes it makes to item tree.