Locked_tables_list::unlock_locked_tables
Similarly to regular DROP TABLE, don't leave locked tables mode if CREATE OR
REPLACE dropped temporary table but failed to cerate new one.
The problem is that there's no track of which temporary table was "locked" by
LOCK TABLES.
backport ce6c0e584e3
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.
- Fix win64 pointer truncation warnings
(usually coming from misusing 0x%lx and long cast in DBUG)
- Also fix printf-format warnings
Make the above mentioned warnings fatal.
- fix pthread_join on Windows to set return value.
For running the Galera tests, the variable my_disable_leak_check
was set to true in order to avoid assertions due to memory leaks
at shutdown.
Some adjustments due to MDEV-13625 (merge InnoDB tests from MySQL 5.6)
were performed. The most notable behaviour changes from 10.0 and 10.1
are the following:
* innodb.innodb-table-online: adjustments for the DROP COLUMN
behaviour change (MDEV-11114, MDEV-13613)
* innodb.innodb-index-online-fk: the removal of a (1,NULL) record
from the result; originally removed in MySQL 5.7 in the
Oracle Bug #16244691 fix
377774689b
* innodb.create-index-debug: disabled due to MDEV-13680
(the MySQL Bug #77497 fix was not merged from 5.6 to 5.7.10)
* innodb.innodb-alter-autoinc: MariaDB 10.2 behaves like MySQL 5.6/5.7,
while MariaDB 10.0 and 10.1 assign different values when
auto_increment_increment or auto_increment_offset are used.
Also MySQL 5.6/5.7 exhibit different behaviour between
LGORITHM=INPLACE and ALGORITHM=COPY, so something needs to be tested
and fixed in both MariaDB 10.0 and 10.2.
* innodb.innodb-wl5980-alter: disabled because it would trigger an
InnoDB assertion failure (MDEV-13668 may need additional effort in 10.2)
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.
collateral changes:
* remove a test from innodb_virtual_basic that is already present in
gcol_keys_innodb
* set thd->abort_on_warning for inplace alter, just like it's set
for copy_data_between_tables - to have warnings converted into
errors identically in all alter algorithms
* don't ignore errors in TABLE::update_virtual_field
SQL Standard behavior for DROP COLUMN xxx RESTRICT:
* If a constraint (UNIQUE or CHECK) uses only the dropped column,
it's automatically dropped too. If it uses many columns - an error.
The problem was that the introduction of max-thread-mem-used can cause
an allocation error very early, even before mysql_parse() is called.
As mysql_parse() calls thd->reset_for_next_command(), which called
clear_error(), the error number was lost.
Fixed by adding an option to have unique messages for each KILL
signal and change max-thread-mem-used to use this new feature.
This removes a lot of problems with the original approach, where
one could get errors signaled silenty almost any time.
ixed by moving clear_error() from reset_for_next_command() to
do_command(), before any memory allocation for the thread.
Related changes:
- reset_for_next_command() now have an optional parameter if we should
call clear_error() or not. By default it's called, but not anymore from
dispatch_command() which was the original problem.
- Added optional paramater to clear_error() to force calling of
reset_diagnostics_area(). Before clear_error() only called
reset_diagnostics_area() if there was no error, so we normally
called reset_diagnostics_area() twice.
- This change removed several duplicated calls to clear_error()
when starting a query.
- Reset max_mem_used on COM_QUIT, to protect against kill during
quit.
- Use fatal_error() instead of setting is_fatal_error (cleanup)
- Set fatal_error if max_thead_mem_used is signaled.
(Same logic we use for other places where we are out of resources)
Don't write to a temporary file, use String.
Remove strange one-liner "helpers", use String methods.
Don't use current_thd, don't allocate memory for 1-byte strings, etc.
DBUG_EXECUTE_IF was wrong, it used my_error, but didn't do error=1.
It's not clear what it was actually testing, what it was supposed
to be testing, and what it has to do with bug#43138, so I removed it.
CREATE/DROP TEMPORARY TABLE are not safe to optimistically replicate in
parallel with other transactions, so they need to be marked as "ddl" in the
binlog.
This was already done for stand-alone CREATE/DROP TEMPORARY. But temporary
tables can also be created and dropped inside a BEGIN...END transaction, and
such transactions were not marked as ddl. Nor was the DROP TEMPORARY TABLE
statement emitted implicitly when a client connection is closed.
So this patch adds such ddl mark for the missing cases.
The difference to Kristian's original patch is mainly a fix in
mysql_trans_commit_alter_copy_data() to remember the unsafe_rollback_flags
over the temporary commit.
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.
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.
The issue was that my_errno was not set properly when a repair was killed,
which confused the rpl_killed_ddl script.
I also added an extra test line in varchar.inc to ensure we don't give
duplicate error rows.
automatic shortening of a too-long non-unique key should
be not a warning, but a note. It's a normal optimization,
doesn't affect correctness, and should never be converted to
an error, no matter how strict sql_mode is.