Remove one of the major sources of race condiitons in mariadb-test.
Normally, mariadb_close() sends COM_QUIT to the server and immediately
disconnects. In mariadb-test it means the test can switch to another
connection and sends queries to the server before the server even
started parsing the COM_QUIT packet and these queries can see the
connection as fully active, as it didn't reach dispatch_command yet.
This is a major source of instability in tests and many - but not all,
still less than a half - tests employ workarounds. The correct one
is a pair count_sessions.inc/wait_until_count_sessions.inc.
Also very popular was wait_until_disconnected.inc, which was completely
useless, because it verifies that the connection is closed, and after
disconnect it always is, it didn't verify whether the server processed
COM_QUIT. Sadly the placebo was as widely used as the real thing.
Let's fix this by making mariadb-test `disconnect` command _to wait_ for
the server to confirm. This makes almost all workarounds redundant.
In some cases count_sessions.inc/wait_until_count_sessions.inc is still
needed, though, as only `disconnect` command is changed:
* after external tools, like `exec $MYSQL`
* after failed `connect` command
* replication, after `STOP SLAVE`
* Federated/CONNECT/SPIDER/etc after `DROP TABLE`
and also in some XA tests, because an XA transaction is dissociated from
the THD very late, after the server has closed the client connection.
Collateral cleanups: fix comments, remove some redundant statements:
* DROP IF EXISTS if nothing is known to exist
* DROP table/view before DROP DATABASE
* REVOKE privileges before DROP USER
etc
WRITTEN WHILE ROWS REMAINS
Problem:
========
When truncate table fails while using transactional based
engines even though the operation errors out we still
continue and log it to binlog. Because of this master has
data but the truncate will be written to binary log which
will cause inconsistency.
Analysis:
========
Truncate table can happen either through drop and create of
table or by deleting rows. In the second case the existing
code is written in such a way that even if an error occurs
the truncate statement will always be binlogged. Which is not
correct.
Binlogging of TRUNCATE TABLE statement should check whether
truncate is executed "transactionally or not". If the table
is transaction based we log the TRUNCATE TABLE only on
successful completion.
If table is non transactional there are possibilities that on
error we could have partial changes done hence in such cases
we do log in spite of errors as some of the lines might have
been removed, so the statement has to be sent to slave.
Fix:
===
Using table handler whether truncate table is being executed
in transaction based mode or not is identified and statement
is binlogged accordingly.
mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_truncate_kill.result:
Added test case to test the fix for Bug#17942050.
mysql-test/suite/binlog/t/binlog_truncate_kill.test:
Added test case to test the fix for Bug#17942050.
sql/sql_truncate.cc:
Check if truncation is successful or not and retun appropriate
return values so that binlogging can be done based on that.
sql/sql_truncate.h:
Added a new enum.