CREATE TABLE bug13510739 (c INTEGER NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (c)) ENGINE=INNODB;
INSERT INTO bug13510739 VALUES (1), (2), (3), (4);
DELETE FROM bug13510739 WHERE c=2;
HANDLER bug13510739 OPEN;
HANDLER bug13510739 READ `primary` = (2);
HANDLER bug13510739 READ `primary` NEXT; <-- crash
The bug is that in the particular testcase row_search_for_mysql() picked up
a delete-marked record and quit, leaving the cursor non-positioned state and
on the subsequent 'get next' call the code crashed because of the
non-positioned cursor.
In row0sel.cc (line numbers from mysql-trunk):
4653 if (rec_get_deleted_flag(rec, comp)) {
...
4679 if (index == clust_index && unique_search) {
4680
4681 err = DB_RECORD_NOT_FOUND;
4682
4683 goto normal_return;
4684 }
it quit from here, not storing the cursor position.
In contrast, if the record=2 is not found at all (e.g. sleep(1) after DELETE
to let the purge wipe it away completely) then 'get = 2' does find record=3
and quits from here:
4366 if (0 != cmp_dtuple_rec(search_tuple, rec, offsets)) {
...
4394 btr_pcur_store_position(pcur, &mtr);
4395
4396 err = DB_RECORD_NOT_FOUND;
4397 #if 0
4398 ut_print_name(stderr, trx, FALSE, index->name);
4399 fputs(" record not found 3\n", stderr);
4400 #endif
4401
4402 goto normal_return;
Another fix could be to extend the condition on line 4366 to hold only if
seach_tuple matches rec AND if rec is not delete marked.
Notice that in the above test case if we wait about 1 second somewhere after
DELETE and before 'get = 2', then the testcase does not crash and returns 4
instead. Not sure if this is the correct behavior, but this bugfix removes
the crash and makes the code return what it also returns in the non-crashing
case (if rec=2 is not found during 'get = 2', e.g. we have sleep(1) there).
Approved by: Marko (http://bur03.no.oracle.com/rb/r/863/)
The counter handler_read_key (SSV::ha_read_key_count) is incremented
incorrectly.
The mysql server maintains a per thread system_status_var (SSV)
object. This object contains among other things the counter
SSV::ha_read_key_count. The purpose of this counter is to measure the
number of requests to read a row based on a key (or the number of
index lookups).
This counter was wrongly incremented in the
ha_innobase::innobase_get_index(). The fix removes
this increment statement (for both innodb and innodb_plugin).
The various callers of the innobase_get_index() was checked to
determine if anybody must increment this counter (if they first call
innobase_get_index() and then perform an index lookup). It was found
that no caller of innobase_get_index() needs to worry about the
SSV::ha_read_key_count counter.
WITH LARGE BUFFER POOL
(Note: this a backport of revno:3472 from mysql-trunk)
rb://845
approved by: Marko
When dropping a table (with an .ibd file i.e.: with
innodb_file_per_table set) we scan entire LRU to invalidate pages from
that table. This can be painful in case of large buffer pools as we hold
the buf_pool->mutex for the scan. Note that gravity of the problem does
not depend on the size of the table. Even with an empty table but a
large and filled up buffer pool we'll end up scanning a very long LRU
list.
The fix is to scan flush_list and just remove the blocks belonging to
the table from the flush_list, marking them as non-dirty. The blocks
are left in the LRU list for eventual eviction due to aging. The
flush_list is typically much smaller than the LRU list but for cases
where it is very long we have the solution of releasing the
buf_pool->mutex after scanning 1K pages.
buf_page_[set|unset]_sticky(): Use new IO-state BUF_IO_PIN to ensure
that a block stays in the flush_list and LRU list when we release
buf_pool->mutex. Previously we have been abusing BUF_IO_READ to achieve
this.
client/mysqltest.cc:
Free mutex after usage (fixes valgrind warnings in embedded server)
mysql-test/include/gis_keys.inc:
Fixed failure in innodb.gis_test
mysql-test/r/gis.result:
Updated result
mysql-test/suite/innodb/r/innodb_gis.result:
Updated results
mysql-test/suite/innodb/t/innodb_bug38231.test:
Added handling of timeouts (happend on some servers in buildbot)
mysql-test/suite/innodb_plugin/r/innodb_gis.result:
Updated results
mysql-test/suite/innodb_plugin/t/innodb.test:
Use error names instead of numbers
mysql-test/suite/innodb_plugin/t/innodb_misc1.test:
This test requires utf8
mysql-test/suite/innodb_plugin/t/innodb_mysql.test:
This test requires Xtradb
sql/sql_base.cc:
Don't print table names for placeholders.
sql/sql_show.cc:
Temporary fix:
Save and restore db and table_name in mysqld_show_create (to get rid of valgrind warning)
A better solution that needs to be investgated is to not change these fields in mysql_derived_prepare()
sql/sql_view.cc:
Fixed valgrind warning
storage/xtradb/handler/ha_innodb.cc:
Don't access THD directly
1. main.merge fails with errno 13 in copy_file().
The reason for the error is that copy_file tries to create a file with the same name as recently deleted one,
and there is still an open handle for the deleted file.
To fix, use my_delete_allow_opened() for MTR's delete_file. On Windows, this renames file to unique name
prior to deletion, and prevents EACCES errors for files opened with FILE_SHARE_DELETE.
2. innodb_bug59641
generates warnings, after server was killed and restarted in the test case.
The warnings are about test_suppression table (needs to be repaired, as it that was written just prior to the crash)
Fixed by using FLUSH TABLES after populating warning suppression table.
The bug was accidentally fixed by fixing
Bug#11759688 52020: InnoDB can still deadlock on just INSERT...ON DUPLICATE KEY
a.k.a. the reintroduction of
Bug#7975 deadlock without any locking, simple select and update
a.k.a. Bug#7975 deadlock without any locking, simple select and update
Bug#7975 was reintroduced when the storage engine API was made
pluggable in MySQL 5.1. Instead of looking at thd->lex directly, we
rely on handler::extra(). But, we were looking at the wrong extra()
flag, and we were ignoring the TRX_DUP_REPLACE flag in places where we
should obey it.
innodb_replace.test: Add tests for hopefully all affected statement
types, so that bug should never ever resurface. This kind of tests
should have been added when fixing Bug#7975 in MySQL 5.0.3 in the
first place.
rb:806 approved by Sunny Bains
In the ON UPDATE CASCADE clause of FOREIGN KEY constraints, the
calculated update vector was not fully initialized. This bug was
introduced in the InnoDB Plugin when implementing support for
ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC.
Additionally, the data type information was not initialized, but
apparently it has never been needed in this case. Nevertheless, it is
not good programming practice to pass uninitialized values around.
calc_row_difference(): Declare the update field uninitialized in
Valgrind. Copy the data type information as well, except when the
field is SQL NULL. In the built-in InnoDB, initialize
ufield->extern_storage = FALSE (an initialization bug that had gone
unnoticed this far). The InnoDB Plugin and later have this flag to
dfield_t and have always initialized it properly.
row_ins_cascade_calc_update_vec(): Reduce the scope of some
pointers. Initialize orig_len. (This caused the bug in InnoDB Plugin
and later.)
row_ins_foreign_check_on_constraint(): Simplify a condition. Declare
the update vector uninitialized.
rb:771 approved by Jimmy Yang
PARENT FOR OTHER ONE
Do not try to lookup key_nr'th key in 'table' because there may not be such
a key there. key_nr is the number of the key in the _child_ table name, not
in the parent table.
Instead just print the fields of the record that are covered by the first key
defined on the parent table.
This bug gets a better fix in MySQL 5.6, which is too risky for 5.1 and 5.5.
Approved by: Jon Olav Hauglid (via IM)
sql/sql_insert.cc:
CREATE ... IF NOT EXISTS may do nothing, but
it is still not a failure. don't forget to my_ok it.
******
CREATE ... IF NOT EXISTS may do nothing, but
it is still not a failure. don't forget to my_ok it.
sql/sql_table.cc:
small cleanup
******
small cleanup
This is a redo for 5.5
Added 'innodb_file_format_max' as variable to ignore change to.
Tests that had to restore this amended
Two tests assumed it to be Antelope, make sure these run on a freshly
started server
The problem occurred when indexes are added between the time that an
UNDO record is created and the time that the purge thread comes around
and deletes the old secondary index entries. The purge thread would
hit an assert when trying to build a secondary index entry for
searching. The problem was that the old value of those fields were not
in the UNDO record since they were not part of an index when the UPDATE
occured.
A test case was added to innodb-index.test.
This fix was accidentally pushed to mysql-5.1 after the 5.1.59 clone-off in
bzr revision id marko.makela@oracle.com-20110829081642-z0w992a0mrc62s6w
with the fix of Bug#12704861 Corruption after a crash during BLOB update
but not merged to mysql-5.5 and upwards.
In the Barracuda formats, the clustered index record no longer
contains a prefix of off-page columns. Because of this, the undo log
must contain these prefixes, so that purge and multi-versioning will
continue to work. However, this also means that an undo log record can
become too big to fit in an undo log page. (It is a limitation of the
undo log that undo records cannot span across multiple pages.)
In case the checks for undo log size fail when CREATE TABLE or CREATE
INDEX is executed, we need a fallback that blocks a modification
operation when the undo log record would exceed the maximum size.
trx_undo_free_last_page_func(): Renamed from trx_undo_free_page_in_rollback().
Define the trx_t parameter only in debug builds.
trx_undo_free_last_page(): Wrapper for trx_undo_free_last_page_func().
Pass the trx_t parameter only in debug builds.
trx_undo_truncate_end_func(): Renamed from trx_undo_truncate_end().
Define the trx_t parameter only in debug builds. Rewrite a for(;;) loop
as a while loop for clarity.
trx_undo_truncate_end(): Wrapper for from trx_undo_truncate_end_func().
Pass the trx_t parameter only in debug builds.
trx_undo_erase_page_end(): Return TRUE if the page was non-empty
to begin with. Refuse to erase empty pages.
trx_undo_report_row_operation(): If the page for which the undo log
was too big was empty, free the undo page and return DB_TOO_BIG_RECORD.
rb:749 approved by Inaam Rana
Also addressed issues in bug #11745133, where we could mark a table
corrupted instead of crashing the server when found a corrupted buffer/page
if the table created with innodb_file_per_table on.
Bug#12637786 was fixed with rb:692 by marko. But that fix has a remaining
bug. It added this assert;
ut_ad(ind_field->prefix_len);
before a section of code that assumes there is a prefix_len.
The patch replaced code that explicitly avoided this with a check for
prefix_len. It turns out that the purge thread can get to that assert
without a prefix_len because it does not use a row_ext_t* .
When UNIV_DEBUG is not defined, the affect of this is that the purge thread
sets the dfield->len to zero and then cannot find the entry in the index to
purge. So secondary index entries remain unpurged.
This patch does not do the assert. Instead, it uses
'if (ind_field->prefix_len) {...}'
around the section of code that assumes a prefix_len. This is the way the
patch I provided to Marko did it.
The test case is simply modified to do a sleep(10) in order to give the
purge thread a chance to run. Without the code change to row0row.c, this
modified testcase will assert if InnoDB was compiled with UNIV_DEBUG.
I tried to sleep(5), but it did not always assert.