After a cursor's statement is re-parsed by the reason of metadata
changes for tables the statement depends on, following memory
allocations taken place on cursor execution is performed on
a memory root already marked as read only despite the fact that
a new memory root has been allocated for this goal.
To fix the issue, bind the cursor lex with a new memory root
created for re-parsing cursor's statement, clean up items
stored on cursor's free list and nullify the data member
sp_lex_cursor::free_list to avoid dangling pointer problem.
It was not possible to use a package body variable as a
fetch target:
CREATE PACKAGE BODY pkg AS
vc INT := 0;
FUNCTION f1 RETURN INT AS
CURSOR cur IS SELECT 1 AS c FROM DUAL;
BEGIN
OPEN cur;
FETCH cur INTO vc; -- this returned "Undeclared variable: vc" error.
CLOSE cur;
RETURN vc;
END;
END;
FETCH assumed that all fetch targets reside of the same sp_rcontext
instance with the cursor. This patch fixes the problem.
Now a cursor and its fetch target can reside in different sp_rcontext
instances.
Details:
- Adding a helper class sp_rcontext_addr
(a combination of Sp_rcontext_handler pointer and an offset in the rcontext)
- Adding a new class sp_fetch_target deriving from sp_rcontext_addr.
Fetch targets in "FETCH cur INTO target1, target2 ..." are now collected
into this structure instead of sp_variable.
sp_variable cannot be used any more to store fetch targets,
because it does not have a pointer to Sp_rcontext_handler
(it only has the current rcontext offset).
- Removing members sp_instr_set members m_rcontext_handler and m_offset.
Deriving sp_instr_set from sp_rcontext_addr instead.
- Renaming sp_instr_cfetch member "List<sp_variable> m_varlist"
to "List<sp_fetch_target> m_fetch_target_list".
- Fixing LEX::sp_add_cfetch() to return the pointer to the
created sp_fetch_target instance (instead of returning bool).
This helps to make the grammar in sql_yacc.c simpler
- Renaming LEX::sp_add_cfetch() to LEX::sp_add_instr_cfetch(),
as `if(sp_add_cfetch())` changed its meaning to the opposite,
to avoid automatic wrong merge from earlier versions.
- Chaning the "List<sp_variable> *vars" parameter to sp_cursor::fetch
to have the data type "List<sp_fetch_target> *".
- Changing the data type of "List<sp_variable> &vars" in
sp_cursor::Select_fetch_into_spvars::send_data_to_variable_list()
to "List<sp_fetch_target> &".
- Adding THD helper methods get_rcontext() and get_variable().
- Moving the code from sql_yacc.yy into a new LEX method
LEX::make_fetch_target().
- Simplifying the grammar in sql_yacc.yy using the new LEX method.
Changing the data type of the bison rule sp_fetch_list from "void"
to "List<sp_fetch_target> *".
on_table_fill_finished() should always be done at the end of open()
even if result is not Select_materialize but (for example)
Select_fetch_into_spvars.
The problem was that instructions sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct and
sp_instr_copen uses the same lex, adding and removing "tail" of
prelocked tables and forgetting that tail of all tables is kept in
LEX::query_tables_last. If the LEX used only by one instruction
or the query do not have prelocked tables it is not important.
But to work correctly in all cases LEX::query_tables_last should
be reset to make new tables added in the correct list (after last
table in the LEX instead after last table of the prelocking "tail"
which was cut).
Changes:
1. Enabling IN/OUT/INOUT mode for sql_mode=DEFAULT,
adding tests for sql_mode=DEFAULT based by mostly
translating compat/oracle.sp-inout.test to SQL/PSM
with minor changes (e.g. testing trigger OLD.column and
NEW.column as IN/OUT parameters).
2. Removing duplicate grammar:
sp_pdparam and sp_fdparam implemented exactly the same syntax after
- the first patch for MDEV-10654 (for sql_mode=ORACLE)
- the change #1 from this patch (for sql_mode=DEFAULT)
Removing separate rules and adding a single "sp_param" rule instead,
which now covers both PRDEDURE and FUNCTION parameters
(and CURSOR parameters as well!).
3. Adding a helper rule sp_param_name_and_mode, which is a combination
of the parameter name and the IN/OUT/INOUT mode. It allows to simplify
the grammer a bit.
4. The first patch unintentionally allowed IN/OUT/INOUT mode
to be specified in CURSOR parameters.
This is good for the IN keyword - it is allowed in PL/SQL CURSORs.
This is not good the the OUT/INOUT keywords - they should not be allowed.
Adding a additional symantic post-check.
sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct::exec_core() created TYPELIBs on a wrong mem_root,
the one which is initialized in sp_head::execute(), this code:
/* init per-instruction memroot */
init_sql_alloc(&execute_mem_root, "per_instruction_memroot",
MEM_ROOT_BLOCK_SIZE, 0, MYF(0));
This memory root cleans up after every sp_instr_xxx executed, so later
sp_instr_cfetch::execute() tried to use already freed and trashed memory.
Changing sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct::exec_core() to call tmp.export_structure()
inside this block (not outside of it):
thd->set_n_backup_active_arena(thd->spcont->callers_arena, ¤t_arena);
...
thd->restore_active_arena(thd->spcont->callers_arena, ¤t_arena);
So now TYPELIBs created by sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct::exec_core() are
still available and valid when sp_instr_cfetch::execute() is called.
They are freed at the end of dispatch_command() corresponding to
the "CALL p1" statement.
Problem:
push_cursor() created sp_cursor instances on THD::main_mem_root,
which is freed only after the SP instructions loop.
Changes:
- Moving sp_cursor declaration from sp_rcontext.h to sql_class.h
- Deriving sp_instr_cpush from sp_cursor. So now sp_cursor is created
only once (at the SP parse time) and then reused on all loop iterations
- Adding a new method reset() into sp_cursor (and its parent classes)
to reset an sp_cursor instance before reuse.
- Moving former sp_cursor members m_fetch_count, m_row_count, m_found
into a separate class sp_cursor_statistics. This helps to reuse
the code in sp_cursor constructors, and in sp_cursor::reset()
- Adding a helper method sp_rcontext::pop_cursor().
- Adding "THD*" parameter to so_rcontext::pop_cursors() and pop_all_cursors()
- Removing "new" and "delete" from sp_rcontext::push_cursor() and
sp_rconext::pop_cursor().
- Fixing sp_cursor not to derive from Sql_alloc, as it's now allocated
only as a part of sp_instr_cpush (and not allocated separately).
- Moving lex_keeper->disable_query_cache() from sp_cursor::sp_cursor()
to sp_instr_cpush::execute().
- Adding tests