PREBUILT->TABLE->N_MYSQL_HANDLES_OPENED == 1
ANALYSIS:
=========
Adding unique index to a InnoDB table which is locked as
mutliple instances may trigger an InnoDB assert.
When we add a primary key or an unique index, we need to
drop the original table and rebuild all indexes. InnoDB
expects that only the instance of the table that is being
rebuilt, is open during the process. In the current
scenario we have opened multiple instances of the table.
This triggers an assert during table rebuild.
'Locked_tables_list' encapsulates a list of all
instances of tables locked by LOCK TABLES statement.
FIX:
===
We are now temporarily closing all the instances of the
table except the one which is being altered and later
reopen them via Locked_tables_list::reopen_tables().
"tokudb_alter_table.drop_add_pk_part_104 leaves a temporary file behind"
Fixed by copying 3 lines from 10.1 to 10.0 that cleaned up the temporary
file for partitioning tables.
May also fix: MDEV-14970 "MariaDB crashed with signal 11 and Aria table"
I am not able to reproduce a crash, however there was no protection in
print_keydup_error() if the storage engine reported the wrong key number.
This patch adds such a protection and should stop any further crashes
in this case.
Other things:
- Added extra protection in Aria to not set errkey to more than number of
keys. (Don't think this is cause of this crash, but better safe than
sorry)
- Extend test_if_equal_repl_errors() to handle different cases of
ER_DUP_ENTRY. This is just mainly precaution for the future.
backport ce6c0e584e
MDEV-8960: Can't refer the same column twice in one ALTER TABLE
Problem was that if column was created in alter table when
it was refered again it was not tried to find from list
of current columns.
mysql_prepare_alter_table:
There is two cases
(1) If alter table adds a new column and then later alter
changes the field definition, there was no check from
list of new columns, instead an incorrect error was given.
(2) If alter table adds a new column and then later alter
changes the default, there was no check from list of
new columns, instead an incorrect error was given.
Problem was that if column was created in alter table when
it was refered again it was not tried to find from list
of current columns.
mysql_prepare_alter_table:
There is two cases
(1) If alter table adds a new column and then later alter
changes the field definition, there was no check from
list of new columns, instead an incorrect error was given.
(2) If alter table adds a new column and then later alter
changes the default, there was no check from list of
new columns, instead an incorrect error was given.
Do not silence uncertain cases, or fix any bugs.
The only functional change should be that ha_federated::extra()
is not calling DBUG_PRINT to report an unhandled case for
HA_EXTRA_PREPARE_FOR_DROP.
Problem was with deleting non existing .frm file for a storage engine that
doesn't have .frm files (yet)
Fixed by not giving an error for non existing .frm files for storage engines
that are using discovery
Fixed also valgrind supression related to the given test case
be consistent and don't include the table name into the error message,
no other CREATE TABLE error does it.
(the crash happened, because thd->lex->query_tables was NULL)
ANALYSIS:
=========
'CREATE TABLE' query with a large value for 'CONNECTION'
string reports an incorrect error.
The length of connection string is stored in .frm in two
bytes (max value= 65535). When the string length exceeds
the max value, the length is truncated to fit the two
bytes limit. Further processing leads to reading only a
part of the string as the length stored is incorrect. The
remaining part of the string is treated as engine type and
hence results in an error.
FIX:
====
We are now restricting the connection string length to 1024.
An appropriate error is reported if the length crosses this
limit.
NOTE:
=====
The 'PASSWORD' table option is documented as unused and
processed within a dead code. Hence it will not cause
similar issue with large strings.
Code flow hit incorrect branch while closing table instances before removal.
This branch expects thread to hold open table instance, whereas CREATE OR
REPLACE doesn't actually hold open table instance.
Before CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE it was impossible to hit this condition in
LTM_PRELOCKED mode, thus the problem didn't expose itself during DROP TABLE
or DROP DATABASE.
Fixed by adjusting condition to take into account LTM_PRELOCKED mode, which can
be set during CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE.