command line clients.
Command line tools like mysqladmin and mysqldump did not recognize
default-auth and plugin-dir options.
Support for these options was found missing in these command line
tools.
Fixed by adding support for the same.
assignments and comparison in query
A query that compares assignments of the same
user variable caused Valgrind warnings: access
to freed memory region.
In case of a DECIMAL argument the assignment
operator (:=) may return a pointer to a stored
value instead of its copy when evaluated.
The next assignment to the same variable may:
a) overwrite the stored value with a new one
and return the same pointer or even
b) reallocate stored value.
Thus, if we evaluate an assignment and keep
the result pointer and then evaluate another
assignment to the same variable, then the
kept result pointer of the first assignment
will point to unexpectedly changed data or
it may be a dead pointer.
That may cause wrong data or crash.
The user_var_entry::val_decimal method has
been modified to copy user variable data.
Problem: "read-only" option ignored if it's enabled in
the command line (or in the config file).
Fix: sync opt_readonly (which is used for checks) with
read_only (global var) when all server options are handled.
When a query fails with a different error on the slave,
the sql thread outputs a message (M) containing:
1. the error message format for the master error code
2. the master error code
3. the error message for the slave's error code
4. the slave error code
Given that the slave has no information on the error message
itself that the master outputs, it can only print its own
version of the message format (but stripped from the
additional data if the message format requires). This may
confuse users.
To fix this we augment the slave's message (M) to explicitly
state that the master's message is actually an error message
format, the one associated with the given master error code
and that the slave server knows about.
but the statement is written to binlog
TRUNCATE PARTITION was written to the binlog
even if it failed before calling any partition's
truncate function.
Solved by adding an argument to truncate_partition,
to flag if it should be written to the binlog or not.
It should be written to the binlog when a call to any
partitions truncate function is done.
archive_discover
Fixed buffer underrun in cleanup_dirname().
Also fixed that original (unencoded) database and table
names were used to discover archive tables.
When installing plugins, there is a missing check
for slash (/) in the path on Windows. Note that on
Windows, both / and \ can be used to separate
directories.
This patch fixes the issue by:
- Adding a FN_DIRSEP symbol for all platforms
consisting of a string of legal directory
separators.
- Adding a charset-aware version of strcspn().
- Adding a check_valid_path() function that uses
my_strcspn() to check if any FN_DIRSEP character
is in the supplied string.
- Using the check_valid_path() function in
sql_plugin.cc and sql_udf.cc (which means
replacing the existing test there).
This is a code cleanup.
The implementation of a storage engine (subclasses of handler) is not supposed
to call my_error() directly inside the engine implementation,
but only return error codes, and report errors later at the demand
of the sql layer only (if needed), using handler::print_error().
This fix removes misplaced calls to my_error(),
and provide an implementation of print_error() instead.
Given that the sql layer implementation of create table, ha_create_table(),
does not use print_error() but returns ER_CANT_CREATE_TABLE directly,
the return code for create table statements using the performance schema
has changed to ER_CANT_CREATE_TABLE.
Adjusted the test suite accordingly.
Before this fix, the test thread_cache failed with spurious failures.
The test used:
-- disconnect X
-- connect Y
while assuming that connection Y would reuse connection X slot in the thread cache.
For this to happen, the disconnect X operation must be given enough time to complete,
otherwise connect Y can be executed in the server before X actually finishes.
This fix uses wait conditions to make the test execution more controlled,
and more reproductible.
Before this fix, the test myisam_file_io executed:
- (a) an update on setup_instrument to disable non myisam file io instruments
- (b) a truncate on events_waits_history_long
and later
- (c) a select on events_waits_history_long
Surprisingly, events that were supposed to be disabled in (a) and removed in (b)
still were found in (c).
This happened for events such as
wait/io/file/innodb/innodb_data_file fil0fil.c: sync
because the sync was started before (a) and completed after (b),
and as a consequence was added in the performance schema history, as expected.
Presence of these records in the history made the test fail.
This fix makes the test script more robust to account for extra spill waits records in (c).
This fix affects the test suite only.
Before this fix, performance schema tests dml_*.test could
fail with spurious failure, depending on the table content.
This fix simplifies the SELECT tests in the dml_*.test scripts,
to only verify that the SELECT operation passed the security checks
and succeeded, which was the original intent of the test.
Usage of
--replace_column 1 # 2 # 3 # 4 # ...
to discard the test output was replaced by a simpler and more maintainable
--disable_result_log
which also work for empty tables.
when generating new name.
If find_uniq_filename returns an error, then this error is not
being propagated upwards, and execution does not report error to
the user (although a entry in the error log is generated).
Additionally, some more errors were ignored in new_file_impl:
- when writing the rotate event
- when reopening the index and binary log file
This patch addresses this by propagating the error up in the
execution stack. Furthermore, when rotation of the binary log
fails, an incident event is written, because there may be a
chance that some changes for a given statement, were not properly
logged. For example, in SBR, LOAD DATA INFILE statement requires
more than one event to be logged, should rotation fail while
logging part of the LOAD DATA events, then the logged data would
become inconsistent with the data in the storage engine.
InnoDB does not attempt to handle lower_case_table_names == 2 when looking
up foreign table names and referenced table name. It turned that server
variable into a boolean and ignored the possibility of it being '2'.
The setting lower_case_table_names == 2 means that it should be stored and
displayed in mixed case as given, but compared internally in lower case.
Normally the server deals with this since it stores table names. But
InnoDB stores referential constraints for the server, so it needs to keep
track of both lower case and given names.
This solution creates two table name pointers for each foreign and referenced
table name. One to display the name, and one to look it up. Both pointers
point to the same allocated string unless this setting is 2. So the overhead
added is not too much.
Two functions are created in dict0mem.c to populate the ..._lookup versions
of these pointers. Both dict_mem_foreign_table_name_lookup_set() and
dict_mem_referenced_table_name_lookup_set() are called 5 times each.
The problem was that mysql_upgrade failed because DROP DATABASE
refused to drop the 'performance_schema' database when the
mysql.proc table definition was made temporarily invalid
by dump import.
This patch fixes the problem by adding the error resulting
from opening a damaged mysq.proc table (ER_CANNOT_LOAD_FROM_TABLE),
to the list of errors DROP DATABASE will ignore when trying
to lock stored procedures and functions before deletion.
This problem was a regression introduced by the patch for
Bug#57663.
Test case added to sp-destruct.test.
InnoDB AUTOINC code expects the locks to be released in strict reverse order
at the end of the statement. However, nested stored proedures and partition
tables break this rule. We now allow the locks to be deleted from the
trx->autoinc_locks vector in any order but optimise for the common (old) case.
rb://441 Approved by Marko Makela
It is not necessary to support INSERT DELAYED for a single value insert,
while we do not support that for multi-values insert when binlog is
enabled in SBR.
The lock_type is upgrade to TL_WRITE from TL_WRITE_DELAYED for
INSERT DELAYED for single value insert as multi-values insert
did when binlog is enabled. Then it's safe. And binlog it as
INSERT without DELAYED.
When using BINLOG statement to execute rows log events, session variables
foreign_key_checks and unique_checks are changed temporarily. As each rows
log event has their own special session environment and its own
foreign_key_checks and unique_checks can be different from current session
which executing the BINLOG statement. But these variables are not restored
correctly after BINLOG statement. This problem will cause that the following
statements fail or generate unexpected data.
In this patch, code is added to backup and restore these two variables.
So BINLOG statement will not affect current session's variables again.
win x86 debug_max
The windows MTR run exhibited a different test execution
ordering (due to the fact that in these platforms MTR is invoked
with --parallel > 1). This uncovered a bug in the aforementioned
test case, which is triggered by the following conditions:
1. server is not restarted between two different tests;
2. the test before binlog.binlog_row_failure_mixing_engines
issues flush logs;
3. binlog.binlog_row_failure_mixing_engines uses binlog
positions to limit the output of show_binlog_events;
4. binlog.binlog_row_failure_mixing_engines does not state which
binlog file to use, thence it uses a wrong binlog file with
the correct position.
There are two possible fixes: 1. make sure that the test start
from a clean slate - binlog wise; 2. in addition to the position,
also state the binary log file before sourcing
show_binlog_events.inc .
We go for fix#1, ie, deploy a RESET MASTER before the test is
actually started.