Fixed that return value of malloc was not checked.
Fixed wrong argument count (compilation failure) to base64_decode()
function.
Note:
- there is no test case for this fix as this code is never compiled
into mysql clients/server;
- as this code is used for internal testing purposes only, no changelog
entry needed.
and a char-field > 128 exists
CHECK TABLE (non-QUICK) and any form of repair table did wrongly rate
records as corrupted under the following conditions:
1. The table has dynamic row format and
2. it has a CHAR like column > 127 bytes (but not VARCHAR)
(for multi-byte character sets this could be less than 127
characters) and
3. it has records with > 127 bytes significant length in that column
(a byte beyond byte position 127 must be non-space).
Affected were the statements CHECK TABLE, REPAIR TABLE, OPTIMIZE TABLE,
ALTER TABLE. CHECK TABLE reported and marked the table as crashed if any
record was present that fulfilled condition 3. The other statements
deleted these records.
The problem was a signed/unsigned compare in MyISAM code. A
char to uchar change became necessary after the big byte to uchar
change.
The ROUND(X, D) function would change the Item::decimals field during
execution to achieve the effect of a dynamic number of decimal digits.
This caused a series of bugs:
Bug #30617:Round() function not working under some circumstances in InnoDB
Bug #33402:ROUND with decimal and non-constant cannot round to 0 decimal places
Bug #30889:filesort and order by with float/numeric crashes server
Fixed by never changing the number of shown digits for DECIMAL when
used with a nonconstant number of decimal digits.
Use compiler provided atomic builtins as a 'backend' for
MySQL's atomic primitives. The builtins are available on
a handful of platforms and compilers.
The name resolution for correlated subqueries and HAVING clauses
failed to distinguish which of two was being performed when there
was a reference to an outer aliased field.
Fixed by adding the condition that HAVING clause name resulotion
is being performed.
value when inserting into a view.
The mysql_prepare_insert function checks all fields of the target table that
directly or indirectly (through a view) are specified in the INSERT
statement to have a default value. This check can be skipped if the INSERT
statement doesn't mention any insert fields. In case of a view this allows
fields that aren't mentioned in the view to bypass the check.
Now fields of the target table are always checked to have a default value
when insert goes into a view.
columns (default datatype value is assigned).
The mysql_update function has been modified to generate
an error when trying to set a NOT NULL field to NULL rather than a warning
in the set_field_to_null_with_conversions function.
Problem: Replication fails when master is mysql-5.1-wl2325-5.0-drop6 and
slave is mysql-5.1-new-rpl. The reason is that, in
mysql-5.1-wl2325-5.0-drop6, the event type id's were different than in
mysql-5.1-new-rpl.
Fix (in mysql-5.1-new-rpl):
(1) detect that the server that generated the events uses the old
format, by checking the server version of the format_description_log_event
This patch recognizes mysql-5.1-wl2325-5.0-drop6p13-alpha,
mysql-5.1-wl2325-5.0-drop6, mysql-5.1-wl2325-5.0, mysql-5.1-wl2325-no-dd.
(2) if the generating server is old, map old event types to new event
types using a permutation array.
I've also added a test case which reads binlogs for four different
versions.