Spatial indexes were not checking for out-of-record condition in
the handler next command when the previous command didn't found
rows.
Fixed by making the rtree index to check for end of rows condition
before re-using the key from the previous search.
Fixed another crash if the tree has changed since the last search.
Added a test case for the other error.
Before this fix, the performance schema instrumentation
in mdl.h / mdl.cc was incomplete, causing:
- build warnings,
- no data collection for the performance schema
This fix:
- added instrumentation helpers for the new preferred
reader read write lock, mysql_prlock_*
- implemented completely the performance schema
instrumentation of mdl.h / mdl.cc
Conflicts:
Text conflict in .bzr-mysql/default.conf
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/explain.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/having.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/disabled.def
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slave_skip.test
Text conflict in storage/federated/ha_federated.cc
consider clustered primary keys
Choosing a shortest index for the covering index scan,
the optimizer ignored the fact, that the clustered primary
key read involves whole table data.
The find_shortest_key function has been modified to
take into account that fact that a clustered PK has a
longest key of possible covering indices.
Before this fix, mysql_upgrade would always drop and re create
the performance_schema database.
This in theory could destroy user data created using 5.1 or older versions.
With this fix, mysql_upgrade checks the content of the
performance_schema database before droping it.
The unit test pfs_instr-t:
- generates a very long (10,000) bytes file name
- calls find_or_create_file.
This leads to a buffer overflow in mysys in my_realpath(),
because my_realpath and mysys file APIs in general do not
test for input parameters: mysys assumes every file name
is less that FN_REFLEN in length.
Calling find_or_create_file with a very long file name is likely
to happen when instrumenting third party code that does not use mysys,
so this test is legitimate.
The fix is to make find_or_create_file in the performance schema
more robust in this case.
The root cause of the failure is that when
Bug#51447 performance schema evil twin files
was fixed, instrumented file names got normalized.
The pfs-t unit test depends on this file normalization,
but it was not updated.
This fix aligns pfs-t.cc lookup_file_by_name()
with the logic in pfs_instr.cc find_or_create_file().
auto_increment on duplicate entry
The bug was that when INSERT_ID was used and the storage
engine was told to release any reserved but not used
auto_increment values, it set the highest auto_increment
value to INSERT_ID.
The fix was to check if the auto_increment value was forced
by user (INSERT_ID) or by slave-thread, i.e. not auto-
generated. So that it is only allowed to release generated
values.
Spatial indexes were not checking for out-of-record condition in
the handler next command when the previous command didn't found
rows.
Fixed by making the rtree index to check for end of rows condition
before re-using the key from the previous search.
Fixed another crash if the tree has changed since the last search.
Added a test case for the other error.
Bug#51676 Server crashes on SELECT, ORDER BY on 'utf8mb4' column
An additional fix. We should use 0xFFFD as a weight for supplementary
characters, not the "weight for character U+FFFD".
Problem was block_size on partitioned tables was not set,
resulting in keys_per_block was not correct which affects
the cost calculation for read time of indexes (including
cost for group min/max).Which resulted in a bad optimizer
decision.
Fixed by setting stats.block_size correctly.
on decimal column
The problem was that there was no check to disallow DECIMAL
columns in the code (it was accepted as if it was INTEGER).
Solution was to correctly disallow DECIMAL columns in
COLUMNS partitioning. As documented.
mode
When the master was executing in sql_mode='traditional' (which
implies that really_abort_on_warning returns TRUE - because of
MODE_STRICT_ALL_TABLES), the error code (ER_DUP_ENTRY in the
reported case) was not being set in the
Query_log_event. Therefore, even if a failure was to be expected
when replaying the statement on the slave, a failure would occur,
because the Query_log_event was not transporting the expected
error code, but 0 instead.
This was because when the master was getting the error code to
set it in the Query_log_event, the executing thread would be
assumed to have been killed:
THD::killed==THD::KILL_BAD_DATA. This would make the error code
fetch routine not to check thd->main_da.sql_errno(), but instead
the thd->killed value. What's more, is that the server would
thd->killed value if thd->killed == THD::KILL_BAD_DATA and return
0 instead. So this is a double inconsistency, as the we should
not even check thd->killed but rather thd->main_da.sql_errno().
We fix this by extending the condition used to choose whether to
check the thd->main_da.sql_errno() or thd->killed, so that it
takes into consideration the case when:
thd->killed==THD::KILL_BAD_DATA.