The problem is that the C API function mysql_real_connect
only attempts to connect to the first IP address returned
for a hostname. This can be a problem if a hostname maps
to multiple IP address and the server is not bound to the
first one that is returned.
The solution is to augment mysql_real_connect so that it
attempts to connect to all IPv4 addresses that a domain
name maps to. The function goes over the list of address
until a successful connection is established.
No test case is provided as its not possible to test this
automatically with the current testing infrastructure.
sql-common/client.c:
The client will try to connect to each IPv4 address from
the list of addresses that hostname maps to until a successful
connection is established or there are no more address.
The problem is that the C API function mysql_real_connect
only attempts to connect to the first IP address returned
for a hostname. This can be a problem if a hostname maps
to multiple IP address and the server is not bound to the
first one that is returned.
The solution is to augment mysql_real_connect so that it
attempts to connect to all IPv4 addresses that a domain
name maps to. The function goes over the list of address
until a successful connection is established.
No test case is provided as its not possible to test this
automatically with the current testing infrastructure.
Fix sleep() synchronisation in innodb_information_schema test case.
mysql-test/t/innodb_information_schema.test:
Using sleep for synchronisation does not work!!!
Replace by looping until the required condition is met.
sql-common/client.c:
mysql_ssl_set() did not free old pointers before overwriting with new ones (happens when
mysql_ssl_set() is called twice without calling mysql_close() in-between).
This sometimes caused memory leaks in the slave depending on exact timing of
master/slave shutdown.
Fixed by freeing old pointers before installing new ones in mysql_ssl_set(), just like
mysql_options() does.
Backport to MySQL 5.0/1 fix by Vladislav Vaintroub:
In Vista and later and also in when using terminal services, when
server is started from command line, client cannot connect to it
via shared memory protocol.
This is a regression introduced when Bug#24731 was fixed. The
reason is that client is trying to attach to shared memory using
global kernel object namespace (all kernel objects are prefixed
with Global\). However, server started from the command line in
Vista and later will create shared memory and events using current
session namespace. Thus, client is unable to find the server and
connection fails.
The fix for the client is to first try to find server using "local"
names (omitting Global\ prefix) and only if server is not found,
trying global namespace.
Backport to MySQL 5.0/1 fix by Vladislav Vaintroub:
In Vista and later and also in when using terminal services, when
server is started from command line, client cannot connect to it
via shared memory protocol.
This is a regression introduced when Bug#24731 was fixed. The
reason is that client is trying to attach to shared memory using
global kernel object namespace (all kernel objects are prefixed
with Global\). However, server started from the command line in
Vista and later will create shared memory and events using current
session namespace. Thus, client is unable to find the server and
connection fails.
The fix for the client is to first try to find server using "local"
names (omitting Global\ prefix) and only if server is not found,
trying global namespace.
in load_defaults()
load_defaults(), my_search_option_files() and
my_print_default_files() utilized a global variable
containing a pointer to thread local memory. This could lead
to race conditions when those functions were called with high
concurrency.
Fixed by changing the interface of the said functions to avoid
the necessity for using a global variable.
Since we cannot change load_defaults() prototype for API
compatibility reasons, it was renamed my_load_defaults().
Now load_defaults() is a thread-unsafe wrapper around
a thread-safe version, my_load_defaults().
mysys/default.c:
1. Added a thread-safe version of load_defaults(), changed
load_defaults() with the old interface to be a thread-unsafe
wrapper around the thread-safe version.
2. Always use a private MEM_ROOT in my_print_default_files,
don't use a global variable.
sql-common/client.c:
Use a thread-safe version of load_defaults().
in load_defaults()
load_defaults(), my_search_option_files() and
my_print_default_files() utilized a global variable
containing a pointer to thread local memory. This could lead
to race conditions when those functions were called with high
concurrency.
Fixed by changing the interface of the said functions to avoid
the necessity for using a global variable.
Since we cannot change load_defaults() prototype for API
compatibility reasons, it was renamed my_load_defaults().
Now load_defaults() is a thread-unsafe wrapper around
a thread-safe version, my_load_defaults().
Bug#38435 - LONG Microseconds cause MySQL to fail a CAST to DATETIME or DATE
Parsing of optional microsecond part in datetime did not
fail gracefully when field width was larger than the allowed
six places.
Now handles up to the correct six places, and disregards
any extra digits without messing up what we've already got.
mysql-test/r/type_datetime.result:
show graceful handling of overly long microsecond parts
(correct truncation).
mysql-test/t/type_datetime.test:
show graceful handling of overly long microsecond parts
(correct truncation).
sql-common/my_time.c:
Special case for time-parsing: for microsecond part,
leading zeroes are actually meaningful! Also, don't
break the entire date on more than the allowed six
digits in microsecond part, just truncate the extra
digits.
Bug#38435 - LONG Microseconds cause MySQL to fail a CAST to DATETIME or DATE
Parsing of optional microsecond part in datetime did not
fail gracefully when field width was larger than the allowed
six places.
Now handles up to the correct six places, and disregards
any extra digits without messing up what we've already got.
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
There were so many changes into mtr (this is the new mtr coming) that I rather
copied mtr from 6.0-main here (at least this one knows how to run Maria tests).
I also fixed suite/maria tests to be accepted by the new mtr.
mysys/thr_mutex.c:
adding DBUG_PRINT here, so that we can locate where the warning is issued.
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
Passing dubious "year zero" in non-zero date (not "0000-00-00") could
lead to negative value for year internally, while variable was unsigned.
This led to Really Bad Things further down the line.
Now doing calculations with signed type for year internally.
mysql-test/r/date_formats.result:
show that very early dates no longer break DATE_FORMAT(..., '%W')
mysql-test/t/date_formats.test:
show that very early dates no longer break DATE_FORMAT(..., '%W')
sql-common/my_time.c:
Allow negative years numbers internally while keeping the interface.
otherwise if somebody passes year zero for whatever reason, we'll
get an integer wrap-around that can lead to Really Bad Things further
down the line. Note that amusingly, calcday_nr() already had signed
output and calc_weekday() already had signed input, anyway.
Passing dubious "year zero" in non-zero date (not "0000-00-00") could
lead to negative value for year internally, while variable was unsigned.
This led to Really Bad Things further down the line.
Now doing calculations with signed type for year internally.
into zippy.cornsilk.net:/home/cmiller/work/mysql/bug26294/my51-bug26294
client/mysqlbinlog.cc:
Auto merged
include/my_time.h:
Auto merged
sql-common/my_time.c:
Auto merged
sql/init.cc:
Auto merged
sql/tztime.cc:
Auto merged
When linking with some external programs, "multiple definition
of `init_time'"
Rename init_time() to my_init_time() to avoid collision with other
libraries (particularly libmng).
client/mysqlbinlog.cc:
Rename init_time() to my_init_time().
include/my_time.h:
Rename init_time() to my_init_time().
sql-common/my_time.c:
Rename init_time() to my_init_time().
sql/init.cc:
Rename init_time() to my_init_time().
sql/tztime.cc:
Rename init_time() to my_init_time().
When linking with some external programs, "multiple definition
of `init_time'"
Rename init_time() to my_init_time() to avoid collision with other
libraries (particularly libmng).
into quad.opbmk:/mnt/raid/alik/MySQL/devel/5.0-rt-merged
libmysql/libmysql.c:
Auto merged
sql-common/client.c:
Auto merged
tests/mysql_client_test.c:
Manually merged.
into quad.opbmk:/mnt/raid/alik/MySQL/devel/5.1-rt-merged
libmysql/libmysql.c:
Auto merged
sql-common/client.c:
Auto merged
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Auto merged
sql/mysqld.cc:
Auto merged
tests/mysql_client_test.c:
Auto merged