ucs2 doesn't provide required by fulltext ctype array. Crash
happens because fulltext attempts to use unitialized ctype
array.
Fixed by converting ucs2 fields to compatible utf8 analogue.
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.
The root cause of the issue was that the CREATE FUNCTION grammar,
for User Defined Functions, was using the sp_name rule.
The sp_name rule is intended for fully qualified stored procedure names,
like either ident.ident, or just ident but with a default database
implicitly selected.
A UDF does not have a fully qualified name, only a name (ident), and should
not use the sp_name grammar fragment during parsing.
The fix is to re-organize the CREATE FUNCTION grammar, to better separate:
- creating UDF (no definer, can have AGGREGATE, simple ident)
- creating Stored Functions (definer, no AGGREGATE, fully qualified name)
With the test case provided, another issue was exposed which is also fixed:
the DROP FUNCTION statement was using sp_name and also failing when no database
is implicitly selected, when droping UDF functions.
The fix is also to change the grammar so that DROP FUNCTION works with
both the ident.ident syntax (to drop a stored function), or just the ident
syntax (to drop either a UDF or a Stored Function, in the current database)
If mysql_lock_tables fails because the lock was aborted, we need to
reset thd->some_tables_delete, otherwise we might loop indefinitely
because handler's tables are not closed in a standard way, meaning
that close_thread_tables() (which resets some_tables_deleted) is not
used.
This patch fixes sporadical failures of handler_myisam/innodb tests
which were introduced by previous fix for this bug.
(compiler issue ?)
Problem:
Improper compile-time flags on AIX prevented use of files > 2 GB. This
resulted in Max_data_length being truncated to 2 GB by MyISAM code.
Solution:
Reverted large-file changes from the fix for bug10776. We need to define
_LARGE_FILES on AIX to have support for files > 2 GB.
Since _LARGE_FILE_API is incompatible with _LARGE_FILES and may be
automatically defined by including standards.h, we also need a
workaround to avoid this conflict.
makedate() will fold years below 100 into the 1970-2069 range. CS removes code
that also wrongly folded years between 100 and 200 into that range, which should
be left unchanged. Backport from 5.1.
Options to mysqld were not processed correctly because switch statement
was missing some "break"s. CS adds them.
No test case; would require .opt file and server restart. Manually tested.
Problem: GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT BIT_FIELD...) uses a tree to store keys;
which are constructed using a temporary table fields,
see Item_func_group_concat::setup().
As a) we don't store null bits in the tree where the bit fields store parts
of their data and b) there's no method to properly compare two table records
we've got problem.
Fix: convert BIT fields to INT in the temporary table used.
myisam_sort_buffer_size.
An incorrect length of the sort buffer was used when calculating the
maximum number of keys. When myisam_sort_buffer_size is small enough,
this could result in the number of keys < number of
BUFFPEK structures which in turn led to use of uninitialized BUFFPEKs.
Fixed by correcting the buffer length calculation.
Bug#29816 Syntactically wrong query fails with misleading error message
The core problem is that an SQL-invoked function name can be a <schema
qualified routine name> that contains no <schema name>, but the mysql
parser insists that all stored procedures (function, procedures and
triggers) must have a <schema name>, which is not true for functions.
This problem is especially visible when trying to create a function
or when a query contains a syntax error after a function call (in the
same query), both will fail with a "No database selected" message if
the session is not attached to a particular schema, but the first
one should succeed and the second fail with a "syntax error" message.
Part of the fix is to revamp the sp name handling so that a schema
name may be omitted for functions -- this means that the internal
function name representation may not have a dot, which represents
that the function doesn't have a schema name. The other part is
to place schema checks after the type (function, trigger or procedure)
of the routine is known.