Disable LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE suport by default and
auto-enable it for the duration of one query, if the query
string starts with the word "load". In all other cases the application
should enable LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE support explicitly.
The problem was originally stated in
http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=82212
The size of an base64-encoded Rows_log_event exceeds its
vanilla byte representation in 4/3 times.
When a binlogged event size is about 1GB mysqlbinlog generates
a BINLOG query that can't be send out due to its size.
It is fixed with fragmenting the BINLOG argument C-string into
(approximate) halves when the base64 encoded event is over 1GB size.
The mysqlbinlog in such case puts out
SET @binlog_fragment_0='base64-encoded-fragment_0';
SET @binlog_fragment_1='base64-encoded-fragment_1';
BINLOG @binlog_fragment_0, @binlog_fragment_1;
to represent a big BINLOG.
For prompt memory release BINLOG handler is made to reset the BINLOG argument
user variables in the middle of processing, as if @binlog_fragment_{0,1} = NULL
is assigned.
Notice the 2 fragments are enough, though the client and server still may
need to tweak their @@max_allowed_packet to satisfy to the fragment
size (which they would have to do anyway with greater number of
fragments, should that be desired).
On the lower level the following changes are made:
Log_event::print_base64()
remains to call encoder and store the encoded data into a cache but
now *without* doing any formatting. The latter is left for time
when the cache is copied to an output file (e.g mysqlbinlog output).
No formatting behavior is also reflected by the change in the meaning
of the last argument which specifies whether to cache the encoded data.
Rows_log_event::print_helper()
is made to invoke a specialized fragmented cache-to-file copying function
which is
copy_cache_to_file_wrapped()
that takes care of fragmenting also optionally wraps encoded
strings (fragments) into SQL stanzas.
my_b_copy_to_file()
is refactored to into my_b_copy_all_to_file(). The former function
is generalized
to accepts more a limit argument to constraint the copying and does
not reinitialize anymore the cache into reading mode.
The limit does not do any effect on the fully read cache.
Also, apply the MDEV-17957 changes to encrypted page checksums,
and remove error message output from the checksum function,
because these messages would be useless noise when mariabackup
is retrying reads of corrupted-looking pages, and not that
useful during normal server operation either.
The error messages in fil_space_verify_crypt_checksum()
should be refactored separately.
Current implementation is conflicting. If UNICODE is defined, FormatMessage() will be FormatMessageW(), and variable win_errormsg with type char can not be passed to it, which should be changed to TCHAR instead. Since we don't use UNICODE here, we can use FormatMessageA() directly to avoid conversion error.
```
my_global.h(1092): error C2664: 'DWORD FormatMessageW(D
WORD,LPCVOID,DWORD,DWORD,LPWSTR,DWORD,va_list *)' : cannot convert argument 5 from 'char [2048]' to 'LPWSTR'
```
- Backported the MYSQL_SYSVAR_SIZE_T to 10.0
- The parameter innodb_ft_result_cache_limit was only 32 bits wide
also on 64-bit systems. Make it size_t, so that it will be 64 bits
on 64-bit systems.
- Added a test case that show how innodb_ft_result_cache_limit variables
behaves in 32bit and 64 bit system.
pthread_detach_this_thread() was intended to be defined to something
meaningful only on some ancient unixes, which don't have
pthread_attr_setdetachstate() defined. Otherwise, on normal unixes,
threads are created detached in the first place.
This was broken in 0f01bf2676 so that
we started calling pthread_detach() for already detached threads.
Intention was to detach aria checkpoint thread.
However in 87007dc2f7 aria service threads
were made joinable with appropriate handling, which makes breaking
revision unneccessary.
Revert remnants of 0f01bf2676, so that
pthread_detach_this_thread() is meaningful only on some ancient unixes
again.
We do not accept:
1. We did not have this problem (fixed earlier and better)
d982e717ab Bug#27510150: MYSQLDUMP FAILS FOR SPECIFIC --WHERE CLAUSES
2. We do not have such options (an DBUG_ASSERT put just in case)
bbc2e37fe4 Bug#27759871: BACKRONYM ISSUE IS STILL IN MYSQL 5.7
3. Serg fixed it in other way in this release:
e48d775c6f Bug#27980823: HEAP OVERFLOW VULNERABILITIES IN MYSQL CLIENT LIBRARY
After the MDEV-13118 fix there's no code in the server that
wants caseup/casedn to change the argument in place for simple
charsets. Let's remove this logic and always return the result in a
new string for all charsets, both simple and complex.
1. Removing the optimization that *some* character sets used in casedn()
and caseup(), which allowed (and required) to change the case in-place,
overwriting the string passed as the "src" argument.
Now all CHARSET_INFO's work in the same way:
non of them change the source string in-place, all of them now convert
case from the source string to the destination string, leaving
the source string untouched.
2. Adding "const" qualifier to the "char *src" parameter
to caseup() and casedn().
3. Removing duplicate implementations in ctype-mb.c.
Now both caseup() and casedn() implementations for all CJK character sets
use internally the same function my_casefold_mb()
(the former my_casefold_mb_varlen()).
4. Removing the "unused" attribute from parameters of some my_case{up|dn}_xxx()
implementations, as the affected parameters are now *used* in the code.
Previously these parameters were used only in DBUG_ASSERT().
This is to mark that a field is indirectly part of a key, which simplifes
checking if we need to have this field up to date to evaluate a key.
For example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a int, b int as (a) virtual,
c int as (b) virtual, index(c))
would mark a and b with PART_INDIRECT_KEY_FLAG.
c is marked with PART_KEY_FLAG as before.
specific temporary errors
The optimistic parallel slave's worker thread could face a run-time error due to
the algorithm's specifics which allows for conflicts like the reported
"Can't find record in 'table'".
A typical stack is like
{noformat}
#0 handler::print_error (this=0x61c00008f8a0, error=149, errflag=0) at handler.cc:3650
#1 0x0000555555e95361 in write_record (thd=thd@entry=0x62a0000a2208, table=table@entry=0x61f00008ce88, info=info@entry=0x7fffdee356d0) at sql_insert.cc:1944
#2 0x0000555555ea7767 in mysql_insert (thd=thd@entry=0x62a0000a2208, table_list=0x61b00012ada0, fields=..., values_list=..., update_fields=..., update_values=..., duplic=<optimized out>, ignore=<optimized out>) at sql_insert.cc:1039
#3 0x0000555555efda90 in mysql_execute_command (thd=thd@entry=0x62a0000a2208) at sql_parse.cc:3927
#4 0x0000555555f0cc50 in mysql_parse (thd=0x62a0000a2208, rawbuf=<optimized out>, length=<optimized out>, parser_state=<optimized out>) at sql_parse.cc:7449
#5 0x00005555566d4444 in Query_log_event::do_apply_event (this=0x61200005b9c8, rgi=<optimized out>, query_arg=<optimized out>, q_len_arg=<optimized out>) at log_event.cc:4508
#6 0x00005555566d639e in Query_log_event::do_apply_event (this=<optimized out>, rgi=<optimized out>) at log_event.cc:4185
#7 0x0000555555d738cf in Log_event::apply_event (rgi=0x61d0001ea080, this=0x61200005b9c8) at log_event.h:1343
#8 apply_event_and_update_pos_apply (ev=ev@entry=0x61200005b9c8, thd=thd@entry=0x62a0000a2208, rgi=rgi@entry=0x61d0001ea080, reason=<optimized out>) at slave.cc:3479
#9 0x0000555555d8596b in apply_event_and_update_pos_for_parallel (ev=ev@entry=0x61200005b9c8, thd=thd@entry=0x62a0000a2208, rgi=rgi@entry=0x61d0001ea080) at slave.cc:3623
#10 0x00005555562aca83 in rpt_handle_event (qev=qev@entry=0x6190000fa088, rpt=rpt@entry=0x62200002bd68) at rpl_parallel.cc:50
#11 0x00005555562bd04e in handle_rpl_parallel_thread (arg=arg@entry=0x62200002bd68) at rpl_parallel.cc:1258
{noformat}
Here {{handler::print_error}} computes whether to error log the
current error when --log-warnings > 1. The decision flag is consulted
bu {{my_message_sql()}} which can be eventually called.
In the bug case the decision is to log.
However in the optimistic mode slave applier case any conflict is
attempted to resolve with rollback and retry to success. Hence the
logging is at least extraneous.
The case is fixed with adding a new flag {{ME_LOG_AS_WARN}} which
{{handler::print_error}} may propagate further on through {{my_error}}
when the error comes from an optimistically running slave worker thread.
The new flag effectively requests the warning level for the errlog record,
while the thread's DA records the actual error (which is regarded as temporary one
by the parallel slave error handler).
Description:- Client applications establishes connection to
server, which does not support SSL, via TCP even when SSL is
enforced via MYSQL_OPT_SSL_MODE or MYSQL_OPT_SSL_ENFORCE or
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT.
Analysis:- There exist no error handling for catching client
applications which enforces SSL connection to connect to a
server which does not support SSL.
Fix:- Error handling is done to catch above mentioned
scenarios.
This previously unreported warning comes from casting size_t to ulong
in sql_hset.h in Hash_Set::at().
Change my_hash_element to accept size_t index parameter.
Modern compilers (such as GCC 8) emit warnings that the
'register' keyword is deprecated and not valid C++17.
Let us remove most use of the 'register' keyword.
Code in 'extra/' is not touched.