Before FRM is written walk vcol expressions through
check_table_name_processor() and check if field items match (db,
table_name) qualifier.
We cannot do this in check_vcol_func_processor() as there is already
no table name qualifiers in expressions of written and loaded FRM.
Before this patch mergeable derived tables / view used in a multi-table
update / delete were merged before the preparation stage.
When the merge of a derived table / view is performed the on expression
attached to it is fixed and ANDed with the where condition of the select S
containing this derived table / view. It happens after the specification of
the derived table / view has been merged into S. If the ON expression refers
to a non existing field an error is reported and some other mergeable derived
tables / views remain unmerged. It's not a problem if the multi-table
update / delete statement is standalone. Yet if it is used in a stored
procedure the select with incompletely merged derived tables / views may
cause a problem for the second call of the procedure. This does not happen
for select queries using derived tables / views, because in this case their
specifications are merged after the preparation stage at which all ON
expressions are fixed.
This patch makes sure that merging of the derived tables / views used in a
multi-table update / delete statement is performed after the preparation
stage.
Approved by Oleksandr Byelkin <sanja@mariadb.com>
At the second execution of the PS
1. mark_as_dependent() is called with the same parameters as at the first
execution (select#4 and select#3)
2. as outer_select (select#3) has been already merged at the first
execution of PS it cannot be reached using the outer_select() function
anymore (and so can not stop iteration).
3. as a result all selects towards the top level select including the
select for 'ca' are marked as uncacheable.
4. Marked uncacheable it executed incorrectly triggering filling its
temporary table several times and using freed memory at the end.
To avoid the problem we use name resolution context to go "up".
NOTE: problem also exists in 10.2 but has no visible effect on execution.
That is why the problem is fixed in 10.2.
The patch also add debug logging of important procedures and
better specify parameters types of st_select_lex::mark_as_dependent.
The bug caused crashes of the server when processing queries with nested
table value constructors (TVC) . It happened because the grammar rules to
parse TVC used the same global lists for both nested TVC and nesting TVC.
As a result invalid select trees were constructed for queries with nested
TVC and this led to crashes at the prepare stage.
This patch provides its own lists structures for each TVC nest level.
Besides the patch fixes a bug in the function wrap_tvc() that missed
inheritance of the SELECT_LEX::exclude_from_table_unique_test for
selects that wrapped TVCs. This inheritance is critical for specifications
of derived tables that employ nested TVCs.
Approved by dmitry.shulga@mariadb.com
This bug caused crashes of the server when processing queries with table
value constructors (TVC) that contained subqueries and were used itself as
subselects. For such TVCs the following transformation is applied at the
prepare stage:
VALUES (v1), ... (vn) => SELECT * FROM (VALUES (v1), ... (vn)) tvc_x.
This transformation allows to reduce the problem of evaluation of TVCs used
as subselects to the problem of evaluation of regular subselects.
The transformation is implemented in the wrap_tvc(). The code the function
to mimic the behaviour of the parser when processing the result of the
transformation. However this imitation was not free of some flaws. First
the function called the method exclude() that completely destroyed the
select tree structures below the transformed TVC. Second the function
used the procedure mysql_new_select to create st_select_lex nodes for
both wrapping select of the transformation and TVC. This also led to
constructing of invalid select tree structures.
The patch actually re-engineers the code of wrap_tvc().
Approved by Oleksandr Byelkin <sanja@mariadb.com>
Problem:
========
CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_USER='root', MASTER_SSL=0, MASTER_SSL_CA='',
MASTER_SSL_CERT='', MASTER_SSL_KEY='', MASTER_SSL_CRL='',
MASTER_SSL_CRLPATH='';
CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_USER='root', MASTER_PASSWORD='', MASTER_SSL=0;
use-after-poison is reported for lex_mi->ssl_crl
File: sql_repl.cc
if (lex_mi->ssl_crl)
strmake_buf(mi->ssl_crl, lex_mi->ssl_crl);
Analysis:
========
At the end of CHANGE MASTER statement execution, the LEX_MASTER_INFO
parameters are reset so that the next query will have a clean state. But
'ssl_crl' and 'ssl_crl_path' members of LEX_MASTER_INFO object are not
cleared during 'LEX_MASTER_INFO::reset'. Hence when a new CHANGE MASTER
statement is executed, the stale value of lex_mi->ssl_crl is used, so ASAN
reports use-after-poison.
Fix:
===
Clear 'ssl_crl' and 'ssl_crl_path' as part of 'reset'.
- Adding optional qualifiers to data types:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a schema.DATE);
Qualifiers now work only for three pre-defined schemas:
mariadb_schema
oracle_schema
maxdb_schema
These schemas are virtual (hard-coded) for now, but may turn into real
databases on disk in the future.
- mariadb_schema.TYPE now always resolves to a true MariaDB data
type TYPE without sql_mode specific translations.
- oracle_schema.DATE translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- maxdb_schema.TIMESTAMP translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- Fixing SHOW CREATE TABLE to use a qualifier for a data type TYPE
if the current sql_mode translates TYPE to something else.
The above changes fix the reported problem, so this script:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_date_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_date_column mariadb_schema.DATE);
and the slave can unambiguously treat DATE as the true MariaDB DATE
without ORACLE specific translation to DATETIME.
Similar,
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_timestamp_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_timestamp_column mariadb_schema.TIMESTAMP);
so the slave treats TIMESTAMP as the true MariaDB TIMESTAMP
without MAXDB specific translation to DATETIME.
Allocate space for fields inside the window function (arguments, PARTITION BY and ORDER BY clause)
in the ref pointer array. All fields inside the window function are part of the temporary
table that is required for the window function computation.
CHECK constraint is checked by check_expression() which walks its
items and gets into Item_field::check_vcol_func_processor() to check
for conformity with foreign key list.
WITHOUT OVERLAPS is checked for same conformity in
mysql_prepare_create_table().
Long uniques are already impossible with InnoDB foreign keys. See
ER_CANT_CREATE_TABLE in test case.
2 accompanying bugs fixed (test main.constraints failed):
1. check->name.str lived on SP execute mem_root while "check" obj
itself lives on SP main mem_root. On second SP execute check->name.str
had garbage data. Fixed by allocating from thd->stmt_arena->mem_root
which is SP main mem_root.
2. CHECK_CONSTRAINT_IF_NOT_EXISTS value was mixed with
VCOL_FIELD_REF. VCOL_FIELD_REF is assigned in check_expression() and
then detected as CHECK_CONSTRAINT_IF_NOT_EXISTS in
handle_if_exists_options().
Existing cases for MDEV-16932 in main.constraints cover both fixes.
The opt_for_user subrule was incorrectly scanned before sp_create_assignment_lex(),
so the user name and the host were created on a wrong memory root.
- Reoganizing the grammar to make sure that sp_create_assignment_lex()
is called immediately after PASSWORD_SYM is scanned, so all attributes
are then allocated on its memory root.
- Moving the semantic code as methods to LEX, so the grammar looks as simple as possible.
- Changing text_or_password to be of the data type USER_AUTH*.
As a side effect, the LEX::definer member is now not used when processing
the SET PASSWORD statement. Everything is done using Bison's stack.
The bug sas introduced by this commit:
commit bf5a144e16
MDEV-19964 S3 replication support
Added new configure options:
s3_slave_ignore_updates
"If the slave has shares same S3 storage as the master"
s3_replicate_alter_as_create_select
"When converting S3 table to local table, log all rows in binary log"
This allows on to configure slaves to have the S3 storage shared or
independent from the master.
Other thing:
Added new session variable '@@sql_if_exists' to force IF_EXIST to DDL's.
The existing syntax for renaming a column uses "ALTER TABLE ... CHANGE"
command. This requires full column specification to rename the column.
This patch adds new syntax "ALTER TABLE ... RENAME COLUMN", which do not
expect users to provide full column specification. It means that the new
syntax would pick in-place or copy algorithm in the same way as that of
existing "ALTER TABLE ... CHANGE" command. The existing syntax
"ALTER TABLE ... CHANGE" will continue to work.
Syntax changes
==============
ALTER TABLE tbl_name
[alter_specification [, alter_specification] ...]
[partition_options]
Following is a new <alter_specification> added:
| RENAME COLUMN <oldname> TO <newname>
Where <oldname> and <newname> are identifiers for old name and new
name of the column.
Related to: WL#10761
Rewriting GRANT/REVOKE grammar to use more bison stack and use Sql_cmd_ style
1. Removing a few members from LEX:
- uint grant, grant_to_col, which_columns
- List<LEX_COLUMN> columns
- bool all_privileges
2. Adding classes Grand_object_name, Lex_grant_object_name
3. Adding classes Grand_privilege, Lex_grand_privilege
4. Adding struct Lex_column_list_privilege_st, class Lex_column_list_privilege
5. Rewriting the GRANT/REVOKE grammar to use new classes and pass them through
bison stack (rather than directly access LEX members)
6. Adding classes Sql_cmd_grant* and Sql_cmd_revoke*,
changing GRANT/REVOKE to use LEX::m_sql_cmd.
7. Adding the "sp_handler" grammar rule and removing some duplicate grammar
for GRANT/REVOKE for different kinds of SP objects.
8. Adding a new rule comma_separated_ident_list, reusing it in:
- with_column_list
- colum_list_privilege