This patch contains fixes for two problems:
1. As originally reported, the server crashed on Mac OS X when trying to access
an EXAMPLE table after the EXAMPLE plugin was installed.
It turned out that the dynamically loaded EXAMPLE plugin called the
function hash_earch() from a Mac OS X system library, instead of
hash_earch() from MySQL's mysys library. Makefile.am in storage/example
does not include libmysys. So the Mac OS X linker arranged the hash_search()
function to be linked to the system library when the shared object is
loaded.
One possible solution would be to include libmysys into the linkage of
dynamic plugins. But then we must have a libmysys.so, which must be
used by the server too. This could have a minimal performance impact,
but foremost the change seems to bee too risky at the current state of
MySQL 5.1.
The selected solution is to rename MySQL's hash_search() to my_hash_search()
like it has been done before with hash_insert() and hash_reset().
Since this is the third time, we need to rename a hash_*() function,
I did renamed all hash_*() functions to my_hash_*().
To avoid changing a zillion calls to these functions, and announcing
this to hundreds of developers, I added defines that map the old names
to the new names.
This change is in hash.h and hash.c.
2. The other problem was improper implementation of the handlerton-to-plugin
mapping. We use a fixed-size array to hold a plugin reference for each
handlerton. On every install of a handler plugin, we allocated a new slot
of the array. On uninstall we did not free it. After some uninstall/install
cycles the array overflowed. We did not check for overflow.
One fix is to check for overflow to stop the crashes.
Another fix is to free the array slot at uninstall and search for a free slot
at plugin install.
This change is in handler.cc.
from stored procedure.
Problem: we replace all references to local variables in stored procedures
with NAME_CONST(name, value) logging to the binary log. However, if the
value's collation differs we might get an 'illegal mix of collation'
error as we don't pass the collation to the function.
Fix: pass the value's collation to NAME_CONST().
Note: actually we should pass to NAME_CONST() the value's derivation as well.
It's impossible without the parser modifying. Now we always set the
derivation to DERIVATION_IMPLICIT, the same as local variables have.
Server created "arc" directories inside database directories and
maintained there useless copies of .frm files.
Creation and renaming procedures of those copies as well as
creation of "arc" directories has been discontinued.
Removal procedure has been kept untouched to be able to
cleanup existent database directories by the DROP DATABASE
query. Also view renaming procedure has been updated to remove
these directories.
JOIN for the subselect wasn't cleaned if we came upon an error
during sub_select() execution. That leads to the assertion failure
in close_thread_tables()
part of the 6.0 code backported
per-file comments:
mysql-test/r/sp-error.result
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
test result
mysql-test/t/sp-error.test
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
test case
sql/sp_head.cc
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
lex->unit.cleanup() call added if not substatement
The problem is that when statement-based replication was enabled,
statements such as INSERT INTO .. SELECT FROM .. and CREATE TABLE
.. SELECT FROM need to grab a read lock on the source table that
does not permit concurrent inserts, which would in turn be denied
if the source table is a log table because log tables can't be
locked exclusively.
The solution is to not take such a lock when the source table is
a log table as it is unsafe to replicate log tables under statement
based replication. Furthermore, the read lock that does not permits
concurrent inserts is now only taken if statement-based replication
is enabled and if the source table is not a log table.
Rotate event is automatically generated and written when rotating binary
log or relay log. Rotate events for relay logs are usually ignored by slave
SQL thread becuase they have the same server id as that of the slave.
However, if --replicate-same-server-id is enabled, rotate event
for relay log would be treated as if it's a rotate event from master, and
would be executed by slave to update the rli->group_master_log_name and
rli->group_master_log_pos to a wrong value and cause the MASTER_POS_WAIT
function to fail and return NULL.
This patch fixed this problem by setting a flag bit (LOG_EVENT_RELAY_LOG_F)
in the event to tell the SQL thread to ignore these Rotate events generated
for relay logs.
This patch also added another binlog event flag bit (LOG_EVENT_ARTIFICIAL_F)
to distinquish faked events, the method used before this was by checking if
log_pos was zero.
In order to improve the performance when replicating to partitioned
myisam tables with row-based format, the number of rows of current
rows log event is estimated and used to setup storage engine for bulk
inserts.
A stored procedure involving substrings could crash the server on certain
platforms because of invalid memory reads.
During storing the new blob-field value, the cached value's address range
overlapped that of the new field value. This caused problems when the
cached value storage was reallocated to provide access for a new
characater set representation. The patch checks the address ranges, and if
they overlap, the new field value is copied to a new storage before it is
converted to the new character set.
and
Bug#33555: Group By Query does not correctly aggregate partitions
Backport of bug-33257 which is the same bug.
read_range_*() calls was not passed to the partition handlers,
but was translated to index_read/next family calls.
Resulting in duplicates rows and wrong aggregations.
The fix for bug 31887 was incomplete : it assumes that all the
field types returned by the IS_NUM macro are descendants of
Item_num and tries to zero-fill the values before doing constant
substitution with such fields when they are compared to constant string
values.
The only exception to this is Field_timestamp : it's in the IS_NUM
macro, but is not a descendant of Field_num.
Fixed by excluding timestamp fields (Field_timestamp) when zero-filling
when converting the constant to compare with to a string.
Note that this will not exclude the timestamp columns from const
propagation.
columns data types
The "SELECT @lastId, @lastId := Id FROM t" query returns
different result sets depending on the type of the Id column
(INT or BIGINT).
Note: this fix doesn't cover the case when a select query
references an user variable and stored function that
updates a value of that variable, in this case a result
is indeterminate.
The server uses incorrect assumption about a constantness of
an user variable value as a select list item:
The server caches a last query number where that variable
was changed and compares this number with a current query
number. If these numbers are different, the server guesses,
that the variable is not updating in the current query, so
a respective select list item is a constant. However, in some
common cases the server updates cached query number too late.
The server has been modified to memorize user variable
assignments during the parse phase to take them into account
on the next (query preparation) phase independently of the
order of user variable references/assignments in a select
item list.
The problem here is that symbols can not be loaded, because symbol
path is not set and default path does not include the directory
where PDB is located.
The problem is _not_ reproducible on the same machine where
mysqld.exe is built - if PDB is not found in the symbol path,
dbghelp would fallback to fully qualified PDB path as given in the
executable header and on the build host this will succeed.
The solution is to calculate symbol path and pass it to SymInitialize()
call.
Problem: with @@sql_mode=pad_char_to_full_length
a CHAR column returned additional garbage
after trailing space characters due to
incorrect my_charpos() call.
Fix: call my_charpos() with correct arguments.
If [NOT] PRESERVE was not given, parser always defaulted to NOT
PRESERVE, making it impossible for the "not given = no change"
rule to work in ALTER EVENT. Leaving out the PRESERVE-clause
defaults to NOT PRESERVE on CREATE now, and to "no change" in
ALTER.
If a delayed insert thread was aborted by a concurrent 'truncate table'
statement, then the diagnostic area would fail with an assert in a debug build
because no actual error message was pushed on the stack despite a thread
being killed.
This patch adds an error message to the stack.
statement/stored procedure
View privileges are properly checked after the fix for bug no
36086, so the method TABLE_LIST::get_db_name() must be used
instead of field TABLE_LIST::db, as this only works for tables.
Bug appears when accessing views in prepared statements.
SUPER is not required to change binlog format for session
A user without SUPER privileges can change the value of the
session variable BINLOG_FORMAT, causing problems for a DBA.
This changeset requires a user to have SUPER privileges to
change the value of the session variable BINLOG_FORMAT, and
not only the global variable BINLOG_FORMAT.
Problem was a mutex added in bug n 27405 for solving a problem
with auto_increment in partitioned innodb tables.
(in ha_partition::write_row over partitions file->ha_write_row)
Solution is to use the patch for bug#33479, which refines the
usage of mutexes for auto_increment.
Backport of bug-33479 from 6.0:
Bug-33479: auto_increment failures in partitioning
Several problems with auto_increment in partitioning
(with MyISAM, InnoDB. Locking issues, not handling
multi-row INSERTs properly etc.)
Changed the auto_increment handling for partitioning:
Added a ha_data variable in table_share for storage engine specific data
such as auto_increment value handling in partitioning, also see WL 4305
and using the ha_data->mutex to lock around read + update.
The idea is this:
Store the table's reserved auto_increment value in
the TABLE_SHARE and use a mutex to, lock it for reading and updating it
and unlocking it, in one block. Only accessing all partitions
when it is not initialized.
Also allow reservations of ranges, and if no one has done a reservation
afterwards, lower the reservation to what was actually used after
the statement is done (via release_auto_increment from WL 3146).
The lock is kept from the first reservation if it is statement based
replication and a multi-row INSERT statement where the number of
candidate rows to insert is not known in advance (like INSERT SELECT,
LOAD DATA, unlike INSERT VALUES (row1), (row2),,(rowN)).
This should also lead to better concurrancy (no need to have a mutex
protection around write_row in all cases)
and work with any local storage engine.