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.
build)
The crash was caused by freeing the internal parser stack during the parser
execution.
This occured only for complex stored procedures, after reallocating the parser
stack using my_yyoverflow(), with the following C call stack:
- MYSQLparse()
- any rule calling sp_head::restore_lex()
- lex_end()
- x_free(lex->yacc_yyss), xfree(lex->yacc_yyvs)
The root cause is the implementation of stored procedures, which breaks the
assumption from 4.1 that there is only one LEX structure per parser call.
The solution is to separate the LEX structure into:
- attributes that represent a statement (the current LEX structure),
- attributes that relate to the syntax parser itself (Yacc_state),
so that parsing multiple statements in stored programs can create multiple
LEX structures while not changing the unique Yacc_state.
Now, Yacc_state and the existing Lex_input_stream are aggregated into
Parser_state, a structure that represent the complete state of the (Lexical +
Syntax) parser.
and value-list
The server returns unexpected results if a right side of the
NOT IN clause consists of NULL value and some constants of
the same type, for example:
SELECT * FROM t WHERE NOT t.id IN (NULL, 1, 2)
may return 3, 4, 5 etc if a table contains these values.
The Item_func_in::val_int method has been modified:
unnecessary resets of an Item_func_case::has_null field
value has been moved outside of an argument comparison
loop. (Also unnecessary re-initialization of the null_value
field has been moved).
offset for time part in UUIDs was 1/1000 of what it
should be. In other words, offset was off.
Also handle the case where we count into the future
when several UUIDs are generated in one "tick", and
then the next call is late enough for us to unwind
some but not all of those borrowed ticks.
Lastly, handle the case where we keep borrowing and
borrowing until the tick-counter overflows by also
changing into a new "numberspace" by creating a new
random suffix.
offset for time part in UUIDs was 1/1000 of what it
should be. In other words, offset was off.
Also handle the case where we count into the future
when several UUIDs are generated in one "tick", and
then the next call is late enough for us to unwind
some but not all of those borrowed ticks.
Lastly, handle the case where we keep borrowing and
borrowing until the tick-counter overflows by also
changing into a new "numberspace" by creating a new
random suffix.
The problem is that relying on the output of the 'ls' command is not
portable as its behavior is not the same between systems and it might
even not be available at all in (Windows).
So I added list_files that relies on the portable mysys library instead.
(and also list_files_write_file and list_files_append_file,
since the test was using '--exec ls' in that way.)
problem was that ha_partition::records was not implemented, thus
using the default handler::records, which is not correct if the engine
does not support HA_STATS_RECORDS_IS_EXACT.
Solution was to implement ha_partition::records as a wrapper around
the underlying partitions records.
The rows column in explain partitions will now include the total
number of records in the partitioned table.
(recommit after removing out-commented code)
enabled)
Before this fix, the lexer and parser would treat the ';' character as a
different token (either ';' or END_OF_INPUT), based on convoluted logic,
which failed in simple cases where a stored procedure is implemented as a
single statement, and used in a multi query.
With this fix:
- the character ';' is always parsed as a ';' token in the lexer,
- parsing multi queries is implemented in the parser, in the 'query:' rules,
- the value of thd->client_capabilities, which is the capabilities
negotiated between the client and the server during bootstrap,
is immutable and not arbitrarily modified during parsing (which was the
root cause of the bug)
When there is an error executing EXISTS predicates they return NULL as their string
or decimal value but don't set the NULL value flag.
Fixed by returning 0 (as a decimal or a string) on error exectuting the subquery.
Note that we can't return NULL as EXISTS is not supposed to return NULL.
Bug#12093 "SP not found on second PS execution if another thread
drops other SP in between" and
Bug#21294 "executing a prepared statement that executes a stored
function which was recreat"
Stored functions are resolved at prepared statement prepare only.
If someone flushes the stored functions cache between prepare and
execute, execution fails.
The fix is to detect the situation of the cache flush and automatically
reprepare the prepared statement after it.
This bug has been fixed in two slightly different ways in
6.0-rpl and {5.1,6.0}-bugteam. To avoid future merge
problems, I'm now copying the 6.0-rpl fix to 5.1-bugteam.
The previous fix for the bug was incomplete. The test failed
because t2 did not exist on the slave (since the slave was
lagging) when the
wait_condition was executed. Fixed by inserting
sync_slave_with_master just after t2 was created.
Test was failing due to the addition of a '\x05' character in result sets
Latest builds of the server have shown this problem to have disappeared.
Removing code within the test that disables the test on Mac OS X.
Recommit due to tree error on earlier, approved patch.
Bug#36787 Test funcs_1.charset_collation_1 failing
Details:
1. Skip charset_collation_1 if charset "ucs2_bin" is
missing (property which distincts "vanilla" builds
from the others)
2. Let builds with version_comment LIKE "%Advanced%"
(found them for 5.1) execute charset_collation_3.
3. Update comments charset_collation.inc so that they
reflect the current experiences.
Problem: rpl_switch_stm_row_mixed did not wait until row events generated by
INSERT DELAYED were written to the master binlog before it synchronized slave
with master. This caused sporadic errors where these rows were missing on
slave.
Fix: wait until all rows appear on the slave.
This is a backport, applying the same to 5.1-bugteam as was previously
applied to 6.0-rpl
InnoDB table, where all selected columns
belong to the same unique index key, returns
incorrect results
Server executes some queries via QUICK_GROUP_MIN_MAX_SELECT
(MIN/MAX optimization for queries with GROUP BY or DISTINCT
clause) and that optimization implies loose index scan, so all
grouping is done by the QUICK_GROUP_MIN_MAX_SELECT::get_next
method.
The server does not set the precomputed_group_by flag for some
QUICK_GROUP_MIN_MAX_SELECT queries and duplicates grouping by
call to the end_send_group function.
Fix: when the test_if_skip_sort_order function selects loose
index scan as a best way to satisfy an ORDER BY/GROUP BY type
of query, the precomputed_group_by flag has been set to use
end_send/end_write functions instead of end_send_group/
end_write_group functions.