Conversion of a subquery to a semi-join is blocked when we have an
IN subquery predicate in the on_expr of an outer join. Currently this
scenario is handled but the cases when an IN subquery predicate is wrapped
inside a Item_in_optimizer item then this blocking is not done.
cmp_item_sort_string::store_value() did not cache the string returned
from item->val_str(), whose result can point to various private members
such as Item_char_typecast::tmp_value.
- cmp_item_sort_string::store_value() remembered the pointer returned
from item->val_str() poiting to tmp_value into cmp_item_string::value_res.
- Later, cmp_item_real::store_value() was called, which called
Item_str_func::val_real(), which called Item_char_typecast::val_str(&tmp)
using a local stack variable "String tmp". Item_char_typecast::tmp_value
was overwritten and become a link to "tmp":
tmp_value.Ptr freed its own buffer and set to point to the buffer
owned by "tmp".
- On return from Item_str_func::val_real(), "String tmp" was destructed,
but "tmp_value" still pointed to the buffer owned by "tmp",
So tmp_value.Ptr became invalid.
- Then cmp_item_sort_string() passed cmp_item_string::value_res to sortcmp().
At this point, value_res still pointed to an invalid value of
Item_char_typecast::tmp_value.
Fix:
changing cmp_item_sort_string::store_value() to force copying
to cmp_item_string::value if item->val_str(&value) returned
a different pointer (instead of &value).
Refactor get_datetime_value() not to create Item_cache_temporal(),
but do it always in ::fix_fields() or ::fix_length_and_dec().
Creating items at the execution time doesn't work very well with
virtual columns and check constraints that are fixed and executed
in different THDs.
It's a generic function, not using anything from Arg_comparator.
Make it a static function, not a class method, to be able to use
it later without Arg_comparator
reorder items in args[] array. Instead of
when1,then1,when2,then2,...[,case][,else]
sort them as
[case,]when1,when2,...,then1,then2,...[,else]
in this case all items used for comparison take a continuous part
of the array and can be aggregated directly. and all items that
can be returned take a continuous part of the array and can be
aggregated directly. Old code had to copy them to a temporary
array before aggreation, and then copy back (thd->change_item_tree)
everything that was changed.
The problem was that Item_func_hybrid_field_type::get_date() did not
convert the result to the correct data type, so MYSQL_TIME::time_type
of the get_date() result could be not in sync with field_type().
Changes:
1. Adding two new classes Datetime and Date to store MYSQL_TIMESTAMP_DATETIME
and MYSQL_TIMESTAMP_DATE values respectively
(in addition to earlier added class Time, for MYSQL_TIMESTAMP_TIME values).
2. Adding Item_func_hybrid_field_type::time_op().
It performs the operation using TIME representation,
and always returns a MYSQL_TIME value with time_type=MYSQL_TIMESTAMP_TIME.
Implementing time_op() for all affected children classes.
3. Fixing all implementations of date_op() to perform the operation
using strictly DATETIME representation. Now they always return a MYSQL_TIME
value with time_type=MYSQL_TIMESTAMP_{DATE|DATETIME},
according to the result data type.
4. Removing assignment of ltime.time_type to mysql_timestamp_type()
from all val_xxx_from_date_op(), because now date_op() makes sure
to return a proper MYSQL_TIME value with a good time_type (and other member)
5. Adding Item_func_hybrid_field_type::val_xxx_from_time_op().
6. Overriding Type_handler_time_common::Item_func_hybrid_field_type_val_xxx()
to call val_xxx_from_time_op() instead of val_xxx_from_date_op().
7. Modified Item_func::get_arg0_date() to return strictly a TIME value
if TIME_TIME_ONLY is passed, or return strictly a DATETIME value otherwise.
If args[0] returned a value of a different temporal type,
(for example a TIME value when TIME_TIME_ONLY was not passed,
or a DATETIME value when TIME_TIME_ONLY was passed), the conversion
is automatically applied.
Earlier, get_arg0_date() did not guarantee a result in
accordance to TIME_TIME_ONLY flag.
There were two problems related to the bug report:
1. Item_datetime::get_date() was not implemented.
So execution went through val_int() followed
by int-to-datetime or int-to-time conversion.
This was the reason why the optimizer did not
work well on data with fractional seconds.
2. Item_datetime::set() did not have a TIME specific code
to mix months and days to hours after unpack_time().
This is why the optimizer did not work well with negative
TIME values, as well as huge time values.
Changes:
1. Overriding Item_datetime::get_date(), to return ltime.
This fixes the problem N1.
2. Cleanup: Moving pack_time() and unpack_time() from
sql-common/my_time.c and include/my_time.h to
sql/sql_time.cc and sql/sql_time.h, as they are not needed
on the client side.
3. Adding a new "enum_mysql_timestamp_type ts_type" parameter
to unpack_time() and moving the TIME specific code to mix
months and days with hours inside unpack_time().
Adding a new "ts_type" parameter to Item_datetime::set(),
to pass it from the caller down to unpack_time().
So now the TIME specific code is automatically called
from Item_datetime::set(). This fixes the problem N2.
This change also helped to get rid of duplicate TIME specific code
from other three places, where mixing month/days to hours
was done immediately after unpack_time().
Moving the DATE specific code to zero hhmmssff
from Item_func_min_max::get_date_native to inside unpack_time(),
for symmetry.
4. Removing the virtual method in_vector::result_type(),
adding in_vector::type_handler() instead.
This helps to get result_type(), field_type(),
mysql_timestamp_type() of an in_vector easier.
Passing type_handler()->mysql_timestamp_type() as
a new parameter to Item_datetime::set() inside
in_temporal::value_to_item().
5. Cleaup: Removing separate implementations of in_datetime::get_value()
and in_time::get_value(). Adding a single implementation
in_temporal::get_value() instead.
Passing type_handler()->field_type() to get_value_internal().
Handle string length as size_t, consistently (almost always:))
Change function prototypes to accept size_t, where in the past
ulong or uint were used. change local/member variables to size_t
when appropriate.
This fix excludes rocksdb, spider,spider, sphinx and connect for now.
MDEV-14957: JOIN::prepare gets unusable "conds" as argument
Do not touch merged derived (it is irreversible)
Fix first argument of in_optimizer for calls possible before fix_fields()
TODO:
- Make get_thd_memroot() inline
- To do this, we need to reduce dependence of include files, especially
so that sql_class.h is not depending in item.h
Make differentiation between pullout for merge and pulout of outer field during exists2in transformation.
In last case the field was outer and so we can safely start from name resolution context of the SELECT where it was pulled.
Old behavior lead to inconsistence between list of tables and outer name resolution context (which skips one SELECT for merge purposes) which creates problem vor name resolution.
As a result of this merge the code for the following tasks appears in 10.3:
- MDEV-12172 Implement tables specified by table value constructors
- MDEV-12176 Transform [NOT] IN predicate with long list of values INTO
[NOT] IN subquery.
Side effect: the second debug Note in cache_temporal_4265.result disappeared.
Before this change:
- During JOIN::cache_const_exprs(),
Item::get_cache() for Item_date_add_interval() was called.
The data type for date_add('2001-01-01',interval 5 day) is VARCHAR,
because the first argument is VARCHAR (not temporal).
Item_get_cache() created Item_cache_str('2001-01-06').
- During evaluate_join_record(), get_datetime_value() was called,
which called Item::get_date() for Item_cache_str('2001-01-06').
This gave the second Note. Then, get_datetime_value() created
a new cache, now Item_cache_temporal for '2001-01-06', so not
further str_to_datetime() happened.
After this change:
- During tem_bool_rowready_func2::fix_length_and_dec(),
Arg_comparator::set_cmp_func_datetime() is called,
which immediately creates an instance of Item_cache_date for
the result of date_add('2001-01-01',interval 5 day).
So later no str_to_datetime happens any more,
neither during JOIN::cache_const_exprs(),
nor during evaluate_join_record().
Fixing the data type for the "fuzzydate" parameter to
Item_func_hybrid_field_type::date_op() from uint to ulonglong,
for consistency with Item::get_date().
- Implementing stricter data type control for Item_long_func descendants
- Cleanup: renaming Type_handler::can_return_str_ascii() to can_return_text()
(a better name).
This is a preparatory step for MDEV-13864.
It does not change behavior in any ways. It simply splits methods into smaller peaces.
The intent of this separate patch is to make more readable the main patch for
MDEV-13864 (which will actually move the predicant to args[0]).
1. Splitting fix_length_and_dec() into smaller pieces, adding:
- bool aggregate_then_and_else_arguments(THD *thd);
- bool aggregate_switch_and_when_arguments(THD *thd);
2. Splitting find_item() into smaller pieces, adding:
- Item *find_item_searched();
- Item *find_item_simple();
3. Splitting print() into smaller pieces, adding:
- void print_when_then_arguments(String *str, enum_query_type query_type,
Item **items, uint count);
- void print_else_argument(String *str, enum_query_type query_type, Item *item)
4. Moving the maybe_null handling part related to ELSE from fix_length_and_dec()
to fix_fields(), as in all other Item_func's.
5. Removing the unused String* argument from find_item().
6. Moving find_item() from public to private, as it's not needed outside.