- 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's currently no way of knowing the determinicity of an UDF.
And the optimizer and the sequence() UDFs were making wrong
assumptions about what the is_const member means.
Plus there was no implementation of update_system_tables()
causing the optimizer to overwrite the information returned by
the <udf>_init function.
Fixed by equating the assumptions about the semantics of
is_const and providing a implementation of update_used_tables().
Added a TODO item for the UDF API change needed to make a better
implementation.
Previously, UDF *_init functions were passed constant strings with erroneous lengths.
The length came from the containing variable's size, not the length of the value itself.
Now the *_init functions get the constant as a null terminated string with the correct
length supplied too.
Previously, UDF *_init functions were passed constant strings with erroneous lengths.
The length came from the containing variable's size, not the length of the value itself.
Now the *_init functions get the constant as a null terminated string with the correct
length supplied.
problem #1: udf_example.so does not get built on AIX
solution#1: build it yourself using
cd sql; gcc -g -I ../include/ -I /usr/include/ -lpthread \
-shared -o udf_example.so udf_example.c; mv udf_example.so \
.libs/
problem#2 (the bug): udf_example fails because it does not
recognize the variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH when doing dl_open(),
it looks at LIBPATH
solution#2: add the library path to LIBPATH
problem#3: udf_example returns the wrong result length since
it relies on strmov to return a pointer to the end of the
string that it copies. On AIX builds, where m_string.h is not
included (m_string defines a macro expanding strmov to stpcpy),
there is a macro expanding strmov to strcpy, which returns a
pointer to the first character.
solution#3: define strmov as stpcpy.
problem#4: #2 applies on hp-ux as well, but this platform
looks at SHLIB_PATH
solution#4: added the library path to SHLIB_PATH
The code that set up data to be passed to user-defined functions was very
old and analyzed the "Type" of the data that was passed into the UDF, when
it really should analyze the "return_type", which is hard-coded for simple
Items and works correctly for complex ones like functions.
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Added test at Sergei's behest.