Implemented the server infrastructure for the fix:
1. Added a function LEX_STRING *thd_query_string(THD) to return
a LEX_STRING structure instead of char *.
This is the function that must be called in innodb instead of
thd_query()
2. Did some encapsulation in THD : aggregated thd_query and
thd_query_length into a LEX_STRING and made accessor and mutator
methods for easy code updating.
3. Updated the server code to use the new methods where applicable.
Implemented the server infrastructure for the fix:
1. Added a function LEX_STRING *thd_query_string(THD) to return
a LEX_STRING structure instead of char *.
This is the function that must be called in innodb instead of
thd_query()
2. Did some encapsulation in THD : aggregated thd_query and
thd_query_length into a LEX_STRING and made accessor and mutator
methods for easy code updating.
3. Updated the server code to use the new methods where applicable.
NOTE: Backporting the patch to next-mr.
WL#4828 Augment DBUG_ENTER/DBUG_EXIT to crash MySQL in different functions
-------
The assessment of the replication code in the presence of faults is extremely
import to increase reliability. In particular, one needs to know if servers
will either correctly recovery or print out appropriate error messages thus
avoiding unexpected problems in a production environment.
In order to accomplish this, the current patch refactories the debug macros
already provided in the source code and introduces three new macros that
allows to inject faults, specifically crashes, while entering or exiting a
function or method. For instance, to crash a server while returning from
the init_slave function (see module sql/slave.cc), one needs to do what
follows:
1 - Modify the source replacing DBUG_RETURN by DBUG_CRASH_RETURN;
DBUG_CRASH_RETURN(0);
2 - Use the debug variable to activate dbug instructions:
SET SESSION debug="+d,init_slave_crash_return";
The new macros are briefly described below:
DBUG_CRASH_ENTER (function) is equivalent to DBUG_ENTER which registers the
beginning of a function but in addition to it allows for crashing the server
while entering the function if the appropriate dbug instruction is activate.
In this case, the dbug instruction should be "+d,function_crash_enter".
DBUG_CRASH_RETURN (value) is equivalent to DBUG_RETURN which notifies the
end of a function but in addition to it allows for crashing the server
while returning from the function if the appropriate dbug instruction is
activate. In this case, the dbug instruction should be
"+d,function_crash_return". Note that "function" should be the same string
used by either the DBUG_ENTER or DBUG_CRASH_ENTER.
DBUG_CRASH_VOID_RETURN (value) is equivalent to DBUG_VOID_RETURN which
notifies the end of a function but in addition to it allows for crashing
the server while returning from the function if the appropriate dbug
instruction is activate. In this case, the dbug instruction should be
"+d,function_crash_return". Note that "function" should be the same string
used by either the DBUG_ENTER or DBUG_CRASH_ENTER.
To inject other faults, for instance, wrong return values, one should rely
on the macros already available. The current patch also removes a set of
macros that were either not being used or were redundant as other macros
could be used to provide the same feature. In the future, we also consider
dynamic instrumentation of the code.
BUG#45747 DBUG_CRASH_* is not setting the strict option
---------
When combining DBUG_CRASH_* with "--debug=d:t:i:A,file" the server crashes
due to a call to the abort function in the DBUG_CRASH_* macro althought the
appropriate keyword has not been set.
NOTE: Backporting the patch to next-mr.
WL#4828 Augment DBUG_ENTER/DBUG_EXIT to crash MySQL in different functions
-------
The assessment of the replication code in the presence of faults is extremely
import to increase reliability. In particular, one needs to know if servers
will either correctly recovery or print out appropriate error messages thus
avoiding unexpected problems in a production environment.
In order to accomplish this, the current patch refactories the debug macros
already provided in the source code and introduces three new macros that
allows to inject faults, specifically crashes, while entering or exiting a
function or method. For instance, to crash a server while returning from
the init_slave function (see module sql/slave.cc), one needs to do what
follows:
1 - Modify the source replacing DBUG_RETURN by DBUG_CRASH_RETURN;
DBUG_CRASH_RETURN(0);
2 - Use the debug variable to activate dbug instructions:
SET SESSION debug="+d,init_slave_crash_return";
The new macros are briefly described below:
DBUG_CRASH_ENTER (function) is equivalent to DBUG_ENTER which registers the
beginning of a function but in addition to it allows for crashing the server
while entering the function if the appropriate dbug instruction is activate.
In this case, the dbug instruction should be "+d,function_crash_enter".
DBUG_CRASH_RETURN (value) is equivalent to DBUG_RETURN which notifies the
end of a function but in addition to it allows for crashing the server
while returning from the function if the appropriate dbug instruction is
activate. In this case, the dbug instruction should be
"+d,function_crash_return". Note that "function" should be the same string
used by either the DBUG_ENTER or DBUG_CRASH_ENTER.
DBUG_CRASH_VOID_RETURN (value) is equivalent to DBUG_VOID_RETURN which
notifies the end of a function but in addition to it allows for crashing
the server while returning from the function if the appropriate dbug
instruction is activate. In this case, the dbug instruction should be
"+d,function_crash_return". Note that "function" should be the same string
used by either the DBUG_ENTER or DBUG_CRASH_ENTER.
To inject other faults, for instance, wrong return values, one should rely
on the macros already available. The current patch also removes a set of
macros that were either not being used or were redundant as other macros
could be used to provide the same feature. In the future, we also consider
dynamic instrumentation of the code.
BUG#45747 DBUG_CRASH_* is not setting the strict option
---------
When combining DBUG_CRASH_* with "--debug=d:t:i:A,file" the server crashes
due to a call to the abort function in the DBUG_CRASH_* macro althought the
appropriate keyword has not been set.
* Finished Monty and Jani's merge
* Some InnoDB tests still fail (because it's old xtradb code run against
newer testsuite). They are expected to go after mergning with the latest
xtradb.
sql/opt_range.cc:
Removed duplicate code (if statement must have been duplicated during earlier merge).
sql/sql_partition.cc:
After mergeing bug#46362 and bug#20577, the NULL partition was also searched
when col = const, fixed by checking if = or range.
Problem was that the partition containing NULL values
was pruned away, since '2001-01-01' < '2001-02-00' but
TO_DAYS('2001-02-00') is NULL.
Added the NULL partition for RANGE/LIST partitioning on TO_DAYS()
function to be scanned too.
Also fixed a bug that added ALLOW_INVALID_DATES to sql_mode
(SELECT * FROM t WHERE date_col < '1999-99-99' on a RANGE/LIST
partitioned table would add it).
mysql-test/include/partition_date_range.inc:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Added include file to decrease test code duplication
mysql-test/r/partition_pruning.result:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Added test results
mysql-test/r/partition_range.result:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Updated test result.
This fix adds the partition containing NULL values to
the list of partitions to be scanned.
mysql-test/t/partition_pruning.test:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Added test case
sql/item.h:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Added MONOTONIC_*INCREASE_NOT_NULL values to be used by TO_DAYS.
sql/item_timefunc.cc:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Calculate the number of days as return value even for invalid dates.
This is so that pruning can be used even for invalid dates.
sql/opt_range.cc:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Fixed a bug that added ALLOW_INVALID_DATES to sql_mode
(SELECT * FROM t WHERE date_col < '1999-99-99' on a RANGE/LIST
partitioned table would add it).
sql/partition_info.h:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Resetting ret_null_part when a single partition is to be used, this
to avoid adding the NULL partition.
sql/sql_partition.cc:
Bug#20577: Partitions: use of to_days() function leads to selection failures
Always include the NULL partition if RANGE or LIST.
Use the returned value for the function for pruning, even if
it is marked as NULL, so that even '2000-00-00' can be
used for pruning, even if TO_DAYS('2000-00-00') is NULL.
Changed == to >= in get_next_partition_id_list to avoid
crash if part_iter->part_nums is not correctly setup.
Problem was that the partition containing NULL values
was pruned away, since '2001-01-01' < '2001-02-00' but
TO_DAYS('2001-02-00') is NULL.
Added the NULL partition for RANGE/LIST partitioning on TO_DAYS()
function to be scanned too.
Also fixed a bug that added ALLOW_INVALID_DATES to sql_mode
(SELECT * FROM t WHERE date_col < '1999-99-99' on a RANGE/LIST
partitioned table would add it).
when partition is reoganized.
Problem was that table->timestamp_field_type was not changed
before copying rows between partitions.
fixed by setting it to TIMESTAMP_NO_AUTO_SET as the first thing
in fast_alter_partition_table, so that all if-branches is covered.
when partition is reoganized.
Problem was that table->timestamp_field_type was not changed
before copying rows between partitions.
fixed by setting it to TIMESTAMP_NO_AUTO_SET as the first thing
in fast_alter_partition_table, so that all if-branches is covered.
We disallow the partitioning of a log table. You could however
partition a table first, and then point logging to it. This is
not only against the docs, it also crashes the server.
We catch this case now.
mysql-test/r/partition.result:
results for 40281
mysql-test/t/partition.test:
test for 40281: show that trying to log to partitioned table fails rather
to crash the server
sql/ha_partition.cc:
Signal that we no longer support logging to partitioned tables,
as per the docs.
sql/sql_partition.cc:
Some commands like "USE ..." have no select, yet we may try
to parse partition info after their execution if user set a
partitioned table as log target. This shouldn't lead to a
NULL-deref/crash.
We disallow the partitioning of a log table. You could however
partition a table first, and then point logging to it. This is
not only against the docs, it also crashes the server.
We catch this case now.