Several items said to be deprecated in the 4.1 manual
have never been removed. This worklog adds deprecation
warnings when these items are used, and warns the user
that the items will be removed in MySQL 5.6.
A couple of previously deprecation decision have been
reversed (see single file comments)
It is well-known that due to concurrency issues, a slave can become
inconsistent when a transaction contains updates to both transaction and
non-transactional tables in statement and mixed modes.
In a nutshell, the current code-base tries to preserve causality among the
statements by writing non-transactional statements to the txn-cache which
is flushed upon commit. However, modifications done to non-transactional
tables on behalf of a transaction become immediately visible to other
connections but may not immediately get into the binary log and therefore
consistency may be broken.
In general, it is impossible to automatically detect causality/dependency
among statements by just analyzing the statements sent to the server. This
happen because dependency may be hidden in the application code and it is
necessary to know a priori all the statements processed in the context of
a transaction such as in a procedure. Moreover, even for the few cases that
we could automatically address in the server, the computation effort
required could make the approach infeasible.
So, in this patch we introduce the option
- "--binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates" that can be used to bypass
the current behavior in order to write directly to binary log statements
that change non-transactional tables.
REORGANIZE PARTITION
There were several problems which lead to this this,
all related to bad error handling.
1) There was several bugs preventing the ddl-log to be used for
cleaning up created files on error.
2) The error handling after the copy partition rows did not close
and unlock the tables, resulting in deletion of partitions
which were in use, which lead InnoDB to put the partition to
drop in a background queue.
error in the query.
Fixes a leak after materializing a GROUP BY subquery to a
temp table when the subquery has a blob column in the SELECT
list.
Fixed by correctly destructing temporary buffers after doing
the conversion.
'CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT' statement were causing 'CREATE
TEMPORARY TABLE ...' to be written to the binary log in row-based
mode (a.k.a. RBR), when there was a temporary table with the same name.
Because the 'CREATE TABLE ... SELECT' statement was executed as
'INSERT ... SELECT' into the temporary table. Since in RBR mode no
other statements related to temporary tables are written into binary log,
this sometimes broke replication.
This patch changes behavior of 'CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] ... SELECT ...'.
it ignores existence of temporary table with the
same name as table being created and is interpreted
as attempt to create/insert into base table. This makes behavior of
'CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] ... SELECT' consistent with
how ordinary 'CREATE TABLE' and 'CREATE TABLE ... LIKE' behave.
The problem was that FLUSH TABLE <table_list> would block,
waiting for all tables with old versions to be removed from
the table definition cache, rather than waiting for only
the tables in <table_list>. This could happen if FLUSH TABLE
was used in combination with LOCK TABLES.
With the new MDL code, this problem is no longer repeatable.
Regression test case added to lock.test. This commit contains
no code changes.
Conflicts:
Text conflict in .bzr-mysql/default.conf
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_loaddata_fatal.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_stm_log.result
Text conflict in mysql-test/t/mysqlbinlog.test
Text conflict in sql/sql_acl.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_servers.cc
Text conflict in sql/sql_update.cc
Text conflict in support-files/mysql.spec.sh
Problem: The test case failed because: (i) warning text in
result file differed from the warning output by the
server, and (ii) binlog contents in result file did
not show the statements logged wrapped in BEGIN/COMMIT
as it is the case after WL 2687.
Solution: We update the result file, but first we change the
unsafe warning text to also refer to performance_schema
table(s). This required changing the result files for
existing test cases that provide output for warnings
related to ER_BINLOG_UNSAFE_SYSTEM_TABLE. "Grepping" in
result files, shows that only binlog_unsafe contained
reference to such a warning.
We also update the result file with the missing
BEGIN/COMMIT statements.
BUG#49481: RBR: MyISAM and bit fields may cause slave to stop on delete:
cant find record
BUG#49482: RBR: Replication may break on deletes when MyISAM tables +
char field are used
When using MyISAM tables, despite the fact that the null bit is
set for some fields, their old value is still in the row. This
can cause the comparison of records to fail when the slave is
doing an index or range scan.
We fix this by avoiding memcmp for MyISAM tables when comparing
records. Additionally, when comparing field by field, we first
check if both fields are not null and if so, then we compare
them. If just one field is null we return failure immediately. If
both fields are null, we move on to the next field.
Problem: When RAND() is binlogged in statement mode, the seed is
binlogged too, so the replication slave generates the same
sequence of random numbers. This makes replication work in many
cases, but not in all cases: the order of rows is not guaranteed
for, e.g., UPDATE or INSERT...SELECT statements, so the row data
will be different if master and slave retrieve the rows in
different orders.
Fix: Mark RAND() as unsafe. It will generate a warning if
binlog_format=STATEMENT and switch to row-logging if
binlog_format=ROW.
Selecting of the CONCAT_WS(...<PS parameter>...) result into
a user variable may return wrong data.
Item_func_concat_ws::val_str contains a number of memory
allocation-saving optimization tricks. After the fix
for bug 46815 the control flow has been changed to a
branch that is commented as "This is quite uncommon!":
one of places where we are trying to concatenate
strings inplace. However, that "uncommon" place
didn't care about PS parameters, that have another
trick in Item_sp_variable::val_str(): they use the
intermediate Item_sp_variable::str_value field,
where they may store a reference to an external
argument's buffer.
The Item_func_concat_ws::val_str function has been
modified to take into account val_str functions
(such as Item_sp_variable::val_str) that return a
pointer to an internal Item member variable that
may reference to a buffer provided.
- mysqld--help-win
Updated result so that it contains missing
value for slave-type-conversions
- rpl_idempotency
This seems a bad merge. In BUG#39934, the contents of
this file had been split into rpl_row_idempontency and
rpl_idempotency. The patch was pushed to 5.1-rep+3 which
was later merged in rep+2-delivery1 which in turn was
merged in 5.1-rpl-merge. Now while merging next-mr in
5.1-rpl-merge, the file got back it's old content (which
is in rpl_row_idempotency now because of BUG#39934). This
cset reverts the bad merge:
bzr merge -r revid:dao-gang.qu@sun.com-20100112120709-ioxp11yl9bvquaqd..\
before:revid:dao-gang.qu@sun.com-20100112120709-ioxp11yl9bvquaqd\
suite/rpl/t/rpl_idempotency.test
- sys_vars.all_vars:
Added test case for slave_type_conversions variable
- rpl_row_idempotency
Removed ER_SLAVE_AMBIGOUS_EXEC_MODE (which was removed by WL 4738)
from the test case. Using ER_WRONG_VALUE_FOR_VAR instead.
- mysqld--help-win
Added missing help for --slave-type-conversions from the
result file.
This was a deadlock between LOCK TABLES/CREATE DATABASE in one connection
and DROP DATABASE in another. It only happened if the table locked by
LOCK TABLES was in the database to be dropped. The deadlock is similar
to the one in Bug#48940, but with LOCK TABLES instead of an active
transaction.
The order of events needed to trigger the deadlock was:
1) Connection 1 locks table db1.t1 using LOCK TABLES. It will now
have a metadata lock on the table name.
2) Connection 2 issues DROP DATABASE db1. This will wait inside
the MDL subsystem for the lock on db1.t1 to go away. While waiting, it
will hold the LOCK_mysql_create_db mutex.
3) Connection 1 issues CREATE DATABASE (database name irrelevant).
This will hang trying to lock the same mutex. Since this is the connection
holding the metadata lock blocking Connection 2, we have a deadlock.
This deadlock would also happen for earlier trees without MDL, but
there DROP DATABASE would wait for a table to be removed from the
table definition cache.
This patch fixes the problem by prohibiting CREATE DATABASE in LOCK TABLES
mode. In the example above, this prevents Connection 1 from hanging trying
to get the LOCK_mysql_create_db mutex. Note that other commands that use
LOCK_mysql_create_db (ALTER/DROP DATABASE) are already prohibited in
LOCK TABLES mode.
Incompatible change: CREATE DATABASE is now disallowed in LOCK TABLES mode.
Test case added to schema.test.
MySQL handles the join syntax "JOIN ... USING( field1,
... )" and natural joins by building the same parse tree as
a corresponding join with an "ON t1.field1 = t2.field1 ..."
expression would produce. This parse tree was not cleaned up
properly in the following scenario. If a thread tries to
lock some tables and finds that the tables were dropped and
re-created while waiting for the lock, it cleans up column
references in the statement by means a per-statement free
list. But if the statement was part of a stored procedure,
column references on the stored procedure's free list weren't
cleaned up and thus contained pointers to freed objects.
Fixed by adding a call to clean up the current prepared
statement's free list.
The test case did not start with fresh binlogs, so in some
cases, dependending on the order MTR runs the tests, it would
try to show binlog contents from invalid positions (binary log
would contain unexpected events from previous test).
We fix this by deploying a RESET MASTER at the beginning of the
test case.