- Removed files specific to compiling on OS/2
- Removed files specific to SCO Unix packaging
- Removed "libmysqld/copyright", text is included in documentation
- Removed LaTeX headers for NDB Doxygen documentation
- Removed obsolete NDB files
- Removed "mkisofs" binaries
- Removed the "cvs2cl.pl" script
- Changed a few GPL texts to use "program" instead of "library"
Make the my_compiler.h header, like my_attribute.h, part of
the distribution. This is required due to the dependency of
the former on the latter (which can undefine __attribute__).
Fixed an incomplete historical ALTER TABLE MODIFY trimming the trigger
privilege bit from mysql.tables_priv.Table_priv column.
Removed the duplicate ALTER TABLE MODIFY.
Test suite added.
line exceeds the limit
The number and/or names of our files for the main test suite
(contents of "mysql-test/t/") now exceeds the command line
length limit on AIX.
Solve the problem by using separate "cp" commands for the
various file name extensions.
Several problems addressed:
1. The maximum value for --open_files_limit on non-windows boxes
is now raised to UINT_MAX (the maximum possible without significant
changes in the code). The maximum value on windows is kept to be
2048 due to a known limitation (bug 24509).
2. mysqld_safe now supports --open_files_limit=xx in addition to
--open-files-limit=xx
3. mysqld_safe always passes through --open[_-]files[_-]limit
to the underlying mysqld. It used to pass it through only if it
the user running the script has access to the root directory or
there was an --user argument specified.
4. Fixed a prototype in my_file.c to match its counterpart in
the other #ifdef branch.
MySQL uses two source layouts when building : the bzr
layout and the source package layout.
The previous fix for bug 35250 contained 1 change that is
valid for both modes and a number of changes that are valid
only for the bzr source layout.
The important thing was to fix the source package layout.
And for this the change in configure.in was sufficient.
It's not trivial (and not requested by this bug) to support
VPATH builds from the bzr trees.
This is why the other changes are reverted and the change to
fix the VPATH build for source distributions is left intact.
The problem was that the CSV storage engine does not support NULL
fields, yet in some early 5.1 version the log tables (general_log
and slow_log) were created with null fields. On top of this, when
altering a CSV table column, all fields of the table must be NOT
NULL otherwise the alteration fails.
The solution is to ensure that during upgrade all columns of the
log tables are NOT NULL.
Several items said to be deprecated in the 4.1 manual
have never been removed. This worklog adds deprecation
warnings when these items are used, and warns the user
that the items will be removed in MySQL 5.6.
A couple of previously deprecation decision have been
reversed (see single file comments)
"mysql_upgrade (ver 5.1) add 3 fields to mysql.proc table but does
not set values".
mysql_upgrade (ver 5.1) adds 3 fields (character_set_client,
collation_connection and db_collation) to the mysql.proc table, but
does not set any values. When we run stored procedures, which were
created with mysql 5.0, a warning is logged into the error log.
The solution to this is for mysql_upgrade to set default best guess
values for these fields. A warning is also written during upgrade, to
make the user aware that default values are set.
special chars
This script failed when the user tried passwords with multiple spaces, \, # or
' characters. Now proper escaping and quoting is used in all contexts.
This problem occurs in the Perl version of this script, too, so fix it in both
places.
Term::ReadKey"
Add the missing module import. Also, while here, fix a few glaring problems
with the script, and ensure that it behaves properly. It seems this script
may have never been working correctly (e.g., reading password didn't chomp()
the result, so password was set with \n at the end; comparing the re-typed
password to original was done with inverted test).
Add END { cleanup(); } block to ensure the script removes temporary working
files.
Add SIG{INT} / SIG{QUIT} handler.
Do a bit of reorganization to make the code easier to understand.
Limit failed connection attempts to 3.
Use ./bin/mysql if it exists, and then fall back on mysql in PATH (before it
assumed 'mysql' in the path). Print a nicer error if 'mysql' can't be called.
This has been tested on Windows (ActivePerl from cmd.exe, no cygwin needed)
and Linux.
Problem 1:
column_priv_hash uses utf8_general_ci collation
for the key comparison. The key consists of user name,
db name and table name. Thus user with privileges on table t1
is able to perform the same operation on T1
(the similar situation with user name & db name, see acl_cache).
So collation which is used for column_priv_hash and acl_cache
should be case sensitive.
The fix:
replace system_charset_info with my_charset_utf8_bin for
column_priv_hash and acl_cache
Problem 2:
The same situation with proc_priv_hash, func_priv_hash,
the only difference is that Routine name is case insensitive.
So the fix is to use my_charset_utf8_bin for
proc_priv_hash & func_priv_hash and convert routine name into lower
case before writing the element into the hash and
before looking up the key.
Additional fix: mysql.procs_priv Routine_name field collation
is changed to utf8_general_ci.
It's necessary for REVOKE command
(to find a field by routine hash element values).
Note:
It's safe for lower-case-table-names mode too because
db name & table name are converted into lower case
(see GRANT_NAME::GRANT_NAME).
"make_binary_distribution" does not always generate correct names
Originally, we solved deficiencies of the predefined "autoconf" macros
(at least on OS X 10.5, they do not correctly differ between "x86" and
"x86_64") by providing explicit "--platform" arguments.
With this patch, "make_binary_distribution" evaluates CFLAGS, so it
"just works" because CFLAGS contains information about the target CPU.
This patch is accompanied by a change in our build tools that drops the
setting of "--platform" arguments.
occasionally.
mysql_multi can call mysqld_safe. In doing this it's not changing the
current working directory. This may cause confusion in the case where
mysqld_multi is handling instances of servers of different versions
and the current working directory is the installation directory of one
of these servers.
Fixed by enhancing the meaning of basedir in [mysqldN] sections of
mysqld_multi. If specified, mysqld_multi will change the current
working directory to the basedir directory before starting the server
in mysqld_multi ... start ... and then change it back to what it was.