Decimals with float, double and decimal now works the following way:
- DECIMAL_NOT_SPECIFIED is used when declaring DECIMALS without a firm number
of decimals. It's only used in asserts and my_decimal_int_part.
- FLOATING_POINT_DECIMALS (31) is used to mark that a FLOAT or DOUBLE
was defined without decimals. This is regarded as a floating point value.
- Max decimals allowed for FLOAT and DOUBLE is FLOATING_POINT_DECIMALS-1
- Clients assumes that float and double with decimals >= NOT_FIXED_DEC are
floating point values (no decimals)
- In the .frm decimals=FLOATING_POINT_DECIMALS are used to define
floating point for float and double (31, like before)
To ensure compatibility with old clients we do:
- When storing float and double, we change NOT_FIXED_DEC to
FLOATING_POINT_DECIMALS.
- When creating fields from .frm we change for float and double
FLOATING_POINT_DEC to NOT_FIXED_DEC
- When sending definition for a float/decimal field without decimals
to the client as part of a result set we convert NOT_FIXED_DEC to
FLOATING_POINT_DECIMALS.
- variance() and std() has changed to limit the decimals to
FLOATING_POINT_DECIMALS -1 to not get the double converted floating point.
(This was to preserve compatiblity)
- FLOAT and DOUBLE still have 30 as max number of decimals.
Bugs fixed:
variance() printed more decimals than we support for double values.
New behaviour:
- Strings now have 38 decimals instead of 30 when converted to decimal
- CREATE ... SELECT with a decimal with > 30 decimals will create a column
with a smaller range than before as we are trying to preserve the number of
decimals.
Other changes
- We are now using the obsolete bit FIELDFLAG_LEFT_FULLSCREEN to specify
decimals > 31
- NOT_FIXED_DEC is now declared in one place
- For clients, NOT_FIXED_DEC is always 31 (to ensure compatibility).
On the server NOT_FIXED_DEC is DECIMAL_NOT_SPECIFIED (39)
- AUTO_SEC_PART_DIGITS is taken from DECIMAL_NOT_SPECIFIED
- DOUBLE conversion functions are now using DECIMAL_NOT_SPECIFIED instead of
NOT_FIXED_DEC
- To ensure that mallocs are marked for the correct THD, even if it's
allocated in another thread, I added the thread_id to the THD constructor
- Added st_my_thread_var to thr_lock_info_init() to avoid a call to my_thread_var
- Moved things from THD::THD() to THD::init()
- Moved some things to THD::cleanup()
- Added THD::free_connection() and THD::reset_for_reuse()
- Added THD to CONNECT::create_thd()
- Added THD::thread_dbug_id and st_my_thread_var->dbug_id. These are needed
to ensure that we have a constant thread_id used for debugging with a THD,
even if it changes thread_id (=connection_id)
- Set variables.pseudo_thread_id in constructor. Removed not needed sets.
Creating a CONNECT object on client connect and pass this to the working thread which creates the THD.
Split LOCK_thread_count to different mutexes
Added LOCK_thread_start to syncronize threads
Moved most usage of LOCK_thread_count to dedicated functions
Use next_thread_id() instead of thread_id++
Other things:
- Thread id now starts from 1 instead of 2
- Added cast for thread_id as thread id is now of type my_thread_id
- Made THD->host const (To ensure it's not changed)
- Removed some DBUG_PRINT() about entering/exiting mutex as these was already logged by mutex code
- Fixed that aborted_connects and connection_errors_internal are counted in all cases
- Don't take locks for current_linfo when we set it (not needed as it was 0 before)
This is an addition to original patch. Embedded server does extra calls of
PROFILING::start_new_query() and PROFILING::finish_current_query(), which
cause DBUG_ASSERT(!current) failure.
Removed these extra calls: dispatch_command() does all needed job.
The function Protocol::net_store_data(a, b, CHARSET_A, CHARSET_B) should
be adapted to be working in the embedded server as it's done
with the Protocol::net_store_data(a, b).
That new function renamed as net_store_data_cs, so we can make it
virtual.
This is port of fix for MySQL BUG#17647863.
revno: 5572
revision-id: jon.hauglid@oracle.com-20131030232243-b0pw98oy72uka2sj
committer: Jon Olav Hauglid <jon.hauglid@oracle.com>
timestamp: Thu 2013-10-31 00:22:43 +0100
message:
Bug#17647863: MYSQL DOES NOT COMPILE ON OSX 10.9 GM
Rename test() macro to MY_TEST() to avoid conflict with libc++.
Bug#68338 RFE: make tmpdir a build-time configurable option
Background: Some distributions use tmpfs for mounting /tmp by
default, which has some advantages, but brings also new
issues. Fedora started using tmpfs on /tmp in version 18 for
example. If not configured otherwise in my.cnf, MySQL uses
system's constant P_tmpdir expanded to /tmp on Linux. This can
introduce some problems with limited space in /tmp and also some
data loss in case of replication slave [1].
In case distributions would like to use /var/tmp, which should be
better for MySQL purposes, then we have to patch the source or
change tmpdir option in my.cnf, which is however not updated in
case it has already existed.
Thus, it would be useful to be able to specify default tmpdir
path using a configure option, while using P_tmpdir in case it is
not defined explicitly.
Based on a contribution from Honza Horak
Fixed main.partition_open_files_limit, innodb.innodb_bug12400341 failures.
These testcases use --max-connections=N command line option, which
was declared PARSE_EARLY during the merge. Embedded didn't handle
early options and failed to start due to unknown command line
option.
libmysqld/lib_sql.cc:
Let embedded handle early options.
sql/mysqld.cc:
Moved handling of early options to a separate function.
sql/mysqld.h:
Moved handling of early options to a separate function.
includes:
* remove some remnants of "Bug#14521864: MYSQL 5.1 TO 5.5 BUGS PARTITIONING"
* introduce LOCK_share, now LOCK_ha_data is strictly for engines
* rea_create_table() always creates .par file (even in "frm-only" mode)
* fix a 5.6 bug, temp file leak on dummy ALTER TABLE