Dumps are created for the tables in each specified database then for the views in each specified database. This bug occurs when any database's views depend on the mysql database's table data while being restored.
Added command line option --flush-privileges to the mysqldump utility which causes a FLUSH PRIVILIGES statement to be written to the dump after the mysql database.
The column's NOT NULL flag doesn't affect what we should print. Remove the
wrong logic that does check it.
Also, verify that this and the previous two tests print the same data as
other output formats.
The cause of the bug was an incomplete fix for bug 18080.
The problem was that setup_tables() unconditionally reset the
name resolution context to its 'tables' argument, which pointed
to the first table of an SQL statement.
The bug fix limits resetting of the name resolution context in
setup_tables() only in the cases when the context was not set
by earlier parser/optimizer phases.
Only MyISAM tables locked with LOCK TABLES ... WRITE were affected.
A query that is optimized with index_merge doesn't reflect rows
inserted within LOCK TABLES.
MyISAM doesn't flush a state within LOCK TABLES. index_merge
optimization creates a copy of the handler, which thus gets
outdated MyISAM state.
New handler->clone() method is introduced to fix this problem.
For non-MyISAM storage engines it allocates a handler and opens
it with ha_open(). For MyISAM it additionally copies MyISAM state
pointer to cloned handler.
The problem was that if after FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK the user
issued DROP/ALTER PROCEDURE/FUNCTION the operation would fail (as
expected), but after UNLOCK TABLE any attempt to execute the same
operation would lead to the error 1305 "PROCEDURE/FUNCTION does not
exist", and an attempt to execute any stored function will also fail.
This happened because under FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK we couldn't open
and lock mysql.proc table for update, and this fact was erroneously
remembered by setting mysql_proc_table_exists to false, so subsequent
statements believed that mysql.proc doesn't exist, and thus that there
are no functions and procedures in the database.
As a solution, we remove mysql_proc_table_exists flag completely. The
reason is that this optimization didn't work most of the time anyway.
Even if open of mysql.proc failed for some reason when we were trying to
call a function or a procedure, we were setting mysql_proc_table_exists
back to true to force table reopen for the sake of producing the same
error message (the open can fail for number of reasons). The solution
could have been to remember the reason why open failed, but that's a lot
of code for optimization of a rare case. Hence we simply remove this
optimization.
0xFF is internal separator for SET|ENUM names.
If this symbol is present in SET|ENUM names then we replace it with
','(deprecated symbol for SET|ENUM names) during frm creation
and restore to 0xFF during frm opening
wrong results
Mark the containing Item(s) (Item_subselect descendant usually) of
a subselect as containing aggregate functions if it has references
to aggregates functions that are calculated outside its context.
This tels end_send_group() not to make an Item_subselect descendant in
select list a copy and causes the correct value being returned.
- Honor unsigned_flag in the corresponding functions
- Use compare_int_signed_unsigned()/compare_int_unsigned_signed() instead of explicit comparison in GREATEST() and LEAST()
VALUES() was considered a constant. This caused replacing
(or pre-calculating) it using uninitialized values before the actual
execution takes place.
Mark it as a non-constant (still not dependent of tables) to prevent
the pre-calculation.
Corrected test case after removal of fix for bug#16377
type_date.test:
Corrected test case after removal of fix for bug#16377
item_cmpfunc.cc:
Removed changes to the agg_cmp_type() made in the for bug#16377
equal constant under any circumstances.
In fact this substitution can be allowed if the field is
not of a type string or if the field reference serves as
an argument of a comparison predicate.