MDEV-32188 make TIMESTAMP use whole 32-bit unsigned range
- Added --update-history option to mariadb-dump to change 2038
row_end timestamp to 2106.
- Updated ALTER TABLE ... to convert old row_end timestamps to
2106 timestamp for tables created before MariaDB 11.4.0.
- Fixed bug in CHECK TABLE where we wrongly suggested to USE REPAIR
TABLE when ALTER TABLE...FORCE is needed.
- mariadb-check printed table names that where used with REPAIR TABLE but
did not print table names used with ALTER TABLE or with name repair.
Fixed by always printing a table that is fixed if --silent is not
used.
- Added TABLE::vers_fix_old_timestamp() that will change max-timestamp
for versioned tables when replication from a pre-11.4.0 server.
A few test cases changed. This is caused by:
- CHECK TABLE now prints 'Please do ALTER TABLE... instead of
'Please do REPAIR TABLE' when there is a problem with the information
in the .frm file (for example a very old frm file).
- mariadb-check now prints repaired table names.
- mariadb-check also now prints nicer error message in case ALTER TABLE
is needed to repair a table.
MDEV-32188 make TIMESTAMP use whole 32-bit unsigned range
- Changed usage of timeval to my_timeval as the timeval parts on windows
are 32-bit long, which causes some compiler issues on windows.
Fixed that no tables from 'mysql' schema are included in userstat.
A beneif of this is that the server is not reading statistics tables
if mysql.proc or other tables in mysql is accessed.
This patch also fixes:
MDEV-33050 Build-in schemas like oracle_schema are accent insensitive
MDEV-33084 LASTVAL(t1) and LASTVAL(T1) do not work well with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33085 Tables T1 and t1 do not work well with ENGINE=CSV and lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33086 SHOW OPEN TABLES IN DB1 -- is case insensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33088 Cannot create triggers in the database `MYSQL`
MDEV-33103 LOCK TABLE t1 AS t2 -- alias is not case sensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33109 DROP DATABASE MYSQL -- does not drop SP with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33110 HANDLER commands are case insensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33119 User is case insensitive in INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS
MDEV-33120 System log table names are case insensitive with lower-cast-table-names=0
- Removing the virtual function strnncoll() from MY_COLLATION_HANDLER
- Adding a wrapper function CHARSET_INFO::streq(), to compare
two strings for equality. For now it calls strnncoll() internally.
In the future it will turn into a virtual function.
- Adding new accent sensitive case insensitive collations:
- utf8mb4_general1400_as_ci
- utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci
They implement accent sensitive case insensitive comparison.
The weight of a character is equal to the code point of its
upper case variant. These collations use Unicode-14.0.0 casefolding data.
The result of
my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci.strcoll()
is very close to the former
my_charset_utf8mb3_general_ci.strcasecmp()
There is only a difference in a couple dozen rare characters, because:
- the switch from "tolower" to "toupper" comparison, to make
utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci closer to utf8mb3_general_ci
- the switch from Unicode-3.0.0 to Unicode-14.0.0
This difference should be tolarable. See the list of affected
characters in the MDEV description.
Note, utf8mb4_general1400_as_ci correctly handles non-BMP characters!
Unlike utf8mb4_general_ci, it does not treat all BMP characters
as equal.
- Adding classes representing names of the file based database objects:
Lex_ident_db
Lex_ident_table
Lex_ident_trigger
Their comparison collation depends on the underlying
file system case sensitivity and on --lower-case-table-names
and can be either my_charset_bin or my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci.
- Adding classes representing names of other database objects,
whose names have case insensitive comparison style,
using my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci:
Lex_ident_column
Lex_ident_sys_var
Lex_ident_user_var
Lex_ident_sp_var
Lex_ident_ps
Lex_ident_i_s_table
Lex_ident_window
Lex_ident_func
Lex_ident_partition
Lex_ident_with_element
Lex_ident_rpl_filter
Lex_ident_master_info
Lex_ident_host
Lex_ident_locale
Lex_ident_plugin
Lex_ident_engine
Lex_ident_server
Lex_ident_savepoint
Lex_ident_charset
engine_option_value::Name
- All the mentioned Lex_ident_xxx classes implement a method streq():
if (ident1.streq(ident2))
do_equal();
This method works as a wrapper for CHARSET_INFO::streq().
- Changing a lot of "LEX_CSTRING name" to "Lex_ident_xxx name"
in class members and in function/method parameters.
- Replacing all calls like
system_charset_info->coll->strcasecmp(ident1, ident2)
to
ident1.streq(ident2)
- Taking advantage of the c++11 user defined literal operator
for LEX_CSTRING (see m_strings.h) and Lex_ident_xxx (see lex_ident.h)
data types. Use example:
const Lex_ident_column primary_key_name= "PRIMARY"_Lex_ident_column;
is now a shorter version of:
const Lex_ident_column primary_key_name=
Lex_ident_column({STRING_WITH_LEN("PRIMARY")});
Ideally our methods and functions should do one thing, do that well,
and do only that. add_table_to_list does far more than adding a
table to a list, so this commit factors the TABLE_LIST creation out
to a new TABLE_LIST constructor. It then uses placement new()
to create it in the correct memory area (result of thd->calloc).
Benefits of this approach:
1. add_table_to_list now returns as early as possible on an error
2. fewer side-effects incurred on creating the TABLE_LIST object
3. TABLE_LIST won't be calloc'd if copy_to_db fails
4. local declarations moved closer to their respective first uses
5. improved code readability and logical flow
Also factored a couple of other functions to keep the happy path
more to the left, which makes them easier to follow at a glance.
According to the standard, the autoincrement column (i.e. *identity
column*) should be advanced each insert implicitly made by
UPDATE/DELETE ... FOR PORTION.
This is very unconvenient use in several notable cases. Concider a
WITHOUT OVERLAPS key with an autoinc column:
id int auto_increment, unique(id, p without overlaps)
An update or delete with FOR PORTION creates a sense that id will remain
unchanged in such case.
The standard's IDENTITY reminds MariaDB's AUTO_INCREMENT, however
the generation rules differ in many ways. For example, there's also a
notion autoincrement index, which is bound to the autoincrement field.
We will define our own generation rule for the PORTION OF operations
involving AUTO_INCREMENT:
* If an autoincrement index contains WITHOUT OVERLAPS specification, then
a new value should not be generated, otherwise it should.
Apart from WITHOUT OVERLAPS there is also another notable case, referred
by the reporter - a unique key that has an autoincrement column and a field
from the period specification:
id int auto_increment, unique(id, s), period for p(s, e)
for this case, no exception is made, and the autoincrementing rules will be
proceeded accordung to the standard (i.e. the value will be advanced on
implicit inserts).
Most things where wrong in the test suite.
The one thing that was a bug was that table_map_id was in some places
defined as ulong and in other places as ulonglong. On Linux 64 bit this
is not a problem as ulong == ulonglong, but on windows this caused failures.
Fixed by ensuring that all instances of table_map_id are ulonglong.