The auto-inc unsafe warning makes sense even though it's just
one auto-inc table could be involved via a trigger or a stored
function.
However its content was not updated by bug@45677 fixes continuing to mention
two tables whereas the fixes refined semantics of replication of auto_increment
in stored routine.
Fixed with updating the error message, renaming the error and an internal unsafe-condition
constants.
A documentation notice
======================
Inserting into an autoincrement column in a stored function or a trigger
is unsafe for replication.
Even with just one autoincrement column, if the routine is invoked more than
once slave is not guaranteed to execute the statement graph same way as
the master.
And since it's impossible to estimate how many times a routine can be invoked at
the query pre-execution phase (see lock_tables), the statement is marked
pessimistically unsafe.
Conflicts:
Text conflict in .bzr-mysql/default.conf
Text conflict in mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_loaddata.test
Text conflict in mysql-test/r/mysqlbinlog2.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_stm_mix_innodb_myisam.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_unsafe.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_insert_id.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_loaddata.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_stm_auto_increment_bug33029.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_udf.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_slow_query_log.test
Text conflict in sql/field.h
Text conflict in sql/log.cc
Text conflict in sql/log_event.cc
Text conflict in sql/log_event_old.cc
Text conflict in sql/mysql_priv.h
Text conflict in sql/share/errmsg.txt
Text conflict in sql/sp.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_acl.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_base.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_class.h
Text conflict in sql/sql_db.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_delete.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_insert.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_lex.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_lex.h
Text conflict in sql/sql_load.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_table.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_update.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_view.cc
Conflict adding files to storage/innobase. Created directory.
Conflict because storage/innobase is not versioned, but has versioned children. Versioned directory.
Conflict adding file storage/innobase. Moved existing file to storage/innobase.moved.
Conflict adding files to storage/innobase/handler. Created directory.
Conflict because storage/innobase/handler is not versioned, but has versioned children. Versioned directory.
Contents conflict in storage/innobase/handler/ha_innodb.cc
Non-transactional updates that take place inside a transaction present problems
for logging because they are visible to other clients before the transaction
is committed, and they are not rolled back even if the transaction is rolled
back. It is not always possible to log correctly in statement format when both
transactional and non-transactional tables are used in the same transaction.
In the current patch, we ensure that such scenario is completely safe under the
ROW and MIXED modes.
Backport for 5.5
The root cause of this bug is that the grammar for GROUP BY clauses,
when using WITH CUBE or WITH ROLLUP, cause conflicts with the grammar
for VIEW, when using WITH CHECK OPTION.
The solution is to implement two token look ahead when parsing a WITH token,
to disambiguate the non standard WITH CUBE and WITH ROLLUP syntaxes.
Patch based on code from Marc Alff and Antony Curtis
2630.39.1, 2630.28.29, 2630.34.3, 2630.34.2, 2630.34.1, 2630.29.29,
2630.29.28, 2630.31.1, 2630.28.13, 2630.28.10, 2617.23.14 and
some other minor revisions.
This patch implements:
WL#4264 "Backup: Stabilize Service Interface" -- all the
server prerequisites except si_objects.{h,cc} themselves (they can
be just copied over, when needed).
WL#4435: Support OUT-parameters in prepared statements.
(and all issues in the initial patches for these two
tasks, that were discovered in pushbuild and during testing).
Bug#39519: mysql_stmt_close() should flush all data
associated with the statement.
After execution of a prepared statement, send OUT parameters of the invoked
stored procedure, if any, to the client.
When using the binary protocol, send the parameters in an additional result
set over the wire. When using the text protocol, assign out parameters to
the user variables from the CALL(@var1, @var2, ...) specification.
The following refactoring has been made:
- Protocol::send_fields() was renamed to Protocol::send_result_set_metadata();
- A new Protocol::send_result_set_row() was introduced to incapsulate
common functionality for sending row data.
- Signature of Protocol::prepare_for_send() was changed: this operation
does not need a list of items, the number of items is fully sufficient.
The following backward incompatible changes have been made:
- CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS is now enabled by default in the client;
- CLIENT_PS_MULTI_RESUTLS is now enabled by default in the client.
Post-push fix.
Problem: After the original bugfix, if a statement is unsafe,
binlog_format=mixed, and engine is statement-only, a warning was
generated and the statement executed. However, it is a fundamental
principle of binlogging that binlog_format=mixed should guarantee
correct logging, no compromise. So correct behavior is to generate
an error and don't execute the statement.
Fix: Generate error instead of warning.
Since issue_unsafe_warnings can only generate one error message,
this allows us to simplify the code a bit too:
decide_logging_format does not have to save the error code for
issue_unsafe_warnings
----------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2630.22.8
committer: Konstantin Osipov <konstantin@mysql.com>
branch nick: mysql-6.0-runtime
timestamp: Sun 2008-08-10 18:49:52 +0400
message:
Get rid of typedef struct for the most commonly used types:
TABLE, TABLE_SHARE, LEX. This simplifies use of tags
and forward declarations.
storing and restoring information about foreign keys in the .FRM files and
properly displaying it in SHOW CREATE TABLE output and I_S tables.
The idea of this patch is to change type of Key_part_spec::field_name and
Key::name to LEX_STRING in order to avoid extra strlen() calls during
semantic analysis and statement execution, particularly, in code to be
implemented on the 2nd milestone of WL#148.
Note that since we are not using LEX_STRING everywhere yet (e.g. in
Create_field and KEY) and we want to limit scope of our changes we
have to do strlen() in places where we create Key and Key_part_spec
instances from objects using plain (char*) for strings. These calls
will go away during the process of further (char*) -> LEX_STRING
refactoring.
We have introduced these changes in 6.0 and backported them to 5.5
tree to make people aware of these changes as early as possible and
to simplify merges with mysql-fk and mysql-6.1-fk trees.
No test case is needed since this patch does not introduce any
user visible changes.
The problem is that the lexer could inadvertently skip over the
end of a query being parsed if it encountered a malformed multibyte
character. A specially crated query string could cause the lexer
to jump up to six bytes past the end of the query buffer. Another
problem was that the laxer could use unfiltered user input as
a signed array index for the parser maps (having upper and lower
bounds 0 and 256 respectively).
The solution is to ensure that the lexer only skips over well-formed
multibyte characters and that the index value of the parser maps
is always a unsigned value.
with gcc 4.3.2
Compiling MySQL with gcc 4.3.2 and later produces a number of
warnings, many of which are new with the recent compiler
versions.
This bug will be resolved in more than one patch to limit the
size of changesets. This is the second patch, fixing more
of the warnings.
with gcc 4.3.2
Compiling MySQL with gcc 4.3.2 and later produces a number of
warnings, many of which are new with the recent compiler
versions.
This bug will be resolved in more than one patch to limit the
size of changesets. This is the second patch, fixing more
of the warnings.
comment can't be read back
A change to the lexer in 5.1 caused slash-asterisk-bang-version
sections to be terminated early if there exists a slash-asterisk-
style comment inside it. Nesting comments is usually illegal,
but we rely on versioned comment blocks in mysqldump, and the
contents of those sections must be allowed to have comments.
The problem was that when encountering open-comment tokens and
consuming -or- passing through the contents, the "in_comment"
state at the end was clobbered with the not-in-a-comment value,
regardless of whether we were in a comment before this or not.
So, """/*!VER one /* two */ three */""" would lose its in-comment
state between "two" and "three". Save the echo and in-comment
state, and restore it at the end of the comment if we consume a
comment.
The problem is that a SELECT .. FOR UPDATE statement might open
a table and later wait for a impeding global read lock without
noticing whether it is holding a table that is being waited upon
the the flush phase of the process that took the global read
lock.
The same problem also affected the following statements:
LOCK TABLES .. WRITE
UPDATE .. SET (update and multi-table update)
TRUNCATE TABLE ..
LOAD DATA ..
The solution is to make the above statements wait for a impending
global read lock before opening the tables. If there is no
impending global read lock, the statement raises a temporary
protection against global read locks and progresses smoothly
towards completion.
Important notice: the patch does not try to address all possible
cases, only those which are common and can be fixed unintrusively
enough for 5.0.
An unnecessarily restrictive lock were taken on sub-SELECTs during DELETE.
During parsing, a global structure is reused for sub-SELECTs and the attribute
keeping track of lock options were not reset properly.
This patch introduces a new attribute to keep track on the syntactical lock
option elements found in a sub-SELECT and then sets the lock options accordingly.
Now the sub-SELECTs will try to acquire a READ lock if possible
instead of a WRITE lock as inherited from the outer DELETE statement.
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
The problem is that the offset argument of the limit clause
might be truncated on a 32-bits server built without big
tables support. The truncation was happening because the
original 64-bits long argument was being cast to a 32-bits
(ha_rows) offset counter.
The solution is to check if the conversing resulted in value
truncation and if so, the offset is set to the maximum possible
value that can fit on the type.
``FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK''
Concurrent execution of 1) multitable update with a
NATURAL/USING join and 2) a such query as "FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK" or "ALTER TABLE" of updating table led
to a server crash.
The mysql_multi_update_prepare() function call is optimized
to lock updating tables only, so it postpones locking to
the last, and if locking fails, it does cleanup of modified
syntax structures and repeats a query analysis. However,
that cleanup procedure was incomplete for NATURAL/USING join
syntax data: 1) some Field_item items pointed into freed
table structures, and 2) the TABLE_LIST::join_columns fields
was not reset.
Major change:
short-living Field *Natural_join_column::table_field has
been replaced with long-living Item*.
columns data types
The "SELECT @lastId, @lastId := Id FROM t" query returns
different result sets depending on the type of the Id column
(INT or BIGINT).
Note: this fix doesn't cover the case when a select query
references an user variable and stored function that
updates a value of that variable, in this case a result
is indeterminate.
The server uses incorrect assumption about a constantness of
an user variable value as a select list item:
The server caches a last query number where that variable
was changed and compares this number with a current query
number. If these numbers are different, the server guesses,
that the variable is not updating in the current query, so
a respective select list item is a constant. However, in some
common cases the server updates cached query number too late.
The server has been modified to memorize user variable
assignments during the parse phase to take them into account
on the next (query preparation) phase independently of the
order of user variable references/assignments in a select
item list.
build)
The crash was caused by freeing the internal parser stack during the parser
execution.
This occured only for complex stored procedures, after reallocating the parser
stack using my_yyoverflow(), with the following C call stack:
- MYSQLparse()
- any rule calling sp_head::restore_lex()
- lex_end()
- x_free(lex->yacc_yyss), xfree(lex->yacc_yyvs)
The root cause is the implementation of stored procedures, which breaks the
assumption from 4.1 that there is only one LEX structure per parser call.
The solution is to separate the LEX structure into:
- attributes that represent a statement (the current LEX structure),
- attributes that relate to the syntax parser itself (Yacc_state),
so that parsing multiple statements in stored programs can create multiple
LEX structures while not changing the unique Yacc_state.
Now, Yacc_state and the existing Lex_input_stream are aggregated into
Parser_state, a structure that represent the complete state of the (Lexical +
Syntax) parser.
enabled)
Before this fix, the lexer and parser would treat the ';' character as a
different token (either ';' or END_OF_INPUT), based on convoluted logic,
which failed in simple cases where a stored procedure is implemented as a
single statement, and used in a multi query.
With this fix:
- the character ';' is always parsed as a ';' token in the lexer,
- parsing multi queries is implemented in the parser, in the 'query:' rules,
- the value of thd->client_capabilities, which is the capabilities
negotiated between the client and the server during bootstrap,
is immutable and not arbitrarily modified during parsing (which was the
root cause of the bug)
Mixing aggregate functions and non-grouping columns is not allowed in the
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY mode. However in some cases the error wasn't thrown because
of insufficient check.
In order to check more thoroughly the new algorithm employs a list of outer
fields used in a sum function and a SELECT_LEX::full_group_by_flag.
Each non-outer field checked to find out whether it's aggregated or not and
the current select is marked accordingly.
All outer fields that are used under an aggregate function are added to the
Item_sum::outer_fields list and later checked by the Item_sum::check_sum_func
function.