Check if AGGREGATE was given with a stored (non-UDF) function, and return
error in that case.
Also made udf_example/udf_test work again, by adding a missing *_init()
function. (_init() functions required unless --allow_suspicious_udfs is
given to the server, since March 2005 - it seems udf_example wasn't updated
at the time.)
not needed by the tescases. This will save test time for those testcases
that does not need cluster, but need a restart, as they dont have to wait
the extra time it would take for cluster to restart. It will also save
time for other testcases, as cluster does not
need to be contacted for each table to be dropped or created.
Backport from 5.1
fix for bug#8461
BUG 8461 - TRUNCATE returns incorrect result if 2nd argument is negative
Reason: Both TRUNCATE/ROUND converts INTEGERS to DOUBLE and back to INTEGERS
Changed the integer routine to work on integers only.
This bug affects 4.1, 5.0 and 5.1
Fixing in 4.1 will need to change the routine to handle different types individually.
5.0 did had different routines for different types already just the INTEGER routine was bad.
Bug #17158 load data infile of char values into table of char with no (PK) fails to load
Bug #17081 Doing "LOAD DATA INFILE" directly after delete can cause missing data
If check_quick_select returns non-empty range then the function cost_group_min_max
cannot return 0 as an estimate of the number of retrieved records.
Yet the function erroneously returned 0 as the estimate in some situations.
When an ambiguous field name is used in a group by clause a warning is issued
in the find_order_in_list function by a call to push_warning_printf.
An expression that was not always valid was passed to this call as the field
name parameter.
There are (at least) two implementations of the checksum
computation. One is in MyISAM for the quick checksum. It
is executed on every row change. The other is in the
SQL layer for the extended checksum. It retrieves all rows
of a table via the respective storage engine.
In former MySQL versions varchars were stored with their
maximum length, but now with their real length similar to
blobs.
This change had been forgotten to take care of in the
extended checksum calculation. Hence too much data was
checksumed. In MyISAM this change had been taken care of
already. Only the real data is included in the checksum.
I changed mysql_checksum_table() so that it uses the
length information of true varchar fields instead
of the field length like in former varchar
implementations.