24abbb9bdb
There is a convention that Item::val_int() and Item::val_real() return SQL NULL doing effectively what this code does: null_value= true; return 0; // Always return 0 for SQL NULL This is done to optimize boolean value evaluation: if Item::val_int() or Item::val_real() returned 1 - that always means TRUE and never can means SQL NULL. This convention helps to avoid unnecessary testing Item::null_value after getting a non-zero return value. Item_func_min_max did not follow this convention. It could return a non-zero value together with null_value==true. This made evaluate_join_record() erroneously misinterpret SQL NULL as TRUE in this call: select_cond_result= MY_TEST(select_cond->val_int()); Fixing Item_func_min_max to follow the convention. |
||
---|---|---|
BUILD | ||
client | ||
cmake | ||
dbug | ||
debian | ||
Docs | ||
extra | ||
include | ||
libmariadb@1d3fd5818a | ||
libmysqld | ||
libservices | ||
man | ||
mysql-test | ||
mysys | ||
mysys_ssl | ||
plugin | ||
randgen/conf | ||
scripts | ||
sql | ||
sql-bench | ||
sql-common | ||
storage | ||
strings | ||
support-files | ||
tests | ||
tpool | ||
unittest | ||
vio | ||
win | ||
wsrep-lib@dfc4bdb8a5 | ||
zlib | ||
.clang-format | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitlab-ci.yml | ||
.gitmodules | ||
appveyor.yml | ||
BUILD-CMAKE | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
config.h.cmake | ||
configure.cmake | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
COPYING | ||
CREDITS | ||
INSTALL-SOURCE | ||
INSTALL-WIN-SOURCE | ||
KNOWN_BUGS.txt | ||
README.md | ||
THIRDPARTY | ||
VERSION |
Code status:
MariaDB: The innovative open source database
MariaDB was designed as a drop-in replacement of MySQL(R) with more features, new storage engines, fewer bugs, and better performance.
MariaDB is brought to you by the MariaDB Foundation and the MariaDB Corporation. Please read the CREDITS file for details about the MariaDB Foundation, and who is developing MariaDB.
MariaDB is developed by many of the original developers of MySQL who now work for the MariaDB Corporation, the MariaDB Foundation and by many people in the community.
MySQL, which is the base of MariaDB, is a product and trademark of Oracle Corporation, Inc. For a list of developers and other contributors, see the Credits appendix. You can also run 'SHOW authors' to get a list of active contributors.
A description of the MariaDB project and a manual can be found at:
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb-vs-mysql-features/
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb-versus-mysql-compatibility/
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/new-and-old-releases/
Getting the code, building it and testing it
Refer to the following guide: https://mariadb.org/get-involved/getting-started-for-developers/get-code-build-test/ which outlines how to correctly build the source code and run the MariaDB testing framework.
Help
More help is available from the Maria Discuss mailing list https://lists.mariadb.org/postorius/lists/discuss.lists.mariadb.org/ and MariaDB's Zulip instance, https://mariadb.zulipchat.com/
Licensing
MariaDB is specifically available only under version 2 of the GNU General Public License (GPLv2). (I.e. Without the "any later version" clause.) This is inherited from MySQL. Please see the README file in the MySQL distribution for more information.
License information can be found in the COPYING file. Third party license information can be found in the THIRDPARTY file.
Bug Reports
Bug and/or error reports regarding MariaDB should be submitted at: https://jira.mariadb.org
For reporting security vulnerabilities see: https://mariadb.org/about/security-policy/
The code for MariaDB, including all revision history, can be found at: https://github.com/MariaDB/server