attempt to create spatial index on char > 31 bytes".
Attempt to create spatial index on char field with length
greater than 31 byte led to assertion failure on server
compiled with safemutex support.
The problem occurred in mi_create() function which was called
to create a new version of table being altered. This function
failed since it detected an attempt to create a spatial key
on non-binary column and tried to return an error.
On its error path it tried to unlock THR_LOCK_myisam mutex
which has not been not locked at this point. Indeed such an
incorrect behavior was caught by safemutex wrapper and caused
assertion failure.
This patch fixes the problem by ensuring that mi_create()
doesn't releases THR_LOCK_myisam mutex on error path if it was
not acquired.
Assert in Diagnostics_area::set_ok_status() for XA COMMIT
This assert was triggered if XA COMMIT was issued when an XA transaction
already had encountered an error (e.g. a deadlock) which required
the XA transaction to be rolled back.
In general, the assert is triggered if a statement tries to send OK to
the client when an error has already been reported. It was triggered
in this case because the trans_xa_commit() function first reported an
error, then rolled back the transaction and finally returned FALSE,
indicating success. Since trans_xa_commit() reported success,
mysql_execute_command() tried to report OK, triggering the assert.
This patch fixes the problem by fixing trans_xa_commit() to return TRUE
if it encounters an error that requires rollback, even if the rollback
itself is successful.
Test case added to xa.test.
With this change, there will be new files "INFO_SRC"
and "INFO_BIN", which describe the source and the
binaries.
They will be contained in all packages:
- in "tar.gz" and derived packages, in "docs/",
- in RPMs, in "/usr/share/doc/packages/MySQL-server".
"INFO_SRC" is also part of a source tarball.
It gives the version as exact as possible, preferably
by calling "bzr version-info" on the source tree.
If that is not possible, it just contains the three
level version number.
"INFO_BIN" contains some info when and where the
binaries were built, the options given to the compiler,
and the flags controlling the included features.
The tests (test "mysql" in the main suite) are extended
to verify the existence of both "INFO_SRC" and "INFO_BIN",
as well as some of the expected contents.
Also fix bug#59110: Memory leak of QUICK_SELECT_I allocated memory.
Includes Jørgen Lølands review comments.
Root cause of these bugs are that test_if_skip_sort_order() decided to
revert the 'skip_sort_order' descision (and use filesort) after the
query plan has been updated to reflect a 'skip' of the sort order.
This might happen in 'check_reverse_order:' if we have a
select->quick which could not be made descending by appending
a QUICK_SELECT_DESC. ().
The original 'save_quick' was then restored after the QEP has been modified,
which caused:
- An incorrect 'precomputed_group_by= TRUE' may have been set,
and not reverted, as part of the already modifified QEP (Bug#59308)
- A 'select->quick' might have been created which we fail to delete (bug#59110).
This fix is a refactorication of test_if_skip_sort_order() where all logic
related to modification of QEP (controlled by argument 'bool no_changes'), is
moved to the end of test_if_skip_sort_order(), and done after *all* 'test_if_skip'
checks has been performed - including the 'check_reverse_order:' checks.
The refactorication above contains now intentional changes to the logic which
has been moved to the end of the function.
Furthermore, a smaller part of the fix address the handling of the
select->quick objects which may already exists when we call
'test_if_skip_sort_order()' (save_quick) -and
new select->quick's created during test_if_skip_sort_order():
- Before new select->quick may be created by calling ::test_quick_select(), we
set 'select->quick= 0' to avoid that ::test_quick_select() prematurely
delete the save_quick's. (After this call we may have both a 'save_quick'
and 'select->quick')
- All returns from ::test_if_skip_sort_order() where we may have both a
'save_quick' and a 'select->quick' has been changed to goto's to the
exit points 'skiped_sort_order:' or 'need_filesort:' where we
decide which of the QUICK_SELECT's to keep, and delete the other.
if the standard input is a directory.
The problem is that mysql monitor try to read from stdin without
checking input source type.
The solution is to stop reading data from standard input if a call
to read(2) failed.
A new test case was added into mysql.test.
handling.
The problem was that parsing of nested regular expression involved
recursive calls. Such recursion didn't take into account the amount of
available stack space, which ended up leading to stack overflow crashes.
Bug #55755 : Date STD variable signness breaks server on FreeBSD and OpenBSD
* Added a check to configure on the size of time_t
* Created a macro to check for a valid time_t that is safe to use with datetime
functions and store in TIMESTAMP columns.
* Used the macro consistently instead of the ad-hoc checks introduced by 52315
* Fixed compliation warnings on platforms where the size of time_t is smaller than
the size of a long (e.g. OpenBSD 4.8 64 amd64).
Bug #52315: utc_date() crashes when system time > year 2037
* Added a correct check for the timestamp range instead of just variable size check to
SET TIMESTAMP.
* Added overflow checking before converting to time_t.
* Using a correct localized error message in this case instead of the generic error.
* Added a test suite.
* fixed the checks so that they check for unsigned time_t as well. Used the checks
consistently across the source code.
* fixed the original test case to expect the new error code.
Root cause for this bug is that the optimizer try to detect&
optimize the special case:
'<field> BETWEEN c1 AND c1' and handle this as the condition '<field> = c1'
This was implemented inside add_key_field(.. *field, *value[]...)
which assumed field to refer key Field, and value[] to refer a [low...high]
constant pair. value[0] and value[1] was then compared for equality.
In a 'normal' BETWEEN condition of the form '<field> BETWEEN val1 and val2' the
BETWEEN operation is represented with an argementlist containing the
values [<field>, val1, val2] - add_key_field() is then called with
parameters field=<field>, *value=val1.
However, if the BETWEEN predicate specified:
1) '<const1> BETWEEN<const2> AND<field>
the 'field' and 'value' arguments to add_key_field() had to be swapped.
This was implemented by trying to cheat add_key_field() to handle it like:
2) '<const1> GE<const2> AND<const1> LE<field>'
As we didn't really replace the BETWEEN operation with 'ge' and 'le',
add_key_field() still handled it as a 'BETWEEN' and compared the (swapped)
arguments<const1> and<const2> for equality. If they was equal, the
condition 1) was incorrectly 'optimized' to:
3) '<field> EQ <const1>'
This fix moves this optimization of '<field> BETWEEN c1 AND c1' into
add_key_fields() which then calls add_key_equal_fields() to collect
key equality / comparison for the key fields in the BETWEEN condition.
Third updated patch - this version also includes copyright notice in added Perl script.
This patch implements a check for such modules at runtime. If modules are not found or unable to load, the test is skipped with
the following message:
[ skipped ] Test needs Perl modules DBI and DBD::mysql
Checks are done via a helper Perl script which looks for the module in a runtime environment that is as similar to that of the
mysqlhotcopy script as possible (thus not intended for Windows environments at this time).
The helper script tells mysql-test about the result by writing information to a temporary file that is later read by mysql-test.
See comments in added files (have_dbi_dbd-mysql.inc and checkDBI_DBD-mysql.pl) for details.
The patch also removes the mysqlhotcopy tests from the list of disabled tests.
ZERO
When dates are represented internally as strings, i.e. when a string constant
is compared to a date value, both values are converted to long integers,
ostensibly for fast comparisons. DATE typed integer values are converted to
DATETIME by multiplying by 1,000,000 (each digit pair representing hour,
minute and second, respectively). But the mechanism did not distuinguish
cached INTEGER values, already in correct format, from newly converted
strings.
Fixed by marking the INTEGER cache as being of DATETIME format.
Problem: the scanner function tested for strings "<![CDATA[" and
"-->" without checking input string boundaries, which led to valgrind's
"Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)" error.
Fix: Adding boundary checking.
@ mysql-test/r/xml.result
@ mysql-test/t/xml.test
Adding test
@ strings/xml.c
Adding a helper function my_xml_parser_prefix_cmp(),
with input string boundary check.
Introduced by the fix for bug#44766.
Problem: it's not correct to use args[0]->str_value as a buffer,
because args[0] may need this buffer for its own purposes.
Fix: adding a new class member tmp_value to use as return value.
@ mysql-test/r/ctype_many.result
@ mysql-test/t/ctype_many.test
Adding tests
@ sql/item_strfunc.cc
Changing code into traditional style:
use "str" as a buffer for the argument and tmp_value for the result value.
@ sql/item_strfunc.h
Adding tmp_value
Problem: when processing a query like:
SELECT '' LIKE '1' ESCAPE COUNT(1);
escape_item->val_str() was never executed and the "escape" class member
stayed initialized, which led to valgrind uninitialized memory error.
Note, a query with some tables in "FROM" clause
returns ER_WRONG_ARGUMENTS in the same situation:
SELECT '' LIKE '1' ESCAPE COUNT(1) FROM t1;
ERROR 1210 (HY000): Incorrect arguments to ESCAPE
Fix: disallowing using aggregate functions in ESCAPE clause,
even if there are no tables used. There is no much use of that anyway.
When mysqldadmin is run with sleep and count options,
it goes into an infinite loop and keeps executing the
specified command.
This happened because the statement, responsible for
decrementing the count value, was missing.
Fixed by adding a statement which will decrement the
count value for each iteration.
Backport to 5.0.
/*![:version:] Query Code */, where [:version:] is a sequence of 5
digits representing the mysql server version(e.g /*!50200 ... */),
is a special comment that the query in it can be executed on those
servers whose versions are larger than the version appearing in the
comment. It leads to a security issue when slave's version is larger
than master's. A malicious user can improve his privileges on slaves.
Because slave SQL thread is running with SUPER privileges, so it can
execute queries that he/she does not have privileges on master.
This bug is fixed with the logic below:
- To replace '!' with ' ' in the magic comments which are not applied on
master. So they become common comments and will not be applied on slave.
- Example:
'INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1) /*!10000, (2)*/ /*!99999 ,(3)*/
will be binlogged as
'INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1) /*!10000, (2)*/ /* 99999 ,(3)*/
IA64 and some other arcitectures use different float rounding mode and
i find no decent way to make it consistent.
So the test changed to be insensitive to this.
per-file messages:
mysql-test/t/gis.test
Bug#52208 gis fails on some platforms (Solaris, HP-UX, Linux)
--replace_result added
When mysqldump tries to dump information in xml format,
the result does not contain field level comments.
In order to retrieve various informations for a field/column,
mysqldump currently uses 'show fields from <tab>' statement.
The attributes returned by the statement lacks the information
regarding field comments.
Fixed by changing the query to one that probes I_S to retrieve
required field informations, including the field comment.
other crashes
Some string manipulating SQL functions use a shared string object intended to
contain an immutable empty string. This object was used by the SQL function
SUBSTRING_INDEX() to return an empty string when one argument was of the wrong
datatype. If the string object was then modified by the sql function INSERT(),
undefined behavior ensued.
Fixed by instead modifying the string object representing the function's
result value whenever string manipulating SQL functions return an empty
string.
Relevant code has also been documented.
The test case fails with out of memory while updating a table
with several multi-megabytes sized rows. This can probably be too
exhausting for PB2 env.
The quick fix here is to reduce the size of the biggest
row (256MB) so that it becomes a little smaller (64MB).
INVOKER-security view access check wrong".
When privilege checks were done for tables used from an
INVOKER-security view which in its turn was used from
a DEFINER-security view connection's active security
context was incorrectly used instead of security context
with privileges of the second view's creator.
This meant that users which had enough rights to access
the DEFINER-security view and as result were supposed to
be able successfully access it were unable to do so in
cases when they didn't have privileges on underlying tables
of the INVOKER-security view.
This problem was caused by the fact that for INVOKER-security
views TABLE_LIST::security_ctx member for underlying tables
were set to 0 even in cases when particular view was used from
another DEFINER-security view. This meant that when checks of
privileges on these underlying tables was done in
setup_tables_and_check_access() active connection security
context was used instead of context corresponding to the
creator of caller view.
This fix addresses the problem by ensuring that underlying
tables of an INVOKER-security view inherit security context
from the view and thus correct security context is used for
privilege checks on underlying tables in cases when such view
is used from another view with DEFINER-security.
Item_func_spatial_collection::fix_length_and_dec didn't call parent's method, so
the maybe_null was set to '0' after it. But in this case the result was
just NULL, that caused wrong behaviour.
per-file comments:
mysql-test/r/gis.result
Bug #57321 crashes and valgrind errors from spatial types
test result updated.
mysql-test/t/gis.test
Bug #57321 crashes and valgrind errors from spatial types
test case added.
sql/item_geofunc.h
Bug #57321 crashes and valgrind errors from spatial types
Item_func_geometry::fix_length_and_dec() called in
Item_func_spatial_collection::fix_length_and_dec().
get_year_value() contains code to convert 2-digits year to
4-digits. The fix for Bug#49910 added a check on the size of
the underlying field so that this conversion is not done for
YEAR(4) values. (Since otherwise one would convert invalid
YEAR(4) values to valid ones.)
The existing check does not work when Item_cache is used, since
it is not detected when the cache is based on a Field. The
reported change in behavior is due to Bug#58030 which added
extra cached items in min/max computations.
The elegant solution would be to implement
Item_cache::real_item() to return the underlying Item.
However, some side effects are observed (change in explain
output) that indicates that such a change is not straight-
forward, and definitely not appropriate for an MRU.
Instead, a Item_cache::field() method has been added in order
to get access to the underlying field. (This field() method
eliminates the need for Item_cache::eq_def() used in
test_if_ref(), but in order to limit the scope of this fix,
that code has been left as is.)
tmptable needed
The function DEFAULT() works by modifying the the data buffer pointers (often
referred to as 'record' or 'table record') of its argument. This modification
is done during name resolution (fix_fields().) Unfortunately, the same
modification is done when creating a temporary table, because default values
need to propagate to the new table.
Fixed by skipping the pointer modification for fields that are arguments to
the DEFAULT function.
The retrieval of a charset by number was not
doing bounds checking before accessing the internal
character sets array.
Added checks for valid charset number.
Added asserts for valid charset number to some of
the internal functions.
Removed one superfluous check for charset_number 0
(since the all_charsets_array[0] is set to 0 anyway) for
uniformity.
Test suite added.
Starting mysqld with defaults file without
extension cause segmentation fault
Bug occurs because fn_expand calls fn_format
with NULL as ext.
This is a backport of the patch from 5.6.
Patch solve this problem by using an empty
string as extension, and adding assertions
to fn_format that correct arguments are passed.
It also add a test tests several variations of
using non-existing defaults files.
Write an additional warning message to the server log,
explaining why a sort operation is aborted.
The output in mysqld.err will look something like:
110127 15:07:54 [ERROR] mysqld: Sort aborted: Out of memory (Needed 24 bytes)
110127 15:07:54 [ERROR] mysqld: Out of sort memory, consider increasing server sort buffer size
110127 15:07:54 [ERROR] mysqld: Sort aborted: Out of sort memory, consider increasing server sort buffer size
110127 15:07:54 [ERROR] mysqld: Sort aborted: Incorrect number of arguments for FUNCTION test.f1; expected 0, got 1
If --log-warn=2 is enabled, we output information about host/user/query as well.
in combination with IS NULL'
As this bug is a duplicate of bug#49322, it also includes test cases
covering this bugreport
Qualifying an OUTER JOIN with the condition 'WHERE <column> IS NULL',
where <column> is declared as 'NOT NULL' causes the
'not_exists_optimize' to be enabled by the optimizer.
In evaluate_join_record() the 'not_exists_optimize' caused
'NESTED_LOOP_NO_MORE_ROWS' to be returned immediately
when a matching row was found.
However, as the 'not_exists_optimize' is derived from
'JOIN_TAB::select_cond', the usual rules for condition guards
also applies for 'not_exist_optimize'. It is therefore incorrect
to check 'not_exists_optimize' without ensuring that all guards
protecting it is 'open'.
This fix uses the fact that 'not_exists_optimize' is derived from
a 'is_null' predicate term in 'tab->select_cond'. Furthermore,
'is_null' will evaluate to 'false' for any 'non-null' rows
once all guards protecting the is_null is open.
We can use this knowledge as an implicit guard check for the
'not_exists_optimize' by moving 'if (...not_exists_optimize)'
inside the handling of 'select_cond==false'. It will then
not take effect before its guards are open.
We also add an assert which requires that a
'not_exists_optimize' always comes together with
a select_cond. (containing 'is_null').