to find "ar" but if it cannot be found sets AR=false. This
leads to confusing failures during the build rather than at
configure time.
We have our own checks for ar, but as AR was already set
earlier by the libtool tests they were never exectuted.
Therefore, update the tests so that we catch any libtool
failures, and run AC_CHECK_PROG explicitly to ensure that we
see sensible output from configure prior to any potential
failure.
to "my_config.h". Not to pollute the top directory, and to get more control
over what is included. Made the include path for "libedit" pick up its own
"config.h" first.
Don't try determine stack direction at configure time
compiler_flag.m4:
Use AC_TRY_COMPILE and AC_TRY_LINK instead of AC_TRY_RUN where possible
misc.m4, configure.in:
Use fourth argument to AC_TRY_RUN, to be used in cross compilation
Don't try determine stack direction at configure time
rename *.t* to *-t* to be automake-friendly
simplify Makefiles
test_atomic.c:
move to unittest, add GPL comment, fix warnings, convert to tap framework.
configure:
remove custom tests for available types, use AC_CHECK_TYPE instead
x86-gcc.h:
fix gcc -ansi errors while maintaining readability
ignore:
added *-t
Allow for configuration of the maximum number of indexes per table.
Added and used a configure.in macro.
Replaced fixed limits by the configurable limit.
Limited MyISAM indexes to its hard limit.
Fixed a bug in opt_range.cc for many indexes with InnoDB.
Tested for 2, 63, 64, 65, 127, 128, 129, 255, 256, and 257 indexes.
Testing this part of the bugfix requires rebuilding of the server
with different options. This cannot be done with our test suite.
Therefore I added the necessary test files to the bug report.
If you repeat the tests, please note that the ps_* tests fail for
everything but 64 indexes. This is because of differences in the
meta data, namely field lengths for index names etc.
The patch implements the idea suggested by Olaf van der Spek in
thread "Client: many small reads?" (internals@lists.mysql.com).
Now small reads performed by the client library are buffered.
The buffering gives up to 2 times speedup when retrieving
one-column tables.