- Adding optional qualifiers to data types:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a schema.DATE);
Qualifiers now work only for three pre-defined schemas:
mariadb_schema
oracle_schema
maxdb_schema
These schemas are virtual (hard-coded) for now, but may turn into real
databases on disk in the future.
- mariadb_schema.TYPE now always resolves to a true MariaDB data
type TYPE without sql_mode specific translations.
- oracle_schema.DATE translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- maxdb_schema.TIMESTAMP translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- Fixing SHOW CREATE TABLE to use a qualifier for a data type TYPE
if the current sql_mode translates TYPE to something else.
The above changes fix the reported problem, so this script:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_date_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_date_column mariadb_schema.DATE);
and the slave can unambiguously treat DATE as the true MariaDB DATE
without ORACLE specific translation to DATETIME.
Similar,
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_timestamp_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_timestamp_column mariadb_schema.TIMESTAMP);
so the slave treats TIMESTAMP as the true MariaDB TIMESTAMP
without MAXDB specific translation to DATETIME.
Problem:
========
During point in time recovery of binary log syntax error is reported for
BEGIN statement and recovery fails.
Analysis:
=========
In MariaDB 10.3 and later, setting the sql_mode system variable to Oracle
allows the server to understand a subset of Oracle's PL/SQL language. When
sql_mode=ORACLE is set, it switches the parser from the MariaDB parser to
Oracle compatible parser. With this change 'BEGIN' is not considered as
'START TRANSACTION'. Hence the syntax error is reported.
Fix:
===
At preset 'BEGIN' query is generated from 'Gtid_log_event::print'. The current
session specific 'sql_mode' information is not present as part of
'Gtid_log_event'. If it was available then, mysqlbinlog tool can make use of
'sql_mode == ORACLE' and can output "START TRANSACTION" in this particular
mode and for other sql_modes it will write "BEGIN" as part of output. Since it
is not available 'mysqlbinlog' tool will output all 'BEGIN' statements as
'START TRANSACTION' irrespective of 'sql_mode'.
When backpatching a forward GOTO label, the old code erroneously
used CURSOR/HANDLER difference between context frames "c" and "a" to tune
a cpop/hpop command. So the cpop/hpop command later tried to pop
all cursors/handlers declared between "a" and "c", but those between
"b" and "c" were not cpushed/hpoped yet during the execution of "GOTO x".
Fixing the code to use the difference between frames "b" and "a" only.
BEGIN -- a
...
GOTO x; -- b
...
<<x>> -- c
...
END -- d
In collaboration with Sergey Vojtovich <svoj@mariadb.org>
The COMPRESSED clause is now a part of the data type and goes immediately
after the data type and length, but before the CHARACTER SET clause,
and before column attributes such as DEFAULT, COLLATE, ON UPDATE,
SYSTEM VERSIONING, engine specific column attributes.
In the old reduction, the COMPRESSED clause was a column attribute.
New syntax:
<varchar or text data type> <length> <compression> <character set> <column attributes>
<varbinary or blob data type> <length> <compression> <column attributes>
New syntax examples:
VARCHAR(1000) COMPRESSED CHARACTER SET latin1 DEFAULT ''
BLOB COMPRESSED DEFAULT ''
Deprecate syntax examples:
VARCHAR(1000) CHARACTER SET latin1 COMPRESSED DEFAULT ''
TEXT CHARACTER SET latin1 DEFAULT '' COMPRESSED
VARBINARY(1000) DEFAULT '' COMPRESSED
As a side effect:
- COMPRESSED is not valid as an SP label name in SQL/PSM routines any more
(but it's still valid as an SP label name in sql_mode=ORACLE)
- COMPRESSED is now allowed in combination with GENERATED ALWAYS AS:
TEXT COMPRESSED GENERATED ALWAYS AS REPEAT('a',1000)
This patch includes:
- MDEV-19639 sql_mode=ORACLE: Wrong SHOW PROCEDURE output for sysvar:=expr
- MDEV-19640 Wrong SHOW PROCEDURE output for SET GLOBAL sysvar1=expr, sysvar2=expr
- Preparatory refactoring for MySQL WL#4179
Detailed change list:
1. Changing sp_create_assignment_lex() to accept the position
in the exact query buffer instead of a "bool no_lookahead".
This actually fixes MDEV-19639.
In the previous reduction sp_create_assignment_lex() was
called too late, when the parser went far the from beginning
of the statement, so only a part of the statement got into
sp_instr_stmt.
2. Generating "SET" or "SET GLOBAL" inside sp_create_assignment_instr()
depending on the option type.
This fixes MDEV-19640.
In the previous reduction the code passed (through no_lookahead)
the position of the
word GLOBAL inside sp_create_assignment_lex(), which
worked only for the left-most assignment.
3. Fixing the affected rules to use:
- ident_cli instead of ident
- ident_cli_set_usual_case instead of ident_set_usual_case
4. Changing the input parameter in:
- LEX::set_system_variable()
- LEX::call_statement_start()
- LEX::set_variable()
from just LEX_CSTRING to Lex_ident_sys_st for stricter data type constrol:
to make sure that noone passes an ident_cli
(a fragment of the original query in the client character set)
instead of server-side identifier
(utf8 identifier allocated on THD when needed).
5. Adding Lex_ident_sys() in places where the affected functions are called.
6. Moving all calls of sp_create_assignment_lex() to the places
just before parsing set_expr_or_default.
This makes the grammar clearer, because
sp_create_assignment_lex() and sp_create_assignment_instr()
now stay near each other, so the balance of LEX's push/pop
can be read easier.
This will also help to WL#4179.
7. Adding class sp_lex_set_var
Moving the initialization code from
sp_create_assignment_lex() to the constructor of sp_lex_set_var.
This will also help to WL#4179.
8. Moving a part of the "set" grammar rule into a separate
rule "set_param".
This makes the grammar easier to read and removes
one shift/reduce conflict.
query with VALUES()
A table value constructor can be used in all contexts where a select
can be used. In particular an ORDER BY clause or a LIMIT clause or both
of them can be attached to a table value constructor to produce a new
query. Unfortunately execution of such queries was not supported.
This patch fixes the problem.
This patch was originally made by Anel Husakovic.
Skip `PACKAGE` and `PACKAGE BODY` records quickly.
These stored objects do not have any parameters or return values
(only procedures and functions have).
So no needs to build a `CREATE` statement
(in `Sp_handler::sp_load_for_information_schema()`) and parse it:
this won't give us any data useful for `INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARAMETERS`.
Part#2 (final): rewritting the code to pass the correct enum_sp_aggregate_type
to the sp_head constructor, so sp_head never changes its aggregation type
later on. The grammar has been simplified and defragmented.
This allowed to check aggregate specific instructions right after
a routine body has been scanned, by calling new LEX methods:
sp_body_finalize_{procedure|function|trigger|event}()
Moving some C++ code from *.yy to a few new helper methods in LEX.
sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct::exec_core() created TYPELIBs on a wrong mem_root,
the one which is initialized in sp_head::execute(), this code:
/* init per-instruction memroot */
init_sql_alloc(&execute_mem_root, "per_instruction_memroot",
MEM_ROOT_BLOCK_SIZE, 0, MYF(0));
This memory root cleans up after every sp_instr_xxx executed, so later
sp_instr_cfetch::execute() tried to use already freed and trashed memory.
Changing sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct::exec_core() to call tmp.export_structure()
inside this block (not outside of it):
thd->set_n_backup_active_arena(thd->spcont->callers_arena, ¤t_arena);
...
thd->restore_active_arena(thd->spcont->callers_arena, ¤t_arena);
So now TYPELIBs created by sp_instr_cursor_copy_struct::exec_core() are
still available and valid when sp_instr_cfetch::execute() is called.
They are freed at the end of dispatch_command() corresponding to
the "CALL p1" statement.