Problem: there is an ASSERT() in the Log_event::read_log_event() checking the integrity
of the event's data that may fail.
Fix: move the assert's condition to an explicit check.
Problem: Unicode->UJIS followed incorrect conversion
rules for U+00A5 YEN SIGN and U+203E OVERLINE,
so these characters were converted to ujis 0x8E5C
and 0x8E7E accordingly.
This behaviour would be correct for a JIS-X-0201 based character set,
but this is wrong for UJIS, which is documented as x-eucjp-unicode-0.9,
and which is based on ASCII for the range U+0000..U+007F.
Fix:
removing JIS-X-0201 conversion rules, making UJIS ASCII compatible.
YEN SIGN and OVERLINE do not have corresponding UJIS characters anymore
and converted to 0x3F QUESTION MARK, throwing a warning in appropriative cases.
This patch also includes a test covering full UJIS->Unicode->UJIS mapping.
The result of the CHECK OPTION condition evaluation over an
updated record and records of merged tables was arbitrary and
dependant on the order of records in the merged tables during
the execution of SELECT statement.
The CHECK OPTION expression was evaluated over expired record
buffers (with arbitrary data in the fields).
Rowids of tables used in the CHECK OPTION expression were
added to temporary table rows. The multi_update::do_updates()
method was modified to restore necessary record buffers
before evaluation of the CHECK OPTION condition.
Integer values with 10 digits may or may not fit into an int column
(e.g. 2147483647 vs 6147483647).
Thus when creating a temp table column for such an int we must
use bigint instead.
Fixed to use bigint.
Also subsituted a "magic number" with a named constant.
type assertion.
The bug was introduced by the patch for bug #16377.
The "+ INTERVAL" (Item_date_add_interval) function detects its result type
by the type of its first argument. But in some cases it returns STRING
as the result type. This happens when, for example, the first argument is a
DATE represented as string. All this makes the get_datetime_value()
function misinterpret such result and return wrong DATE/DATETIME value.
To avoid such cases in the fix for #16377 the code that detects correct result
field type on the first execution was added to the
Item_date_add_interval::get_date() function. Due to this the result
field type of the Item_date_add_interval item stored by the send_fields()
function differs from item's result field type at the moment when
the item is actually sent. It causes an assertion failure.
Now the get_datetime_value() detects that the DATE value is returned by
some item not only by checking the result field type but also by comparing
the returned value with the 100000000L constant - any DATE value should be
less than this value.
Removed result field type adjusting code from the
Item_date_add_interval::get_date() function.
Refining the tests since pb revealed the older version's fragality - the error from SF() due to killed
may be different on different env:s.
DBUG_ASSERT instead of assert.
longer showing SP names.
SHOW CREATE VIEW uses Item::print() methods to reconstruct the
statement text from the parse tree.
The print() method for stored procedure calls needs allocate
space to print the function's quoted name.
It was incorrectly calculating the length of the buffer needed
(was too short).
Fixed to reflect the actual space needed.
Problem: altering a bit field we use Field::is_equal() to check if the bit
field is changed. Comparing the field type is not enough for bit fields.
Fix: add proper Field_bit::is_equal() that compares the field lengths as well.
Fix a race
Wait at the end of the test for all events to finish.
Then continue to the next result. This should be done, as the
server won't be restarted, and although events are dropped with
drop database, they could still be executing in memory.
The reason for the bug was that replaying of a query on slave could not be possible since its event
was recorded with the killed error. Due to the specific of handling INSERT, which per-row-while-loop is
unbreakable to killing, the query on transactional table should have not appeared in binlog unless
there was a call to a stored routine that got interrupted with killing (and then there must be an error
returned out of the loop).
The offered solution added the following rule for binlogging of INSERT that accounts the above
specifics:
For INSERT on transactional-table if the error was not set the only raised flag
is harmless and is ignored via masking out on time of creation of binlog event.
For both table types the combination of raised error and KILLED flag indicates that there
was potentially partial execution on master and consistency is under the question.
In that case the code continues to binlog an event with an appropriate killed error.
The fix relies on the specified behaviour of stored routine that must propagate the error
to the top level query handling if the thd->killed flag was raised in the routine execution.
The patch adds an arg with the default killed-status-unset value to Query_log_event::Query_log_event.