In process of record search it is not taken into account
that inital quick->file->ref value could be inapplicable
to range interval. After proper row is found this value is
stored into the record buffer and later the record is
filtered out at condition evaluation stage.
The fix is store a refernce of found row to the handler ref field.
bitmap_is_set(table->read_set, field_index))
UPDATE on an InnoDB table modifying the same index that is used
to satisfy the WHERE condition could trigger a debug assertion
under some circumstances.
Since for engines with the HA_PRIMARY_KEY_IN_READ_INDEX flag
set results of an index scan on a secondary index are appended
by the primary key value, if a query involves only columns from
the primary key and a secondary index, the latter is considered
to be covering.
That tricks mysql_update() to mark for reading only columns
from the secondary index when it does an index scan to retrieve
rows to update in case a part of that key is also being
updated. However, there may be other columns in WHERE that are
part of the primary key, but not the secondary one.
What we actually want to do in this case is to add index
columns to the existing WHERE columns bitmap rather than
replace it.
Conflicts:
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/grant.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/t/grant.test
Text conflict in mysys/mf_loadpath.c
Text conflict in sql/slave.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_priv.h
Conflicts:
Text conflict in configure.in
Text conflict in dbug/dbug.c
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/ps.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/t/ps.test
Text conflict in sql/CMakeLists.txt
Text conflict in sql/ha_ndbcluster.cc
Text conflict in sql/mysqld.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_plugin.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_table.cc
during an UPDATE
Extended the fix for bug 29310 to multi-table update:
When a table is being updated it has two set of fields - fields required for
checks of conditions and fields to be updated. A storage engine is allowed
not to retrieve columns marked for update. Due to this fact records can't
be compared to see whether the data has been changed or not. This makes the
server always update records independently of data change.
Now when an auto-updatable timestamp field is present and server sees that
a table handle isn't going to retrieve write-only fields then all of such
fields are marked as to be read to force the handler to retrieve them.
Conflicts:
Text conflict in client/mysqlbinlog.cc
Text conflict in mysql-test/Makefile.am
Text conflict in mysql-test/collections/default.daily
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog_row_innodb.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_typeconv_innodb.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_get_master_version_and_clock.test
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_row_create_table.test
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slave_skip.test
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_typeconv_innodb.test
Text conflict in mysys/charset.c
Text conflict in sql/field.cc
Text conflict in sql/field.h
Text conflict in sql/item.h
Text conflict in sql/item_func.cc
Text conflict in sql/log.cc
Text conflict in sql/log_event.cc
Text conflict in sql/log_event_old.cc
Text conflict in sql/mysqld.cc
Text conflict in sql/rpl_utility.cc
Text conflict in sql/rpl_utility.h
Text conflict in sql/set_var.cc
Text conflict in sql/share/Makefile.am
Text conflict in sql/sql_delete.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_plugin.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_select.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_table.cc
Text conflict in storage/example/ha_example.h
Text conflict in storage/federated/ha_federated.cc
Text conflict in storage/myisammrg/ha_myisammrg.cc
Text conflict in storage/myisammrg/myrg_open.c
Conflicts:
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/partition_innodb.result
Text conflict in sql/field.h
Text conflict in sql/item.h
Text conflict in sql/item_cmpfunc.h
Text conflict in sql/item_sum.h
Text conflict in sql/log_event_old.cc
Text conflict in sql/protocol.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_select.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_yacc.yy
definition at engine
If a single ALTER TABLE contains both DROP INDEX and ADD INDEX using
the same index name (a.k.a. index modification) we need to disable
in-place alter table because we can't ask the storage engine to have
two copies of the index with the same name even temporarily (if we
first do the ADD INDEX and then DROP INDEX) and we can't modify
indexes that are needed by e.g. foreign keys if we first do
DROP INDEX and then ADD INDEX.
Fixed the problem by disabling in-place ALTER TABLE for these cases.
Conflicts:
Text conflict in .bzr-mysql/default.conf
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/explain.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/having.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/disabled.def
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slave_skip.test
Text conflict in storage/federated/ha_federated.cc
consider clustered primary keys
Choosing a shortest index for the covering index scan,
the optimizer ignored the fact, that the clustered primary
key read involves whole table data.
The find_shortest_key function has been modified to
take into account that fact that a clustered PK has a
longest key of possible covering indices.
performance degradation.
Filesort + join cache combination is preferred to full index scan because it
is usually faster. But it's not the case when the index is clustered one.
Now test_if_skip_sort_order function prefers filesort only if index isn't
clustered.
The problem was that a shared InnoDB row lock was taken when executing
SELECT statements inside a stored function as a part of a transaction
using REPEATABLE READ. This prevented other transactions from updating
the row.
InnoDB uses multi-versioning and consistent nonlocking reads. SELECTs
should therefore not acquire locks and block other transactions
wishing to do updates.
This bug is no longer repeatable with the changes introduced in the scope
of metadata locking.
Test case added to innodb_mysql.test.
Conflicts:
Text conflict in .bzr-mysql/default.conf
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_slow_query_log.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slow_query_log.test
Conflict adding files to server-tools. Created directory.
Conflict because server-tools is not versioned, but has versioned children. Versioned directory.
Conflict adding files to server-tools/instance-manager. Created directory.
Conflict because server-tools/instance-manager is not versioned, but has versioned children. Versioned directory.
Contents conflict in server-tools/instance-manager/options.cc
Text conflict in sql/mysqld.cc
Fixed 2 problems :
1. test_if_order_by_key() was continuing on the primary key
as if it has a primary key suffix (as the secondary keys do).
This leads to crashes in ORDER BY <pk>,<pk>.
Fixed by not treating the primary key as the secondary one
and not depending on it being clustered with a primary key.
2. The cost calculation was trying to read the records
per key when operating on ORDER BYs that order on all of the
secondary key + some of the primary key.
This leads to crashes because of out-of-bounds array access.
Fixed by assuming we'll find 1 record per key in such cases.
SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL is used to temporarily set
the trans.iso.level for the next transaction. After the
transaction, the iso.level is (re-)set to value of the
session variable 'tx_isolation'.
The bug is caused by setting the thd->variables.tx_isolation
field to the value of the session variable upon each
statement commit. It should only be set at the end of the
full transaction.
The fix has been to remove the setting of the variable in
ha_autocommit_or_rollback if we're in a transaction, as it
will be correctly set in either ha_rollback or
ha_commit_one_phase.
If, on the other hand, we're in autocommit mode, tx_isolation
will be explicitly set here.
The SE API requires mysql to notify the storage engine that
it's going to read certain tables at the beginning of the
statement (by calling start_stmt(), store_lock() or
external_lock()).
These are typically called by the lock_tables().
However SHOW CREATE TABLE is not pre-locking the tables
because it's not expected to access the data at all.
But for some view definitions (that include comparing a
date/datetime/timestamp column to a string returning
scalar subquery) the JOIN::prepare may still access data
when materializing the scalar non-correlated subquery
in Arg_comparator::can_compare_as_dates().
Fixed by not materializing the subquery when the function
is called in a SHOW/EXPLAIN/CREATE VIEW
Problem: using null microsecond part (e.g. "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.0000")
in a WHERE condition may lead to wrong results due to improper
DATETIMEs comparison in some cases.
Fix: as we compare DATETIMEs as strings we must trim trailing 0's
in such cases.
case than in corr index".
Server was unable to find existing or explicitly created supporting
index for foreign key if corresponding statement clause used field
names in case different than one used in key specification and created
yet another supporting index.
In cases when name of constraint (and thus name of generated index)
was the same as name of existing/explicitly created index this led
to duplicate key name error.
The problem was that unlike all other code Key_part_spec::operator==()
compared field names in case sensitive fashion. As result routines
responsible for getting rid of redundant generated supporting indexes
for foreign key were not working properly for versions of field names
using different cases.
use partial primary key if another index can prevent filesort
The fix for bug #28404 causes the covering ordering indexes to be
preferred unconditionally over non-covering and ref indexes.
Fixed by comparing the cost of using a covering index to the cost of
using a ref index even for covering ordering indexes.
Added an assertion to clarify the condition the local variables should
be in.
uninitialized variable used as subscript
Grouping select from a "constant" InnoDB table (a table
of a single row) joined with other tables caused a crash.
Certain multi-updates gave different results on InnoDB from
to MyISAM, due to on-the-fly updates being used on the former and
the update order matters.
Fixed by turning off on-the-fly updates when update order
dependencies are present.
on 5.0
The server crashes on an assert in net_end_statement indicating that the
Diagnostics area wasn't set properly during execution.
This happened on a multi table DELETE operation using the IGNORE keyword.
The keyword is suppose to allow for execution to continue on a best effort
despite some non-fatal errors. Instead execution stopped and no client
response was sent which would have led to a protocol error if it hadn't been
for the assert.
This patch corrects this issue by checking for the existence of an IGNORE
option before setting an error state during row-by-row delete iteration.
Moved the test case for the bug into a separate file (and restored the
original innodb_mysql test setup).
Used the new wait_show_condition test macro to avoid the usage of sleep
connections
The problem is that tables can enter open table cache for a thread without
being properly cleaned up. This can happen if make_join_statistics() fails
to read a const table because of e.g. a deadlock. It does set a member of
TABLE structure to a value it allocates, but doesn't clean-up this setting
on error nor does it set the rest of the members in JOIN to allow for
automatic cleanup.
As a result when such an error occurs and the next statement depends re-uses
the table from the open tables cache it will get it with this
TABLE::reginfo.join_tab pointing to a memory area that's freed.
Fixed by making sure make_join_statistics() cleans up TABLE::reginfo.join_tab
on error.
The special TRUNCATE TABLE (DDL) transaction wasn't being properly
rolled back if a error occurred during row by row deletion. The
error can be caused by a foreign key restriction imposed by InnoDB
SE and would cause the server to erroneously issue a implicit
commit.
The solution is to rollback the transaction if a truncation via row
by row deletion fails, otherwise commit. All effects of a TRUNCATE
ABLE operation are rolled back if a row by row deletion fails.
locking type of temp table
The problem is that INSERT INTO .. SELECT FROM .. and CREATE
TABLE .. SELECT FROM a temporary table could inadvertently
overwrite the locking type of the temporary table. The lock
type of temporary tables should be a write lock by default.
The solution is to reset the lock type of temporary tables
back to its default value after they are used in a statement.
column
When the storage engine uses secondary keys clustered with the primary key MySQL was
adding the primary key parts to each secondary key.
In doing so it was not checking whether the index was on full columns and this
resulted in the secondary keys being added to the list of covering keys even if
they have partial columns.
Fixed by not adding a primary key part to the list of columns that can be used
for index read of the secondary keys when the primary key part is a partial key part.
The bug is repeatable with latest(1.0.1) InnoDB plugin on Linux, Win,
If MySQL is compiled with valgrind there are errors about
using of uninitialized variable(orig_table).
The fix is to set field->orig_table correct value.
When statement-based replication is used, and the
transaction isolation level is READ-COMMITTED or stricter,
InnoDB will print an error because statement-based
replication might lead to inconsistency between master
and slave databases. However, when the binary log is not
engaged, this is not an issue and an error should
not be printed.
This patch makes thd_binlog_format() return BINLOG_FORMAT_
UNSPEC when the binary log is not engaged for the given
thread.
Range scan in descending order for c <= <col> <= c type of
ranges was ignoring the DESC flag.
However some engines like InnoDB have the primary key parts
as a suffix for every secondary key.
When such primary key suffix is used for ordering ignoring
the DESC is not valid.
But we generally would like to do this because it's faster.
Fixed by performing only reverse scan if the primary key is used.
Removed some dead code in the process.
- Disable the "prefer full scan on clustered primary key over full scan
of any secondary key" rule introduced by BUG#35850.
- Update test results accordingly
(bk trigger: file this for BUG#35850)
The index (key_part_1, key_part-2) was erroneously considered as compatible
with the required ordering in the function test_test_if_order_by_key when
a query with an ORDER BY clause contained a condition of the form
key_part_1=const OR key_part_1 IS NULL
and the order list contained only key_part_2. This happened because the value
of the const_key_parts field in the KEYUSE structure was not formed correctly
for the keys that could be used for ref_or_null access.
This was fixed in the code of the update_ref_and_keys function.
The problem could not manifest itself for MyISAM databases because the
implementation of the keys_to_use_for_scanning() handler function always
returns an empty bitmap for the MyISAM engine.
file .\ha_innodb.
Problem: if a partial unique key followed by a non-partial one we declare
the second one as a primary key.
Fix: sort non-partial unique keys before partial ones.