Apply the correct pattern for debug instrumentation:
SET @save_dbug=@@debug_dbug;
SET debug_dbug='+d,...';
...
SET debug_dbug=@save_dbug;
Numerous tests use statements of the form
SET debug_dbug='-d,...';
which will inadvertently enable all DBUG tracing output,
causing unnecessary waste of resources.
The test main.index_merge_innodb is taking very much time,
especially on later versions (10.2 and 10.3).
Some of this could be attributed to the use of INSERT...SELECT,
which is time-consumingly creating explicit record locks in InnoDB
for the locking read in the SELECT part.
In 10.3 and later, some slowness can be attributed to MDEV-12288,
which makes the InnoDB purge thread spend time to reset transaction
identifiers in the inserted records. If we prevent purge from
running before all tables are dropped, the test seems to be
10% faster on an unoptimized debug build on 10.5. (A proper fix
would be to implement MDEV-515 and stop writing row-level undo log
records for inserts into an empty table or partition.)
At the same time, it should not hurt to make main.index_merge_myisam
to use the sequence engine. Not only could it be a little faster,
but the test would be slightly more readable.
Eliminate one InnoDB table with 128*16384 rows, and use
the sequence engine instead. Also, run everything in a single
transaction, to prevent purge from running concurrently
unnecessarily. (Starting with MariaDB Server 10.3, purge would
reset the DB_TRX_ID after INSERT.)
Also fixes:
MDEV-20560 Assertion `precision > 0' failed in decimal_bin_size upon SELECT with MOD short unsigned decimal
Changing the way how Item_func_mod calculates its max_length.
It now uses decimal_precision(), decimal_scale() and unsigned_flag
of its arguments, like all other Item_num_op descendants do.
In the function test_if_cheaper_ordering we make a decision if using an index is better than
using filesort for ordering. If we chose to do range access then in test_quick_select we
should make sure that cost for table scan is set to DBL_MAX so that it is not picked.
selectivity values fails
After having set the assertion that checks validity of selectivity values
returned by the function table_cond_selectivity() a test case from
order_by.tesst failed. The failure occurred because range optimizer could
return as an estimate of the cardinality of the ranges built for an index
a number exceeding the total number of records in the table.
The second bug is more subtle. It may happen when there are several
indexes with same prefix defined on the first joined table t accessed by
a constant ref access. In this case the range optimizer estimates the
number of accessed records of t for each usable index and these
estimates can be different. Only the first of these estimates is taken
into account when the selectivity of the ref access is calculated.
However the optimizer later can choose a different index that provides
a different estimate. The function table_condition_selectivity() could use
this estimate to discount the selectivity of the ref access. This could
lead to an selectivity value returned by this function that was greater
that 1.
This patch corrects the fix of the patch for mdev-19421 that resolved
the problem of parsing some embedded join expressions such as
t1 join t2 left join t3 on t2.a=t3.a on t1.a=t2.a.
Yet the patch contained a bug that prevented proper context analysis
of the queries where such expressions were used together with comma
separated table references in from clauses.
There were two problems:
(1) If user wanted same time zone information on all nodes in the Galera
cluster all updates were not replicated as time zone information was
stored on MyISAM tables. This is fixed on Galera by altering time zone
tables to InnoDB while they are modified.
(2) If user wanted different time zone information to nodes in the Galera
cluster TRUNCATE TABLE for time zone tables was replicated by Galera
destroying time zone information from other nodes. This is fixed
on Galera by introducing new option for mysql_tzinfo_to_sql_symlink
tool --skip-write-binlog to disable Galera replication while
time zone tables are modified.
Changes to be committed:
modified: mysql-test/r/mysql_tzinfo_to_sql_symlink.result
modified: mysql-test/suite/wsrep/r/mysql_tzinfo_to_sql_symlink.result
new file: mysql-test/suite/wsrep/r/mysql_tzinfo_to_sql_symlink_skip.result
new file: mysql-test/suite/wsrep/t/mysql_tzinfo_to_sql_symlink_skip.test
modified: sql/tztime.cc
When discounting selectivity of ref access, don't discount the
selectivity we've already discounted for range access.
The 10.1 version of the fix. Will need to adjust condition filtering
test results in 10.4
check_valid_path() uses my_strcspn() that cannot handle invalid characters
properly. This is fixed by a big refactoring in 10.2 (MDEV-6353).
For 5.5, let's simply swap tests, because check_string_char_length()
rejects invalid characters just fine.
Description:- During server startup, the server exits if
the 'mysql.plugin' system table has any rows with empty
value for the field 'name' (plugin name).
The parser returned a syntax error message for the queries with join
expressions like this t1 JOIN t2 [LEFT | RIGHT] JOIN t3 ON ... ON ... when
the second operand of the outer JOIN operation with ON clause was another
join expression with ON clause. In this expression the JOIN operator is
right-associative, i.e. expression has to be parsed as the expression
t1 JOIN (t2 [LEFT | RIGHT] JOIN t3 ON ... ) ON ...
Such join expressions are hard to parse because the outer JOIN is
left-associative if there is no ON clause for the first outer JOIN operator.
The patch implements the solution when the JOIN operator is always parsed
as right-associative and builds first the right-associative tree. If it
happens that there is no corresponding ON clause for this operator the
tree is converted to left-associative.
The idea of the solution was taken from the patch by Martin Hansson
"WL#8083: Fixed the join_table rule" from MySQL-8.0 code line.
As the grammar rules related to join expressions in MySQL-8.0 and
MariaDB-5.5+ are quite different MariaDB solution could not borrow
any code from the MySQL-8.0 solution.
The problem was that sp_head::MULTI_RESULTS was not set correctly for ANALYZE statement
with SELECT ... INTO variable.
This is a follow up fix for MDEV-7023
and WHERE filter afterwards
This patch complements the patch fixing the bug MDEV-6892. The latter
properly handled queries that used mergeable views returning constant
columns as inner tables of outer joins and whose where clause contained
predicates referring to these columns if the predicates of happened not
to be equality predicates. Otherwise the server still could return wrong
result sets for such queries. Besides the fix for MDEV-6892 prevented
some possible conversions of outer joins to inner joins for such queries.
This patch corrected the function check_simple_equality() to handle
properly conjunctive equalities of the where clause that refer to the
constant columns of mergeable views used as inner tables of an outer join.
The patch also changed the code of Item_direct_view_ref::not_null_tables().
This change allowed to take into account predicates containing references
to constant columns of mergeable views when converting outer joins into
inner joins.
in where clause
The classes Item_func_isnottrue and Item_func_isnotfalse inherited the
implementation of the eval_not_null_tables method from the Item_func
class. As a result the not_null_tables_cache was set incorrectly for
the objects of these classes. It led to improper conversion of outer
joins to inner joins when the where clause of the processed query
contained IS NOT TRUE or IS NOT FALSE predicates. The coverted query
in many cases produced a wrong result set.
Handling of top level conjuncts in WHERE whose used_tables() contained
RAND_TABLE_BIT in the function make_join_select() was incorrect.
As a result if such a conjunct referred to fields non of which belonged
to the last joined table it was pushed twice. (This could be seen
for a test case from subselect.test whose output was changed after this
patch had been applied. In 10.1 when running EXPLAIN FORMAT=JSON for
the query from this test case we clearly see that one of the conjuncts
is pushed twice.) This fact by itself was not good. Besides, if such a
conjunct was pushed to a table that was the result of materialization
of a semi-join the query could return a wrong result set. In particular
we could watch it for queries with semi-join subqueries whose left parts
used stored functions without "deterministic' specifier.
as well as
MDEV-19500 Update with join stopped worked if there is a call to a procedure in a trigger
MDEV-19521 Update Table Fails with Trigger and Stored Function
MDEV-19497 Replication stops because table not found
MDEV-19527 UPDATE + JOIN + TRIGGERS = table doesn't exists error
Reimplement the fix for (5d510fdbf0)
MDEV-18507 can't update temporary table when joined with table with triggers on read-only
instead of calling open_tables() twice, put multi-update
prepare code inside open_tables() loop.
Add a test for a MDL backoff-and-retry loop inside open_tables()
across multi-update prepare code.
This patch complements the patch that fixes bug MDEV-18479.
This patch takes care of possible overflow when calculating the
estimated number of rows in a materialized derived table / view.
This bug could happen when queries with nested outer joins were
executed employing join buffers. At such an execution if the method
JOIN_CACHE::join_records() is called when a join buffer has become
full no 'first_unmatched' field should be cleaned up in the JOIN_TAB
structure to which the join cache with this buffer is attached.