Due to a BZR bug, that merge was done by the following command:
bzr merge -r 'revid:tor.didriksen@sun.com-20100527074248-6qtv0p1ugy6o1hjo..' <mysql-trunk-bugfixing path>
and .tar.gz, windows vs linux..
On Intel x86 machines index selection by the MySQL query
optimizer could sometimes depend on the compiler version and
optimization flags used to build the server binary.
The problem was a result of a known issue with floating point
calculations on x86: since internal FPU precision (80 bit)
differs from precision used by programs (32-bit float or 64-bit
double), the result of calculating a complex expression may
depend on how FPU registers are allocated by the compiler and
whether intermediate values are spilled from FPU to memory. In
this particular case compiler versions and optimization flags
had an effect on cost calculation when choosing the best index
in best_access_path().
A possible solution to this problem which has already been
implemented in mysql-trunk is to limit FPU internal precision
to 64 bits. So the fix is a backport of the relevant code to
5.1 from mysql-trunk.
configure.in:
Configure check for fpu_control.h
mysql-test/r/explain.result:
Test case for bug #48537.
mysql-test/t/explain.test:
Test case for bug #48537.
sql/mysqld.cc:
Backport of the code to switch FPU on x86 to 64-bit precision.
is not needed any more with current versions of FreeBSD.
(Entries 52410 and 52412 in the Bug DB)
That change is based on Dan Nelson replying on the
FreeBSD mailing list, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
in a thread running from 2010-Apr-29 to 2010-May-1 titled
"Need info about FreeBSD and interrupted system
calls for MySQL code"
Also, ensure the cmake settings correspond to the autotools
ones: Add "HAVE_BROKEN_REALPATH" to cmake.
cmake/os/FreeBSD.cmake:
With current versions of FreeBSD, threading is not done on
the user-level any more, so the huge "net retry count"
is not needed any more.
However, it is still being kept as a comment for now,
so that it can be re-activated should the need arise.
In addition, set "HAVE_BROKEN_REALPATH" to completely
mirror the autotools path.
configure.in:
With current versions of FreeBSD, threading is not done on
the user-level any more, so the huge "net retry count"
is not needed any more.
This definitely holds for FreeBSD version 6 and up.
Adapt the informational messages to the path taken.
The thing is that on some platforms (e.g. Mac OS X) sockaddr_in / sockaddr_in6
contain a non-standard field (sin_len / sin6_len), that must be set.
The problem was that only standard fields were set, thus getnameinfo() returned
EAI_SYSTEM instead of EAI_NONAME.
The fix is to introduce configure-time checks (for GNU auto-tools and CMake) for
those additional fields and to set them if they are available.
TO DO: Enable this in CMake-based builds.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 3474
revision-id: marko.makela@oracle.com-20100520104042-ma2nsscqdvwoph8k
parent: marko.makela@oracle.com-20100519081618-h38q02qxuvcowbtk
committer: Marko Mäkelä <marko.makela@oracle.com>
branch nick: 5.1-innodb
timestamp: Thu 2010-05-20 13:40:42 +0300
message:
Bug#53593: Add some instrumentation to improve Valgrind sensitivity
BUILD/*: Add valgrind_configs=--with-valgrind.
BUILD/*: Remove -USAFEMALLOC from valgrind_flags.
configure.in: Add AC_ARG_WITH(valgrind) and HAVE_VALGRIND.
include/my_sys.h: Define a number of MEM_ wrappers for VALGRIND_ functions.
include/my_sys.h: Make TRASH do MEM_UNDEFINED().
include/m_string.h: Remove unused macro bzero_if_purify(A,B).
_mymalloc(): Declare MEM_UNDEFINED() on the allocated memory.
_myfree(): Declare MEM_NOACCESS() on the freed memory.
storage/innobase/include/univ.i: Enable UNIV_DEBUG_VALGRIND based on
HAVE_VALGRIND rather than HAVE_purify.
Possible things to do:
* In my_global.h, remove the defined(HAVE_purify) condition
from the _WIN32 uint3korr().
* In my_global.h *int*korr(), use | instead of +
in order to keep the Valgrind V bits accurate
* Consider replacing HAVE_purify with HAVE_VALGRIND
* Use VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK, VALGRIND_DISCARD in mem_root and similar places
BUILD/*: Add valgrind_configs=--with-valgrind.
BUILD/*: Remove -USAFEMALLOC from valgrind_flags.
configure.in: Add AC_ARG_WITH(valgrind) and HAVE_VALGRIND.
include/my_sys.h: Define a number of MEM_ wrappers for VALGRIND_ functions.
include/my_sys.h: Make TRASH do MEM_UNDEFINED().
include/m_string.h: Remove unused macro bzero_if_purify(A,B).
_mymalloc(): Declare MEM_UNDEFINED() on the allocated memory.
_myfree(): Declare MEM_NOACCESS() on the freed memory.
storage/innobase/include/univ.i: Enable UNIV_DEBUG_VALGRIND based on
HAVE_VALGRIND rather than HAVE_purify.
Possible things to do:
* In my_global.h, remove the defined(HAVE_purify) condition
from the _WIN32 uint3korr().
* In my_global.h *int*korr(), use | instead of +
in order to keep the Valgrind V bits accurate
* Consider replacing HAVE_purify with HAVE_VALGRIND
* Use VALGRIND_CREATE_BLOCK, VALGRIND_DISCARD in mem_root and similar places
Conflicts:
Text conflict in configure.in
Text conflict in dbug/dbug.c
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/ps.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/t/ps.test
Text conflict in sql/CMakeLists.txt
Text conflict in sql/ha_ndbcluster.cc
Text conflict in sql/mysqld.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_plugin.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_table.cc
on Windows".
On platforms where read-write lock implementation does not
prefer readers by default (Windows, Solaris) server might
have deadlocked while detecting MDL deadlock.
MDL deadlock detector relies on the fact that read-write
locks which are used in its implementation prefer readers
(see new comment for MDL_lock::m_rwlock for details).
So far MDL code assumed that default implementation of
read/write locks for the system has this property.
Indeed, this turned out ot be wrong, for example, for
Windows or Solaris. Thus MDL deadlock detector might have
deadlocked on these systems.
This fix simply adds portable implementation of read/write
lock which prefer readers and changes MDL code to use this
new type of synchronization primitive.
No test case is added as existing rqg_mdl_stability test can
serve as one.
config.h.cmake:
Check for presence of pthread_rwlockattr_setkind_np to be
able to determine if system natively supports read-write
locks for which we can specify if readers or writers should
be preferred.
configure.cmake:
Check for presence of pthread_rwlockattr_setkind_np to be
able to determine if system natively supports read-write
locks for which we can specify if readers or writers should
be preferred.
configure.in:
Check for presence of pthread_rwlockattr_setkind_np to be
able to determine if system natively supports read-write
locks for which we can specify if readers or writers should
be preferred.
include/my_pthread.h:
Added support for portable read-write locks which prefer
readers.
To do so extended existing my_rw_lock_t implementation to
support selection of whom to prefer depending on a flag.
mysys/thr_rwlock.c:
Extended existing my_rw_lock_t implementation to support
selection of whom to prefer depending on a flag.
Added rw_pr_init() function implementing initialization of
read-write locks preferring readers.
sql/mdl.cc:
Use portable read-write locks which prefer readers instead of
relying on that system implementation of read-write locks has
this property (this was true for Linux/NPTL but was false,
for example, for Windows and Solaris).
Added comment explaining why preferring readers is important
for MDL deadlock detector (thanks to Serg for example!).
sql/mdl.h:
Use portable read-write locks which prefer readers instead of
relying on that system implementation of read-write locks has
this property (this was true for Linux/NPTL but was false,
for example, for Windows and Solaris).
In POSIX systems, the file descriptor set used in the select(2)
system call is represented by a bit vector of size FD_SETSIZE.
When select(2) is used on file/socket descriptors with a value
that is beyond this size, unpredictable errors may occur.
In this case, the error happens when there are a large number
of tables that need repair. These tables are opened before
the sockets for incoming connections are acquired, resulting
in these sockets getting descriptor id which is higher than
FD_SETSIZE.
Replacing the call to select(2) with poll(2) fixes the problem,
as poll takes an array of the wanted descriptors, instead of
a bit vector.
MS Windows has a different implementation of 'select', and is not
affected by this bug.
configure.in:
Added a test for the <poll.h> file
sql/mysqld.cc:
Restructured some of the code to reduce the number of
#ifdef's. Removed some HP/UX 10-specific code.
in message printed at end of configure
New text for the success message of "configure".
configure.in:
The message must be changed to drop the "www.mysql.com" URL.
Original revision:
------------------------------------------------------------
revision-id: kent.boortz@sun.com-20100204182709-dw1dwpglkd5qrehb
committer: Kent Boortz <kent.boortz@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-5.1-bugteam
timestamp: Thu 2010-02-04 19:27:09 +0100
message:
LT_INIT and LT_PREREQ was added in libtool 2.2 2008, a bit too
recent, switched back to the older AC_PROG_LIBTOOL
------------------------------------------------------------
path names than 99 characters, using the USTAR format of the
resulting source TAR.
To be able to specify the use of USTAR when creating the source
TAR, we needed both to update the GNU autotools version requirements
slightly, and update the initiation of the tools to use more
modern constructs.
printstack() being present
When Bug#47391 was fixed, no assumption was made that support
for Solaris 8 was needed. Solaris 8 lacks printstack(), and
the build breaks because of this.
This patch adds a test for the presence of printstack() to
configure.in for 5.0, and uses HAVE_PRINTSTACK to make
decisions rather than the __sun define.