The code for executing indexed ORDER BY was not setting all the
internal fields correctly when selecting to execute ORDER BY over
and index.
Fixed by change the access method to one that will use the
quick indexed access if one is selected while selecting indexed
ORDER BY.
Mixing aggregate functions and non-grouping columns is not allowed in the
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY mode. However in some cases the error wasn't thrown because
of insufficient check.
In order to check more thoroughly the new algorithm employs a list of outer
fields used in a sum function and a SELECT_LEX::full_group_by_flag.
Each non-outer field checked to find out whether it's aggregated or not and
the current select is marked accordingly.
All outer fields that are used under an aggregate function are added to the
Item_sum::outer_fields list and later checked by the Item_sum::check_sum_func
function.
Fixes:
- Bug #34920: auto_increment resets to 1 on foreign key creation
We need to use/inherit the passed in autoinc counter for ALTER TABLE
statements too.
View definition as SELECT ... FROM DUAL WHERE ... has
valid syntax, but use of such view in SELECT or
SHOW CREATE VIEW syntax causes unexpected syntax error.
Server omits FROM DUAL clause when storing view body
string in a .frm file for further evaluation.
However, syntax of SELECT-witout-FROM query is more
restrictive than SELECT FROM DUAL syntax, and doesn't
allow the WHERE clause.
NOTE: this syntax difference is not documented.
View registration procedure has been modified to
preserve original structure of view's body.
The bug is a regression introduced in 5.1 by the patch for bug28404.
Under some circumstances test_if_skip_sort_order() could leave some
data structures in an inconsistent state so that some parts of code
could assume the selected execution strategy for GROUP BY/DISTINCT as
a loose index scan (e.g. JOIN_TAB::is_using_loose_index_scan()), while
the actual strategy chosen was an ordered index scan, which led to
wrong data being returned.
Fixed test_if_skip_sort_order() so that when changing the type for a
join table, select->quick is reset not only for EXPLAIN, but for the
actual join execution as well, to not confuse code that depends on its
value to determine the chosen GROUP BY/DISTINCT strategy.
When trying to get the requested amount of memory for the keybuffer,
the out of memory could be signaled if one of the tentative allocations
fail. Later the server would crash (debug assert) when trying to send
a ok packet with a error set.
The solution is only to signal the error if all tentative allocations
for the keybuffer fail.
for YEAR data type.
The problem was that for some unknown reason 0 was not allowed
as a default value for YEAR data type. That was coded before BK.
However the Manual does not say a word about such a limitation.
Also, it looks inconsistent with other data types.
The fix is to allow 0 as a default value.
Fixed the parser to reject SQLSTATE '00000',
since '00000' is the successful completion condition,
and can not be caught by an exception handler in SQL.
correctly - crashes server !
Creating federated table with connect string containing empty
(zero-length) host name and port is evaluated as 0 (port is
incorrect, omitted or 0) crashes server.
This happens because federated calls strcmp() with NULL pointer.
Fixed by avoiding strcmp() call if hostname is set to NULL.
binlogging of insert into a autoincrement blackhole table ignored
an explicit set insert_id.
Fixed with refining of the blackhole's insert method to call
update_auto_increment() that prepares binlogging the insert query
with the preceeding set insert_id.
Note, as the engine does not store any actual data one has to explicitly
provide to the server with the value of the autoincrement column via
set insert_id. Otherwise binlogging will happend with the default
set insert_id=1.
When swapping out heap I_S tables to disk, this is done after plan refinement.
Thus, READ_RECORD::file will still point to the (deleted) heap handler at start
of execution. This causes segmentation fault if join buffering is used and the
query is a star query where the result is found to be empty before accessing
some table. In this case that table has not been initialized (i.e. had its
READ_RECORD re-initialized) before the cleanup routine tries to close the handler.
Fixed by updating READ_RECORD::file when changing handler.
Bug #18453 Warning/error message if there is a mismatch between ...
There were three problems:
1. the reported lack of warnings for the BEFORE syntax of PURGE;
2. the similar lack of warnings for the TO syntax;
3. incompatible behaviour between the two in that the latter blanked out
regardlessly of presence or lack the actual file corresponding to
an index record; the former version gave up at the first mismatch.
fixed with deploying the warning's generation and synronizing logics of
purge_logs() and purge_logs_before_date().
my_stat() is called in either of two branches of purge_logs() (responsible
for the TO syntax of PURGE) similarly to how it has behaved in the BEFORE syntax.
If there is no actual binlog file, my_stat returns NULL and my_delete is
not invoked.
A critical error is reported to the user if a file from the index
could not be retrieved info about or deleted with a system error code
different than ENOENT.
The problem was in a test case for Bug33507:
- when the number of active connections reaches the limit,
the server accepts only root connections. That's achieved by
accepting a connection, negotiating with the client and
checking user credentials. If it is not SUPER, the connection
is dropped.
- when the server accepts connection, it increases the counter;
- when the server drops connection, it decreases the counter;
- the race was in between of decreasing the counter and accepting
new connection:
- max_user_connections = 2;
- 2 oridinary user connections accepted;
- extra user connection is establishing;
- server checked user credentials, and sent 'Too many connections'
error;
- the client receives the error and establishes extra SUPER user
connection;
- the server however didn't decrease the counter (the extra
user connection still is "alive" in the server) -- so, the new
SUPER-user connection, will be dropped, because it exceeds
(max_user_connections + 1).
The fix is to implement "safe connect", which makes several attempts
to connect and use it in the test script.
Queries like:
SELECT ROW(1, 2) IN (SELECT t1.a, 2)
FROM t1 GROUP BY t1.a
or
SELECT ROW(1, 2) IN (SELECT t1.a, 2 FROM t2)
FROM t1 GROUP BY t1.a
lead to assertion failure in the
Item_in_subselect::row_value_transformer method in debugging
build, or to unexpected error message in release build:
ERROR 1247 (42S22): Reference '<list ref>' not supported (forward
reference in item list)
Unexpected error message and assertion failure have been
eliminated.
When there are no underlying tables specified for a merge table,
SHOW CREATE TABLE outputs a statement that cannot be executed. The
same is true for mysqldump (it generates dumps that cannot be
executed).
This happens because SQL parser does not accept empty UNION() clause.
This patch changes the following:
- it is now possible to execute CREATE/ALTER statement with
empty UNION() clause.
- the same as above, but still worth noting: it is now possible to
remove underlying tables mapping using ALTER TABLE ... UNION=().
- SHOW CREATE TABLE does not output UNION() clause if there are
no underlying tables specified for a merge table. This makes
mysqldump slightly smaller.
in some case.
ER_CON_COUNT_ERROR is defined with SQL state 08004. However, this SQL state is not always
returned.
This error can be thrown in two cases:
1. when an ordinary user (a user w/o SUPER privilege) is connecting,
and the number of active user connections is equal or greater than
max_connections.
2. when a user is connecting and the number of active user connections is
already (max_connections + 1) -- that means that no more connections will
be accepted regardless of the user credentials.
In the 1-st case, SQL state is correct.
The bug happens in the 2-nd case -- on UNIX the client gets 00000 SQL state, which is
absolutely wrong (00000 means "not error SQL state); on Windows
the client accidentally gets HY000 (which means "unknown SQL state).
The cause of the problem is that the server rejects extra connection
prior to read a packet with client capabilities. Thus, the server
does not know if the client supports SQL states or not (if the client
supports 4.1 protocol or not). So, the server supposes the worst and
does not send SQL state at all.
The difference in behavior on UNIX and Windows occurs because on Windows
CLI_MYSQL_REAL_CONNECT() invokes create_shared_memory(), which returns
an error (in default configuration, where shared memory is not configured).
Then, the client does not reset this error, so when the connection is
rejected, SQL state is HY000 (from the error from create_shared_memory()).
The bug appeared after test case for Bug#33507 -- before that, this behavior
just had not been tested.
The fix is to 1) reset the error after create_shared_memory();
2) set SQL state to 'unknown error' if it was not received from
the server.
A separate test case is not required, since the behavior is already
tested in connect.test.
Note for doc-team: the manual should be updated to say that under
some circumstances, 'Too many connections' has HY000 SQL state.