prepared statement and subquery.
When a field of a view from an outer select is resolved the find_field_in_view
function creates an Item_direct_view_ref object that references the
corresponding view underlying field. After that the view_ref is marked
as a dependent one. While resolving view underlying field it also get
marked as a dependent one due to current_select still points to the subselect.
Marking the view underlying field is wrong and lead to attaching conditions
to a wrong table and thus to the wrong result of the whole statement.
Now mark_select_range_as_dependent() function isn't called for fields from a
view underlying table.
statements
Currently the optimizer evaluates loose index scan only for top-level SELECT
statements
Extend loose index scan applicability by :
- Test the applicability of loose scan for each sub-select, instead of the
whole query. This change enables loose index scan for sub-queries.
- allow non-select statements with SELECT parts (like, e.g.
CREATE TABLE .. SELECT ...) to use loose index scan.
When implicitly converting string fields to numbers the
string-to-number conversion error was not sent to the client.
Added code to send the conversion error as warning.
We also need to prevent generation of warnings from the places
where val_xxx() methods are called for the sole purpose of updating
the Item::null_value flag.
To achieve that a special function is added (and called) :
update_null_value(). This function will set the no_errors flag and
will call val_xxx(). The warning generation in Field_string::val_xxx()
will use the flag when generating the conversion warnings.
If a view was created with the DEFINER security and later the definer user
was dropped then a SELECT from the view throws the error message saying that
there is no definer user is registered. This is ok for a root but too much
for a mere user.
Now the st_table_list::prepare_view_securety_context() function reveals
the absence of the definer only to a superuser and throws the 'access denied'
error to others.
Added missing DBUG_RETURN statements (in mysqldump.c)
Added missing enums
Fixed a lot of wrong DBUG_PRINT() statements, some of which could cause crashes
Removed usage of %lld and %p in printf strings as these are not portable or produces different results on different systems.
Moved .progress files into the log directory
Moved 'cluster' database tables into the MySQL database, to not have 'cluster' beeing a reserved database name
Fixed bug where mysqld got a core dump when trying to use a table created by MySQL 3.23
Fixed some compiler warnings
Fixed small memory leak in libmysql
Note that this doesn't changeset doesn't include the new mysqldump.c code required to run some tests. This will be added when I merge 5.0 to 5.1
(Mostly in DBUG_PRINT() and unused arguments)
Fixed bug in query cache when used with traceing (--with-debug)
Fixed memory leak in mysqldump
Removed warnings from mysqltest scripts (replaced -- with #)
- When a shared library argument is supplied, it's checked for an OS
specific directory separator. The expected error is different
depending on the separator used. Create OS specific versions of these
tests.
The regression is caused by the fix for bug 14767. When INSERT ... SELECT
used a view in the SELECT list that was not inlined, and there was an
active transaction, the server could crash in Query_cache::invalidate.
On INSERT ... SELECT only the table being inserted into is invalidated.
Thus views that can't be inlined are skipped from invalidation.
The bug manifests itself in two ways so there is 2 test cases.
One checks that the only the table being inserted into is invalidated.
And the second one checks that there is no crash on INSERT ... SELECT.