mariadb/mysql-test/t/rpl_sp.test
unknown 6f83de163b Dmitri please review. Fix for BUG#10417 "CREATE TRIGGER not written to binlog":
writing DROP and CREATE TRIGGER to binlog, disabling binlogging
of substatements, testing.


mysql-test/r/rpl_sp.result:
  result update
mysql-test/t/rpl_sp.test:
  removing useless lines, plus testing replication of triggers
sql/sql_trigger.cc:
  trigger can be used to destroy slave, so only SUPER can create it by default.
  If create|drop goes ok, binlog CREATE TRIGGER and DROP TRIGGER.
sql/sql_trigger.h:
  disable binlogging of substatements of triggers (even if now triggers
  can't do updates)
2005-05-06 18:52:19 +02:00

266 lines
6.7 KiB
Text

# Test of replication of stored procedures (WL#2146 for MySQL 5.0)
source include/master-slave.inc;
# First let's test replication of current_user() (that's a related thing)
# we need a db != test, where we don't have automatic grants
create database if not exists mysqltest1;
use mysqltest1;
create table t1 (a varchar(100));
sync_slave_with_master;
use mysqltest1;
# ********************** PART 1 : STORED PROCEDURES ***************
# Does the same proc as on master get inserted into mysql.proc ?
# (same definer, same properties...)
connection master;
# cleanup
--disable_warnings
drop procedure if exists foo;
drop procedure if exists foo2;
drop procedure if exists foo3;
drop procedure if exists foo4;
drop procedure if exists bar;
drop function if exists fn1;
--enable_warnings
delimiter |;
--error 1418; # not deterministic
create procedure foo()
begin
declare b int;
set b = 8;
insert into t1 values (b);
insert into t1 values (unix_timestamp());
end|
--replace_column 2 # 5 #
show binlog events from 98| # check that not there
create procedure foo() deterministic
begin
declare b int;
set b = 8;
insert into t1 values (b);
insert into t1 values (unix_timestamp());
end|
delimiter ;|
# we replace columns having times
# (even with fixed timestamp displayed time may changed based on TZ)
--replace_result localhost.localdomain localhost 127.0.0.1 localhost
--replace_column 13 # 14 #
select * from mysql.proc where name='foo' and db='mysqltest1';
sync_slave_with_master;
--replace_result localhost.localdomain localhost 127.0.0.1 localhost
--replace_column 13 # 14 #
select * from mysql.proc where name='foo' and db='mysqltest1';
# Now when we call it, does the CALL() get into binlog,
# or the substatements?
connection master;
# see if timestamp used in SP on slave is same as on master
set timestamp=1000000000;
call foo();
--replace_column 2 # 5 #
show binlog events from 308;
select * from t1;
sync_slave_with_master;
select * from t1;
# Now a SP which is supposed to not update tables (CALL should not be
# binlogged) as it's "read sql data", so should not give error even if
# non-deterministic.
connection master;
delete from t1;
create procedure foo2()
not deterministic
reads sql data
select * from mysqltest1.t1;
call foo2();
# verify CALL is not in binlog
--replace_column 2 # 5 #
show binlog events from 605;
--error 1418;
alter procedure foo2 contains sql;
# SP with definer's right
drop table t1;
create table t1 (a int);
create table t2 like t1;
create procedure foo3()
deterministic
insert into t1 values (15);
# let's create a non-privileged user
grant CREATE ROUTINE, EXECUTE on mysqltest1.* to "zedjzlcsjhd"@127.0.0.1;
grant SELECT on mysqltest1.t1 to "zedjzlcsjhd"@127.0.0.1;
grant SELECT, INSERT on mysqltest1.t2 to "zedjzlcsjhd"@127.0.0.1;
connect (con1,127.0.0.1,zedjzlcsjhd,,mysqltest1,$MASTER_MYPORT,);
connection con1;
--error 1419; # only full-global-privs user can create a routine
create procedure foo4()
deterministic
insert into t1 values (10);
connection master;
set global log_bin_trust_routine_creators=1;
connection con1;
delimiter |;
create procedure foo4()
deterministic
begin
insert into t2 values(3);
insert into t1 values (5);
end|
delimiter ;|
# I add ,0 so that it does not print the error in the test output,
# because this error is hostname-dependent
--error 1142,0;
call foo4(); # invoker has no INSERT grant on table => failure
show warnings;
connection master;
call foo3(); # success (definer == root)
show warnings;
--replace_result localhost.localdomain localhost 127.0.0.1 localhost
--error 1142,0;
call foo4(); # definer's rights => failure
show warnings;
# we test replication of ALTER PROCEDURE
alter procedure foo4 sql security invoker;
call foo4(); # invoker's rights => success
show warnings;
# Check that only successful CALLs are in binlog
--replace_column 2 # 5 #
show binlog events from 841;
# Note that half-failed CALLs are not in binlog, which is a known
# bug. If we compare t2 on master and slave we see they differ:
select * from t1;
select * from t2;
sync_slave_with_master;
select * from t1;
select * from t2;
# Test of DROP PROCEDURE
--replace_result localhost.localdomain localhost 127.0.0.1 localhost
--replace_column 13 # 14 #
select * from mysql.proc where name="foo4" and db='mysqltest1';
connection master;
drop procedure foo4;
select * from mysql.proc where name="foo4" and db='mysqltest1';
sync_slave_with_master;
select * from mysql.proc where name="foo4" and db='mysqltest1';
# ********************** PART 2 : FUNCTIONS ***************
connection master;
drop procedure foo;
drop procedure foo2;
drop procedure foo3;
delimiter |;
create function fn1(x int)
returns int
deterministic
begin
insert into t1 values (x);
return x+2;
end|
delimiter ;|
delete t1,t2 from t1,t2;
select fn1(20);
insert into t2 values(fn1(21));
select * from t1;
select * from t2;
sync_slave_with_master;
select * from t1;
select * from t2;
connection master;
delimiter |;
drop function fn1;
create function fn1()
returns int
deterministic
begin
return unix_timestamp();
end|
delimiter ;|
delete from t1;
set timestamp=1000000000;
insert into t1 values(fn1());
--replace_result localhost.localdomain localhost 127.0.0.1 localhost
--replace_column 13 # 14 #
select * from mysql.proc where db='mysqltest1';
select * from t1;
sync_slave_with_master;
use mysqltest1;
select * from t1;
--replace_result localhost.localdomain localhost 127.0.0.1 localhost
--replace_column 13 # 14 #
select * from mysql.proc where db='mysqltest1';
# And now triggers
connection con1;
--error 1227;
create trigger trg before insert on t1 for each row set new.a= 10;
connection master;
# fn1() above uses timestamps, so in !ps-protocol, the timezone will be
# binlogged, but in --ps-protocol it will not be (BUG#9359) so
# the binlog offsets get shifted which spoils SHOW BINLOG EVENTS.
# To be immune, we take a new binlog.
flush logs;
delete from t1;
# TODO: when triggers can contain an update, test that this update
# does not go into binlog.
# I'm not setting user vars in the trigger, because replication of user vars
# would take care of propagating the user var's value to slave, so even if
# the trigger was not executed on slave it would not be discovered.
create trigger trg before insert on t1 for each row set new.a= 10;
insert into t1 values (1);
select * from t1;
sync_slave_with_master;
select * from t1;
connection master;
delete from t1;
drop trigger t1.trg;
insert into t1 values (1);
select * from t1;
--replace_column 2 # 5 #
show binlog events in 'master-bin.000002' from 98;
sync_slave_with_master;
select * from t1;
# Clean up
connection master;
drop function fn1;
drop database mysqltest1;
drop user "zedjzlcsjhd"@127.0.0.1;
sync_slave_with_master;