- bug #11655 "Wrong time is returning from nested selects - maximum time exists
- input and output TIME values were not validated properly in several conversion functions
- bug #20927 "sec_to_time treats big unsigned as signed"
- integer overflows were not checked in several functions. As a result, input values like 2^32 or 3600*2^32 were treated as 0
- BIGINT UNSIGNED values were treated as SIGNED in several functions
- in cases where both input string truncation and out-of-range TIME value occur, only 'truncated incorrect time value' warning was produced
-Add support for detecting version and features from mysqld binary
- Autodetect netware
- Disable some features not available below 5.0
- Cleanup executable_setup to look for one executable at a time, only llok for the ones that are needed based on the selected testcases and settings
Set a flag when a SHOW command is parsed, and check it in log_slow_statement(). SHOW commands are not counted as slow queries, even if they use table scans.
invocations of LAST_INSERT_ID.
Reding of LAST_INSERT_ID inside stored function wasn't noted by caller,
and no LAST_INSERT_ID_EVENT was issued for binary log.
The solution is to add THD::last_insert_id_used_bin_log, which is much
like THD::last_insert_id_used, but is reset only for upper-level
statements. This new variable is used to issue LAST_INSERT_ID_EVENT.
- Type casting was not consequent, thus when adding a DATE type with
a WEEK interval the result type was DATETIME and not DATE as is the
norm.
- By changing the order of the date internal enumerations the deviant
type casting is resolved (Item_date_add_interval::fix_length_and_dec()
which determines result type for this operation assumes that addition
of any interval with value <= INTERVAL_DAY to date value will result
in date). There are two independant places to change:
interval_names[] and interval_type.
Non-upper-level INSERTs (the ones in the body of stored procedure,
stored function, or trigger) into a table that have AUTO_INCREMENT
column didn't affected the result of LAST_INSERT_ID() on this level.
The problem was introduced with the fix of bug 6880, which in turn was
introduced with the fix of bug 3117, where current insert_id value was
remembered on the first call to LAST_INSERT_ID() (bug 3117) and was
returned from that function until it was reset before the next
_upper-level_ statement (bug 6880).
The fix for bug#21726 brings back the behaviour of version 4.0, and
implements the following: remember insert_id value at the beginning
of the statement or expression (which at that point equals to
the first insert_id value generated by the previous statement), and
return that remembered value from LAST_INSERT_ID() or @@LAST_INSERT_ID.
Thus, the value returned by LAST_INSERT_ID() is not affected by values
generated by current statement, nor by LAST_INSERT_ID(expr) calls in
this statement.
Version 5.1 does not have this bug (it was fixed by WL 3146).
Fix: "mysql --xml" now print NULL values the same way that "mysqldump --xml" does:
<field name="name" xsi:nil="true" />
to distinguish from empty strings:
<field name="name"></field>
and from string "NULL":
<field name="name">NULL</field>
Problem: for character sets having mbmaxlen==2,
any ALTER TABLE changed TEXT column type to MEDIUMTEXT,
due to wrong "internal length to create length" formula.
Fix: removing rounding code introduced in early 4.1 time,
which is not correct anymore.
Adding a multibyte-aware VARCHAR copying function, to put correct column prefix,
taking in account number of characters (instead just limiting on number of bytes).
For example, for a KEY(col(3)) on a UTF8 column when copying the string 'foo bar foo',
we should put only 3 leftmost characters: 'foo'.
9 characters were incorrectly put before this fix.
On an INSERT into an updatable but non-insertable view an error message was
issued stating the view being not updatable. This can lead to a confusion of a
user.
A new error message is introduced. Is is showed when a user tries to insert
into a non-insertable view.