alter event rename".
ALTER EVENT ... RENAME statement hasn't checked privileges
for the target database. It also caused server crashes when
target database was not specified explicitly and there was
no current database.
This fix adds missing privilege check and check for the case
when target database is not specified explicitly or implicitly.
with PREPARE fails with weird error".
More generally, re-executing a stored procedure with a complex SP cursor query
could lead to a crash.
The cause of the problem was that SP cursor queries were not optimized
properly at first execution: their parse tree belongs to sp_instr_cpush,
not sp_instr_copen, and thus the tree was tagged "EXECUTED" when the
cursor was declared, not when it was opened. This led to loss of optimization
transformations performed at first execution, as sp_instr_copen saw that the
query is already "EXECUTED" and therefore either not ran first-execution
related blocks or wrongly rolled back the transformations caused by
first-execution code.
The fix is to update the state of the parsed tree only when the tree is
executed, as opposed to when the instruction containing the tree is executed.
Assignment if i->state is moved to reset_lex_and_exec_core.
Introduced EVENTS.EVENT_DEFINITION, like ROUTINES.ROUTINE_DEFINITION
Hence, the contents of the current EVENTS.EVENT_BODY become the contents
of EVENT_DEFINITION. EVENT_BODY will contain always, for now, "SQL" (wo
quotes).
functions in queries
Using MAX()/MIN() on table with disabled indexes (by ALTER TABLE)
results in error 124 (wrong index) from storage engine.
The problem was that optimizer use disabled index to optimize
MAX()/MIN(). Normally it must skip disabled index and perform
table scan.
This patch skips disabled indexes for min/max optimization.
fails randomly.
The problem is that the test was affected by other running
test-suites on the same box. The fix affects the test only,
no code touched.
function crashes server".
Attempts to execute prepared multi-delete statement which involved trigger or
stored function caused server crashes (the same happened for such statements
included in stored procedures in cases when one tried to execute them more
than once).
The problem was caused by yet another incorrect usage of check_table_access()
routine (the latter assumes that table list which it gets as argument
corresponds to value LEX::query_tables_own_last). We solve this problem by
juggling with LEX::query_tables_own_last value when we call
check_table_access() for LEX::auxilliary_table_list (better solution is too
intrusive and should be done in 5.1).