- Adding optional qualifiers to data types:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a schema.DATE);
Qualifiers now work only for three pre-defined schemas:
mariadb_schema
oracle_schema
maxdb_schema
These schemas are virtual (hard-coded) for now, but may turn into real
databases on disk in the future.
- mariadb_schema.TYPE now always resolves to a true MariaDB data
type TYPE without sql_mode specific translations.
- oracle_schema.DATE translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- maxdb_schema.TIMESTAMP translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- Fixing SHOW CREATE TABLE to use a qualifier for a data type TYPE
if the current sql_mode translates TYPE to something else.
The above changes fix the reported problem, so this script:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_date_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_date_column mariadb_schema.DATE);
and the slave can unambiguously treat DATE as the true MariaDB DATE
without ORACLE specific translation to DATETIME.
Similar,
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_timestamp_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_timestamp_column mariadb_schema.TIMESTAMP);
so the slave treats TIMESTAMP as the true MariaDB TIMESTAMP
without MAXDB specific translation to DATETIME.
Allocate space for fields inside the window function (arguments, PARTITION BY and ORDER BY clause)
in the ref pointer array. All fields inside the window function are part of the temporary
table that is required for the window function computation.
Remove Query_tables_list::lock_tables_state - it is not used and it causes
errors like this:
sql_lex.h:1675:7: runtime error: load of value 2779096485, which is not a
valid value for type 'enum_lock_tables_state'
- Any temporary tables created under read-only mode will never be logged
to binary log. Any usage of these tables to update normal tables, even
after read-only has been disabled, will use row base logging (as the
temporary table will not be on the slave).
- Analyze, check and repair table will not be logged in read-only mode.
Other things:
- Removed not used varaibles in
MYSQL_BIN_LOG::flush_and_set_pending_rows_event.
- Set table_share->table_creation_was_logged for all normal tables.
- THD::binlog_query() now returns -1 if statement was not logged., This
is used to update table_share->table_creation_was_logged.
- Don't log admin statements in opt_readonly is set.
- Table's that doesn't have table_creation_was_logged will set binlog format to row
logging.
- Removed not needed/wrong setting of table->s->table_creation_was_logged
in create_table_from_items()
Note: this patch is for 5.6.
Detected by ASAN.
The patch fixes the cleanup of parser stack pointers.
Reviewed-by: Guilhem Bichot <guilhem.bichot@oracle.com>
The parser returned a syntax error message for the queries with join
expressions like this t1 JOIN t2 [LEFT | RIGHT] JOIN t3 ON ... ON ... when
the second operand of the outer JOIN operation with ON clause was another
join expression with ON clause. In this expression the JOIN operator is
right-associative, i.e. expression has to be parsed as the expression
t1 JOIN (t2 [LEFT | RIGHT] JOIN t3 ON ... ) ON ...
Such join expressions are hard to parse because the outer JOIN is
left-associative if there is no ON clause for the first outer JOIN operator.
The patch implements the solution when the JOIN operator is always parsed
as right-associative and builds first the right-associative tree. If it
happens that there is no corresponding ON clause for this operator the
tree is converted to left-associative.
The idea of the solution was taken from the patch by Martin Hansson
"WL#8083: Fixed the join_table rule" from MySQL-8.0 code line.
As the grammar rules related to join expressions in MySQL-8.0 and
MariaDB-5.5+ are quite different MariaDB solution could not borrow
any code from the MySQL-8.0 solution.
Problem:
========
The test now fails with the following trace:
CURRENT_TEST: rpl.rpl_parallel_temptable
--- /mariadb/10.4/mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_parallel_temptable.result
+++ /mariadb/10.4/mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_parallel_temptable.reject
@@ -194,7 +194,6 @@
30 conservative
31 conservative
32 optimistic
-33 optimistic
Analysis:
=========
The part of test which fails with result content mismatch is given below.
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE t4 (a INT PRIMARY KEY) ENGINE=InnoDB;
INSERT INTO t4 VALUES (32);
INSERT INTO t4 VALUES (33);
INSERT INTO t1 SELECT a, "optimistic" FROM t4;
slave_parallel_mode=optimistic
The expectation of the above test script is, INSERT FROM SELECT should read both
32, 33 and populate table 't1'. But this expectation fails occasionally.
All three INSERT statements are handed over to three different slave parallel
workers. Temporary tables are not safe for parallel replication. They were
designed to be visible to one thread only, so have no table locking. Thus there
is no protection against two conflicting transactions committing in parallel and
things like that.
So anything that uses temporary tables will be serialized with anything before
it, when using parallel replication by using a "wait_for_prior_commit" function
call. This will ensure that the each transaction is executed sequentially.
But there exists a code path in which the above wait doesn't happen. Because of
this at times INSERT from SELECT doesn't wait for the INSERT (33) to complete
and it completes its executes and enters commit stage. Hence only row 32 is
found in those cases resulting in test failure.
The wait needs to be added within "open_temporary_table" call. The code looks
like this within "open_temporary_table".
Each thread tries to open temporary table in 3 different ways:
case 1: Find a temporary table which is already in use by using
find_temporary_table(tl) && wait_for_prior_commit()
case 2: If above failed then try to look for temporary table which is marked for
free for reuse. This internally calls "wait_for_prior_commit()" if table
is found.
find_and_use_tmp_table(tl, &table)
case 3: If none of the above open a new table handle from table share.
if (!table && (share= find_tmp_table_share(tl)))
{ table= open_temporary_table(share, tl->get_table_name(), true); }
At present the "wait_for_prior_commit" happens only in case 1 & 2.
Fix:
====
On slave add a call for "wait_for_prior_commit" for case 3.
The above wait on slave will solve the issue. A more detailed fix would be to
mark temporary tables as not safe for parallel execution on the master side.
In order to do that, on the master side, mark the Gtid_log_event specific flag
FL_TRANSACTIONAL to be false all the time. So that they are not scheduled
parallely.
query with VALUES()
A table value constructor can be used in all contexts where a select
can be used. In particular an ORDER BY clause or a LIMIT clause or both
of them can be attached to a table value constructor to produce a new
query. Unfortunately execution of such queries was not supported.
This patch fixes the problem.
If a derived table has SELECT DISTINCT, provide index statistics for it so that the join optimizer in the
upper select knows that ref access to the table will produce one row.
it always required UPDATE privilege on views, not being able to detect
when a views was not actually updated in multi-update.
fix: instead of marking all tables as "updating" by default,
only set "updating" on tables that will actually be updated
by multi-update. And mark the view "updating" if any of the
view's tables is.
1. Always drop merged_for_insert flag on cleanup (there could be errors which prevent TABLE to be assigned)
2. Make more precise cleanup of select parts which was touched
st_select_lex::handle_derived() and mysql_handle_list_of_derived() had
exactly the same implementations.
- Adding a new method LEX::handle_list_of_derived() instead
- Removing public function mysql_handle_list_of_derived()
- Reusing LEX::handle_list_of_derived() in st_select_lex::handle_derived()
The problem was originally stated in
http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=82212
The size of an base64-encoded Rows_log_event exceeds its
vanilla byte representation in 4/3 times.
When a binlogged event size is about 1GB mysqlbinlog generates
a BINLOG query that can't be send out due to its size.
It is fixed with fragmenting the BINLOG argument C-string into
(approximate) halves when the base64 encoded event is over 1GB size.
The mysqlbinlog in such case puts out
SET @binlog_fragment_0='base64-encoded-fragment_0';
SET @binlog_fragment_1='base64-encoded-fragment_1';
BINLOG @binlog_fragment_0, @binlog_fragment_1;
to represent a big BINLOG.
For prompt memory release BINLOG handler is made to reset the BINLOG argument
user variables in the middle of processing, as if @binlog_fragment_{0,1} = NULL
is assigned.
Notice the 2 fragments are enough, though the client and server still may
need to tweak their @@max_allowed_packet to satisfy to the fragment
size (which they would have to do anyway with greater number of
fragments, should that be desired).
On the lower level the following changes are made:
Log_event::print_base64()
remains to call encoder and store the encoded data into a cache but
now *without* doing any formatting. The latter is left for time
when the cache is copied to an output file (e.g mysqlbinlog output).
No formatting behavior is also reflected by the change in the meaning
of the last argument which specifies whether to cache the encoded data.
Rows_log_event::print_helper()
is made to invoke a specialized fragmented cache-to-file copying function
which is
copy_cache_to_file_wrapped()
that takes care of fragmenting also optionally wraps encoded
strings (fragments) into SQL stanzas.
my_b_copy_to_file()
is refactored to into my_b_copy_all_to_file(). The former function
is generalized
to accepts more a limit argument to constraint the copying and does
not reinitialize anymore the cache into reading mode.
The limit does not do any effect on the fully read cache.
main.derived_cond_pushdown: Move all 10.3 tests to the end,
trim trailing white space, and add an "End of 10.3 tests" marker.
Add --sorted_result to tests where the ordering is not deterministic.
main.win_percentile: Add --sorted_result to tests where the
ordering is no longer deterministic.
The test and also rpl_gtid_delete_domain failed on PPC64 platform
due to an incorrectly specified actual key for searching
in a gtid domain system hash. While the correct size is 32 bits
the supplied value was 8 bytes of long int size on the platform.
The problem became evident thanks to the big endiness which
cut off the *least* significant part of the value field.
Fixed with correcting a dynamic array initialization to hold
now uint32 values as well as the values extraction for
searching in the gtid domain system hash.
A new added test ensures no overflowed values are accepted
for deletion which prevents inadvertent action. Notice though
MariaDB [test]> set @@session.gtid_domain_id=(1 << 32) + 1;
MariaDB [test]> show warnings;
+---------+------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| Level | Code | Message |
+---------+------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| Warning | 1292 | Truncated incorrect gtid_domain_id value: '4294967297' |
+---------+------+--------------------------------------------------------+
MariaDB [test]> select @@session.gtid_domain_id;
+--------------------------+
| @@session.gtid_domain_id |
+--------------------------+
| 4294967295 |
+--------------------------+
This patch fills a serious flaw in the implementation of common table
expressions. Before this patch an attempt to prepare a statement from
a query with a parameter marker in a CTE that was used more than once
in the query ended up with a bogus error message. Similarly if a statement
in a stored procedure contained a CTE whose specification used a
local variables and this CTE was referred to more than once in the
statement then the server failed to execute the stored procedure returning
a bogus error message on a non-existing field.
The problems appeared due to incorrect handling of parameter markers /
local variables in CTEs that were referred more than once.
This patch fixes the problems by differentiating between the original
occurrences of a parameter marker / local variable used in the
specification of a CTE and the corresponding occurrences used
in copies of this specification. These copies are substituted
instead of non-first references to the CTE.
The idea of the fix and even some code were taken from the MySQL
implementation of the common table expressions.
Before this patch if no default database was set the server threw
an error for any table name reference that was not fully qualified by
database name. In particular it happened for table names referenced
CTE tables. This was incorrect.
The error message was thrown at the parser stage when the names referencing
different tables were not resolved yet.
Now if no default database is set and a with clause is used in the
processed statement any table reference is just supplied with a dummy
database name "*none*" at the parser stage. Later after a call
of check_dependencies_in_with_clauses() when the names for CTE tables
can be resolved error messages are thrown only for those names that
refer to non-CTE tables. This is done in open_and_process_table().
MDEV-10581 sql_mode=ORACLE: Explicit cursor FOR LOOP
MDEV-12098 sql_mode=ORACLE: Implicit cursor FOR loop
Cleanup changes:
- Removing sp_lex_cursor::m_cursor_name
- Adding sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct::m_cursor (the cursor global index)
- Fixing sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct::print() to access to the cursor
name using m_ctx and m_cursor (like other cursor related instructions do)
instead of m_cursor_name.
This change is needed to unify sp_assignment_lex and sp_cursor_lex later,
to fix this problem easier:
MDEV-16558 Parenthesized expression does not work as a lower FOR loop bound