BREAKS RBR
Analysis:
--------
A table created using a query of the format:
CREATE TABLE t1 AS SELECT REPEAT('A',1000) DIV 1 AS a;
breaks the Row Based Replication.
The query above creates a table having a field of datatype
'bigint' with a display width of 3000 which is beyond the
maximum acceptable value of 255.
In the RBR mode, CREATE TABLE SELECT statement is
replicated as a combination of CREATE TABLE statement
equivalent to one the returned by SHOW CREATE TABLE and
row events for rows inserted. When this CREATE TABLE event
is executed on the slave, an error is reported:
Display width out of range for column 'a' (max = 255)
The following is the output of 'SHOW CREATE TABLE t1':
CREATE TABLE t1(`a` bigint(3000) DEFAULT NULL)
ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
The problem is due to the combination of two facts:
1) The above CREATE TABLE SELECT statement uses the display
width of the result of DIV operation as the display width
of the column created without validating the width for out
of bound condition.
2) The DIV operation incorrectly returns the length of its first
argument as the display width of its result; thus allowing
creation of a table with an incorrect display width of 3000
for the field.
Fix:
----
This fix changes the DIV operation implementation to correctly
evaluate the display width of its result. We check if DIV's
results estimated width crosses maximum width for integer
value (21) and if yes set it to this maximum value.
This patch also fixes fixes maximum display width evaluation
for DIV function when its first argument is in UCS2.
BREAKS RBR
Analysis:
--------
A table created using a query of the format:
CREATE TABLE t1 AS SELECT REPEAT('A',1000) DIV 1 AS a;
breaks the Row Based Replication.
The query above creates a table having a field of datatype
'bigint' with a display width of 3000 which is beyond the
maximum acceptable value of 255.
In the RBR mode, CREATE TABLE SELECT statement is
replicated as a combination of CREATE TABLE statement
equivalent to one the returned by SHOW CREATE TABLE and
row events for rows inserted. When this CREATE TABLE event
is executed on the slave, an error is reported:
Display width out of range for column 'a' (max = 255)
The following is the output of 'SHOW CREATE TABLE t1':
CREATE TABLE t1(`a` bigint(3000) DEFAULT NULL)
ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
The problem is due to the combination of two facts:
1) The above CREATE TABLE SELECT statement uses the display
width of the result of DIV operation as the display width
of the column created without validating the width for out
of bound condition.
2) The DIV operation incorrectly returns the length of its first
argument as the display width of its result; thus allowing
creation of a table with an incorrect display width of 3000
for the field.
Fix:
----
This fix changes the DIV operation implementation to correctly
evaluate the display width of its result. We check if DIV's
results estimated width crosses maximum width for integer
value (21) and if yes set it to this maximum value.
This patch also fixes fixes maximum display width evaluation
for DIV function when its first argument is in UCS2.
This is port of fix for MySQL BUG#17647863.
revno: 5572
revision-id: jon.hauglid@oracle.com-20131030232243-b0pw98oy72uka2sj
committer: Jon Olav Hauglid <jon.hauglid@oracle.com>
timestamp: Thu 2013-10-31 00:22:43 +0100
message:
Bug#17647863: MYSQL DOES NOT COMPILE ON OSX 10.9 GM
Rename test() macro to MY_TEST() to avoid conflict with libc++.
MDEV-4984: Implement MASTER_GTID_WAIT() and @@LAST_GTID.
MDEV-4726: Race in mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_gtid_stop_start.test
MDEV-5636: Deadlock in RESET MASTER
MASTER_GTID_WAIT() is similar to MASTER_POS_WAIT(), but works with a
GTID position rather than an old-style filename/offset.
@@LAST_GTID gives the GTID assigned to the last transaction written
into the binlog.
Together, the two can be used by applications to obtain the GTID of
an update on the master, and then do a MASTER_GTID_WAIT() for that
position on any read slave where it is important to get results that
are caught up with the master at least to the point of the update.
The implementation of MASTER_GTID_WAIT() is implemented in a way
that tries to minimise the performance impact on the SQL threads,
even in the presense of many waiters on single GTID positions (as
from @@LAST_GTID).
Update InnoDB to 5.6.14
Apply MySQL-5.6 hack for MySQL Bug#16434374
Move Aria-only HA_RTREE_INDEX from my_base.h to maria_def.h (breaks an assert in InnoDB)
Fix InnoDB memory leak
fix the code to compile with clang. fix warnings too.
include/probes_mysql_nodtrace.h:
clang++ doesn't like numeric _constants_ being used in ||
(it suspects that the intention was | ). Boolean constants are ok.
sql/hostname.cc:
only used in DBUG_ASSERT
sql/item.cc:
str_to_time and str_to_datetime return bool, not MYSQL_TIMESTAMP_xxx
sql/item_func.cc:
str_to_datetime_with_warn() returns bool, not MYSQL_TIMESTAMP_xxx
storage/cassandra/CMakeLists.txt:
CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS can be empty
storage/connect/odbconn.cpp:
HWND is void*
storage/connect/user_connect.h:
deprecated on FreeBSD and unused anyway
storage/connect/value.cpp:
bad characters inside. unused.
storage/spider/spd_trx.cc:
clang++ warns that memset will also overwrite vtbl. it might be as well a good idea,
as it asserts that the object will only be used as a storage.
silence the warning.
The bug caused a memory overwrite in the function update_ref_and_keys()
It happened due to a wrong value of SELECT_LEX::cond_count. This value
historically was calculated by the fix_fields method. Now the logic of
calling this method became too complicated and, as a result, this value
is calculated not always correctly.
The patch changes the way how and when the values of SELECT_LEX::cond_count
and of SELECT_LEX::between_count are calculated. The new code does it just at
the beginning of update_ref_and_keys().
Other fix of maybe_null problem and revert of revno: 3608 "MDEV-3873 & MDEV-3876 & MDEV-3912 : Wrong result (extra rows) with ALL subquery from a MERGE view."
includes:
* remove some remnants of "Bug#14521864: MYSQL 5.1 TO 5.5 BUGS PARTITIONING"
* introduce LOCK_share, now LOCK_ha_data is strictly for engines
* rea_create_table() always creates .par file (even in "frm-only" mode)
* fix a 5.6 bug, temp file leak on dummy ALTER TABLE
Cleanup: remove TIME_FUZZY_DATE.
Introduce TIME_FUZZY_DATES which means "very fuzzy, the resulting
value is only used for comparison. It can be invalid date, fine, as long as it can be
compared".
Updated many tests results (they're better now).
Item_func_min_max::get_date() did not check the
returned value against the fuzzy_date flags, so
it could return a bad value to the caller that
expects a good date (e.h. CONVERT_TZ).
modified:
mysql-test/r/type_date.result
mysql-test/r/type_datetime.result
mysql-test/r/type_time.result
mysql-test/t/type_date.test
mysql-test/t/type_datetime.test
mysql-test/t/type_time.test
sql/item_func.cc
sql/item_timefunc.cc
sql/mysql_priv.h
sql/time.cc