- Use local variables table and share to simplify code
- Use sql_command_flags to detect what kind of command was used
- Added CF_DELETES_DATA to simplify detecton of delete commands
- Removed duplicate error in create_table_from_items().
- Any temporary tables created under read-only mode will never be logged
to binary log. Any usage of these tables to update normal tables, even
after read-only has been disabled, will use row base logging (as the
temporary table will not be on the slave).
- Analyze, check and repair table will not be logged in read-only mode.
Other things:
- Removed not used varaibles in
MYSQL_BIN_LOG::flush_and_set_pending_rows_event.
- Set table_share->table_creation_was_logged for all normal tables.
- THD::binlog_query() now returns -1 if statement was not logged., This
is used to update table_share->table_creation_was_logged.
- Don't log admin statements in opt_readonly is set.
- Table's that doesn't have table_creation_was_logged will set binlog format to row
logging.
- Removed not needed/wrong setting of table->s->table_creation_was_logged
in create_table_from_items()
post-review fixes:
* test for dependent subqueries
* test for triggers and routines
* disallow INSERT...RETURNING in triggers and stored functions
* don't return anything if INSERT IGNORE ignored an error
Now both offset and limit are stored and do not chenged during execution
(offset is decreased during processing in versions before 10.5).
(Big part of this changes made by Monty)
TABLE::mark_columns_needed_for_update(): use_all_columns() assigns
pointer of all_set into read_set and write_set, but this is not good
since all_set is changed later by
TABLE::mark_columns_used_by_index_no_reset().
Do column_bitmaps_signal() whenever we change read_set/write_set.
* do not allow versioned table to be without versioned (non-system) fields
* prohibit changing field versioning, when removing table versioning
* handle CREATE...SELECT as well
* remove one level of virtual functions
* remove redundant checks
* remove an if() as the value is always known at compilation time
don't pretend that "DEFAULT expr" and "ON UPDATE DEFAULT NOW"
are "basically the same thing"
This patch allows the server to open old tables that have
"bad" generated columns (i.e. indexed virtual generated columns,
persistent generated columns) that depend on sql_mode,
for general things like SELECT, INSERT, DROP, etc.
Warning are issued in such cases.
Only these commands are now disallowed and return an error:
- CREATE TABLE introducing a "bad" generated column
- ALTER TABLE introducing a "bad" generated column
- CREATE INDEX introdicing a "bad" generated column
(i.e. adding an index on a virtual generated column
that depends on sql_mode).
Note, these commands are allowed:
- ALTER TABLE removing a "bad" generate column
- ALTER TABLE removing an index from a "bad" virtual generated column
- DROP INDEX removing an index from a "bad" virtual generated column
but only if the table does not have any "bad" columns as a result.
This reverts commit e86010f909fb6b8c4ffd9d6df92991ac079e67e7.
Reverting on Monty's request, as this change makes merging
things from 10.5 to 10.2 much harder.
Problem:-
When mysql executes INSERT ON DUPLICATE KEY INSERT, the storage engine checks
if the inserted row would generate a duplicate key error. If yes, it returns
the existing row to mysql, mysql updates it and sends it back to the storage
engine.When the table has more than one unique or primary key, this statement
is sensitive to the order in which the storage engines checks the keys.
Depending on this order, the storage engine may determine different rows
to mysql, and hence mysql can update different rows.The order that the
storage engine checks keys is not deterministic. For example, InnoDB checks
keys in an order that depends on the order in which indexes were added to
the table. The first added index is checked first. So if master and slave
have added indexes in different orders, then slave may go out of sync.
Solution:-
Make INSERT...ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE unsafe while using stmt or mixed format
When there is more then one unique key.
Although there is two exception.
1. Auto Increment key is not counted because Innodb will get gap lock for
failed Insert and concurrent insert will get a next increment value. But if
user supplies auto inc value it can be unsafe.
2. Count only unique keys for which insertion is performed.
So this patch also addresses the bug id #72921
cmake -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
Maintainer mode makes all warnings errors. This patch fix warnings. Mostly about
deprecated `register` keyword.
Too much warnings came from Mroonga and I gave up on it.