Mixing aggregate functions and non-grouping columns is not allowed in the
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY mode. However in some cases the error wasn't thrown because
of insufficient check.
In order to check more thoroughly the new algorithm employs a list of outer
fields used in a sum function and a SELECT_LEX::full_group_by_flag.
Each non-outer field checked to find out whether it's aggregated or not and
the current select is marked accordingly.
All outer fields that are used under an aggregate function are added to the
Item_sum::outer_fields list and later checked by the Item_sum::check_sum_func
function.
The bool data type was redefined to BOOL (4 bytes on windows).
Removed the #define and fixed some of the warnings that were uncovered
by this.
Note that the fix also disables 2 warnings :
4800 : 'type' : forcing value to bool 'true' or 'false' (performance warning)
4805: 'operation' : unsafe mix of type 'type' and type 'type' in operation
These warnings will be handled in a separate bug, as they are performance related or bogus.
Fixed to int the return type of functions that return more than
2 distinct values.
than max_connections -- which results in user lockout.
The problem was that the variable thread_count that contains
the number of active threads was interpreted as a number of
active connections.
The fix is to introduce a new counter for active connections.
added new function test_if_data_home_dir() which checks that
path does not contain mysql data home directory.
Using of mysql data home directory in
DATA DIRECTORY & INDEX DIRECTORY is disallowed.
added new function test_if_data_home_dir() which checks that
path does not contain mysql data home directory.
Using of 'mysql data home'/'any db name' in
DATA DIRECTORY & INDEX DIRECTORY is disallowed
The check_global_access() function was made available to InnoDB, but
was not defined in the embedded server library. InnoDB, as a plugin,
is not recompiled when the embedded server is built. This caused a
link failure when compiling applications which use the embedded server.
The fix here is to always define check_global_access() externally; in
the embedded server case, it is defined to just return OK.
Also, don't run the test case for this bug in embedded server.
between 5.0 and 5.1.
The problem was that in the patch for Bug#11986 it was decided
to store original query in UTF8 encoding for the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.
This approach however turned out to be quite difficult to implement
properly. The main problem is to preserve the same IS-output after
dump/restore.
So, the fix is to rollback to the previous functionality, but also
to fix it to support multi-character-set-queries properly. The idea
is to generate INFORMATION_SCHEMA-query from the item-tree after
parsing view declaration. The IS-query should:
- be completely in UTF8;
- not contain character set introducers.
For more information, see WL4052.
Fixes the following bugs:
- Bug #33349: possible race condition revolving around data dictionary and repartitioning
Introduce retry/sleep logic as a workaround for a transient bug
where ::open fails for partitioned tables randomly if we are using
one file per table.
- Bug #34053: normal users can enable innodb_monitor logging
In CREATE TABLE and DROP TABLE check whether the table in question is one
of the magic innodb_monitor tables and whether the user has enough rights
to mess with it before doing anything else.
- Bug #22868: 'Thread thrashing' with > 50 concurrent conns under an upd-intensive workloadw
- Bug #29560: InnoDB >= 5.0.30 hangs on adaptive hash rw-lock 'waiting for an X-lock'
This is a combination of changes that forward port the scalability fix applied to 5.0
through r1001.
It reverts changes r149 and r122 (these were 5.1 specific changes made in lieu of
scalability fix of 5.0)
Then it applies r1001 to 5.0 which is the original scalability fix.
Finally it applies r2082 which fixes an issue with the original fix.
- Bug #30930: Add auxiliary function to retrieve THD::thread_id
Add thd_get_thread_id() function. Also make check_global_access() function
visible to InnoDB under INNODB_COMPATIBILITY_HOOKS #define.
when executed in version 5
Zero fill is a field attribute only. So we can't always
propagate constants for zerofill fields : the values and
expression results don't have that flag.
Fixed by converting the const value to a string and
using that in const propagation when the context allows it.
Disable const propagation for fields with ZEROFILL flag in
all the other cases.
pre-locking.
The crash was caused by an implicit assumption in check_table_access() that
table_list parameter is always a part of lex->query_tables.
When iterating over the passed list of tables, check_table_access() used
to stop only when lex->query_tables_last_not_own was reached.
In case of pre-locking, lex->query_tables_last_own is not NULL and points
to some element of lex->query_tables. When the parameter
of check_table_access() was not part of lex->query_tables, loop invariant
could never be violated and a crash would happen when the current table
pointer would point beyond the end of the provided list.
The fix is to change the signature of check_table_access() to also accept
a numeric limit of loop iterations, similarly to check_grant(), and
supply this limit in all places when we want to check access of tables
that are outside lex->query_tables, or just want to check access to one table.
The problem is that some DDL statements (ALTER TABLE, CREATE
TRIGGER, FLUSH TABLES, ...) when under LOCK TABLES need to
momentarily drop the lock, reopen the table and grab the write
lock again (using reopen_tables). When grabbing the lock again,
reopen_tables doesn't pass a flag to mysql_lock_tables in
order to ignore the impending global read lock, which causes a
assertion because LOCK_open is being hold. Also dropping the
lock must not signal to any threads that the table has been
relinquished (related to the locking/flushing protocol).
The solution is to correct the way the table is reopenned
and the locks grabbed. When reopening the table and under
LOCK TABLES, the table version should be set to 0 so other
threads have to wait for the table. When grabbing the lock,
any other flush should be ignored because it's theoretically
a atomic operation. The chosen solution also fixes a potential
discrepancy between binlog and GRL (global read lock) because
table placeholders were being ignored, now a FLUSH TABLES WITH
READ LOCK will properly for table with open placeholders.
It's also important to mention that this patch doesn't fix
a potential deadlock if one uses two GRLs under LOCK TABLES
concurrently.
without PK
Bug#31609 Not all RBR slave errors reported as errors
bug#32468 delete rows event on a table with foreign key constraint fails
The first two bugs comprise idempotency issues.
First, there was no error code reported under conditions of the bug
description although the slave sql thread halted.
Second, executions were different with and without presence of prim key in
the table.
Third, there was no way to instruct the slave whether to ignore an error
and skip to the following event or to halt.
Fourth, there are handler errors which might happen due to idempotent
applying of binlog but those were not listed among the "idempotent" error
list.
All the named issues are addressed.
Wrt to the 3rd, there is the new global system variable, changeble at run
time, which controls the slave sql thread behaviour.
The new variable allows further extensions to mimic the sql_mode
session/global variable.
To address the 4th, the new bug#32468 had to be fixed as it was staying
in the way.