For now following tasks have been done:
- PASSWORD() function was rewritten. PASSWORD() now returns SHA1
hash_stage2; for new passwords user.password contains '*'hash_stage2; sql_yacc.yy also fixed;
- password.c: new functions were implemented, old rolled back to 4.0 state
- server code was rewritten to use new authorization algorithm (check_user(), change
user, and other stuff in sql/sql_parse.cc)
- client code was rewritten to use new authorization algorithm
(mysql_real_connect, myslq_authenticate in sql-common/client.c)
- now server barks on 45-byte-length 4.1.0 passwords and refuses 4.1.0-style
authentification. Users with 4.1.0 passwords are blocked (sql/sql_acl.cc)
- mysqladmin.c was fixed to work correctly with new passwords
Tests for 4.0-4.1.1, 4.1.1-4.1.1 (with or without db/password) logons was performed;
mysqladmin also was tested. Additional check are nevertheless necessary.
Merge InnoDB-4.0.14: SAVEPOINT now implemented; InnoDB now accepts also column prefix keys; crashing bug in ON UPDATE CASCADE fixed; page checksum formula fixed
Add syntax SAVEPOINT id and ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT id. This is compatible with DB2 and Oracle but not with SQL Server. Savepoints do not do anything yet, this is just parsing.
now by default, FLUSH, OPTIMIZE, ANALYZE, REPAIR commands are written to the
binlog, unless the new NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG keyword was used :
OPTIMIZE NO_WRITE_TO_BINLOG table t;
Previously these commands were never written to the binlog, but there are
2 reasons to change this :
- the RENAME TABLE in MERGE table bug (#175) on slave
- the possible "differently optimised queries may lead to different
updates on the master and slave" bug, until we have automatic ORDER BY.
FLUSH LOGS/SLAVE/MASTER/TABLES WITH READ LOCK are never written to the binlog.
New test for the new logging behaviour.
Other small change : reload_acl_and_cache() and reset_slave() don't send their errors themselves,
this is more usual.