Let us transfer triggers associated with table when we rename it (but only if
we are not changing database to which table belongs, in the latter case we will
emit error).
The cause of the bug was an ASSERT that checked the consistency
of TABLE_SHARE::db and TABLE_LIST::db and failed for I_S tables.
The fix relaxes the requirement for consistency for I_S.
column is increasing when table is recreated with PS/SP":
make use of create_field::char_length more consistent in the code.
Reinit create_field::length from create_field::char_length
for every execution of a prepared statement (actually fixes the
bug).
When a too long field is used for a key, only a prefix part of the field is
used. Length is reduced to the max key length allowed for storage. But if the
field have a multibyte charset it is possible to break multibyte char
sequence. This leads to the failed assertion in the innodb code and
server crash when a record is inserted.
The make_prepare_table() now aligns truncated key length to the boundary of
multibyte char.
symptom). sys_var::check_set() was wrong. mysqlbinlog makes use of such SET SQL_MODE=N
(where N is interpreted like if SQL_MODE was a field of type SET), so
this bug affected recovery from binlogs if the server was running with certain SQL_MODE values,
for example the default values on Windows (STRICT_TRANS_TABLES); to work around this bug people
had to edit mysqlbinlog's output.
if the function, invoked in a non-binlogged caller (e.g. SELECT, DO), failed half-way on the master,
slave would stop and complain that error code between him and master mismatch.
To solve this, when a stored function is invoked in a non-binlogged caller (e.g. SELECT, DO), we binlog the function
call as SELECT instead of as DO (see revision comment of sp_head.cc for more).
And: minor wording change in the help text.
This cset will cause conflicts in 5.1, I'll merge.
problem was: when a connection disconnects having an open transaction affecting MyISAM and InnoDB, the ROLLBACK event stored in the binary log
contained a non-zero error code (1053 because of the disconnection), so when slave applied the transaction, slave complained that its ROLLBACK succeeded
(error_code=0) while master's had 1053, so slave stopped. But internally generated binlog events such as this ROLLBACK
should always have 0 as error code, as is true in 4.1 and was accidentally broken in 5.0,
so that there is no false alarm.
The name length was checked "the old way", not taking charsets into account,
when creating a stored routine.
Fixing this enforces the real limit (64 characters) again, and no truncation
is possible.
- Detect that connection to server has been broken in "net_clear". Since
net_clear is always called before we send command to server, we can be sure
that server has not received the command.