Table comment: issue a warning(error in traditional mode) if length of comment > 60 symbols
Column comment: issue a warning(error in traditional mode) if length of comment > 255 symbols
Table 'comment' is changed from char* to LEX_STRING
Parsing of CREATE/ALTER EVENT statement was crashing because of early
initialization done during parsing, instead in the after parsing phase.
Moreover, we don't want SUBqueries in CREATE/ALTER EVENT therefore we
disable them, though it is possible to make them work. It can be emulated
inside SP with a cursor and SP variable (CREATE/ALTER EVENT can still
accept variables as values).
This cut No 7 should finish the part of fixing the parsing of the events :
- Event_timed is no more used during parsing. Less problems because it has
a mutex. Event_parse_data class is used during parsing. It is suited only
for this purpose. It's pretty lightweight
- Late checking of data from parsing is being performed. This should solve
the problems of nested events in SP or other events (for the situation
of no nested bodies). Before if an ALTER EVENT was in a SP, then when the
SP was compiled, and not executed, the actual init_xxx methods of Event_timed
were called, which is wrong.
- It could be a side effect of using a specialized class, but test events_stress is
now 25% quicker.
Cut No8 will start splitting Event_scheduler into 2 parts, the QUEUE will be moved
to Event_queue.
It was hard to distinguish case, when one was unable to create trigger
on the table because trigger with same action time and event already
existed for this table, from the case, when one tried to create trigger
with name which was already occupied by some other trigger, since in
both these cases we emitted ER_TRG_ALREADY_EXISTS error and message.
Now we emit ER_NOT_SUPPORTED_YET error with appropriate additional
message in the first case. There is no sense in introducing separate
error for this situation since we plan to get rid of this limitation
eventually.
CHECK TABLE could complain about a fully intact spatial index.
A wrong comparison operator was used for table checking.
The result was that it checked for non-matching spatial keys.
This succeeded if at least two different keys were present,
but failed if only the matching key was present.
I fixed the key comparison.
sp_grant_privileges(), the function that GRANTs EXECUTE + ALTER privs on a SP,
did so creating a user-entry with not password; mysql_routine_grant() would then
write that "change" to the user-table.
Bug #18361: Triggers on mysql.user table cause server crash
Because they do not work, we do not allow creating triggers on tables
within the 'mysql' schema.
(They may be made to work and re-enabled at some later date, but not
in 5.0 or 5.1.)