mariadb/mysql-test/t/rpl_error_ignored_table.test
guilhem@mysql.com 69517b22a1 Fix for BUG#2983 "If statement was killed on master, slave errors despite replicate-wild-ignore-t"
We introduce a new function mysql_test_parse_for_slave().
If the slave sees that the query got a really bad error on master
(killed e.g.), then it calls this function to know if this query
can be ignored because of replicate-*-table rules (do not worry
about replicate-*-db rules: they are checked so early that they have
no bug). If the answer is yes, it skips the query and continues. If
it's no, then it stops and say "fix your slave data manually" (like it
did before this change).
2004-03-11 17:38:19 +01:00

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# Test for
# Bug #797: If a query is ignored on slave (replicate-ignore-table) the slave
# still checks that it has the same error as on the master.
source include/master-slave.inc;
connection master;
create table t1 (a int primary key);
# generate an error that goes to the binlog
--error 1062;
insert into t1 values (1),(1);
save_master_pos;
connection slave;
# as the t1 table is ignored on the slave, the slave should be able to sync
sync_with_master;
# The port number is different when doing the release build with
# Do-compile, hence we have to replace the port number here accordingly
--replace_result 3306 MASTER_PORT 9306 MASTER_PORT 3334 MASTER_PORT 3336 MASTER_PORT
show slave status;
# check that the table has been ignored, because otherwise the test is nonsense
show tables like 't1';
connection master;
drop table t1;
save_master_pos;
connection slave;
sync_with_master;
# Now test that even critical errors (connection killed)
# are ignored if rules allow it.
# The "kill" idea was copied from rpl000001.test.
connection master1;
select get_lock('crash_lock%20C', 10);
connection master;
create table t2 (a int primary key);
insert into t2 values(1);
create table t3 (id int);
insert into t3 values(connection_id());
send update t2 set a = a + 1 + get_lock('crash_lock%20C', 10);
connection master1;
sleep 2;
select (@id := id) - id from t3;
kill @id;
drop table t2,t3;
connection master;
--error 1053;
reap;
connection master1;
show binlog events from 79;
save_master_pos;
connection slave;
# SQL slave thread should not have stopped (because table of the killed
# query is in the ignore list).
sync_with_master;