NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO mode.
In the NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO mode the table->auto_increment_field_not_null
variable is used to indicate that a non-NULL value was specified by the user
for an auto_increment column. When an INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE updates the
auto_increment field this variable is set to true and stays unchanged for the
next insert operation. This makes the next inserted row sometimes wrongly have
0 as the value of the auto_increment field.
Now the fill_record() function resets the table->auto_increment_field_not_null
variable before filling the record.
The table->auto_increment_field_not_null variable is also reset by the
open_table() function for a case if we missed some auto_increment_field_not_null
handling bug.
Now the table->auto_increment_field_not_null is reset at the end of the
mysql_load() function.
Reset the table->auto_increment_field_not_null variable after each
write_row() call in the copy_data_between_tables() function.
thd->options' OPTION_STATUS_NO_TRANS_UPDATE bit was not restored at the end of SF() invocation, where
SF() modified non-ta table.
As the result of this artifact it was not possible to detect whether there were any side-effects when
top-level query ends.
If the top level query table was not modified and the bit is lost there would be no binlogging.
Fixed with preserving the bit inside of thd->no_trans_update struct. The struct agregates two bool flags
telling whether the current query and the current transaction modified any non-ta table.
The flags stmt, all are dropped at the end of the query and the transaction.
context was used as an argument of GROUP_CONCAT.
Ensured correct setting of the depended_from field in references
generated for set functions aggregated in outer selects.
A wrong value of this field resulted in wrong maps returned by
used_tables() for these references.
Made sure that a temporary table field is added for any set function
aggregated in outer context when creation of a temporary table is
needed to execute the inner subquery.
To correctly decide which predicates can be evaluated with a given table
the optimizer must know the exact set of tables that a predicate depends
on. If that mask is too wide (refer to non-existing tables) the optimizer
can erroneously skip a predicate.
One such case of wrong table usage mask were the aggregate functions.
The have a all-1 mask (meaning depend on all tables, including non-existent
ones).
Fixed by making a real used_tables mask for the aggregates. The mask is
constructed in the following way :
1. OR the table dependency masks of all the arguments of the aggregate.
2. If all the arguments of the function are from the local name resolution
context and it is evaluated in the same name resolution
context where it is referenced all the tables from that name resolution
context are OR-ed to the dependency mask. This is to denote that an
aggregate function depends on the number of rows it processes.
3. Handle correctly the case of an aggregate function optimization (such that
the aggregate function can be pre-calculated and made a constant).
Made sure that an aggregate function is never a constant (unless subject of a
specific optimization and pre-calculation).
One other flaw was revealed and fixed in the process : references were
not calling the recalculation method for used_tables of their targets.
Removed wrong fix for the bug#27006.
The bug was added by the fix for the bug#19978 and fixed by Monty on 2007/02/21.
trigger.test, trigger.result:
Corrected test case for the bug#27006.
UPDATE if the row wasn't actually changed.
This bug was caused by fix for bug#19978. It causes AFTER UPDATE triggers
not firing if a row wasn't actually changed by the update part of the
INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE.
Now triggers are always fired if a row is touched by the INSERT ... ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE.
INSERT uses query_id to verify what fields are
mentioned in the fields list of the INSERT command.
However the check for that is made after the
ON DUPLICATE KEY is processed. This causes all
the fields mentioned in ON DUPLICATE KEY to be
considered as mentioned in the fields list of
INSERT.
Moved the check up, right after processing the
fields list.
touched but not actually changed.
The LAST_INSERT_ID() is reset to 0 if no rows were inserted or changed.
This is the case when an INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE updates a row
with the same values as the row contains.
Now the LAST_INSERT_ID() values is reset to 0 only if there were no rows
successfully inserted or touched.
The new 'touched' field is added to the COPY_INFO structure. It holds the
number of rows that were touched no matter whether they were actually
changed or not.
When INSERT is done over a view the table being inserted into is
checked to be unique among all views tables. But if the view contains
self-joined table an error will be thrown even if all tables are used under
different aliases.
The unique_table() function now also checks tables' aliases when needed.
Several problems fixed:
1. There was a "catch-all" context initialization in setup_tables()
that was causing the table that we insert into to be visible in the
SELECT part of an INSERT .. SELECT .. statement with no tables in
its FROM clause. This was making sure all the under-initialized
contexts in various parts of the code are not left uninitialized.
Fixed by removing the "catch-all" statement and initializing the
context in the parser.
2. Incomplete name resolution context when resolving the right-hand
values in the ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE ... part of an INSERT ... SELECT ...
caused columns from NATURAL JOIN/JOIN USING table references in the
FROM clause of the select to be unavailable.
Fixed by establishing a proper name resolution context.
3. When setting up the special name resolution context for problem 2
there was no check for cases where an aggregate function without a
GROUP BY effectively takes the column from the SELECT part of an
INSERT ... SELECT unavailable for ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE.
Fixed by checking for that condition when setting up the name
resolution context.
UPDATE contains wrong data if the SELECT employs a temporary table.
If the UPDATE values of the INSERT .. SELECT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statement contains fields from the SELECT part and the select employs a
temporary table then those fields will contain wrong values because they
aren't corrected to get data from the temporary table.
The solution is to add these fields to the selects all_fields list,
to store pointers to those fields in the selects ref_pointer_array and
to access them via Item_ref objects.
The substitution for Item_ref objects is done in the new function called
Item_field::update_value_transformer(). It is called through the
item->transform() mechanism at the end of the select_insert::prepare()
function.
duplicate key entries on slave" (two concurrrent connections doing
multi-row INSERT DELAYED to insert into an auto_increment column,
caused replication slave to stop with "duplicate key error" (and
binlog was wrong)), and BUG#26116 "If multi-row INSERT
DELAYED has errors, statement-based binlogging breaks" (the binlog
was not accounting for all rows inserted, or slave could stop).
The fix is that: if (statement-based) binlogging is on, a multi-row
INSERT DELAYED is silently converted to a non-delayed INSERT.
Note: it is not possible to test BUG#25507 in 5.0 (requires mysqlslap),
so it is tested only in the changeset for 5.1. However, BUG#26116
is tested here, and the fix for BUG#25507 is the same code change.
"INSERT... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE skips auto_increment values".
When in an INSERT ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE, using
an autoincrement column, we inserted some autogenerated values and
also updated some rows, some autogenerated values were not used
(for example, even if 10 was the largest autoinc value in the table
at the start of the statement, 12 could be the first autogenerated
value inserted by the statement, instead of 11). One autogenerated
value was lost per updated row. Led to exhausting the range of the
autoincrement column faster.
Bug introduced by fix of BUG#20188; present since 5.0.24 and 5.1.12.
This bug breaks replication from a pre-5.0.24 master.
But the present bugfix, as it makes INSERT ON DUP KEY UPDATE
behave like pre-5.0.24, breaks replication from a [5.0.24,5.0.34]
master to a fixed (5.0.36) slave! To warn users against this when
they upgrade their slave, as agreed with the support team, we add
code for a fixed slave to detect that it is connected to a buggy
master in a situation (INSERT ON DUP KEY UPDATE into autoinc column)
likely to break replication, in which case it cannot replicate so
stops and prints a message to the slave's error log and to SHOW SLAVE
STATUS.
For 5.0.36->[5.0.24,5.0.34] replication we cannot warn as master
does not know the slave's version (but we always recommended to users
to have slave at least as new as master).
As agreed with support, I'll also ask for an alert to be put into
the MySQL Network Monitoring and Advisory Service.
updated.
INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE reports that a record was updated when
the duplicate key occurs even if the record wasn't actually changed
because the update values are the same as those in the record.
Now the compare_record() function is used to check whether the record was
changed and the update of a record reported only if the record differs
from the original one.
When inserting into a join-based view the update fields from the ON DUPLICATE
KEY UPDATE wasn't checked to be from the table being inserted into and were
silently ignored.
The new check_view_single_update() function is added to check that
insert/update fields are being from the same single table of the view.
Corrected spelling in copyright text
Makefile.am:
Don't update the files from BitKeeper
Many files:
Removed "MySQL Finland AB & TCX DataKonsult AB" from copyright header
Adjusted year(s) in copyright header
Many files:
Added GPL copyright text
Removed files:
Docs/Support/colspec-fix.pl
Docs/Support/docbook-fixup.pl
Docs/Support/docbook-prefix.pl
Docs/Support/docbook-split
Docs/Support/make-docbook
Docs/Support/make-makefile
Docs/Support/test-make-manual
Docs/Support/test-make-manual-de
Docs/Support/xwf
- Removed not used variables and functions
- Added #ifdef around code that is not used
- Renamed variables and functions to avoid conflicts
- Removed some not used arguments
Fixed some class/struct warnings in ndb
Added define IS_LONGDATA() to simplify code in libmysql.c
I did run gcov on the changes and added 'purecov' comments on almost all lines that was not just variable name changes
Bug#4968 "Stored procedure crash if cursor opened on altered table"
Bug#19733 "Repeated alter, or repeated create/drop, fails"
Bug#19182 "CREATE TABLE bar (m INT) SELECT n FROM foo; doesn't work from
stored procedure."
Bug#6895 "Prepared Statements: ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN does nothing"
Bug#22060 "ALTER TABLE x AUTO_INCREMENT=y in SP crashes server"
Test cases for bugs 4968, 19733, 6895 will be added in 5.0.
Re-execution of CREATE DATABASE, CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE
statements in stored routines or as prepared statements caused
incorrect results (and crashes in versions prior to 5.0.25).
In 5.1 the problem occured only for CREATE DATABASE, CREATE TABLE
SELECT and CREATE TABLE with INDEX/DATA DIRECTOY options).
The problem of bugs 4968, 19733, 19282 and 6895 was that functions
mysql_prepare_table, mysql_create_table and mysql_alter_table were not
re-execution friendly: during their operation they used to modify contents
of LEX (members create_info, alter_info, key_list, create_list),
thus making the LEX unusable for the next execution.
In particular, these functions removed processed columns and keys from
create_list, key_list and drop_list. Search the code in sql_table.cc
for drop_it.remove() and similar patterns to find evidence.
The fix is to supply to these functions a usable copy of each of the
above structures at every re-execution of an SQL statement.
To simplify memory management, LEX::key_list and LEX::create_list
were added to LEX::alter_info, a fresh copy of which is created for
every execution.
The problem of crashing bug 22060 stemmed from the fact that the above
metnioned functions were not only modifying HA_CREATE_INFO structure in
LEX, but also were changing it to point to areas in volatile memory of
the execution memory root.
The patch solves this problem by creating and using an on-stack
copy of HA_CREATE_INFO (note that code in 5.1 already creates and
uses a copy of this structure in mysql_create_table()/alter_table(),
but this approach didn't work well for CREATE TABLE SELECT statement).
tables,alter table
Deadlock could happen if there are delayed insert + flush tables + alter table
running concurrently.
This is fixed by removing a redundant mutex lock when killing a delayed thread.
Note: bug#21726 does not directly apply to 4.1, as it doesn't have stored
procedures. However, 4.1 had some bugs that were fixed in 5.0 by the
patch for bug#21726, and this patch is a backport of those fixes.
Namely, in 4.1 it fixes:
- LAST_INSERT_ID(expr) didn't return value of expr (4.1 specific).
- LAST_INSERT_ID() could return the value generated by current
statement if the call happens after the generation, like in
CREATE TABLE t1 (i INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, j INT);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (NULL, 0), (NULL, LAST_INSERT_ID());
- Redundant binary log LAST_INSERT_ID_EVENTs could be generated.
Non-upper-level INSERTs (the ones in the body of stored procedure,
stored function, or trigger) into a table that have AUTO_INCREMENT
column didn't affected the result of LAST_INSERT_ID() on this level.
The problem was introduced with the fix of bug 6880, which in turn was
introduced with the fix of bug 3117, where current insert_id value was
remembered on the first call to LAST_INSERT_ID() (bug 3117) and was
returned from that function until it was reset before the next
_upper-level_ statement (bug 6880).
The fix for bug#21726 brings back the behaviour of version 4.0, and
implements the following: remember insert_id value at the beginning
of the statement or expression (which at that point equals to
the first insert_id value generated by the previous statement), and
return that remembered value from LAST_INSERT_ID() or @@LAST_INSERT_ID.
Thus, the value returned by LAST_INSERT_ID() is not affected by values
generated by current statement, nor by LAST_INSERT_ID(expr) calls in
this statement.
Version 5.1 does not have this bug (it was fixed by WL 3146).