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5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Marc Alff
033c6c394d Bug#53696 Performance schema engine violates the PSEA API by calling my_error()
This is a code cleanup.

The implementation of a storage engine (subclasses of handler) is not supposed
to call my_error() directly inside the engine implementation, 
but only return error codes, and report errors later at the demand
of the sql layer only (if needed), using handler::print_error().

This fix removes misplaced calls to my_error(),
and provide an implementation of print_error() instead.

Given that the sql layer implementation of create table, ha_create_table(),
does not use print_error() but returns ER_CANT_CREATE_TABLE directly,
the return code for create table statements using the performance schema
has changed to ER_CANT_CREATE_TABLE.

Adjusted the test suite accordingly.
2010-12-01 13:06:41 +01:00
Davi Arnaut
5f911fa874 Bug#49938: Failing assertion: inode or deadlock in fsp/fsp0fsp.c
Bug#54678: InnoDB, TRUNCATE, ALTER, I_S SELECT, crash or deadlock

- Incompatible change: truncate no longer resorts to a row by
row delete if the storage engine does not support the truncate
method. Consequently, the count of affected rows does not, in
any case, reflect the actual number of rows.

- Incompatible change: it is no longer possible to truncate a
table that participates as a parent in a foreign key constraint,
unless it is a self-referencing constraint (both parent and child
are in the same table). To work around this incompatible change
and still be able to truncate such tables, disable foreign checks
with SET foreign_key_checks=0 before truncate. Alternatively, if
foreign key checks are necessary, please use a DELETE statement
without a WHERE condition.

Problem description:

The problem was that for storage engines that do not support
truncate table via a external drop and recreate, such as InnoDB
which implements truncate via a internal drop and recreate, the
delete_all_rows method could be invoked with a shared metadata
lock, causing problems if the engine needed exclusive access
to some internal metadata. This problem originated with the
fact that there is no truncate specific handler method, which
ended up leading to a abuse of the delete_all_rows method that
is primarily used for delete operations without a condition.

Solution:

The solution is to introduce a truncate handler method that is
invoked when the engine does not support truncation via a table
drop and recreate. This method is invoked under a exclusive
metadata lock, so that there is only a single instance of the
table when the method is invoked.

Also, the method is not invoked and a error is thrown if
the table is a parent in a non-self-referencing foreign key
relationship. This was necessary to avoid inconsistency as
some integrity checks are bypassed. This is inline with the
fact that truncate is primarily a DDL operation that was
designed to quickly remove all data from a table.
2010-10-06 11:34:28 -03:00
Marc Alff
bb9505ae31 Fixed Copyright headers in storage/perfschema
Fixed minor merge issues with #includes
2010-07-15 17:44:45 -06:00
Mats Kindahl
e409d6f69c WL#5030: Split and remove mysql_priv.h
This patch:

- Moves all definitions from the mysql_priv.h file into
  header files for the component where the variable is
  defined
- Creates header files if the component lacks one
- Eliminates all include directives from mysql_priv.h
- Eliminates all circular include cycles
- Rename time.cc to sql_time.cc
- Rename mysql_priv.h to sql_priv.h
2010-03-31 16:05:33 +02:00
Marc Alff
67a48e1a4c WL#2360 Performance schema
Part V: performance schema implementation
2010-01-11 18:47:27 -07:00