Given the OK macro used in innodb does a DBUG_RETURN(1) on expression failure
the innodb implementation has a number of errors in i_s.cc.
We introduce a new macro BREAK_IF that replaces some use of the OK macro.
Also, do some other cleanup detailed below.
When invoking Field::store() on integers, always pass the parameter
is_unsigned=true to avoid an unnecessary conversion to double.
i_s_fts_deleted_generic_fill(), i_s_fts_config_fill():
Use the BREAK_IF macro instead of OK.
i_s_fts_index_cache_fill_one_index(), i_s_fts_index_table_fill_one_index():
Add a parameter for conv_string, and let the caller allocate that buffer.
i_s_fts_index_cache_fill(): Check the return status of
i_s_fts_index_cache_fill_one_index().
i_s_fts_index_table_fill(): Check the return status of
i_s_fts_index_table_fill_one_index().
i_s_fts_index_table_fill_one_fetch(): Always let the caller invoke
i_s_fts_index_table_free_one_fetch().
i_s_innodb_buffer_page_fill(), i_s_innodb_buf_page_lru_fill():
Do release dict_sys->mutex if filling the buffers fails.
i_s_innodb_buf_page_lru_fill(): Also display the value
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_BUFFER_PAGE.PAGE_IO_FIX='IO_PIN'
when a block is in that state. Remove the unnecessary variable 'heap'.
Remove the debug parameter innodb_force_recovery_crash that was
introduced into MySQL 5.6 by me in WL#6494 which allowed InnoDB
to resize the redo log on startup.
Let innodb.log_file_size actually start up the server, but ensure
that the InnoDB storage engine refuses to start up in each of the
scenarios.
crashes server
This bug is the result of merging the Oracle MySQL follow-up fix
BUG#22963169 MYSQL CRASHES ON CREATE FULLTEXT INDEX
without merging the base bug fix:
Bug#79475 Insert a token of 84 4-bytes chars into fts index causes
server crash.
Unlike the above mentioned fixes in MySQL, our fix will not change
the storage format of fulltext indexes in InnoDB or XtraDB
when a character encoding with mbmaxlen=2 or mbmaxlen=3
and the length of a word is between 128 and 84*mbmaxlen bytes.
The Oracle fix would allocate 2 length bytes for these cases.
Compatibility with other MySQL and MariaDB releases is ensured by
persisting the used maximum length in the SYS_COLUMNS table in the
InnoDB data dictionary.
This fix also removes some unnecessary strcmp() calls when checking
for the legacy default collation my_charset_latin1
(my_charset_latin1.name=="latin1_swedish_ci").
fts_create_one_index_table(): Store the actual length in bytes.
This metadata will be written to the SYS_COLUMNS table.
fts_zip_initialize(): Initialize only the first byte of the buffer.
Actually the code should not even care about this first byte, because
the length is set as 0.
FTX_MAX_WORD_LEN: Define as HA_FT_MAXCHARLEN * 4 aka 336 bytes,
not as 254 bytes.
row_merge_create_fts_sort_index(): Set the actual maximum length of the
column in bytes, similar to fts_create_one_index_table().
row_merge_fts_doc_tokenize(): Remove the redundant parameter word_dtype.
Use the actual maximum length of the column. Calculate the extra_size
in the same way as row_merge_buf_encode() does.
Memory was leaked when ALTER TABLE is attempted on a table
that contains corrupted indexes.
The memory leak was reported by AddressSanitizer for the test
innodb.innodb_corrupt_bit. The leak was introduced into
MariaDB Server 10.0.26, 10.1.15, 10.2.1 by the following:
commit c081c978a2
Merge: 1d21b22155a482e76e65
Author: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
Date: Tue Jun 21 14:11:02 2016 +0200
Merge branch '5.5' into bb-10.0
MariaDB Server 10.0.28 and 10.1.19 merged code from Percona XtraDB
that introduced support for compressed columns. Much but not all
of this code was disabled by placing #ifdef HAVE_PERCONA_COMPRESSED_COLUMNS
around it.
Among the unused but not disabled code is code to access
some new system tables related to compressed columns.
The creation of these system tables SYS_ZIP_DICT and SYS_ZIP_DICT_COLS
would cause a crash in --innodb-read-only mode when upgrading
from an earlier version to 10.0.28 or 10.1.19.
Let us remove all the dead code related to compressed columns.
Users who already upgraded to 10.0.28 and 10.1.19 will have the two
above mentioned empty tables in their InnoDB system tablespace.
Subsequent versions of MariaDB Server will completely ignore those tables.
This is not a fix, this is instrumentation to find out is MySQL frm dictionary
and InnoDB data dictionary really out-of-sync when this assertion is fired,
or is there some other reason (bug).
When checking is any of the renamed columns part of the
columns for new indexes we accessed NULL pointer if checked
column used on index was added on same statement. Additionally,
we tried to check too many indexes, added_index_count
is enough here.
commit ef92aaf9ec
Author: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
Date: Wed Jun 22 22:37:28 2016 +0300
MDEV-10083: Orphan ibd file when playing with foreign keys
Analysis: row_drop_table_for_mysql did not allow dropping
referenced table even in case when actual creating of the
referenced table was not successfull if foreign_key_checks=1.
Fix: Allow dropping referenced table even if foreign_key_checks=1
if actual table create returned error.
Analysis: row_drop_table_for_mysql did not allow dropping
referenced table even in case when actual creating of the
referenced table was not successfull if foreign_key_checks=1.
Fix: Allow dropping referenced table even if foreign_key_checks=1
if actual table create returned error.
Use direct persistent index corruption set on InnoDB dictionary
for this test. Do not allow creating new indexes if one of the
existing indexes is already marked as corrupted.
Problem was that in-place online alter table was used on a table
that had mismatch between MySQL frm file and InnoDB data dictionary.
Fixed so that traditional "Copy" method is used if the MySQL frm
and InnoDB data dictionary is not consistent.
In row_search_for_mysql function on XtraDB there was a old logic
where null bytes were inited. This caused server to think that
key value is null and continue on incorrect path.
MDEV-9469: 'Incorrect key file' on ALTER TABLE
InnoDB needs to rebuild table if column name is changed and
added index (or foreign key) is created based on this new
name in same alter table.
Fix the doubly questional fix for MySQL Bug#17250787:
* it detected autoinc index by looking for the first index
that starts from autoinc column. never mind one column
can be part of many indexes.
* it used autoinc_field->field_index to look up into internal
innodb dictionary. But field_index accounts for virtual
columns too, while innodb dictionary ignores them.
Find the index by its name, like elsewhere in ha_innobase.