'LOAD DATA CONCURRENT [LOCAL] INFILE ...' statment only is binlogged as
'LOAD DATA [LOCAL] INFILE ...' in SBR and MBR. As a result, if replication is on,
queries on slaves will be blocked by the replication SQL thread.
This patch write code to write 'CONCURRENT' into the log event if 'CONCURRENT' option
is in the original statement in SBR and MBR.
Problem: The test was written before BUG#45827 was fixed.
The test contained code that assumed the wrong behavior,
pre-BUG#45827. Then, the fix for BUG#45827 was merged
from 5.1-rep+2 to 5.1-rep+3. Since the test case assumed
the wrong behavior, it failed. This should have been fixed
by making the test assume the correct behavior, but was
fixed by updating the result file to assert failure.
Fix 1: fix the test to assume correct behavior
(post-BUG#45827), update result file.
Fix 2: make test fail with 'die' instead of 'exit' when
wrong behavior is detected. Thus, the test cannot be
silenced with a wrong result file in case the behavior
will change again.
Row-based replication requires the types of columns on the
master and slave to be approximately the same (some safe
conversions between strings are allowed), but does not
allow safe conversions between fields of similar types such
as TINYINT and INT.
This patch implement type conversions between similar fields
on the master and slave.
The conversions are controlled using a new variable
SLAVE_TYPE_CONVERSIONS of type SET('ALL_LOSSY','ALL_NON_LOSSY').
Non-lossy conversions are any conversions that do not run the
risk of losing any information, while lossy conversions can
potentially truncate the value. The column definitions are
checked to decide if the conversion is acceptable.
If neither conversion is enabled, it is required that the
definitions of the columns are identical on master and slave.
Conversion is done by creating an internal conversion table,
unpacking the master data into it, and then copy the data to
the real table on the slave.
timestamp primary key
Since TIMESTAMP values are adjusted by the current time zone
settings in both numeric and string contexts, using any
expressions involving TIMESTAMP values as a
(sub)partitioning function leads to undeterministic behavior of
partitioned tables. The effect may vary depending on a storage
engine, it can be either incorrect data being retrieved or
stored, or an assertion failure. The root cause of this is the
fact that the calculated partition ID may differ from a
previously calculated ID for the same data due to timezone
adjustments of the partitioning expression value.
Fixed by disabling any expressions involving TIMESTAMP values
to be used in partitioning functions with the follwing two
exceptions:
1. Creating or altering into a partitioned table that violates
the above rule is not allowed, but opening existing such tables
results in a warning rather than an error so that such tables
could be fixed.
2. UNIX_TIMESTAMP() is the only way to get a
timezone-independent value from a TIMESTAMP column, because it
returns the internal representation (a time_t value) of a
TIMESTAMP argument verbatim. So UNIX_TIMESTAMP(timestamp_column)
is allowed and should be used to fix existing tables if one
wants to use TIMESTAMP columns with partitioning.
------------------------------------------------------------
2599.161.3 Ingo Struewing 2009-07-21
Bug#20667 - Truncate table fails for a write locked table
TRUNCATE TABLE was not allowed under LOCK TABLES.
The patch removes this restriction. mysql_truncate()
does now handle that case.
This fix changes the character set used within the
IBMDB2I handler to hash table names to information
about open tables. Previously, tables with names
that differed only in letter case would hash to the
same data structure. This caused incorrect behavior
or errors when two such tables were in use simultaneously.
An error occuring in the execution of a stored procedure, called
from do_select is masked, since the error condition is not
propagated back to the caller (join->conds->val_int() returns
a result value, and not an error code)
An explicit check was added to see if the thd error code has been
set, and if so, the loop status is set to the error state.
Backport from 6.0-codebase (revid: 2617.68.31)
Postfix for Bug#48210 FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK deadlocks
against concurrent CREATE PROCEDURE
Rewrote the second test to use DROP PROCEDURE instead of
CREATE USER as CREATE USER does not work with embedded server.
Bug #48210 FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK deadlocks
against concurrent CREATE PROCEDURE
This deadlock occured between
a) CREATE PROCEDURE (or other commands listed below)
b) FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
If the execution of them happened in the following order:
- a) opens a table (e.g. mysql.proc)
- b) locks the global read lock (or GRL)
- a) sleeps inside wait_if_global_read_lock()
- b) increases refresh_version and sleeps waiting
for old tables to go away
Note that a) must start waiting on the GRL before FLUSH increases
refresh_version. Otherwise a) won't wait on the GRL and instead
close its tables for reopen, allowing FLUSH to complete and thus
avoid the deadlock.
With this patch the deadlock is avoided by making CREATE PROCEDURE
acquire a protection against global read locks before it starts
executing. This means that FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK will have
to wait until CREATE PROCEDURE completes before acquiring the global
read lock, thereby avoiding the deadlock.
This is implemented by introducing a new SQL command flag called
CF_PROTECT_AGAINST_GRL. Commands marked with this flag will
acquire a GRL protection in the beginning of mysql_execute_command().
This patch adds the flag to CREATE, ALTER and DROP for PROCEDURE
and FUNCTION, as well as CREATE USER, DROP USER, RENAME USER and
REVOKE ALL. All these commands either call open_grant_tables() or
open_system_table_for_updated() which make them susceptible for
this deadlock.
The patch also adds the CF_PROTECT_AGAINST_GRL flag to a number
of commands that previously acquired GRL protection in their
respective SQLCOM case in mysql_execute_command().
Test case that checks for GRL protection for CREATE PROCEDURE
and CREATE USER added to mdl_sync.test.
Also re-enables the test for Bug #43867
Followup to Bug#46654 False deadlock on concurrent DML/DDL with partitions,
inconsistent behavior
Partition_sync.test uses features only available in debug builds.
Disabling the test for non-debug builds.
Bug #46654 False deadlock on concurrent DML/DDL with partitions,
inconsistent behavior
The problem was that if one connection is running a multi-statement
transaction which involves a single partitioned table, and another
connection attempts to alter the table, the first connection gets
ER_LOCK_DEADLOCK and cannot proceed anymore, even when the ALTER TABLE
statement in another connection has timed out or failed.
The reason for this was that the prepare phase for ALTER TABLE for
partitioned tables removed all instances of the table from the table
definition cache before it started waiting on the lock. The transaction
running in the first connection would notice this and report ER_LOCK_DEADLOCK.
This patch changes the prep_alter_part_table() ALTER TABLE code so that
tdc_remove_table() is no longer called. Instead, only the TABLE instance
changed by prep_alter_part_table() is marked as needing reopen.
The patch also removes an unnecessary call to tdc_remove_table() from
mysql_unpack_partition() as the changed TABLE object is destroyed by the
caller at a later point.
Test case added in partition_sync.test.
Bug#40181 Made use of tdc_remove_table instead of just
setting share->version to 0 to make sure all unused table
instances go away as part of CREATE/ALTER TABLE.
Bug #47313 assert in check_key_in_view during CALL procedure
View definitions are inlined in a stored procedure when the procedure
is fist called. This means that if a temporary table is later added
with the same name as the view, the stored procedure will still
use the view. This happens even if temporary tables normally shadow
base tables/views.
The reason for the assert was that even if the stored procedure
referenced the view, open_table() still tried to open the
temporary table. This "half view/half temporary table" state
caused the assert.
The bug was not present in 5.1 as open_table() is not called
for the view there. This code was changed with the introduction
of MDL in order to properly lock the view and any objects it
refers to.
This patch fixes the problem by instructing open_table()
to open base tables/views (using OT_BASE_ONLY) when reopening
tables/views used by stored procedures. This also means that
a prepared statement is no longer invalidated if a temporary
table is created with the same name as a view used in the
prepared statement.
Test case added to sp.test. The test case also demonstrates
the effect of sp cache invalidation between CALLs.
Bug #47635 assert in start_waiting_global_read_lock during CREATE VIEW
The problem was that CREATE VIEW would trigger an assert if
a temporary table with the same name already existed.
This bug was fixed by the patch for Bug#47335. CREATE/ALTER VIEW
will now ignore temporary tables. See Bug#47335 for more information.
Test case added to view.test.
Bug #47335 assert in get_table_share
The assert would happen if ALTER VIEW was used to alter a view (existing
or non-existing) and a temporary table with the same name already existed.
The assert is triggered if the current statement does not have a MDL lock on
the view to be altered. This would happen because open_table() would open
the temporary table instead and MDL locks are not taken for temporary
tables (since they are local to one connection).
The patch changes open_type for CREATE/ALTER VIEW to OT_BASE_ONLY. This prevents
open_table() from trying to open a temporary table with the same name should
one exist. Now the view will be altered if it exists or ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE will
be reported if it does not.
Test case added to view.test
Followup to Bug#42546 Backup: RESTORE fails, thinking it finds an existing table
This patch updates lowercase_table2.test with the changed error message
CREATE TABLE produces if it fails because it finds an matching TABLE_SHARE
in the TDC even if the .FRM/.MYD has been removed from disk.
With the changes introduced in Bug#42546, CREATE TABLE uses open_tables()
which will find the TDC entry and fail in open_table_from_share() with
ER_FILE_NOT_FOUND. Before, CREATE TABLE would not use open_tables() and
fail with ER_TABLE_EXISTS_ERROR upon finding the TDC entry in
mysql_create_table_no_lock().
Bug#42546 Backup: RESTORE fails, thinking it finds an existing table
The problem occured when a MDL locking conflict happened for a non-existent
table between a CREATE and a INSERT statement. The code for CREATE
interpreted this lock conflict to mean that the table existed,
which meant that the statement failed when it should not have.
The problem could occur for CREATE TABLE, CREATE TABLE LIKE and
ALTER TABLE RENAME.
This patch fixes the problem for CREATE TABLE and CREATE TABLE LIKE.
It is based on code backported from the mysql-6.1-fk tree written
by Dmitry Lenev. CREATE now uses normal open_and_lock_tables() code
to acquire exclusive locks. This means that for the test case in the bug
description, CREATE will wait until INSERT completes so that it can
get the exclusive lock. This resolves the reported bug.
The patch also prohibits CREATE TABLE and CREATE TABLE LIKE under
LOCK TABLES. Note that this is an incompatible change and must
be reflected in the documentation. Affected test cases have been
updated.
mdl_sync.test contains tests for CREATE TABLE and CREATE TABLE LIKE.
Fixing the issue for ALTER TABLE RENAME is beyond the scope of this
patch. ALTER TABLE cannot be prohibited from working under LOCK TABLES
as this could seriously impact customers and a proper fix would require
a significant rewrite.
SPATIAL and FULLTEXT indexes don't support algorithm
selection.
Disabled by creating a special grammar rule for these
in the parser.
Added some encasulation of duplicate parser code.
A few problems were found in the fix for bug 43668:
1) Comparison of the YEAR column with NULL always returned TRUE;
2) Comparison of the YEAR column with constants always returned
unpredictable result;
3) Unnecessary conversion warnings when comparing a non-integer
constant with a NULL value in the YEAR column;
The problems described above have been resolved with an
exception: zero (i.e. invalid) YEAR column value comparison
with 00 or 2000 still fail (it is not a regression and it was
not a regression), so MIN/MAX on YEAR column containing zero
value still fail.