ROW variables did not get assigned from subselects in these contexts:
BEGIN
DECLARE r ROW TYPE OF t1;
SET r=(SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a=1);
END;
BEGIN
DECLARE r ROW TYPE OF t1 DEFAULT (SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE a=1);
END;
All fields of the ROW variable remained NULL.
Derived table creation code would call Field::make_new_field() which would
memcpy the Field object from the source table, including Field::read_stats.
But the temp. table as a whole had table->stats_is_read=false. Which was
correct but not consistent with Field::read_stats and caused an assertion.
Fixed by making sure that Field::read_stats=NULL for fields in the new
temporary (i.e. work) tables.
- Adding a new argument "flag" to MY_COLLATION_HANDLER::strnncollsp_nchars()
and a flag MY_STRNNCOLLSP_NCHARS_EMULATE_TRIMMED_TRAILING_SPACES.
The flag defines if strnncollsp_nchars() should emulate trailing spaces
which were possibly trimmed earlier (e.g. in InnoDB CHAR compression).
This is important for NOPAD collations.
For example, with this input:
- str1= 'a ' (Latin letter a followed by one space)
- str2= 'a ' (Latin letter a followed by two spaces)
- nchars= 3
if the flag is given, strnncollsp_nchars() will virtually restore
one trailing space to str1 up to nchars (3) characters and compare two
strings as equal:
- str1= 'a ' (one extra trailing space emulated)
- str2= 'a ' (as is)
If the flag is not given, strnncollsp_nchars() does not add trailing
virtual spaces, so in case of a NOPAD collation, str1 will be compared
as less than str2 because it is shorter.
- Field_string::cmp_prefix() now passes the new flag.
Field_varstring::cmp_prefix() and Field_blob::cmp_prefix() do
not pass the new flag.
- The branch in cmp_whole_field() in storage/innobase/rem/rem0cmp.cc
(which handles the CHAR data type) now also passed the new flag.
- Fixing UCA collations to respect the new flag.
Other collations are possibly also affected, however
I had no success in making an SQL script demonstrating the problem.
Other collations will be extended to respect this flags in a separate
patch later.
- Changing the meaning of the last parameter of Field::cmp_prefix()
from "number of bytes" (internal length)
to "number of characters" (user visible length).
The code calling cmp_prefix() from handler.cc was wrong.
After this change, the call in handler.cc became correct.
The code calling cmp_prefix() from key_rec_cmp() in key.cc
was adjusted according to this change.
- Old strnncollsp_nchar() related tests in unittest/strings/strings-t.c
now pass the new flag.
A few new tests also were added, without the flag.
rename to stress that is a specific hack for Item_func_nextval
and should not be used for other items.
If a vcol uses Item_func_nextval, a corresponding table for the sequence
should be added to the prelocking list (in that sense NEXTVAL is not
simply a function, but more like a subquery), see add_internal_tables()
in DML_prelocking_strategy::handle_table(). At the moment it is only
implemented for DEFAULT, not for GENERATED ALWAYS AS, thus the
VCOL_NEXTVAL hack.
Fixing a few problems relealed by UBSAN in type_float.test
- multiplication overflow in dtoa.c
- uninitialized Field::geom_type (and Field::srid as well)
- Wrong call-back function types used in combination with SHOW_FUNC.
Changes in the mysql_show_var_func data type definition were not
properly addressed all around the code by the following commits:
b4ff64568c18feb62fee0ee879ff8a
Adding a helper SHOW_FUNC_ENTRY() function and replacing
all mysql_show_var_func declarations using SHOW_FUNC
to SHOW_FUNC_ENTRY, to catch mysql_show_var_func in the future
at compilation time.
The ALTER related code cannot do at the same time both:
- modify partitions
- change column data types
Explicit changing of a column data type together with a partition change is
prohibited by the parter, so this is not allowed and returns a syntax error:
ALTER TABLE t MODIFY ts BIGINT, DROP PARTITION p1;
This fix additionally disables implicit data type upgrade
(e.g. from "MariaDB 5.3 TIME" to "MySQL 5.6 TIME", or the other way
around according to the current mysql56_temporal_format) in case of
an ALTER modifying partitions, e.g.:
ALTER TABLE t DROP PARTITION p1;
In such commands now only the partition change happens, while
the data types stay unchanged.
One can additionally run:
ALTER TABLE t FORCE;
either before or after the ALTER modifying partitions to
upgrade data types according to mysql56_temporal_format.