main/statistics_json.result is updated for f8ba5ced55 (MDEV-36099)
The test uses 'delete from t1' in many places and then populates
the table again. The natural order of rows in a MyISAM table is well
defined and the test was implicitly relying on that.
before f8ba5ced55 delete was deleting rows one by one, using
ha_myisam::delete_row() because the connection was stuck in rbr mode.
This caused rows to be shown in the reverse insertion order (because of
the delete link list).
MDEV-36099 fixes this bug and the server now correctly uses
ha_myisam::delete_all_rows(). This makes rows to be shown in the
insertion order as expected.
Issue: When XA transaction is implicitly rolled back, we keep XA state
XA_ACTIVE and set rm_error to ER_LOCK_DEADLOCK. Other than XA command
we don't check for rm_error and DML and query are executed with a new
transaction.
Fix: One way to fix this issue is to set the XA state to XA_ROLLBACK_ONLY
which is checked while opening table open_tables() and ER_XAER_RMFAIL is
returned for any DML or Query.
Problem:
Empty queries are incremented if no rows are sent to the client in the
EXECUTE phase of select query. With cursor protocol, rows are not sent
during EXECUTE phase; they are sent later in FETCH phase. Hence,
queries executed with cursor protocol are always falsely treated as
empty in EXECUTE phase.
Fix:
For cursor protocol, empty queries are now counted during the FETCH
phase. This ensures counter correctly reflects whether any rows were
actually sent to the client.
Tests included in `mysql-test/main/show.test`.
It places a limit N (a timeout value in milliseconds) on how long
a statement is permitted to execute before the server terminates it.
Syntax:
SELECT /*+ MAX_EXECUTION_TIME(milliseconds) */ ...
Only top-level SELECT statements support the hint.
when a definer for SP/view is wrong - it shold be ER_MALFORMED_DEFINER,
not ER_NO_SUCH_USER
when one uses current_role as a definer or grantee but there's no
current role - it should be ER_INVALID_ROLE not ER_MALFORMED_DEFINER
when a non-existent user is specified - it should be ER_NO_SUCH_USER,
which should say "The user does not exist", not "Definer does not exist"
clarify ER_CANT_CHANGE_TX_CHARACTERISTICS to say what cannot be changed
The main purpose of this allow one to use the --read-only
option to ensure that no one can issue a query that can
block replication.
The --read-only option can now take 4 different values:
0 No read only (as before).
1 Blocks changes for users without the 'READ ONLY ADMIN'
privilege (as before).
2 Blocks in addition LOCK TABLES and SELECT IN SHARE MODE
for not 'READ ONLY ADMIN' users.
3 Blocks in addition 'READ_ONLY_ADMIN' users for all the
previous statements.
read_only is changed to an enum and one can use the following
names for the lock levels:
OFF, ON, NO_LOCK, NO_LOCK_NO_ADMIN
Too keep things compatible with older versions config files, one can
still use values FALSE and TRUE, which are mapped to OFF and ON.
The main visible changes are:
- 'show variables like "read_only"' now returns a string
instead of a number.
- Error messages related to read_only violations now contains
the current value off readonly.
Other things:
- is_read_only_ctx() renamed to check_read_only_with_error()
- Moved TL_READ_SKIP_LOCKED to it's logical place
Reviewed by: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
MDEV-36563 Assertion `!mysql_bin_log.is_open()' failed in
THD::mark_tmp_table_as_free_for_reuse
The purpose of this commit is to ensure that creation and changes of
temporary tables are properly and predicable logged to the binary
log. It also fixes some bugs where ROW logging was used in MIXED mode,
when STATEMENT would be a better (and expected) choice.
In this comment STATEMENT stands for logging to binary log in
STATEMENT format, MIXED stands for MIXED binlog format and ROW for ROW
binlog format.
New rules for logging of temporary tables
- CREATE of temporary tables are now by default binlogged only if
STATEMENT binlog format is used. If it is binlogged, 1 is stored in
TABLE_SHARE->table_creation_was_logged. The user can change this
behavior by setting create_temporary_table_binlog_formats to
MIXED,STATEMENT in which case the create is logged in statement
format also in MIXED mode (as before).
- Changes to temporary tables are only binlogged if and only if
the CREATE was logged. The logging happens under STATEMENT or MIXED.
If binlog_format=ROW, temporary table changes are not binlogged. A
temporary table that are changed under ROW are marked as 'not up to
date in binlog' and no future row changes are logged. Any usage of
this temporary table will force row logging of other tables in any
future statements using the temporary table to be row logged.
- DROP TEMPORARY is binlogged only of the CREATE was binlogged.
Changes done:
- Row logging is forced for any statement using temporary tables that
are not up to date in the binary log.
(Before the row logging was forced if the user has a temporary table)
- If there is any changes to the temporary table that is not binlogged,
the table is marked as not up to date.
- TABLE_SHARE->table_creation_was_logged has a new definition for
temporary tables:
0 Table creating was not logged to binary log
1 Table creating was logged to binary log and table is up to date.
2 Table creating was logged to binary log but some changes where
not logged to binary log.
Table is not up to date in binary log is defined as value 0 or 2.
- If a multi-table-update or multi-table-delete fails then
all updated temporary tables are marked as not up to date.
- Enforce row logging if the query is using temporary tables
that are not up to date.
Before row logging was enforced if the user had any
temporary tables.
- When dropping temporary tables use IF EXISTS. This ensures
that slave will not stop if it had crashed and lost the
temporary tables.
- Remove comment and version from DROP /*!4000 TEMPORARY.. generated when
a connection closes that has open temporary tables. Added 'generated by
server' at the end of the DROP.
Bugs fixed:
- When using temporary tables with commands that forced row based,
like INSERT INTO temporary_table VALUES (UUID()), this was never
logged which causes the temporary table to be inconsistent on
master and slave.
- Used binlog format is now clearly defined. It is now only depending
on the current binlog_format and the tables used.
Before it was depending on the user had ANY temporary tables and
the state of 'current_stmt_binlog_format' set by previous queries.
This also caused temporary tables to be logged to binary log in
some cases.
- CREATE TABLE t1 LIKE not_logged_temporary_table caused replication
to stop.
- Rename of not binlogged temporary tables where binlogged to binary log
which caused replication to stop.
Changes in behavior:
- By default create_temporary_table_binlog_formats=STATEMENT, which
means that CREATE TEMPORARY is not logged to binary log under MIXED
binary logging. This can be changed by setting
create_temporary_table_binlog_formats to MIXED,STATEMENT.
- Using temporary tables that was not logged to the binary log will
cause any query using them for updating other tables to be logged in
ROW format. Before all queries was logged in ROW format if the user had
any temporary tables, even if they were not used by the query.
- Generated DROP TEMPORARY TABLE is now always using IF EXISTS and
has a "generated by server" comment in the binary log.
The consequences of the above is that manipulations of a lot of rows
through temporary tables will by default be be slower in mixed mode.
For example:
BEGIN;
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE tmp AS SELECT a, b, c FROM
large_table1 JOIN large_table2 ON ...;
INSERT INTO other_table SELECT b, c FROM tmp WHERE a <100;
DROP TEMPORARY TABLE tmp;
COMMIT;
By default this will create a huge entry in the binary log, compared
to just a few hundred bytes in statement mode. However the change in
this commit will make usage of temporary tables more reliable and
predicable and is thus worth it. Using statement mode or
create_temporary_table_binlog_formats can be used to avoid this issue.
check sequence privileges in Item_func_nextval::fix_fields(),
just like column privileges are checked in Item_field::fix_fields()
remove sequence specific hacks that kinda made sequence privilege
checks works, but not in all cases. And they were too lax,
didn't requre SELECT privilege for NEXTVAL. Also INSERT privilege looks
wrong here, UPDATE would've been more appropriate, but won't
change that for compatibility reasons.
also fixes
MDEV-36413 User without any privileges to a sequence can read from it and modify it via column default
Identifier names can be empty in the grammar. The check_ident_length
is used from everything from triggers, to partitions, to key names
and UDF names. This change updates 0 length identifiers as valid
without further checking.
Primary keys are one clear case where a empty name is used and
the name.str is a null pointer.
Checking empty names where the key->name.str is a null pointer
results in a UBSAN error in Well_formed_prefix_status further
down the stack which we can avoid.
The is_infoschema_db is a deep character set based
comparision. In in many cases the db is still
an empty structure.
Doing this comparion early prevents a UBSAN error
by not performing character set operations on
a null pointer.
* rpl.rpl_system_versioning_partitions updated for MDEV-32188
* innodb.row_size_error_log_warnings_3 changed error for MDEV-33658
(checks are done in a different order)
This patch includes a few changes to make the code easier to maintain:
- Renamed SQL_I_List::link_in_list to SQL_I_List::insert. link_in_list was
ambiguous as it could refer to a link or it could refer to a node
- Remove field_name local variable in multi_update::initialize_tables because
it is not used when creating the temporary tables
- multi_update changes:
- Move temp table callocs to init, a more natural location for them, and moved
tables_to_update to const member variable so we don't recompute it.
- Filter out jtbm tables and tables not in the update map, pushing those that
will be updated into an update_targets container. This simplifies checks and
loops in initialize_tables.
normalize_cond() translated `WHERE col` into `WHERE col<>0`
But the opetator "not equal to 0" does not necessarily exists
for all data types.
For example, the query:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE inet6col;
was translated to:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE inet6col<>0;
which further failed with this error:
ERROR : Illegal parameter data types inet6 and bigint for operation '<>'
This patch changes the translation from `col<>0` to `col IS TRUE`.
So now
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE inet6col;
gets translated to:
SELECT * FROM t1 WHERE inet6col IS TRUE;
Details:
1. Implementing methods:
- Field_longstr::val_bool()
- Field_string::val_bool()
- Item::val_int_from_val_str()
If the input contains bad data,
these methods raise a better error message:
Truncated incorrect BOOLEAN value
Before the change, the error was:
Truncated incorrect DOUBLE value
2. Fixing normalize_cond() to generate Item_func_istrue/Item_func_isfalse
instances instead of Item_func_ne/Item_func_eq
3. Making Item_func_truth sargable, so it uses the range optimizer.
Implementing the following methods:
- get_mm_tree(), get_mm_leaf(), add_key_fields() in Item_func_truth.
- get_func_mm_tree(), for all Item_func_truth descendants.
4. Implementing the method negated_item() for all Item_func_truth
descendants, so the negated item has a chance to be sargable:
For example,
WHERE NOT col IS NOT FALSE -- this notation is not sargable
is now translated to:
WHERE col IS FALSE -- this notation is sargable
DROP TABLE on child and UPDATE of parent table can cause an MDL BF-BF
conflict when applied concurrently.
DROP TABLE takes MDL locks on both child and its parent table, however
it only it did not add certification keys for the parent table.
This patch adds the following:
* Append certification keys corresponding to all parent tables
before DROP TABLE replication.
* Fix wsrep_append_fk_parent_table() so that it works when it is
given a table list containing temporary tables.
* Make sure function wsrep_append_fk_parent_table() is only called
for local transaction. That was not the case for ALTER TABLE.
* Add a test case that verifies that UPDATE parent depends on
preceeding DROP TABLE child.
* Adapt galera_ddl_fk_conflict test to work with DROP TABLE as well.
Signed-off-by: Julius Goryavsky <julius.goryavsky@mariadb.com>
The previous commit for fixing MDEV-35446 disabled setting
Galera errors on COM_STMT_PREPARE commands.
As a side effect, a number of tests were started to fail
due to the client receiving different error codes from the
ones expected in the test dependending on whether --ps-protocol
was used.
Also, in the case of test galera_ftwrl, it was found that
it is expected that during COM_STMT_PREPARE command, we
may perform a sync wait operation, which can fail with
LOCK_WAIT_TIMEOUT error.
The revised fix consists in anticipating the call to
wsrep_after_command_before_result(), so that we check for
BF aborts or errors during statement prepare, before sending
back the statement metadata message to client.
Signed-off-by: Julius Goryavsky <julius.goryavsky@mariadb.com>
Test failed sporadically when --ps-protocol was enabled:
a transaction that was BF aborted on COMMIT would succeed
instead of reporting the expected deadlock error.
The reason for the failure was that, depending on timing,
the transaction was BF aborted while the COMMIT statement
was being prepared through a COM_STMT_PREPARE command.
In the failing cases, the transaction was BF aborted
after COM_STMT_PREPARE had already disabled the diagnostics
area of the client. Attempt to override the deadlock error
towards the end of dispatch_command() would be skipped,
resulting in a successful COMMIT even if the transaction
is aborted.
This bug affected the following MTR tests:
- galera_insert_multi
- galera_nopk_unicode
Signed-off-by: Julius Goryavsky <julius.goryavsky@mariadb.com>
create templates
thd->alloc<X>(n) to use instead of (X*)thd->alloc(sizeof(X)*n)
and the same for thd->calloc(). By the default the type is char,
so old usage of thd->alloc(size) works too.
This task is inspired by the Percona implementation of
slow_query_log_always_write_time.
This task implements the variable log_slow_always_query_time (name
matching other MariaDB variables using the slow query log). The
default value for the variable is 31536000, which makes MariaDB
compatible with older installations.
For queries with execution time longer than log_slow_always_query_time
the variables log_slow_rate_limit and log_slow_min_examined_row_limit
will be ignored and the query will be written to the slow query log
if there is no other limitations (like log_slow_filter etc).
Other things:
- long_query_time internal variable renamed to log_slow_query_time.
- More descriptive information for "log_slow_query_time".