but broken.
Before this patch, it was allowed to use stored functions in
HANDLER ... READ statements. The problem was that this functionality
was not really supported by the code. Proper locking would for example
not be performed, and it was also possible to break replication by
having stored functions that performed updates.
This patch disallows the use of stored functions in HANDLER ... READ.
Any such statement will now give an ER_NOT_SUPPORTED_YET error.
This is an incompatible change and should be reflected in the
documentation.
Test case added to handler_myisam/handler_innodb.test.
Subselect executes twice, at JOIN::optimize stage
and at JOIN::execute stage. At optimize stage
Innodb prebuilt struct which is used for the
retrieval of column values is initialized in.
ha_innobase::index_read(), prebuilt->sql_stat_start is true.
After QUICK_ROR_INTERSECT_SELECT finished his job it
restores read_set/write_set bitmaps with initial values
and deactivates one of the handlers used by
QUICK_ROR_INTERSECT_SELECT in JOIN::cleanup
(it's the case when we reuse original handler as one of
handlers required by QUICK_ROR_INTERSECT_SELECT object).
On second subselect execution inactive handler is activated
in QUICK_RANGE_SELECT::reset, file->ha_index_init().
In ha_index_init Innodb prebuilt struct is reinitialized
with inappropriate read_set/write_set bitmaps. Further
reinitialization in ha_innobase::index_read() does not
happen as prebuilt->sql_stat_start is false.
It leads to partial retrieval of required field values
and we get a mix of field values from different records
in the record buffer.
The fix is to reset
read_set/write_set bitmaps as these values
are required for proper intialization of
internal InnoDB struct which is used for
the retrieval of column values
(see build_template(), ha_innodb.cc)
With recent changes in the performance schema default sizing parameters,
the memory used by a mysqld binary increased accordingly.
This negatively affects the MTR test suite,
because running several tests in parallel now consumes more ressources.
The fix is to leave the default production values unchanged,
and to configure the MTR environment to limit memory
used when running tests in the test suite, which is ok
because only a few objects are typically used within a test script.
This fix:
- changed the default configuration in MTR to use less memory
- adjusted the performance schema tests accordingly
Note that 1,000 mutex instances was too short and caused test failures
in the past in team trees, so the default used is now 10,000 in MTR.
The amount of memory used by the performance schema itself
can be observed with the statement SHOW ENGINE PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA STATUS
Original changeset:
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 3197
revision-id: alik@sun.com-20100831135426-h5a4s2w6ih1d8q2x
parent: magnus.blaudd@sun.com-20100830120632-u3xzy002mdwueli8
committer: Alexander Nozdrin <alik@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-5.5-bugfixing
timestamp: Tue 2010-08-31 17:54:26 +0400
message:
Bug#55980 Character sets: supplementary character _bin ordering is wrong
Problem:
- ORDER BY for utf8mb4_bin, utf16_bin and utf32_bin returned
results in a wrong order, because old functions
(supporting only BMP range) were used to handle these collations.
- Additionally, utf16_bin did not sort supplementary characters
between U+D700 and U+E000, as WL#1213 specification specified.
------------------------------------------------------------
Problem:
- ORDER BY for utf8mb4_bin, utf16_bin and utf32_bin returned
results in a wrong order, because old functions
(supporting only BMP range) were used to handle these collations.
- Additionally, utf16_bin did not sort supplementary characters
between U+D700 and U+E000, as WL#1213 specification specified.
The include/mysqlhotcopy.inc had an error in the 'if' condition, so it failed
if the mysqlhotcopy tool was found.
per-file comments:
mysql-test/include/mysqlhotcopy.inc
test should proceed exactly if the mysqlhotcopy was set.
mysql-test/mysql-test-run.pl
don't set the MYSQL_HOTCOPY variable if no mysqlhotcopy was found.
Problem: a few functions did not calculate their max_length correctly.
This is an after-fix for WL#2649 Number-to-string conversions".
Fix: changing the buggy functions to calculate max_length
using fix_char_length() introduced in WL#2649,
instead of setting max_length directly
mysql-test/include/ctype_numconv.inc
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_binary.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_cp1251.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_latin1.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_ucs.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/r/ctype_utf8.result
Adding new tests
mysql-test/t/ctype_utf8.test
Including ctype_numconv
sql/item.h
- Introducing new method fix_char_length_ulonglong(),
for the cases when length is potentially greater
than UINT_MAX32. This method removes a few
instances of duplicate code, e.g. in item_strfunc.cc.
- Setting collation in Item_copy properly. This change
fixes wrong metadata on client side in some cases, when
"binary" instead of the real character set was reported.
sql/item_cmpfunc.cc
- Using fix_char_length() and max_char_length() methods,
instead of direct access to max_length, to calculate
item length properly.
- Moving count_only_length() in COALESCE after
agg_arg_charsets_for_string_result(). The old
order was incorrect and led to wrong length
calucation in case of multi-byte character sets.
sql/item_func.cc
Fixing that count_only_length() didn't work
properly for multi-byte character sets.
Using fix_char_length() and max_char_length()
instead of direct access to max_length.
sql/item_strfunc.cc
- Using fix_char_length(), fix_char_length_ulonglong(),
max_char_length() instead of direct access to max_length.
- Removing wierd condition: "if (collation.collation->mbmaxlen > 0)",
which is never FALSE.
'CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT' behaviour
BUG#47132, BUG#47442, BUG49494, BUG#23992 and BUG#48814 will disappear
automatically after the this patch.
BUG#55617 is fixed by this patch too.
This is the 5.5 part.
It implements:
- 'CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT' statement will not insert
anything and binlog anything if the table already exists.
It only generate a warning that table already exists.
- A couple of test cases for the behavior changing.
'CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT' behaviour
BUG#55474, BUG#55499, BUG#55598, BUG#55616 and BUG#55777 are fixed
in this patch too.
This is the 5.1 part.
It implements:
- if the table exists, binlog two events: CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS
and INSERT ... SELECT
- Insert nothing and binlog nothing on master if the existing object
is a view. It only generates a warning that table already exists.
example files)
The system variable 'thread_concurrency' has been
(re-)enabled on all platforms, to prevent startup
errors.
'thread_concurrency' is unused and has no effect,
on any platform, in MySQL 5.1 and later versions. It
will be deprecated, and removed, in context of
worklog WL#5265
FLUSH TABLES <list> WITH READ LOCK are incompatible" to
be pushed as separate patch.
Replaced thread state name "Waiting for table", which was
used by threads waiting for a metadata lock or table flush,
with a set of names which better reflect types of resources
being waited for.
Also replaced "Table lock" thread state name, which was used
by threads waiting on thr_lock.c table level lock, with more
elaborate "Waiting for table level lock", to make it
more consistent with other thread state names.
Updated test cases and their results according to these
changes.
Fixed sys_vars.query_cache_wlock_invalidate_func test to not
to wait for timeout of wait_condition.inc script.
if() treated any non-numeric string as false
Fixed to treat those as true instead
Added some test cases
Fixed missing $ in variable name in include/mix2.inc
TABLES <list> WITH READ LOCK are incompatible".
The problem was that FLUSH TABLES <list> WITH READ LOCK
which was issued when other connection has acquired global
read lock using FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK was blocked
and has to wait until global read lock is released.
This issue stemmed from the fact that FLUSH TABLES <list>
WITH READ LOCK implementation has acquired X metadata locks
on tables to be flushed. Since these locks required acquiring
of global IX lock this statement was incompatible with global
read lock.
This patch addresses problem by using SNW metadata type of
lock for tables to be flushed by FLUSH TABLES <list> WITH
READ LOCK. It is OK to acquire them without global IX lock
as long as we won't try to upgrade those locks. Since SNW
locks allow concurrent statements using same table FLUSH
TABLE <list> WITH READ LOCK now has to wait until old
versions of tables to be flushed go away after acquiring
metadata locks. Since such waiting can lead to deadlock
MDL deadlock detector was extended to take into account
waits for flush and resolve such deadlocks.
As a bonus code in open_tables() which was responsible for
waiting old versions of tables to go away was refactored.
Now when we encounter old version of table in open_table()
we don't back-off and wait for all old version to go away,
but instead wait for this particular table to be flushed.
Such approach supported by deadlock detection should reduce
number of scenarios in which FLUSH TABLES aborts concurrent
multi-statement transactions.
Note that active FLUSH TABLES <list> WITH READ LOCK still
blocks concurrent FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK statement
as the former keeps tables open and thus prevents the
latter statement from doing flush.
table with active trx
Essentially, the problem is that InnoDB does a implicit commit
when a cursor (table handler) is unlocked/closed, creating
a dissonance between the transaction state within the server
layer and the storage engine layer. Theoretically, a statement
transaction can encompass several table instances in a similar
manner to a multiple statement transaction, hence it does not
make sense to limit a statement transaction to the lifetime of
the table instances (cursors) used within it.
Since this particular instance of the problem is only triggerable
on 5.1 and is masked on 5.5 due 2PC being skipped (assertion is in
the prepare phase of a 2PC), the solution (which is less risky) is
to explicitly end the transaction before the cached table is unlock
on rename table.
The patch is to be null merged into trunk.
Problem: Item_str_ascii_func::val_str() did not set
charset of the returned value properly.
mysql-test/include/ctype_numconv.inc
mysql-test/r/ctype_binary.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_cp1251.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_latin1.result
mysql-test/r/ctype_ucs.result
- Adding tests
sql/item_strfunc.cc
- Adding initialization of charset
Essentially, the problem is that safemalloc is excruciatingly
slow as it checks all allocated blocks for overrun at each
memory management primitive, yielding a almost exponential
slowdown for the memory management functions (malloc, realloc,
free). The overrun check basically consists of verifying some
bytes of a block for certain magic keys, which catches some
simple forms of overrun. Another minor problem is violation
of aliasing rules and that its own internal list of blocks
is prone to corruption.
Another issue with safemalloc is rather the maintenance cost
as the tool has a significant impact on the server code.
Given the magnitude of memory debuggers available nowadays,
especially those that are provided with the platform malloc
implementation, maintenance of a in-house and largely obsolete
memory debugger becomes a burden that is not worth the effort
due to its slowness and lack of support for detecting more
common forms of heap corruption.
Since there are third-party tools that can provide the same
functionality at a lower or comparable performance cost, the
solution is to simply remove safemalloc. Third-party tools
can provide the same functionality at a lower or comparable
performance cost.
The removal of safemalloc also allows a simplification of the
malloc wrappers, removing quite a bit of kludge: redefinition
of my_malloc, my_free and the removal of the unused second
argument of my_free. Since free() always check whether the
supplied pointer is null, redudant checks are also removed.
Also, this patch adds unit testing for my_malloc and moves
my_realloc implementation into the same file as the other
memory allocation primitives.