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Fix for bug #5915 "ALTER TABLE behaves differently when converting column

to auto_increment in 4.1".
Now we are enforcing NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO mode during ALTER TABLE only
if we are converting one auto_increment column to another auto_increment
column (this also includes most common case when we don't do anything
with such column).

Also now when we convert some column to TIMESTAMP NOT NULL column with
ALTER TABLE we convert NULL values to current timestamp, (as we do this
in INSERT). One can still get old behavior by setting system TIMESTAMP
variable to 0.


mysql-test/r/auto_increment.result:
  Added tests for ALTER TABLE converting columns containing NULL and 0
  values to AUTO_INCREMENT columns.
mysql-test/r/type_timestamp.result:
  Removed test for creation of TIMESTAMP(19) columns (it is 4.0 specific).
  Added test for ALTER TABLE converting columns containing NULL values
  to TIMESTAMP columns.
mysql-test/t/auto_increment.test:
  Added tests for ALTER TABLE converting columns containing NULL and 0
  values to AUTO_INCREMENT columns.
mysql-test/t/type_timestamp.test:
  Removed test for creation of TIMESTAMP(19) columns (it is 4.0 specific).
  Added test for ALTER TABLE converting columns containing NULL values
  to TIMESTAMP columns.
sql/field_conv.cc:
  Fix bug #5915 "ALTER TABLE behaves differently when converting column
  to auto_increment in 4.1". Also now when we are converting some column
  to TIMESTAMP column, we are converting NULL values to CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
  (as it was initially planned).
  
  do_copy_timestamp(): Fixed comment.
  do_copy_next_number(): We should also set auto_increment_field_not_null
    to FALSE if we have NULL in source field.
  Copy_field::set(): Moved setting of copy functions for TIMESTAMP and
    AUTO_INCREMENT fields to proper place (this was dead code before).
sql/sql_table.cc:
  Fix for bug #5915 "ALTER TABLE behaves differently when converting column
  to auto_increment in 4.1".
  
  Instead of always forcing NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO in ALTER TABLE it is
  better to do this only if we are converting one auto_increment column
  to another auto_increment column (this also includes most common case
  when we don't do anything with such column).
This commit is contained in:
unknown
2004-10-07 13:02:39 +04:00
parent 7d583c5834
commit 34789efd31
6 changed files with 133 additions and 36 deletions

View File

@@ -289,3 +289,55 @@ a b
0 13
500 14
drop table t1;
create table t1 (a bigint);
insert into t1 values (1), (2), (3), (NULL), (NULL);
alter table t1 modify a bigint not null auto_increment primary key;
select * from t1;
a
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drop table t1;
create table t1 (a bigint);
insert into t1 values (1), (2), (3), (0), (0);
alter table t1 modify a bigint not null auto_increment primary key;
select * from t1;
a
1
2
3
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drop table t1;
create table t1 (a bigint);
insert into t1 values (0), (1), (2), (3);
set sql_mode=NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO;
alter table t1 modify a bigint not null auto_increment primary key;
set sql_mode= '';
select * from t1;
a
0
1
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drop table t1;
create table t1 (a int auto_increment primary key , b int null);
set sql_mode=NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO;
insert into t1 values (0,1),(1,2),(2,3);
select * from t1;
a b
0 1
1 2
2 3
set sql_mode= '';
alter table t1 modify b varchar(255);
insert into t1 values (0,4);
select * from t1;
a b
0 1
1 2
2 3
3 4
drop table t1;