values
We should re-set the access method functions when changing the access
method when switching to another index to avoid sorting.
Fixed by doing a little re-engineering : encapsulating all the function
assignment into a special function and calling it when flipping the
indexes.
only const tables
The problem was caused by two shortcuts in the optimizer that
are inapplicable in the ROLLUP case.
Normally in a case when only const tables are involved in a
query, DISTINCT clause can be safely optimized away since there
may be only one row produced by the join. Similarly, we don't
need to create a temporary table to resolve DISTINCT/GROUP
BY/ORDER BY. Both of these are inapplicable when the WITH
ROLLUP modifier is present.
Fixed by disabling the said optimizations for the WITH ROLLUP
case.
mysql-test/r/olap.result:
Added a test case for bug #48475.
mysql-test/t/olap.test:
Added a test case for bug #48475.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Disabled const-only table optimizations for the WITH ROLLUP
case.
Bug#41756 "Strange error messages about locks from InnoDB".
In JT_EQ_REF (join_read_key()) access method,
don't try to unlock rows in the handler, unless certain that
a) they were locked
b) they are not used.
Unlocking of rows is done by the logic of the nested join loop,
and is unaware of the possible caching that the access method may
have. This could lead to double unlocking, when a row
was unlocked first after reading into the cache, and then
when taken from cache, as well as to unlocking of rows which
were actually used (but taken from cache).
Delegate part of the unlocking logic to the access method,
and in JT_EQ_REF count how many times a record was actually
used in the join. Unlock it only if it's usage count is 0.
Implemented review comments.
mysql-test/r/bug41756.result:
Add result file (Bug#41756)
mysql-test/t/bug41756-master.opt:
Use --innodb-locks-unsafe-for-binlog, as in 5.0 just
using read_committed isolation is not sufficient to
reproduce the bug.
mysql-test/t/bug41756.test:
Add a test file (Bug#41756)
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Complete struct READ_RECORD initialization with a new
member to unlock records.
sql/records.cc:
Extend READ_RECORD API with a method to unlock read records.
sql/sql_select.cc:
In JT_EQ_REF (join_read_key()) access method,
don't try to unlock rows in the handler, unless certain that
a) they were locked
b) they are not used.
sql/sql_select.h:
Add members to TABLE_REF to count TABLE_REF buffer usage count.
sql/structs.h:
Update declarations.
Bug#41756 "Strange error messages about locks from InnoDB".
In JT_EQ_REF (join_read_key()) access method,
don't try to unlock rows in the handler, unless certain that
a) they were locked
b) they are not used.
Unlocking of rows is done by the logic of the nested join loop,
and is unaware of the possible caching that the access method may
have. This could lead to double unlocking, when a row
was unlocked first after reading into the cache, and then
when taken from cache, as well as to unlocking of rows which
were actually used (but taken from cache).
Delegate part of the unlocking logic to the access method,
and in JT_EQ_REF count how many times a record was actually
used in the join. Unlock it only if it's usage count is 0.
Implemented review comments.
mysql-test/r/innodb_lock_wait_timeout_1.result:
Update results (Bug41756).
mysql-test/t/innodb_lock_wait_timeout_1.test:
Add a test case (Bug#41756).
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Complete struct READ_RECORD initialization with a new
member to unlock records.
sql/records.cc:
Extend READ_RECORD API with a method to unlock read records.
sql/sql_select.cc:
In JT_EQ_REF (join_read_key()) access method,
don't try to unlock rows in the handler, unless certain that
a) they were locked
b) they are not used.
sql/sql_select.h:
Add members to TABLE_REF to count TABLE_REF buffer usage count.
sql/structs.h:
Update declarations.
with temporary tables
There were two problems the test case from this bug was
triggering:
1. JOIN::rollup_init() was supposed to wrap all constant Items
into another object for queries with the WITH ROLLUP modifier
to ensure they are never considered as constants and therefore
are written into temporary tables if the optimizer chooses to
employ them for DISTINCT/GROUP BY handling.
However, JOIN::rollup_init() was called before
make_join_statistics(), so Items corresponding to fields in
const tables could not be handled as intended, which was
causing all kinds of problems later in the query execution. In
particular, create_tmp_table() assumed all constant items
except "hidden" ones to be removed earlier by remove_const()
which led to improperly initialized Field objects for the
temporary table being created. This is what was causing crashes
and valgrind errors in storage engines.
2. Even when the above problem had been fixed, the query from
the test case produced incorrect results due to some
DISTINCT/GROUP BY optimizations being performed by the
optimizer that are inapplicable in the WITH ROLLUP case.
Fixed by disabling inapplicable DISTINCT/GROUP BY optimizations
when the WITH ROLLUP modifier is present, and splitting the
const-wrapping part of JOIN::rollup_init() into a separate
method which is now invoked after make_join_statistics() when
the const tables are already known.
mysql-test/r/olap.result:
Added a test case for bug #48131.
mysql-test/t/olap.test:
Added a test case for bug #48131.
sql/sql_select.cc:
1. Disabled inapplicable DISTINCT/GROUP BY optimizations when
the WITH ROLLUP modifier is present.
2. Split the const-wrapping part of JOIN::rollup_init() into a
separate method.
sql/sql_select.h:
Added rollup_process_const_fields() declaration.
subquery returning multiple rows
Error handling was missing when handling subqueires in WHERE
and when assigning a SELECT result to a @variable.
This caused crash(es).
Fixed by adding error handling code to both the WHERE
condition evaluation and to assignment to an @variable.
having clause...
The fix for bug 46184 was not very complete. It was not covering
views using temporary tables and multiple tables in a FROM clause.
Fixed by reverting the fix for 46184 and making a more general
check that is checking at the right execution stage and for all
of the non-supported cases.
Now PROCEDURE ANALYZE on non-top level SELECT is also forbidden.
Updated the analyse.test and subselect.test accordingly.
Queries with nested outer joins may lead to crashes or
bad results because an internal data structure is not handled
correctly.
The optimizer uses bitmaps of nested JOINs to determine
if certain table can be placed at a certain place in the
JOIN order.
It does maintain a bitmap describing in which JOINs
last placed table is nested.
When it puts a table it makes sure the bit of every JOIN that
contains the table in question is set (because JOINs can be nested).
It does that by recursively setting the bit for the next enclosing
JOIN when this is the first table in the JOIN and recursively
resetting the bit if it's the last table in the JOIN.
When it removes a table from the join order it should do the
opposite : recursively unset the bit if it's the only remaining
table in this join and and recursively set the bit if it's removing
the last table of a JOIN.
There was an error in how the bits was set for the upper levels :
when removing a table it was setting the bit for all the enclosing
nested JOINs even if there were more tables left in the current JOIN
(which practically means that the upper nested JOINs were not affected).
Fixed by stopping the recursion at the relevant level.
mysql-test/r/join.result:
Bug #42116: test case
mysql-test/t/join.test:
Bug #42116: test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #41116: don't go up and set the bits if more tables in
at the current JOIN level
line 138 when forcing a spatial index
Problem: "Spatial indexes can be involved in the search
for queries that use a function such as MBRContains()
or MBRWithin() in the WHERE clause".
Using spatial indexes for JOINs with =, <=> etc.
predicates is incorrect.
Fix: disable spatial indexes for such queries.
mysql-test/r/select.result:
Fix for bug#47019: Assertion failed: 0, file .\rt_mbr.c,
line 138 when forcing a spatial index
- test result.
mysql-test/t/select.test:
Fix for bug#47019: Assertion failed: 0, file .\rt_mbr.c,
line 138 when forcing a spatial index
- test case.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fix for bug#47019: Assertion failed: 0, file .\rt_mbr.c,
line 138 when forcing a spatial index
- disable spatial indexes for queries which use
non-spatial conditions (e.g. NATURAL JOINs).
Temporary tables may set join->group to 0 even though there is
grouping. Also need to test if sum_func_count>0 when JOIN::exec()
decides whether to present results in a grouped manner.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Temporary tables may set join->group to 0 even though there is
grouping. Also need to test if sum_func_count>0 when JOIN::exec()
decides whether to present results in a grouped manner.
columns without where/group
Simple SELECT with implicit grouping used to return many rows if
the query was ordered by the aggregated column in the SELECT
list. This was incorrect because queries with implicit grouping
should only return a single record.
The problem was that when JOIN:exec() decided if execution needed
to handle grouping, it was assumed that sum_func_count==0 meant
that there were no aggregate functions in the query. This
assumption was not correct in JOIN::exec() because the aggregate
functions might have been optimized away during JOIN::optimize().
The reason why queries without ordering behaved correctly was
that sum_func_count is only recalculated if the optimizer chooses
to use temporary tables (which it does in the ordered case).
Hence, non-ordered queries were correctly treated as grouped.
The fix for this bug was to remove the assumption that
sum_func_count==0 means that there is no need for grouping. This
was done by introducing variable "bool implicit_grouping" in the
JOIN object.
mysql-test/r/func_group.result:
Add test for BUG#47280
mysql-test/t/func_group.test:
Add test for BUG#47280
sql/opt_sum.cc:
Improve comment for opt_sum_query()
sql/sql_class.h:
Add comment for variables in TMP_TABLE_PARAM
sql/sql_select.cc:
Introduce and use variable implicit_grouping instead of (!group_list && sum_func_count) in places that need to test if grouping is required. Also added comments for: optimization of aggregate fields for implicitly grouped queries (JOIN::optimize) and choice of end_select method (JOIN::execute)
sql/sql_select.h:
Add variable implicit_grouping, which will be TRUE for queries that contain aggregate functions but no GROUP BY clause. Also added comment to sort_and_group variable.
buffering is used
FORCE INDEX FOR ORDER BY now prevents the optimizer from
using join buffering. As a result the optimizer can use
indexed access on the first table and doesn't need to
sort the complete resultset at the end of the statement.
the fix is reverted from 5.1, mysql-pe as
unnecessary(no valgrind warnings there).
sql/sql_select.cc:
the fix is reverted from 5.1, mysql-pe as
unnecessary(no valgrind warnings there).
query
The fix for bug 46749 removed the check for OUTER_REF_TABLE_BIT
and substituted it for a check on the presence of
Item_ident::depended_from.
Removing it altogether was wrong : OUTER_REF_TABLE_BIT should
still be checked in addition to depended_from (because it's not
set in all cases and doesn't contradict to the check of depended_from).
Fixed by returning the old condition back as a compliment to the
new one.
The external 'for' loop in remove_dup_with_compare() handled
HA_ERR_RECORD_DELETED by just starting over without advancing
to the next record which caused an infinite loop.
This condition could be triggered on certain data by a SELECT
query containing DISTINCT, GROUP BY and HAVING clauses.
Fixed remove_dup_with_compare() so that we always advance to
the next record when receiving HA_ERR_RECORD_DELETED from
rnd_next().
mysql-test/r/distinct.result:
Added a test case for bug #46159.
mysql-test/t/distinct.test:
Added a test case for bug #46159.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fixed remove_dup_with_compare() so that we always advance to
the next record when receiving HA_ERR_RECORD_DELETED from
rnd_next().
Memory allocated in TMP_TABLE_PARAM::copy_field is not cleaned up.
The fix is to clean up TMP_TABLE_PARAM::copy_field array in JOIN::destroy.
mysql-test/r/explain.result:
test result
mysql-test/t/explain.test:
test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Memory allocated in TMP_TABLE_PARAM::copy_field is not cleaned up.
The fix is to clean up TMP_TABLE_PARAM::copy_field array in JOIN::destroy.
function,file sql_base.cc
When uncacheable queries are written to a temp table the optimizer must
preserve the original JOIN structure, because it is re-using the JOIN
structure to read from the resulting temporary table.
This was done only for uncacheable sub-queries.
But top level queries can also benefit from this mechanism, specially if
they're using index access and need a reset.
Fixed by not limiting the saving of JOIN structure to subqueries
exclusively.
Added a new test file to extend the existing (large) subquery.test.
field references
This error requires a combination of factors :
1. An "impossible where" in the outermost SELECT
2. An aggregate in the outermost SELECT
3. A correlated subquery with a WHERE clause that includes an outer
field reference as a top level WHERE sargable predicate
When JOIN::optimize detects an "impossible WHERE" it will bail out
without doing the rest of the work and initializations. It will not
call make_join_statistics() as well. And make_join_statistics fills
in various structures for each table referenced.
When processing the result of the "impossible WHERE" the query must
send a single row of data if there are aggregate functions in it.
In this case the server marks all the aggregates as having received
no rows and calls the relevant Item::val_xxx() method on the SELECT
list. However if this SELECT list happens to contain a correlated
subquery this subquery is evaluated in a normal evaluation mode.
And if this correlated subquery has a reference to a field from the
outermost "impossible where" SELECT the add_key_fields will mistakenly
consider the outer field reference as a "local" field reference when
looking for sargable predicates.
But since the SELECT where the outer field reference refers to is not
completely initialized due to the "impossible WHERE" in this level
we'll get a NULL pointer reference.
Fixed by making a better condition for discovering if a field is "local"
to the SELECT level being processed.
It's not enough to look for OUTER_REF_TABLE_BIT in this case since
for outer references to constant tables the Item_field::used_tables()
will return 0 regardless of whether the field reference is from the
local SELECT or not.
The problem was that creating a DECIMAL column from a decimal
value could lead to a failed assertion as decimal values can
have a higher precision than those attached to a table. The
assert could be triggered by creating a table from a decimal
with a large (> 30) scale. Also, there was a problem in
calculating the number of digits in the integral and fractional
parts if both exceeded the maximum number of digits permitted
by the new decimal type.
The solution is to ensure that truncation procedure is executed
when deducing a DECIMAL column from a decimal value of higher
precision. If the integer part is equal to or bigger than the
maximum precision for the DECIMAL type (65), the integer part
is truncated to fit and the fractional becomes zero. Otherwise,
the fractional part is truncated to fit into the space left
after the integer part is copied.
This patch borrows code and ideas from Martin Hansson's patch.
mysql-test/r/type_newdecimal.result:
Add test case result for Bug#45261. Also, update test case to
reflect that an additive operation increases the precision of
the resulting type by 1.
mysql-test/t/type_newdecimal.test:
Add test case for Bug#45261
sql/field.cc:
Added DBUG_ASSERT to ensure object's invariant is maintained.
Implement method to create a field to hold a decimal value
from an item.
sql/field.h:
Explain member variable. Add method to create a new decimal field.
sql/item.cc:
The precision should only be capped when storing the value
on a table. Also, this makes it impossible to calculate the
integer part if Item::decimals (the scale) is larger than the
precision.
sql/item.h:
Simplify calculation of integer part.
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc:
Do not limit the precision. It will be capped later.
sql/item_func.cc:
Use new method for allocating a new decimal field.
Add a specialized method for retrieving the precision
of a user variable item.
sql/item_func.h:
Add method to return the precision of a user variable.
sql/item_sum.cc:
Use new method for allocating a new decimal field.
sql/my_decimal.h:
The integer part could be improperly calculated for a decimal
with 31 digits in the fractional part.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Use new method which truncates the integer or decimal parts
as needed.
In create_myisam_from_heap() mark all errors as fatal except
HA_ERR_RECORD_FILE_FULL for a HEAP table.
Not doing so could lead to problems, e.g. in a case when a
temporary MyISAM table gets overrun due to its MAX_ROWS limit
while executing INSERT/REPLACE IGNORE ... SELECT.
The SELECT execution was aborted, but the error was
converted to a warning due to IGNORE clause, so neither 'ok'
nor 'error' packet could be sent back to the client. This
condition led to hanging client when using 5.0 server, or
assertion failure in 5.1.
mysql-test/r/insert_select.result:
Added a test case for bug #46075.
mysql-test/t/insert_select.test:
Added a test case for bug #46075.
sql/sql_select.cc:
In create_myisam_from_heap() mark all errors as fatal except
HA_ERR_RECORD_FILE_FULL for a HEAP table.
Problem 1:
When the 'Using index' optimization is used, the optimizer may still - after
cost-based optimization - decide to use another index in order to avoid using
a temporary table. But when this happens, the flag to the storage engine to
read index only (not table) was still set. Fixed by resetting the flag in the
storage engine and TABLE structure in the above scenario, unless the new index
allows for the same optimization.
Problem 2:
When a 'ref' access method was employed by cost-based optimizer, (when the column
is non-NULLable), it was assumed that it needed no initialization if 'quick' access
methods (since they are based on range scan). When ORDER BY optimization overrides
the decision, however, it expects to have this initialized and hence crashes.
Fixed in 5.1 (was fixed in 6.0 already) by initializing 'quick' even when there's
'ref' access.
mysql-test/r/order_by.result:
Bug#46454: Test result.
mysql-test/t/order_by.test:
Bug#46454: Test case.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#46454:
Problem 1 fixed in make_join_select()
Problem 2 fixed in test_if_skip_sort_order()
sql/table.h:
Bug#46454: Added comment to field.
use partial primary key if another index can prevent filesort
The fix for bug #28404 causes the covering ordering indexes to be
preferred unconditionally over non-covering and ref indexes.
Fixed by comparing the cost of using a covering index to the cost of
using a ref index even for covering ordering indexes.
Added an assertion to clarify the condition the local variables should
be in.
mysql-test/include/mix1.inc:
Bug #36259: fixed a non-stable test case
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
Bug #36259 and #45828 : test case
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test:
Bug #36259 and #45828 : test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #36259 and #45828 : don't consider covering indexes supperior to
ref keys.
Using DECIMAL constants with more than 65 digits in CREATE
TABLE ... SELECT led to bogus errors in release builds or
assertion failures in debug builds.
The problem was in inconsistency in how DECIMAL constants and
fields are handled internally. We allow arbitrarily long
DECIMAL constants, whereas DECIMAL(M,D) columns are limited to
M<=65 and D<=30. my_decimal_precision_to_length() was used in
both Item and Field code and truncated precision to
DECIMAL_MAX_PRECISION when calculating value length without
adjusting precision and decimals. As a result, a DECIMAL
constant with more than 65 digits ended up having length less
than precision or decimals which led to assertion failures.
Fixed by modifying my_decimal_precision_to_length() so that
precision is truncated to DECIMAL_MAX_PRECISION only for Field
object which is indicated by the new 'truncate' parameter.
Another inconsistency fixed by this patch is how DECIMAL
constants and expressions are handled for CREATE ... SELECT.
create_tmp_field_from_item() (which is used for constants) was
changed as a part of the bugfix for bug #24907 to handle long
DECIMAL constants gracefully. Item_func::tmp_table_field()
(which is used for expressions) on the other hand was still
using a simplistic approach when creating a Field_new_decimal
from a DECIMAL expression.
mysql-test/r/type_newdecimal.result:
Added a test case for bug #45262.
mysql-test/t/type_newdecimal.test:
Added a test case for bug #45262.
sql/item.cc:
Use the new 'truncate' parameter in
my_decimal_precision_to_length().
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc:
Use the new 'truncate' parameter in
my_decimal_precision_to_length().
sql/item_func.cc:
1. Use the new 'truncate' parameter in
my_decimal_precision_to_length().
2. Do not truncate decimal precision to DECIMAL_MAX_PRECISION
for additive expressions involving long DECIMAL constants.
3. Fixed an incosistency in how DECIMAL constants and
expressions are handled for CREATE ... SELECT.
sql/item_func.h:
Use the new 'truncate' parameter in
my_decimal_precision_to_length().
sql/item_sum.cc:
Use the new 'truncate' parameter in
my_decimal_precision_to_length().
sql/my_decimal.h:
Do not truncate precision to DECIMAL_MAX_PRECISION
when calculating length in
my_decimal_precision_to_length() if 'truncate' parameter
is FALSE.
sql/sql_select.cc:
1. Use the new 'truncate' parameter in
my_decimal_precision_to_length().
2. Use a more correct logic when adjusting value's length.
The TABLE::reginfo.impossible_range is used by the optimizer to indicate
that the condition applied to the table is impossible. It wasn't initialized
at table opening and this might lead to an empty result on complex queries:
a query might set the impossible_range flag on a table and when the query finishes,
all tables are returned back to the table cache. The next query that uses the table
with the impossible_range flag set and an index over the table will see the flag
and thus return an empty result.
The open_table function now initializes the TABLE::reginfo.impossible_range
variable.
mysql-test/r/select.result:
A test case for the bug#45266: Uninitialized variable lead to an empty result.
mysql-test/t/select.test:
A test case for the bug#45266: Uninitialized variable lead to an empty result.
sql/sql_base.cc:
Bug#45266: Uninitialized variable lead to an empty result.
The open_table function now initializes the TABLE::reginfo.impossible_range
variable.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#45266: Uninitialized variable lead to an empty result.
The open_table function now initializes the TABLE::reginfo.impossible_range
variable.
sql/structs.h:
Bug#45266: Uninitialized variable lead to an empty result.
A comment is added.
with gcc 4.3.2
Compiling MySQL with gcc 4.3.2 and later produces a number of
warnings, many of which are new with the recent compiler
versions.
This bug will be resolved in more than one patch to limit the
size of changesets. This is the second patch, fixing more
of the warnings.
crashes server!
The problem affects the scenario when index merge is followed by a filesort
and the sort buffer is not big enough for all the sort keys.
In this case the filesort function will read the data to the end through the
index merge quick access method (and thus closing the cursor etc),
but will leave the pointer to the quick select method in place.
It will then create a temporary file to hold the results of the filesort and
will add it as a sort output file (in sort.io_cache).
Note that filesort will copy the original 'sort' structure in an automatic
variable and restore it after it's done.
As a result at exiting filesort() we have a sort.io_cache filled in and
nothing else (as a result of close of the cursors at end of reading data
through index merge).
Now create_sort_index() will note that there is a select and will clean it up
(as it's been used already by filesort() reading the data in). While doing that
a special case in the index merge destructor will clean up the sort.io_cache,
assuming it's an output of the index merge method and is not needed anymore.
As a result the code that tries to read the data back from the filesort output
will get no data in both memory and disk and will crash.
Fixed similarly to how filesort() does it : by copying the sort.io_cache structure
to a local variable, removing the pointer to the io_cache (so that it's not freed
by QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT::~QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT) and restoring the original
structure (together with the valid pointer) after the cleanup is done.
This is a safe thing to do because all the structures are already cleaned up by
hitting the end of the index merge's read method (QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT::get_next())
and the cleanup code being written in a way that tolerates repeating cleanups.
mysql-test/r/index_merge.result:
Bug #44810: test case
mysql-test/t/index_merge.test:
Bug #44810: test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #44810: preserve the io_cache produced by filesort while cleaning up
the index merge quick access method (QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT).
with gcc 4.3.2
Compiling MySQL with gcc 4.3.2 and later produces a number of
warnings, many of which are new with the recent compiler
versions.
This bug will be resolved in more than one patch to limit the
size of changesets. This is the second patch, fixing more
of the warnings.
uninitialized variable used as subscript
Grouping select from a "constant" InnoDB table (a table
of a single row) joined with other tables caused a crash.
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
Added test case for bug bug #44886.
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test:
Added test case for bug bug #44886.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #44886: SIGSEGV in test_if_skip_sort_order() -
uninitialized variable used as subscript
1. The test_if_order_by_key function returned unitialized
used_key_parts parameter in case of a "constant" InnoDB
table. Calling function uses this parameter values as
an array index, thus sometimes it caused a crash.
The test_if_order_by_key function has been modified
to set used_key_parts to 0 (no need for ordering).
2. The test_if_skip_sort_order function has been
modified to accept zero used_key_parts value and
to prevent an array access by negative index.
Holding on to the temporary inno hash index latch is an optimization in
many cases, but a pessimization in some others.
Release temporary latches for those corner cases we (or rather, or customers,
thanks!) have identified, that is, when we are about to do something that
might take a really long time, like REPAIR or filesort.
sql/ha_myisam.cc:
Let go of (inno, for now) latch when doing MyISAM-repair.
(optimize passes through repair.) ("Stuck" in "Repair with
keycache".)
sql/sql_insert.cc:
Let go of (inno, for now) latch when doing CREATE...SELECT
in select_insert::send_data() -- it might take a while.
("stuck" in "Sending data")
sql/sql_select.cc:
Release temporary (inno, for now) latch on
- free_tmp_table() (this can take surprisingly long, "removing tmp table")
- create_myisam_from_heap() (HEAP table overflowing onto disk as MyISAM,
"converting HEAP to MyISAM")
HAVING
When calculating GROUP BY the server caches some expressions. It does
that by allocating a string slot (Item_copy_string) and assigning the
value of the expression to it. This effectively means that the result
type of the expression can be changed from whatever it was to a string.
As this substitution takes place after the compile-time result type
calculation for IN but before the run-time type calculations,
it causes the type calculations in the IN function done at run time
to get unexpected results different from what was prepared at compile time.
In the CASE ... WHEN ... THEN ... statement there was a similar problem
and it was solved by artificially adding a STRING argument to the set of
types of the IN/CASE arguments at compile time, so if any of the
arguments of the CASE function changes its type to a string it will
still be covered by the information prepared at compile time.
mysql-test/include/mix1.inc:
Bug #44399: extended the test to cover the different types
mysql-test/r/func_in.result:
Bug #44399: test case
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
Bug #44399: extended the test to cover the different types
mysql-test/t/func_in.test:
Bug #44399: test case
sql/item.cc:
Bug #44399: Implement typed caching for GROUP BY
sql/item.h:
Bug #44399: Implement typed caching for GROUP BY
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc:
Bug #44399: remove the special case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #44399: Implement typed caching for GROUP BY
SQL_SELECT::test_quick_select
The crash was caused by an incomplete cleanup of JOIN_TAB::select
during the filesort of rows for GROUP BY clause inside a subquery.
Queries where a quick index access is replaced with filesort was
was affected. For example:
SELECT 1 FROM
(SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT c1) FROM t1
WHERE c2 IN (1, 1) AND c3 = 2 GROUP BY c2) x
Quick index access related data in the SQL_SELECT::test_quick_select
function was inconsistent after an incomplete cleanup.
This function has been completed to prevent crashes in the
SQL_SELECT::test_quick_select function.
mysql-test/include/mix1.inc:
Add test case for bug #44290.
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
Add test case for bug #44290.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #44290: explain crashes for subquery with distinct in
SQL_SELECT::test_quick_select
Quick index access related data in the SQL_SELECT::test_quick_select
function was inconsistent after an incomplete cleanup.
This function has been completed to prevent crashes in the
SQL_SELECT::test_quick_select function.
'INSERT ... SELECT' statements
The code that produces result rows expected that a duplicate row
error could not occur in INSERT ... SELECT statements with
unfulfilled WHERE conditions. This may happen, however, if the
SELECT list contains only aggregate functions.
Fixed by checking if an error occured before trying to send EOF
to the client.
mysql-test/r/insert_select.result:
Bug#44306: Test result
mysql-test/t/insert_select.test:
Bug#44306: Test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#44306: Fix
EXPLAIN EXTENDED of nested query containing a error:
1054 Unknown column '...' in 'field list'
may cause a server crash.
Parse error like described above forces a call to
JOIN::destroy() on malformed subquery.
That JOIN::destroy function closes and frees temporary
tables. However, temporary fields of these tables
may be listed in st_select_lex::group_list of outer
query, and that st_select_lex may not cleanup them
properly. So, after the JOIN::destroy call that
st_select_lex::group_list may have Item_field
objects with dangling pointers to freed temporary
table Field objects. That caused a crash.
mysql-test/r/subselect3.result:
Added test case for bug #37362.
mysql-test/t/subselect3.test:
Added test case for bug #37362.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #37362: Crash in do_field_eq
The JOIN::destroy function has been modified to
cleanup temporary table column items.
Original commentary:
Bug #37348: Crash in or immediately after JOIN::make_sum_func_list
The optimizer pulls up aggregate functions which should be aggregated in
an outer select. At some point it may substitute such a function for a field
in the temporary table. The setup_copy_fields function doesn't take this
into account and may overrun the copy_field buffer.
Fixed by filtering out the fields referenced through the specialized
reference for aggregates (Item_aggregate_ref).
Added an assertion to make sure bugs that cause similar discrepancy
don't go undetected.
mysql-test/r/func_group.result:
Backport bug #37348 fix 5.1 --> 5.0.
mysql-test/t/func_group.test:
Backport bug #37348 fix 5.1 --> 5.0.
sql/item.cc:
Backport bug #37348 fix 5.1 --> 5.0.
sql/item.h:
Backport bug #37348 fix 5.1 --> 5.0.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Backport bug #37348 fix 5.1 --> 5.0.
select where .. (col=col and col=col) or ... (false expression)
Problem: optimizer didn't take into account a singular case
when we eliminated all the predicates at the AND level of WHERE.
That may lead to wrong results.
Fix: replace (a=a AND a=a...) with TRUE if we eliminated all the
predicates.
mysql-test/r/select.result:
Fix for bug #42957: no results from
select where .. (col=col and col=col) or ... (false expression)
- test result.
mysql-test/t/select.test:
Fix for bug #42957: no results from
select where .. (col=col and col=col) or ... (false expression)
- test case.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fix for bug #42957: no results from
select where .. (col=col and col=col) or ... (false expression)
- replacing equality predicates by multiple equality items check
if we eliminate all the predicates at the AND level and
replace them with TRUE if so.
mysqld is optimized for the default
case (up to 64-indices); for a greater
number of indices it goes through a
different code path. As that code-path
is a compile-time option and can not
easily be covered in standard tests,
bitrot occurred. key-fields need an
explicit initialization in the non-
optimized case; this setup was
presumably not added when a new key-
vector was added.
Changeset adds the necessary
initialisations.
No test case added due to dependence
on compile-time option.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Init merge_keys as well. If we don't,
things blow up badly outside of the
optimized-for-64-keys case!
sql/table.cc:
Init merge_keys as well. If we don't,
things blow up badly outside of the
optimized-for-64-keys case!
connections
The problem is that tables can enter open table cache for a thread without
being properly cleaned up. This can happen if make_join_statistics() fails
to read a const table because of e.g. a deadlock. It does set a member of
TABLE structure to a value it allocates, but doesn't clean-up this setting
on error nor does it set the rest of the members in JOIN to allow for
automatic cleanup.
As a result when such an error occurs and the next statement depends re-uses
the table from the open tables cache it will get it with this
TABLE::reginfo.join_tab pointing to a memory area that's freed.
Fixed by making sure make_join_statistics() cleans up TABLE::reginfo.join_tab
on error.
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
Bug #42419: test case
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql-master.opt:
Bug #42419: increase the timeout so it covers te conservative
sleep 3 in the test
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test:
Bug #42419: test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #42419: clean up the members of TABLE on failure in
make_join_statisitcs()
- 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
ORDER BY could cause a server crash
Dependent subqueries like
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t1, t2 WHERE t2.b
IN (SELECT DISTINCT t2.b FROM t2 WHERE t2.b = t1.a)
caused a memory leak proportional to the
number of outer rows.
The make_simple_join() function has been modified to
JOIN class method to store join_tab_reexec and
table_reexec values in the parent join only
(make_simple_join of tmp_join may access these values
via 'this' pointer of the parent JOIN).
NOTE: this patch doesn't include standard test case (this is
"out of memory" bug). See bug #42037 page for test cases.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #42037: Queries containing a subquery with DISTINCT and
ORDER BY could cause a server crash
The make_simple_join() function has been modified to
JOIN class method to store join_tab_reexec and
table_reexec values in the parent join only.
sql/sql_select.h:
Bug #42037: Queries containing a subquery with DISTINCT and
ORDER BY could cause a server crash
1. The make_simple_join() function has been modified to
JOIN class method.
2. Type of JOIN::table_reexec field has been changed from
TABLE** to TABLE *table_reexec[1]: this field always was
NULL or a pointer to one-element array of pointers, so
a pointer to a pointer has been replaced with one pointer
and unnecessary memory allocation has been eliminated.
messed up
"ROW(...) IN (SELECT ... FROM DUAL)" always returned TRUE.
Item_in_subselect::row_value_transformer rewrites "ROW(...)
IN SELECT" conditions into the "EXISTS (SELECT ... HAVING ...)"
form.
For a subquery from the DUAL pseudotable resulting HAVING
condition is an expression on constant values, so further
transformation with optimize_cond() eliminates this HAVING
condition and resets JOIN::having to NULL.
Then JOIN::exec treated that NULL as an always-true-HAVING
and that caused a bug.
To distinguish an optimized out "HAVING TRUE" clause from
"HAVING FALSE" we already have the JOIN::having_value flag.
However, JOIN::exec() ignored JOIN::having_value as described
above as if it always set to COND_TRUE.
The JOIN::exec method has been modified to take into account
the value of the JOIN::having_value field.
mysql-test/r/subselect3.result:
Added test case for bug #39069.
mysql-test/t/subselect3.test:
Added test case for bug #39069.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #39069: <row constructor> IN <table-subquery> seriously
messed up
The JOIN::exec method has been modified to take into account
the value of the JOIN::having_value field.
The greedy optimizer tracks the current level of nested joins and the position
inside these by setting and maintaining a state that's global for the whole FROM
clause.
This state was correctly maintained inside the selection of the next partial plan
table (in best_extension_by_limited_search()).
greedy_search() also moves the current position by adding the last partial match
table when there's not enough tables in the partial plan found by
best_extension_by_limited_search().
This may require update of the global state variables that describe the current
position in the plan if the last table placed by greedy_search is not a top-level
join table.
Fixed by updating the state after placing the partial plan table in greedy_search()
in the same way this is done on entering the best_extension_by_limited_search().
Fixed the signature of the function called to update the state :
check_interleaving_with_nj
mysql-test/r/greedy_optimizer.result:
Bug #38795: test case
mysql-test/t/greedy_optimizer.test:
Bug #38795: test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #38795: correctly update current position when placing
the next partial plan table in greedy_search().
Table could be marked dependent because it is
either 1) an inner table of an outer join, or 2) it is a part of
STRAIGHT_JOIN. In case of STRAIGHT_JOIN table->maybe_null should not
be assigned. The fix is to set st_table::maybe_null to 'true' only
for those tables which are used in outer join.
mysql-test/r/select.result:
test result
mysql-test/t/select.test:
test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Table could be marked dependent because it is
either 1) an inner table of an outer join, or 2) it is a part of
STRAIGHT_JOIN. In case of STRAIGHT_JOIN table->maybe_null should not
be assigned. The fix is to set st_table::maybe_null to 'true' only
for those tables which are used in outer join.
sql/sql_select.h:
added comment
Bug#37671 crash on prepared statement + cursor + geometry + too many open files!
if mysql_execute_command() returns error then free materialized_cursor object.
is_rnd_inited is added to satisfy rnd_end() assertion
(handler may be uninitialized in some cases)
sql/sql_cursor.cc:
if mysql_execute_command() returns error then free materialized_cursor object.
is_rnd_inited is added to satisfy rnd_end() assertion
(handler may be uninitialized in some cases)
sql/sql_select.cc:
added result check
tests/mysql_client_test.c:
test case
if table has bit fields then uneven bits(if exist) are stored into null bits place.
So we need to copy null bits in case of uneven bit field presence.
mysql-test/r/type_bit.result:
test result
mysql-test/t/type_bit.test:
test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
if table has bit fields then uneven bits(if exist) are stored into null bits place.
So we need to copy null bits in case of uneven bit field presence.
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
The check for non-aggregated columns in queries with aggregate function, but without
GROUP BY was treating all the parts of the query as if they are in the SELECT list.
Fixed by ignoring the non-aggregated fields in the WHERE clause.
mysql-test/r/func_group.result:
Bug #39656: test case
mysql-test/t/func_group.test:
Bug #39656: test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #39656: ignore the new non-aggregated column refs in a WHERE
by saving the state so far and then adding only the new values of the other
parts of the bitmask.
fails after the first time
Two separate problems :
1. When flattening joins the linked list used for name resolution
(next_name_resolution_table) was not updated.
Fixed by updating the pointers when extending the table list
2. The items created by expanding a * (star) as a column reference
were marked as fixed, but no cached table was assigned to them
(unlike what Item_field::fix_fields does).
Fixed by assigning a cached table (so the re-preparation is done
faster).
Note that the fix for #2 hides the fix for #1 in most cases
(except when a table reference cannot be cached).
mysql-test/r/sp.result:
Bug #33811: test case
mysql-test/t/sp.test:
Bug #33811: test case
sql/sql_base.cc:
Bug #33811: cache the table for Item_fields created by expanding '*'
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #33811: maintain a correct name resolution chain when
flattening joins.
Server crashed during a sort order optimization
of a dependent subquery:
SELECT
(SELECT t1.a FROM t1, t2
WHERE t1.a = t2.b AND t2.a = t3.c
ORDER BY t1.a)
FROM t3;
Bitmap of tables, that the reference to outer table
column uses, in addition to the regular table bit
has the OUTER_REF_TABLE_BIT bit set.
The only_eq_ref_tables function traverses this map
bit by bit simultaneously with join->map2table list.
Obviously join->map2table never contains an entry
for the OUTER_REF_TABLE_BIT pseudo-table, so the
server crashed there.
The only_eq_ref_tables function has been modified
to traverse regular table bits only like the
update_depend_map function (resetting of the
OUTER_REF_TABLE_BIT there is enough, but
resetting of the whole set of PSEUDO_TABLE_BITS
is used there for sure).
mysql-test/r/order_by.result:
Added test case for bug #39844.
mysql-test/t/order_by.test:
Added test case for bug #39844.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #39844: Query Crash Mysql Server 5.0.67
The only_eq_ref_tables function has been modified
to traverse regular table bits only like the
update_depend_map function (resetting of the
OUTER_REF_TABLE_BIT there is enough, but
resetting of the whole set of PSEUDO_TABLE_BITS
is used there for sure).
with COALESCE and JOIN
The server returned to a client the VARBINARY column type
instead of the DATE type for a result of the COALESCE,
IFNULL, IF, CASE, GREATEST or LEAST functions if that result
was filesorted in an anonymous temporary table during
the query execution.
For example:
SELECT COALESCE(t1.date1, t2.date2) AS result
FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON t1.id = t2.id ORDER BY result;
To create a column of various date/time types in a
temporary table the create_tmp_field_from_item() function
uses the Item::tmp_table_field_from_field_type() method
call. However, fields of the MYSQL_TYPE_NEWDATE type were
missed there, and the VARBINARY columns were created
by default.
Necessary condition has been added.
mysql-test/r/metadata.result:
Added test case for bug #39283.
mysql-test/t/metadata.test:
Added test case for bug #39283.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #39283: Date returned as VARBINARY to client for queries
with COALESCE and JOIN
To create a column of various date/time types in a
temporary table the create_tmp_field_from_item() function
uses the Item::tmp_table_field_from_field_type() method
call. However, fields of the MYSQL_TYPE_NEWDATE type were
missed there, and the VARBINARY columns were created
by default.
Necessary condition has been added.
crashes server
When creating temporary table that contains aggregate functions a
non-reversible source transformation was performed to redirect aggregate
function arguments towards temporary table columns.
This caused EXPLAIN EXTENDED to fail because it was trying to resolve
references to the (freed) temporary table.
Fixed by preserving the original aggregate function arguments and
using them (instead of the transformed ones) for EXPLAIN EXTENDED.
mysql-test/r/explain.result:
Bug#34773: test case
mysql-test/t/explain.test:
Bug#34773: test case
sql/item.cc:
Bug#34773: use accessor functions instead of public members
sql/item_sum.cc:
Bug#34773:
- Encapsulate the arguments into Item_sum and
provide accessor and mutator methods
- print the orginal arguments (if present)
in EXPLAIN EXTENDED
- preserve the original arguments list.
sql/item_sum.h:
Bug#34773:
- Encapsulate the arguments into Item_sum and
provide accessor and mutator methods
- print the orginal arguments (if present)
in EXPLAIN EXTENDED
- preserve the original arguments list.
sql/opt_range.cc:
Bug#34773: use accessor functions instead of public members
sql/opt_sum.cc:
Bug#34773: use accessor functions instead of public members
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#34773: use accessor functions instead of public members
The optimizer pulls up aggregate functions which should be aggregated in
an outer select. At some point it may substitute such a function for a field
in the temporary table. The setup_copy_fields function doesn't take this
into account and may overrun the copy_field buffer.
Fixed by filtering out the fields referenced through the specialized
reference for aggregates (Item_aggregate_ref).
Added an assertion to make sure bugs that cause similar discrepancy
don't go undetected.
mysql-test/r/func_group.result:
Bug #37348: test case
mysql-test/t/func_group.test:
Bug #37348: test case
sql/item.cc:
Bug #37348: Added a way to distinguish Item_aggregate_ref from the other types of refs
sql/item.h:
Bug #37348: Added a way to distinguish Item_aggregate_ref from the other types of refs
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #37348:
- Don't consider copying field references
seen through Item_aggregate_ref
- check for discrepancies between the number of expected
fields that need copying and the actual fields copied.
When switching to indexed ORDER BY we must be sure to reset the index read
flag if we are switching from a covering index to non-covering.
mysql-test/r/subselect.result:
Bug#37548: test case
mysql-test/t/subselect.test:
Bug#37548: test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#37548: update the index read flag if the index for indexed ORDER BY is not
covering.
used causes server crash.
When the loose index scan access method is used values of aggregated functions
are precomputed by it. Aggregation of such functions shouldn't be performed
in this case and functions should be treated as normal ones.
The create_tmp_table function wasn't taking this into account and this led to
a crash if a query has MIN/MAX aggregate functions and employs temporary table
and loose index scan.
Now the JOIN::exec and the create_tmp_table functions treat MIN/MAX aggregate
functions as normal ones when the loose index scan is used.
mysql-test/r/group_min_max.result:
Added a test case for the bug#38195.
mysql-test/t/group_min_max.test:
Added a test case for the bug#38195.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#38195: Incorrect handling of aggregate functions when loose index scan is
used causes server crash.
The JOIN::exec and the create_tmp_table functions treat MIN/MAX aggregate
functions as normal ones when the loose index scan is used.
used causes server crash.
When the loose index scan access method is used values of aggregated functions
are precomputed by it. Aggregation of such functions shouldn't be performed
in this case and functions should be treated as normal ones.
The create_tmp_table function wasn't taking this into account and this led to
a crash if a query has MIN/MAX aggregate functions and employs temporary table
and loose index scan.
Now the JOIN::exec and the create_tmp_table functions treat MIN/MAX aggregate
functions as normal ones when the loose index scan is used.
mysql-test/r/group_min_max.result:
Added a test case for the bug#38195.
mysql-test/t/group_min_max.test:
Added a test case for the bug#38195.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#38195: Incorrect handling of aggregate functions when loose index scan is
used causes server crash.
Now the JOIN::exec and the create_tmp_table functions treat MIN/MAX aggregate
functions as normal ones when the loose index scan is used.
Calling List<Cached_item>::delete_elements for the same list twice
caused a crash of the server in the function JOIN::cleaunup.
Ensured that delete_elements() in JOIN::cleanup would be called only once.
mysql-test/r/subselect.result:
Added a test case for bug #38191.
mysql-test/t/subselect.test:
Added a test case for bug #38191.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fixed bug #38191.
Ensured that delete_elements() in JOIN::cleanup would be called only once.
Range scan in descending order for c <= <col> <= c type of
ranges was ignoring the DESC flag.
However some engines like InnoDB have the primary key parts
as a suffix for every secondary key.
When such primary key suffix is used for ordering ignoring
the DESC is not valid.
But we generally would like to do this because it's faster.
Fixed by performing only reverse scan if the primary key is used.
Removed some dead code in the process.
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
Bug#37830 : test case
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test:
Bug#37830 : test case
sql/opt_range.cc:
Bug#37830 :
- preserve and use used_key_parts to
distinguish when a primary key suffix is used
- removed some dead code
sql/opt_range.h:
Bug#37830 :
- preserve used_key_parts
- dead code removed
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#37830 : Do only reverse order traversal
if the primary key suffix is used.
Range scan in descending order for c <= <col> <= c type of
ranges was ignoring the DESC flag.
However some engines like InnoDB have the primary key parts
as a suffix for every secondary key.
When such primary key suffix is used for ordering ignoring
the DESC is not valid.
But we generally would like to do this because it's faster.
Fixed by performing only reverse scan if the primary key is used.
Removed some dead code in the process.
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
Bug#37830 : test case
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test:
Bug#37830 : test case
sql/opt_range.cc:
Bug#37830 :
- preserve and use used_key_parts to
distinguish when a primary key suffix is used
- removed some dead code
sql/opt_range.h:
Bug#37830 :
- preserve used_key_parts
- dead code removed
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#37830 : Do only reverse order traversal
if the primary key suffix is used.
- In QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT::read_keys_and_merge: when we got table->sort from Unique,
tell init_read_record() not to use rr_from_cache() because a) rowids are already sorted
and b) it might be that the the data is used by filesort(), which will need record rowids
(which rr_from_cache() cannot provide).
- Fully de-initialize the table->sort read in QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT::get_next(). This fixes BUG#35477.
(bk trigger: file as fix for BUG#35478).
sql/filesort.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- make find_all_keys() use quick->get_next() instead of init_read_record(r)/r.read_record() calls
- added dbug printout
sql/mysql_priv.h:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added parameter to init_read_record
sql/opt_range.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- In QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT::read_keys_and_merge: when we got table->sort from Unique,
tell init_read_record() not to use rr_from_cache() because a) rowids are already sorted
and b) it might be that the the data is used by filesort(), which will need record rowids
(which rr_from_cache() cannot provide).
- Fully de-initialize the table->sort read in QUICK_INDEX_MERGE_SELECT::get_next().
sql/records.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added disable_rr_cache parameter to init_read_record
- Added comment
sql/sql_acl.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added parameter to init_read_record
sql/sql_delete.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added parameter to init_read_record
sql/sql_help.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added parameter to init_read_record
sql/sql_select.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added parameter to init_read_record
sql/sql_table.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added parameter to init_read_record
sql/sql_udf.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added parameter to init_read_record
sql/sql_update.cc:
BUG#35478: sort_union() returns bad data when sort_buffer_size is hit
- Added parameter to init_read_record
InnoDB table, where all selected columns
belong to the same unique index key, returns
incorrect results
Server executes some queries via QUICK_GROUP_MIN_MAX_SELECT
(MIN/MAX optimization for queries with GROUP BY or DISTINCT
clause) and that optimization implies loose index scan, so all
grouping is done by the QUICK_GROUP_MIN_MAX_SELECT::get_next
method.
The server does not set the precomputed_group_by flag for some
QUICK_GROUP_MIN_MAX_SELECT queries and duplicates grouping by
call to the end_send_group function.
Fix: when the test_if_skip_sort_order function selects loose
index scan as a best way to satisfy an ORDER BY/GROUP BY type
of query, the precomputed_group_by flag has been set to use
end_send/end_write functions instead of end_send_group/
end_write_group functions.
mysql-test/r/group_min_max_innodb.result:
Fixed bug #36632: SELECT DISTINCT from a simple view on an
InnoDB table, where all selected columns
belong to the same unique index key, returns
incorrect results
mysql-test/t/group_min_max_innodb.test:
Fixed bug #36632: SELECT DISTINCT from a simple view on an
InnoDB table, where all selected columns
belong to the same unique index key, returns
incorrect results
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fixed bug #36632: SELECT DISTINCT from a simple view on an
InnoDB table, where all selected columns
belong to the same unique index key, returns
incorrect results
The value of JOIN::tables must be set to 0 when there
is no matching min/max row.
mysql-test/r/subselect.result:
Added a test case for bug #37004.
mysql-test/t/subselect.test:
Added a test case for bug #37004.
into magare.gmz:/home/kgeorge/mysql/work/B36011-5.1-bugteam
sql/sql_select.cc:
Auto merged
mysql-test/r/subselect.result:
merge of bug 36011 to 5.1-bugteam
mysql-test/t/subselect.test:
merge of bug 36011 to 5.1-bugteam
with dependent subqueries
An IN subquery is executed on EXPLAIN when it's not correlated.
If the subquery required a temporary table for its execution
not all the internal structures were restored from pointing to
the items of the temporary table to point back to the items of
the subquery.
Fixed by restoring the ref array when a temp tables were used in
executing the IN subquery during EXPLAIN EXTENDED.
mysql-test/r/subselect.result:
Bug #36011: test case
mysql-test/t/subselect.test:
Bug #36011: test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #36011: restore the ref array after execution
when there were temp tables.
- Disable the "prefer full scan on clustered primary key over full scan
of any secondary key" rule introduced by BUG#35850.
- Update test results accordingly
(bk trigger: file this for BUG#35850)
mysql-test/r/innodb.result:
BUG#35850 "Performance regression in 5.1.23/5.1.24"
- Update test results
mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result:
BUG#35850 "Performance regression in 5.1.23/5.1.24"
- Testcase
- Update test results
mysql-test/r/join_outer_innodb.result:
BUG#35850 "Performance regression in 5.1.23/5.1.24"
- Update test results
mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test:
BUG#35850 "Performance regression in 5.1.23/5.1.24"
- Testcase
sql/sql_select.cc:
BUG#35850 "Performance regression in 5.1.23/5.1.24"
- Disable the "prefer full scan on clustered primary key over full scan
of any secondary key" rule introduced by BUG#35850.
into host.loc:/home/uchum/work/5.1-bugteam
mysql-test/r/ctype_gbk.result:
Auto merged
mysql-test/r/subselect3.result:
Auto merged
mysql-test/t/subselect3.test:
Auto merged
sql/sql_select.cc:
Auto merged
strings/ctype-big5.c:
Merge with 5.0-bugteam (bug#35993).
strings/ctype-gbk.c:
Merge with 5.0-bugteam (bug#35993).
The function test_if_skip_sort_order ignored any covering index used for ref
access of a table in a query with ORDER BY if this index was incompatible
with the ORDER BY list and there was another covering index compatible with
this list.
As a result sub-optimal execution plans were chosen for some queries with
ORDER BY clause.
mysql-test/r/distinct.result:
Adjusted results after the fix for bug#35844.
mysql-test/r/order_by.result:
Added a test case for bug#35844.
mysql-test/t/order_by.test:
Added a test case for bug#35844.
impossible WHERE/HAVING clause
(subselect_single_select_engine::exec).
Allocation and initialization of joined table list t1, t2... of
subqueries like:
NOT IN (SELECT ... FROM t1,t2,... WHERE 0)
is optimized out, however server tries to traverse this list.
mysql-test/r/subselect3.result:
Added test case for bug#36005.
mysql-test/t/subselect3.test:
Added test case for bug#36005.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Fixed bug#36005.
1. JOIN::prepare initializes JOIN::table counter (actually a size
of the JOIN::join_tab array) and sets it to a number of joined tables.
2. The make_join_statistics function (when called from JOIN::optimize)
allocates and fills the JOIN::join_tab array.
However, when optimizing subselect has impossible (definite false)
WHERE or HAVING clause, optimizer skips call to make_join_statistics
and leaves JOIN::join_tab == NULL.
3. subselect_single_select_engine::exec does traversal of the JOIN::join_tab
array and the server dies because array is not allocated but array
counter is greater than 0.
The JOIN::optimize method has been modified to reset the JOIN::table
counter to 0 in cause of impossible WHERE/HAVING clause.
into magare.gmz:/home/kgeorge/mysql/work/merge-build-5.1-bugteam
include/my_dbug.h:
Auto merged
mysys/mf_keycache.c:
Auto merged
sql/item_func.cc:
Auto merged
sql/log.cc:
Auto merged
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Auto merged
sql/mysqld.cc:
Auto merged
sql/opt_range.cc:
Auto merged
sql/set_var.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_select.cc:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_check.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_dynrec.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_open.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_packrec.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_test1.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_test2.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_write.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisammrg/ha_myisammrg.cc:
Auto merged
into amd64.(none):/src/bug26243/my50-bug26243
libmysql/libmysql.c:
Auto merged
myisam/mi_open.c:
Auto merged
sql/ha_federated.cc:
Auto merged
sql/ha_myisammrg.cc:
Auto merged
sql/slave.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_select.cc:
Auto merged
tests/mysql_client_test.c:
Auto merged
- Backported the 5.1 DBUG to 5.0.
- Avoid memory cleanup race on Windows client for CTRL-C
client/mysql.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- On Windows, the sigint handler shouldn't call mysql_end
because the main thread will do so automatically.
- Remove unnecessary signal call from the sigint handler.
- Call my_end with proper value.
dbug/dbug.c:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Backported the 5.1 DBUG library. The old version uses a non-thread
safe global variable 'static struct state *stack'.
dbug/factorial.c:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Backported the 5.1 DBUG library. The old version uses a non-thread
safe global variable 'static struct state *stack'.
dbug/user.r:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Backported the 5.1 DBUG library. The old version uses a non-thread
safe global variable 'static struct state *stack'.
include/my_dbug.h:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Backported the 5.1 DBUG library. The old version uses a non-thread
safe global variable 'static struct state *stack'.
libmysql/libmysql.c:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
myisam/mi_open.c:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/ha_federated.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/ha_innodb.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/ha_myisammrg.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/mysqld.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/net_serv.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/opt_range.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/set_var.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/slave.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/sql_cache.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
tests/mysql_client_test.c:
Bug#26243 mysql command line crash after control-c
- Update for new DBUG library.
into moonbone.local:/work/27219-bug-5.1
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Auto merged
sql/item_sum.cc:
Auto merged
sql/item_sum.h:
Auto merged
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Auto merged
sql/sql_lex.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_select.cc:
Auto merged
mysql-test/r/group_by.result:
SCCS merged
mysql-test/t/group_by.test:
SCCS merged
sql/item.cc:
SCCS merged
sql/sql_lex.h:
SCCS merged
into moonbone.local:/work/27219-5.0-opt-mysql
sql/item.cc:
Auto merged
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Auto merged
sql/item_sum.cc:
Auto merged
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Auto merged
sql/sql_select.cc:
Auto merged
into a88-113-38-195.elisa-laajakaista.fi:/home/my/bk/mysql-5.1-marvel
client/mysqldump.c:
Auto merged
client/mysqltest.c:
Auto merged
include/my_global.h:
Auto merged
mysql-test/lib/mtr_report.pl:
Auto merged
sql/ha_partition.cc:
Auto merged
sql/handler.h:
Auto merged
sql/item_func.cc:
Auto merged
sql/log.cc:
Auto merged
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Auto merged
sql/mysqld.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_class.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_parse.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_select.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_show.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_table.cc:
Auto merged
sql/sql_yacc.yy:
Auto merged
sql/table.cc:
Auto merged
sql/unireg.cc:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/ha_myisam.cc:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_dynrec.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisam/mi_open.c:
Auto merged
storage/myisammrg/ha_myisammrg.cc:
Auto merged
include/config-win.h:
Manual merge between main 5.1 and 5.1 marvel.
mysql-test/r/change_user.result:
Manual merge between main 5.1 and 5.1 marvel.
mysql-test/t/change_user.test:
Manual merge between main 5.1 and 5.1 marvel.
sql/sql_plugin.cc:
Manual merge between main 5.1 and 5.1 marvel.
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.
mysql-test/r/order_by.result:
Bug #35206: test case
mysql-test/t/order_by.test:
Bug #35206: test case
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug #35206: Change the access method when selecting a
quick indexed access.
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.
mysql-test/t/group_by.test:
Added a test case for the bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
mysql-test/r/group_by.result:
Added a test case for the bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
sql/sql_select.cc:
Bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
Implementation of new check for mixing non aggregated fields and aggregation
function in the ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY mode.
sql/sql_lex.cc:
Bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
Initialization of the full_group_by_flag bitmap.
SELECT_LEX::test_limit function doesn't reset ORDER BY
clause anymore.
sql/sql_lex.h:
Bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
The full_group_by_flag is added to the SELECT_LEX class.
sql/item_sum.h:
Bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
The outer_fields list is added to the Item_sum class.
sql/mysql_priv.h:
Bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
Defined a set of constants used in the new check for mixing non aggregated
fields and sum functions in the ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY_MODE.
sql/item_subselect.cc:
Bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
The Item_in_subselect::select_in_like_transformer function now drops
ORDER BY clause in all selects in a subquery.
sql/item_sum.cc:
Bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
Now the Item_sum::check_sum_func function now checks whether fields in the
outer_fields list are aggregated or not and marks selects accordingly.
sql/item.cc:
Bug#27219: Aggregate functions in ORDER BY.
Now the Item_field::fix_fields function checks whether the field is aggregated
or not and marks its select_lex accordingly.