MySQL provides what appears to be a non standard extension to the
FOREIGN KEY syntax which let users name (label/tag) a foreign key
to more easily identify a specific foreign key if any problems show
up later during the query parsing or execution. But the foreign key
name was not being properly set to the right key, possible leaving
the foreign key with no name.
Moved out a lot of code into functions from external_lock and
start_stmt
Fixed a crashing bug at memory alloc failure
Merged the stmt and all variables into one trans variable
Always register start of statement as according to the
interface of the handlers.
Also register for start of transaction when not statement commit
== not autocommit AND no begin - commit ongoing
Now that we registered in a proper manner we also needed to handle
the commit call when end of statement and transaction is ongoing
Added start_stmt_count to know when we have start of statement
for first table
make sure that if builder configured with a non-standard (!= 3306)
default TCP port that value actually gets used throughout. if they
didn't configure a value, assume "use a sensible default", which
will be read from /etc/services or, failing that, from the factory
default. That makes the order of preference
- command-line option
- my.cnf, where applicable
- $MYSQL_TCP_PORT environment variable
- /etc/services (unless configured --with-tcp-port)
- default port (--with-tcp-port=... or factory default)
Declaring an all space column name in the SELECT FROM DUAL or in a view
leads to misleading warning message:
"Leading spaces are removed from name ' '".
The Item::set_name method has been modified to raise warnings like
"Name ' ' has become ''" in case of the truncation of an all
space identifier to an empty string identifier instead of the
"Leading spaces are removed from name ' '" warning message.
The problem was that aborted_threads variable was updated
twice when a client connection had been aborted.
The fix is to refactor a code to have aborted_threads updated
only in one place.
UPGRADE)
Bug 17565 (RENAME DATABASE destroys events)
Bug#28360 (RENAME DATABASE destroys routines)
Removed the
RENAME DATABASE db1 TO db2
statement.
Implemented the
ALTER DATABASE db UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAME
statement, which has the same function.
"Rows not deleted from innodb partitioned tables if --innodb_autoinc_lock_mode=0"
Due to a previous bugfix which initializes a previously uninitialized
variable, ha_partition::get_auto_increment() may fail to operate
correctly when the storage engine reports that it is only reserving
one value and one or more partitions have a different 'next-value'.
Currently, only affects Innodb's new-style auto-increment code which
reserves larger blocks of values and has less inter-thread contention.
In the ha_partition::position() we don't calculate the number
of the partition of the record, but use m_last_part value instead,
relying on that it's previously set by some other call like ::write_row().
Delete_rows_log_event::do_exec_row() calls find_and_fetch_row(),
where we used position() + rnd_pos() call for the InnoDB-based PARTITION-ed
table as there HA_PRIMARY_KEY_REQUIRED_FOR_POSITION enabled.
fixed by introducing new handler::rnd_pos_by_record() method to be
used for random record-based positioning
The patch limits read_buffer_size and read_rnd_buffer_size by 2 GB on all platforms for the following reasons:
- I/O code in mysys, code in mf_iocache.c and in some storage engines do not currently work with sizes > 2 GB for those buffers
- even if the above had been fixed, Windows POSIX read() and write() calls are not 2GB-safe, so setting those buffer to sizes > 2GB would not work correctly on 64-bit Windows.
Previously, UDF *_init functions were passed constant strings with erroneous lengths.
The length came from the containing variable's size, not the length of the value itself.
Now the *_init functions get the constant as a null terminated string with the correct
length supplied too.