Assertion happens due to missing initialization of unsigned_flag
for Item_func_set_user_var object. It leads to incorrect
calculation of decimal field size.
The fix is to add initialization of unsigned_flag.
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.
The problem was that server didn't check resulting size of prepared
statement argument which was set using mysql_send_long_data() API.
By calling mysql_send_long_data() several times it was possible
to create overly big string and thus force server to allocate
memory for it. There was no way to limit this allocation.
The solution is to add check for size of result string against
value of max_long_data_size start-up parameter. When intermediate
string exceeds max_long_data_size value an appropriate error message
is emitted.
We can't use existing max_allowed_packet parameter for this purpose
since its value is limited by 1GB and therefore using it as a limit
for data set through mysql_send_long_data() API would have been an
incompatible change. Newly introduced max_long_data_size parameter
gets value from max_allowed_packet parameter unless its value is
specified explicitly. This new parameter is marked as deprecated
and will be eventually replaced by max_allowed_packet parameter.
Value of max_long_data_size parameter can be set only at server
startup.
Bug#55794: ulonglong options of mysqld show wrong values.
Port the few remaining system variables to the correct mechanism --
range-check in check-stage (and throw error or warning at that point
as needed and depending on STRICTness), update in update stage.
Fix some signedness errors when retrieving sysvar values for display.
Some of the server implementations don't support dates later
than 2038 due to the internal time type being 32 bit.
Added checks so that the server will refuse dates that cannot
be handled by either throwing an error when setting date at
runtime or by refusing to start or shutting down the server if
the system date cannot be stored in my_time_t.
Repairing MyISAM table with fulltext indexes and low
myisam_sort_buffer_size may crash the server.
Estimation of number of index entries was done incorrectly,
causing further assertion failure or server crash.
Docs note: min value for myisam_sort_buffer_size has been
changed from 4 to 4096.
Several items said to be deprecated in the 4.1 manual
have never been removed. This worklog adds deprecation
warnings when these items are used, and warns the user
that the items will be removed in MySQL 5.6.
A couple of previously deprecation decision have been
reversed (see single file comments)
When compressed myisam files are opened, they are always memory mapped
sometimes causing memory swapping problems.
When we mmap the myisam compressed tables of size greater than the memory
available, the kswapd0 process utilization is very high consuming 30-40% of
the cpu. This happens only with linux kernels older than 2.6.9
With newer linux kernels, we don't have this problem of high cpu consumption
and this option may not be required.
The option 'myisam_mmap_size' is added to limit the amount of memory used for
memory mapping of myisam files. This option is not dynamic.
The default value on 32 bit system is 4294967295 bytes and on 64 bit system it
is 18446744073709547520 bytes.
Note: Testcase only tests the option variable. The actual bug has be to
tested manually.
Inconsistent behavior of session variable max_allowed_packet
(and net_buffer_length); only assignment to the global variable
has any effect, without this being obvious to the user.
The patch for Bug#22891 is backported to 5.0, making the two
session variables read-only. As this is a backport to GA
software, the error used when trying to assign to the read-
only variable is ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR. The error message is the
same as in 5.1+.
assertion .\filesort.cc, line 797
A query with the "ORDER BY @@some_system_variable" clause,
where @@some_system_variable is NULL, causes assertion
failure in the filesort procedures.
The reason of the failure is in the value of
Item_func_get_system_var::maybe_null: it was unconditionally
set to false even if the value of a variable was NULL.
always rollsback.
The global variable max_binlog_cache_size cannot be set more than 4GB on
32 bit systems, limiting transactions of all storage engines to 4G of changes.
The problem is max_binlog_cache_size is declared as ulong which is 4 bytes
on 32 bit and 8 bytes on 64 bit machines.
Fixed by using ulonglong for max_binlog_cache_size which is 8bytes on 32
and 64 bit machines.The range for max_binlog_cache_size on 32 bit and 64 bit
systems is 4096-18446744073709547520 bytes.
If a sys-var has a base and a block-size>1, and then a
user-supplied value >= minimum ended up below minimum
thanks to block-size alignment, we threw a warning.
This meant for instance that when getting, then setting
the minimum, we'd see a warning. This was needlessly
confusing. (updated patch)
The problem is that creating a event could fail if the value of
the variable server_id didn't fit in the originator column of
the event system table. The cause is two-fold: it was possible
to set server_id to a value outside the documented range (from
0 to 2^32-1) and the originator column of the event table didn't
have enough room for values in this range.
The log tables (general_log and slow_log) also don't have a proper
column type to store the server_id and having a large server_id
value could prevent queries from being logged.
The solution is to ensure that all system tables that store the
server_id value have a proper column type (int unsigned) and that
the variable can't be set to a value that is not within the range.
Started fix in 5.0 as the same issue is here.
Revising queries used given what appears to be the scope of this test to only select the manipulated variables.
Added tests for values that are / are not multiples of 1024 to test rounding / constraints.
This behavior is not currently documented (docs bug has been opened)
In STRICT mode, out-of-bounds values caused an error message
to be queued (rather than just a warning), without any further
error-like processing happening. (The error is queued during
update, at which time it's too late. For it to be processed
properly, it would need to be queued during check-stage.)
The assertion rightfully complains that we're trying to send
an OK while having an error queued.
Changeset breaks a lot of tests out into check-stage. This also
allows us to send more correct warnings/error messages.
Several system variables did not behave like system variables should do.
When trying to SET them or use them in SELECT, they were reported as
"unknown system variable". But they appeared in SHOW VARIABLES.
This has been fixed by removing the "fixed_vars" array of variables
and integrating the variables into the normal system variables chain.
All of these variables do now behave as read-only global-only
variables. Trying to SET them tells they are read-only, trying to
SELECT the session value tells they are global only. Selecting the
global value works. It delivers the same value as SHOW VARIABLES.
set but is ignored".
This patch makes @@session.max_allowed_packed and
@@session.net_buffer_length read-only as suggested in the bug
report. The user will have to use SET GLOBAL (and reconnect)
to alter the session values of these variables.
The error string ER_VARIABLE_IS_READONLY is introduced.
Tests are modified accordingly.
The code to get read the value of a system variable was extracting its value
on PREPARE stage and was substituting the value (as a constant) into the parse tree.
Note that this must be a reversible transformation, i.e. it must be reversed before
each re-execution.
Unfortunately this cannot be reliably done using the current code, because there are
other non-reversible source tree transformations that can interfere with this
reversible transformation.
Fixed by not resolving the value at PREPARE, but at EXECUTE (as the rest of the
functions operate). Added a cache of the value (so that it's constant throughout
the execution of the query). Note that the cache also caches NULL values.
Updated an obsolete related test suite (variables-big) and the code to test the
result type of system variables (as per bug 74).
- Updated slow_query_log_file_basic and general_log_file basis instead of the func version as
the func version run good but the basic versions fail.
- Sent innodb.test to dev@innodb.com.
- variables.test has differences probably due to a bug in mtr or in the SET statement (see bug#39369).
- general_log_file_basic.test and slow_query_log_file_bsaic.test have differences, which might be
produced by the new mtr (see bug#38124).
We have "set" variables, which can accept empty values
(like sql_mode), and which can not (like log_output). The problem
was that the code does not distinguish them and allow empty
values for every set variable.
The fix is to introduce an attribute of a set variable telling
whether it can accept empty values.
Default values of variables were not subject to upper/lower bounds
and step, while setting variables was. Bounds and step are also
applied to defaults now; defaults are corrected quietly, values
given by the user are corrected, and a correction-warning is thrown
as needed. Lastly, very large values could wrap around, starting
from 0 again. They are bounded at the maximum value for the
respective data-type now if no lower maximum is specified in the
variable's definition.
doesn't recognize it
This is a 5.0 version of the patch, it will be null-merged to 5.1
Problem:
'log' and 'log_slow_queries' were "fixed" variables, i.e. they showed up
in SHOW VARIABLES, but could not be used in expressions like
"select @@log". Also, using them in the SET statement produced an
incorrect "unknown system variable" error.
Solution:
Make 'log' and 'log_slow_queries' read-only dynamic variables to make
them available for use in expressions, and produce a correct error
about the variable being read-only when used in the SET statement.