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Author SHA1 Message Date
4acc7615ee Bug #19929406: HANDLE_FATAL_SIGNAL (SIG=11) IN
__MEMMOVE_SSSE3_BACK FROM STRING::COPY

Issue:
-----
While using row comparators, the store_value functions call
val_xxx functions in the prepare phase. This can cause
valgrind issues.

SOLUTION:
---------
Setting up of the comparators should be done by
alloc_comparators in the prepare phase. Also, make sure
store_value will be called only during execute phase.

This is a backport of the fix for Bug#17755540.
2015-09-18 07:34:32 +05:30
aed8369e43 Bug #16869534 QUERYING SUBSET OF COLUMNS DOESN'T USE TABLE CACHE; OPENED_TABLES I
Description: When querying a subset of columns from the information_schema.TABLES

Analysis: When information about tables is collected for statements like
"SELECT ENGINE FROM I_S.TABLES" we do not perform full-blown table opens
in SE, instead we only use information from table shares from the Table
Definition Cache or .FRMs. Still in order to simplify I_S implementation
mock TABLE objects are created from TABLE_SHARE during this process.
This is done by calling open_table_from_share() function with special
arguments. Since this function always increments "Opened_tables" counter,
calls to it can be mistakingly interpreted as full-blown table opens in SE.

Note that claim that "'SELECT ENGINE FROM I_S.TABLES' statement doesn't
use Table Cache" is nevertheless factually correct. But it misses the
point, since such statements a) don't use full-blown TABLE objects and
therefore don't do table opens b) still use Table Definition Cache.

Fix: We are now incrementing the counter when db_stat(i.e open flags for ha_open(

we have considered an optimization which would use TABLE objects from
Table Cache when available instead of constructing mock TABLE objects,
but found it too intrusive for stable releases.
2014-11-26 16:59:58 +05:30
f499292522 BUG#17665767 - FAILING ASSERTION: PRIMARY_KEY_NO == -1 || PRIMARY_KEY_NO == 0
BACKGROUND:
This bug is a followup on Bug#16368875.
The assertion failure happens because in SQL layer the key
does not get promoted to PRIMARY KEY but InnoDB takes it
as PRIMARY KEY.

ANALYSIS:
Here we are trying to create an index on POINT (GEOMETRY)
data type which is a type of BLOB (since GEOMETRY is a
subclass of BLOB).
In general, we can't create an index over GEOMETRY family
type field unless we specify the length of the
keypart (similar to BLOB fields).
Only exception is the POINT field type. The POINT column
max size is 25. The problem is that the field is not treated
as PRIMARY KEY when we create a index on POINT column using
its max column size as key part prefix. The fix would allow
index on POINT column to be treated as PRIMARY KEY.

FIX:
Patch for Bug#16368875 is extended to take into account
GEOMETRY datatype, POINT in particular to consider it
as PRIMARY KEY in SQL layer.
2014-06-25 18:06:28 +05:30
e107c24f1c Bug#18776592 INNODB: FAILING ASSERTION: PRIMARY_KEY_NO == -1 ||
PRIMARY_KEY_NO == 0 

This bug is a backport of the following revision of 5.6 source tree:
# committer: Gopal Shankar <gopal.shankar@oracle.com>
# branch nick: priKey56
# timestamp: Wed 2013-05-29 11:11:46 +0530
# message:
#   Bug#16368875 INNODB: FAILING ASSERTION:
2014-06-25 09:50:17 +05:30
496abd0814 Updated/added copyright headers 2014-01-06 10:52:35 +05:30
d978016d93 Fix for Bug 16395495 - OLD FSF ADDRESS IN GPL HEADER 2013-03-19 15:53:48 +01:00
1f9561d2f2 merge 5.1 => 5.5 2012-03-27 14:55:29 +02:00
efc29bc531 Backport of fix for Bug#12763207 - ASSERT IN SUBSELECT::SINGLE_VALUE_TRANSFORMER 2012-03-27 14:39:27 +02:00
b6e6097c95 Updated/added copyright headers 2011-07-03 17:47:37 +02:00
1400d7a2cc Updated/added copyright headers 2011-06-30 17:37:13 +02:00
e5ce023f57 Updated/added copyright headers 2011-06-30 17:31:31 +02:00
25221cccd2 Fix for BUG#11755168 '46895: test "outfile_loaddata" fails (reproducible)'.
In sql_class.cc, 'row_count', of type 'ha_rows', was used as last argument for
ER_TRUNCATED_WRONG_VALUE_FOR_FIELD which is
"Incorrect %-.32s value: '%-.128s' for column '%.192s' at row %ld".
So 'ha_rows' was used as 'long'.
On SPARC32 Solaris builds, 'long' is 4 bytes and 'ha_rows' is 'longlong' i.e. 8 bytes.
So the printf-like code was reading only the first 4 bytes.
Because the CPU is big-endian, 1LL is 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x01
so the first four bytes yield 0. So the warning message had "row 0" instead of
"row 1" in test outfile_loaddata.test:
-Warning	1366	Incorrect string value: '\xE1\xE2\xF7' for column 'b' at row 1
+Warning	1366	Incorrect string value: '\xE1\xE2\xF7' for column 'b' at row 0

All error-messaging functions which internally invoke some printf-life function
are potential candidate for such mistakes.
One apparently easy way to catch such mistakes is to use
ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT (from my_attribute.h).
But this works only when call site has both:
a) the format as a string literal
b) the types of arguments.
So:
  func(ER(ER_BLAH), 10);
will silently not be checked, because ER(ER_BLAH) is not known at
compile time (it is known at run-time, and depends on the chosen
language).
And
  func("%s", a va_list argument);
has the same problem, as the *real* type of arguments is not
known at this site at compile time (it's known in some caller).
Moreover,
  func(ER(ER_BLAH));
though possibly correct (if ER(ER_BLAH) has no '%' markers), will not
compile (gcc says "error: format not a string literal and no format
arguments").

Consequences:
1) ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT is here added only to functions which in practice
take "string literal" formats: "my_error_reporter" and "print_admin_msg".
2) it cannot be added to the other functions: my_error(),
push_warning_printf(), Table_check_intact::report_error(),
general_log_print().

To do a one-time check of functions listed in (2), the following
"static code analysis" has been done:
1) replace
  my_error(ER_xxx, arguments for substitution in format)
with the equivalent
  my_printf_error(ER_xxx,ER(ER_xxx), arguments for substitution in
format),
so that we have ER(ER_xxx) and the arguments *in the same call site*
2) add ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT to push_warning_printf(),
Table_check_intact::report_error(), general_log_print()
3) replace ER(xxx) with the hard-coded English text found in
errmsg.txt (like: ER(ER_UNKNOWN_ERROR) is replaced with
"Unknown error"), so that a call site has the format as string literal
4) this way, ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT can effectively do its job
5) compile, fix errors detected by ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT
6) revert steps 1-2-3.
The present patch has no compiler error when submitted again to the
static code analysis above.
It cannot catch all problems though: see Field::set_warning(), in
which a call to push_warning_printf() has a variable error
(thus, not replacable by a string literal); I checked set_warning() calls
by hand though.

See also WL 5883 for one proposal to avoid such bugs from appearing
again in the future.

The issues fixed in the patch are:
a) mismatch in types (like 'int' passed to '%ld')
b) more arguments passed than specified in the format.
This patch resolves mismatches by changing the type/number of arguments,
not by changing error messages of sql/share/errmsg.txt. The latter would be wrong,
per the following old rule: errmsg.txt must be as stable as possible; no insertions
or deletions of messages, no changes of type or number of printf-like format specifiers,
are allowed, as long as the change impacts a message already released in a GA version.
If this rule is not followed:
- Connectors, which use error message numbers, will be confused (by insertions/deletions
of messages)
- using errmsg.sys of MySQL 5.1.n with mysqld of MySQL 5.1.(n+1)
could produce wrong messages or crash; such usage can easily happen if
installing 5.1.(n+1) while /etc/my.cnf still has --language=/path/to/5.1.n/xxx;
or if copying mysqld from 5.1.(n+1) into a 5.1.n installation.
When fixing b), I have verified that the superfluous arguments were not used in the format
in the first 5.1 GA (5.1.30 'bteam@astra04-20081114162938-z8mctjp6st27uobm').
Had they been used, then passing them today, even if the message doesn't use them
anymore, would have been necessary, as explained above.
2011-05-16 22:04:01 +02:00
0f03af653c Updated/added copyright headers 2011-07-04 01:25:49 +02:00
ad826d2221 BUG#12558519
Automerged bzr bundle from bug report into latest mysql-5.5.
2011-05-24 00:33:55 +01:00
d0f6fde3de BUG#12558519: RPL_TYPECONV PRODUCES VALGRIND STACK
In RBR and in case of converting blob fields, the space allocated
while unpacking into the conversion field was not freed after
copying from it into the real field.

We fix this by freeing the conversion field when the conversion
table is not needed anymore (on close_tables_to_lock).
2011-05-23 23:46:51 +01:00
27fa7876c8 merge from latest 5.5 2011-05-21 10:59:32 +02:00
12f651ac9d Merge from 5.1. 2011-05-21 10:21:08 +02:00
7b079a3a7e Merge 5.5 2011-04-15 15:46:11 +02:00
ab33d3ef2b Merge 2011-03-25 15:03:44 +01:00
3d8d672450 Bug#60111 storage type for table not saved in .frm
(aka BUG#11766883)
  - fix review comments
  - Rewrite last usage of handler::get_tablespace_name to use
    table->s->tablespace directly
  - Remove(revert) the addition of default implementation for
    handler::get_tablespace_name
  - Add comments describing the new TABLE_SHARE members default_storage_media
    and tablespace
  - Fix usage of incorrect mask for column_format bits, i.e COLUMN_FORMAT_MASK
2011-03-25 10:06:07 +01:00
f4c515ef53 Changed prefix from ES_ to STMT_ on Query arena state 2011-03-04 12:53:56 +01:00
6c85d65357 Bug#60111 storage type for table not saved in .frm
- Add new "format section" in extra data segment with additional table and
   column properties. This was originally introduced in 5.1.20 based MySQL Cluster
 - Remove hardcoded STORAGE DISK for table and instead
   output the real storage format used. Keep both TABLESPACE
   and STORAGE inside same version guard.
 - Implement default version of handler::get_tablespace_name() since tablespace
   is now available in share and it's unnecessary for each handler  to implement.
   (the function could actually be removed totally now).
 - Add test for combinations of TABLESPACE  and STORAGE with CREATE TABLE
   and ALTER TABLE
 - Add test to show that 5.5 now can read a .frm file created by MySQL Cluster
   7.0.22. Although it does not yet show the column level attributes, they are read.
2011-03-04 09:41:29 +01:00
77c0f33ee2 Fix for BUG#59894
"set optimizer_switch to e or d causes invalid memory writes/valgrind warnings":
due to prefix support, the argument "e" was overwritten with its full value
"engine_condition_pushdown", which caused a buffer overrun.
This was wrong usage of find_type(); other wrong usages are fixed here too.
Please start reading with the comment of typelib.c.
2011-02-11 15:00:09 +01:00
80179eba3e merge 2011-02-10 18:15:19 +01:00
c5e525f879 merge 2011-01-28 13:28:15 +01:00
fa8cdca34f Update of copyright headers for files I changed this year. 2011-01-27 23:47:24 +01:00
4e4081bb40 BUG#59549, fix compiler error on Windows, step 2 2011-01-20 18:24:48 +01:00
1a46e493dd Manual merge from 5.1 2011-01-10 15:08:31 +01:00
d4f8ffeeb6 Bug#56380: valgrind memory leak warning from partition tests
There could be memory leaks if ALTER ... PARTITION command fails.

Problem was that the list of items to free was not set in
the partition info structure when fix_partition_func call failed
during ALTER ... PARTITION.

Solved by always setting the list in the partition info struct.
2010-12-01 12:20:46 +01:00
378cdc58c1 Patch that refactors global read lock implementation and fixes
bug #57006 "Deadlock between HANDLER and FLUSH TABLES WITH READ
LOCK" and bug #54673 "It takes too long to get readlock for
'FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK'".

The first bug manifested itself as a deadlock which occurred
when a connection, which had some table open through HANDLER
statement, tried to update some data through DML statement
while another connection tried to execute FLUSH TABLES WITH
READ LOCK concurrently.

What happened was that FTWRL in the second connection managed
to perform first step of GRL acquisition and thus blocked all
upcoming DML. After that it started to wait for table open
through HANDLER statement to be flushed. When the first connection
tried to execute DML it has started to wait for GRL/the second
connection creating deadlock.

The second bug manifested itself as starvation of FLUSH TABLES
WITH READ LOCK statements in cases when there was a constant
stream of concurrent DML statements (in two or more
connections).

This has happened because requests for protection against GRL
which were acquired by DML statements were ignoring presence of
pending GRL and thus the latter was starved.

This patch solves both these problems by re-implementing GRL
using metadata locks.

Similar to the old implementation acquisition of GRL in new
implementation is two-step. During the first step we block
all concurrent DML and DDL statements by acquiring global S
metadata lock (each DML and DDL statement acquires global IX
lock for its duration). During the second step we block commits
by acquiring global S lock in COMMIT namespace (commit code
acquires global IX lock in this namespace).

Note that unlike in old implementation acquisition of
protection against GRL in DML and DDL is semi-automatic.
We assume that any statement which should be blocked by GRL
will either open and acquires write-lock on tables or acquires
metadata locks on objects it is going to modify. For any such
statement global IX metadata lock is automatically acquired
for its duration.

The first problem is solved because waits for GRL become
visible to deadlock detector in metadata locking subsystem
and thus deadlocks like one in the first bug become impossible.

The second problem is solved because global S locks which
are used for GRL implementation are given preference over
IX locks which are acquired by concurrent DML (and we can
switch to fair scheduling in future if needed).

Important change:
FTWRL/GRL no longer blocks DML and DDL on temporary tables.
Before this patch behavior was not consistent in this respect:
in some cases DML/DDL statements on temporary tables were
blocked while in others they were not. Since the main use cases
for FTWRL are various forms of backups and temporary tables are
not preserved during backups we have opted for consistently
allowing DML/DDL on temporary tables during FTWRL/GRL.

Important change:
This patch changes thread state names which are used when
DML/DDL of FTWRL is waiting for global read lock. It is now
either "Waiting for global read lock" or "Waiting for commit
lock" depending on the stage on which FTWRL is.

Incompatible change:
To solve deadlock in events code which was exposed by this
patch we have to replace LOCK_event_metadata mutex with
metadata locks on events. As result we have to prohibit
DDL on events under LOCK TABLES.

This patch also adds extensive test coverage for interaction
of DML/DDL and FTWRL.

Performance of new and old global read lock implementations
in sysbench tests were compared. There were no significant
difference between new and old implementations.
2010-11-11 20:11:05 +03:00
dd2e3db48f merge 2010-10-04 15:42:16 +03:00
0ac0817348 Manual merge of bug#51851 from mysql-5.1-bugteam into mysql-5.5-bugteam 2010-10-01 14:16:00 +02:00
a01773dbee Bug#51851: Server with SBR locks mutex twice on
LOAD DATA into partitioned MyISAM table

Problem was that both partitioning and myisam
used the same table_share->mutex for different protections
(auto inc and repair).

Solved by adding a specific mutex for the partitioning
auto_increment.

Also adding destroying the ha_data structure in
free_table_share (which is to be propagated
into 5.5).

This is a 5.1 ONLY patch, already fixed in 5.5+.
2010-10-01 13:39:04 +02:00
8322cad015 Reverted a temporary workaround for bug #56405 "Deadlock
in the MDL deadlock detector".

It is no longer needed as a better fix for this bug has
been pushed.
2010-09-30 17:29:12 +04:00
a53f61e6e8 Merge from mysql-5.5-bugteam to mysql-5.5-runtime 2010-09-30 12:43:43 +02:00
dc0b8f7ada merge of mysql-5.5 into mysql-5.5-wl1054 2010-09-20 17:17:32 +03:00
ac35157899 A temporary workaround for bug #56405 "Deadlock in the
MDL deadlock detector".

Deadlock could have occurred when workload containing mix
of DML, DDL and FLUSH TABLES statements affecting same
set of tables was executed in heavily concurrent environment.

This deadlock occurred when several connections tried to
perform deadlock detection in metadata locking subsystem.
The first connection started traversing wait-for graph,
encountered sub-graph representing wait for flush, acquired
LOCK_open and dived into sub-graph inspection. When it has
encounterd sub-graph corresponding to wait for metadata lock
and blocked while trying to acquire rd-lock on
MDL_lock::m_rwlock (*) protecting this subgraph, since some
other thread had wr-lock on it. When this wr-lock was released
it could have happened (if there was other pending wr-lock
against this rwlock) that rd-lock from the first connection
was left unsatisfied but at the same time new rd-lock request
from the second connection sneaked in and was satisfied (for
this to be possible second rd- request should come exactly
after wr-lock is released but before pending wr-lock manages
to grab rwlock, which is possible both on Linux and in our
own rwlock implementation). If this second connection
continued traversing wait-for graph and encountered sub-graph
representing wait for flush it tried to acquire LOCK_open
and thus deadlock was created.

This patch tries to workaround this problem but not allowing
deadlock detector to lock LOCK_open mutex if some other thread
doing deadlock detection already owns it and current search
depth is greater than 0. Instead deadlock is reported.

Other possible solutions are either known to have negative
effects on performance or require much more time for proper
implementation and testing.

No test case is provided as this bug is very hard to repeat
in MTR environment but is repeatable with the help of RQG
tests.
2010-09-06 21:29:02 +04:00
a92ca267e0 Fix TABLE::init() comment. 2010-08-31 13:49:48 +04:00
0142c14a6b Bug#27480 (Extend CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES privilege
to allow temp table operations) -- prerequisite patch #1.
  
Move a piece of code that initialiazes TABLE instance
after it was successfully opened into a separate function.
This function will be reused in the following patches.
2010-08-27 12:39:01 +04:00
8673d2b20f Commit on behalf of Dmitry Lenev.
Merge his patch for Bug#52044 into 5.5, and apply 
review comments.
2010-08-12 17:50:23 +04:00
881a76699e WL#1054: Pluggable authentication support
Merged the implementation to a new base tree.
2010-08-09 11:32:50 +03:00
dfc63866eb Auto-merge from mysql-trunk-merge. 2010-07-29 16:32:11 +04:00
5fff906edd Fix for bug #52044 "FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK and FLUSH
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.
2010-07-27 17:34:58 +04:00
60ab2b9283 WL#5498: Remove dead and unused source code
Remove unused macros or macro which are always defined.
2010-07-23 17:16:29 -03:00
6c15f6718f Merge of mysql-5.1-bugteam into mysql-trunk-merge. 2010-07-20 16:30:10 -03:00
c96b249fc3 Bug#45288: pb2 returns a lot of compilation warnings on linux
Fix warnings flagged by the new warning option -Wunused-but-set-variable
that was added to GCC 4.6 and that is enabled by -Wunused and -Wall. The
option causes a warning whenever a local variable is assigned to but is
later unused. It also warns about meaningless pointer dereferences.
2010-07-20 15:07:36 -03:00
a10ae35328 Bug#34043: Server loops excessively in _checkchunk() when safemalloc is enabled
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.
2010-07-08 18:20:08 -03:00
da4d23277f Bug #30584: delete with order by and limit clauses does not
use limit efficiently
Bug #36569: UPDATE ... WHERE ... ORDER BY... always does a
            filesort even if not required

Also two bugs reported after QA review (before the commit
of bugs above to public trees, no documentation needed):

Bug #53737: Performance regressions after applying patch
            for bug 36569
Bug #53742: UPDATEs have no effect after applying patch
            for bug 36569


Execution of single-table UPDATE and DELETE statements did not use the 
same optimizer as was used in the compilation of SELECT statements. 
Instead, it had an optimizer of its own that did not take into account 
that you can omit sorting by retrieving rows using an index.

Extra optimization has been added: when applicable, single-table 
UPDATE/DELETE statements use an existing index instead of filesort. A 
corresponding SELECT query would do the former.

Also handling of the DESC ordering expression has been added when
reverse index scan is applicable.

From now on most single table UPDATE and DELETE statements show the 
same disk access patterns as the corresponding SELECT query. We verify 
this by comparing the result of SHOW STATUS LIKE 'Sort%

Currently the get_index_for_order function 
a) checks quick select index (if any) for compatibility with the
   ORDER expression list or
b) chooses the cheapest available compatible index, but only if 
   the index scan is cheaper than filesort.
Second way is implemented by the new test_if_cheaper_ordering
function (extracted part the test_if_skip_sort_order()).
2010-06-23 00:32:29 +04:00
484351d108 Merge trunk-bugfixing -> trunk-runtime 2010-06-17 17:31:51 +04:00
d6e003545a Merge of mysql-5.1-bugteam into mysql-trunk-merge. 2010-06-10 22:30:49 -03:00