for ALTER TABLE + MERGE tables
The patch for Bug#56292 changed how metadata locks are taken for MERGE
tables. After the patch, locking the MERGE table will also lock the
children tables with the same metadata lock type. This means that
LOCK TABLES on a MERGE table also will implicitly do LOCK TABLES on
the children tables.
A consequence of this change, is that it is possible to do LOCK TABLES
on a child table both explicitly and implicitly with the same statement
and that these two locks can be of different strength. For example,
LOCK TABLES child READ, merge WRITE.
In LOCK TABLES mode, we are not allowed to take new locks and each
statement must therefore try to find an existing TABLE instance with
a suitable lock. The code that searched for a suitable TABLE instance,
only considered table level locks. If a child table was locked twice,
it was therefore possible for this code to find a TABLE instance with
suitable table level locks but without suitable metadata lock.
This problem caused the assert in upgrade_shared_lock_to_exclusive()
to be triggered as it tried to upgrade a MDL_SHARED lock to
EXCLUSIVE. The problem was a regression caused by the patch for
Bug#56292.
This patch fixes the problem by partially reverting the changes
done by Bug#56292. Now, the children tables will only use the
same metadata lock as the MERGE table for MDL_SHARED_NO_WRITE
when not in locked tables mode. This means that LOCK TABLE
on a MERGE table will not implicitly lock the children tables.
This still fixes the original problem in Bug#56292 without
causing a regression.
Test case added to merge.test.
This assert was triggered if DELETE was done on a view that
referenced another view which in turn (directly or indirectly)
referenced more than one table.
Delete from a view referencing more than one table (a join view)
is not supported and is supposed to give ER_VIEW_DELETE_MERGE_VIEW
error. Before this error was reported from the multi table
delete code, an assert verified that the view from the DELETE statement
had more than one underlying table. However, this assert did not take
into account that the view could refer to another view which in turn
referenced the actual tables.
This patch fixes the problem by adjusting the assert to take this
possibility into account. This problem was only noticeable on debug
builds of the server. On release builds, ER_VIEW_DELETE_MERGE_VIEW
was correctly reported.
Test case added to delete.test.
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+.
Bug#57113: ha_partition::extra(ha_extra_function):
Assertion `m_extra_cache' failed
Fix for bug#55458 included DBUG_ASSERTS causing
debug builds of the server to crash on
another multi-table update.
Removed the asserts since they where wrong.
(updated after testing the patch in 5.5).
mysql-test/r/partition.result:
updated result
mysql-test/t/partition.test:
Added test for bug#57113
sql/ha_partition.cc:
Removed the assert for m_extra_cache when
::extra(HA_PREPARE_FOR_UPDATE) was called.
This crash occured if the same debug trace file was closed twice,
leading to the same memory being free'd twice. This could occur
if the "debug" server system variable refered to the same trace
file in both global and session scope.
Example of an order of events that would lead to a crash:
1) Enable debug tracing to a trace file (global scope)
2) Enable debug tracing to the same trace file (session scope)
3) Reset debug settings (global scope)
4) Reset debug settings (session scope)
This caused a crash because the trace file was, by mistake, closed
in 3), leading to the same memory being free'd twice when the file
was closed again in 4).
Internally, the debug settings are stored in a stack, with session
settings (if any) on top and the global settings below. Each connection
has its own stack. When a set of settings is changed, it must be
determined if its debug trace file is to be closed. Before, this was done
by only checking below on the settings stack. So if the global settings
were changed, an existing debug trace file reference in session settings
would be missed. This caused the file to be closed even if it was in use,
leading to a crash later when it was closed again.
This patch fixes the problem by preventing the trace file from being shared
between global and session settings. If session debug settings are set without
specifying a new trace file, stderr is used for output. This is a change
in behaviour and should be reflected in the documentation.
Test case added to variables.test.
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.
Fixed a number of memory leaks discovered by valgrind.
dbug/dbug.c:
This is actually an addendum to the fix for bug #52629:
- there is no point in limiting the fix to just global
variables, session ones are also affected.
- zero all fields when allocating a new 'state' structure so
that FreeState() does not deal with unitialized data later.
- add a check for a NULL pointer in DBUGCloseFile()
mysql-test/r/partition_error.result:
Added a test case for bug #56709.
mysql-test/r/variables_debug.result:
Added a test case for bug #56709.
mysql-test/t/partition_error.test:
Added a test case for bug #56709.
mysql-test/t/variables_debug.test:
Added a test case for bug #56709.
sql/item_timefunc.cc:
There is no point in declaring 'value' as a member of
Item_extract and dynamically allocating memory for it in
Item_extract::fix_length_and_dec(), since this string is only
used as a temporary storage in Item_extract::val_int().
sql/item_timefunc.h:
Removed 'value' from the Item_extract class definition.
sql/sql_load.cc:
- we may need to deallocate 'buffer' even when 'error' is
non-zero in some cases, since 'error' is public, and there is
external code modifying it.
- assign NULL to buffer when deallocating it so that we don't
do it twice in the destructor
- there is no point in changing 'error' in the destructor.
Added --enable-connect-log, somewhet similar to --enable-query-log
If query log is disabled, disable connect log too
Also some related cleanup in mysqltest.test: removing duplicate test loop
REPAIR of merge table
Bug #56422 CHECK TABLE run when the table is locked reports
corruption along with timeout
The crash happened if a table maintenance statement (ANALYZE TABLE,
REPAIR TABLE, etc.) was executed on a MERGE table and opening and
locking a child table failed. This could for example happen if a child
table did not exist or if a lock timeout happened while waiting for
a conflicting metadata lock to disappear.
Since opening and locking the MERGE table and its children failed,
the tables would be closed and the metadata locks released.
However, TABLE_LIST::table for the MERGE table would still be set,
with its value invalid since the tables had been closed.
This caused the table maintenance statement to try to continue
and upgrade the metadata lock on the MERGE table. But since the lock
already had been released, this caused a segfault.
This patch fixes the problem by setting TABLE_LIST::table to NULL
if open_and_lock_tables() fails. This prevents maintenance
statements from continuing and trying to upgrade the metadata lock.
The patch includes a 5.5 version of the fix for
Bug #46339 crash on REPAIR TABLE merge table USE_FRM.
This bug caused REPAIR TABLE ... USE_FRM to give an assert
when used on merge tables.
The patch also enables the CHECK TABLE statement for log tables.
Before, CHECK TABLE for log tables gave ER_CANT_LOCK_LOG_TABLE,
yet still counted the statement as successfully executed.
With the changes to table maintenance statement error handling
in this patch, CHECK TABLE would no longer be considered as
successful in this case. This would have caused upgrade scripts
to mistakenly think that the general and slow logs are corrupted
and have to be repaired. Enabling CHECK TABLES for log tables
prevents this from happening.
Finally, the patch changes the error message from "Corrupt" to
"Operation failed" for a number of issues not related to table
corruption. For example "Lock wait timeout exceeded" and
"Deadlock found trying to get lock".
Test cases added to merge.test and check.test.
tree for embedded server
Test case for bug #56251 "Deadlock with INSERT
DELAYED and MERGE tables" can't be run against
embedded server. Embedded server converts all
DELAYED INSERTs into ordinary INSERTs and this
test can't work properly if such conversion
happens.
Moved this test from merge.test to delayed.test
which is skipped if test suite is run with
--embedded-server option.
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)
mysql-test/include/index_merge_ror_cpk.inc:
test case
mysql-test/r/index_merge_innodb.result:
test case
mysql-test/r/index_merge_myisam.result:
test case
sql/opt_range.cc:
if ROR merge scan is used we need 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)
The problem was that RENAME TABLE caused an assert if the system variable
lower_case_table_names was 2 (default on Mac OS X) and the old table name
was given in upper case. This caused lowercase_table2.test to fail.
The assert checks that an exclusive metadata lock is held by the connection
trying to do RENAME TABLE - specificially during updates of table triggers.
The assert was triggered since the check is case sensitive and the lock
was held on the normalized (lower case) version of the table name.
This patch fixes the problem by making sure a normalized version of the
table name is used for the metadata lock check, while using a non-normalized
version of the table name for the rename of trigger files. The same is done
for ALTER TABLE ... RENAME.
Regression testing for the bug itself is already covered by
lowercase_table2.test. Additional coverage added to lowercase_fs_off.test.
tables".
Attempting to issue an INSERT DELAYED statement for a MERGE
table might have caused a deadlock if it happened as part of
a transaction or under LOCK TABLES, and there was a concurrent
DDL or LOCK TABLES ... WRITE statement which tried to lock one
of its underlying tables.
The problem occurred when a delayed insert handler thread tried
to open a MERGE table and discovered that to do this it had also
to open all underlying tables and hence acquire metadata
locks on them. Since metadata locks on the underlying tables were
not pre-acquired by the connection thread executing INSERT DELAYED,
attempts to do so might lead to waiting. In this case the
connection thread had to wait for the delayed insert thread.
If the thread which was preventing the lock on the underlying table
from being acquired had to wait for the connection thread (due to
this or other metadata locks), a deadlock occurred.
This deadlock was not detected by the MDL deadlock detector since
waiting for the handler thread by the connection thread is not
represented in the wait-for graph.
This patch solves the problem by ensuring that the delayed
insert handler thread never tries to open underlying tables
of a MERGE table. Instead open_tables() is aborted right after
the parent table is opened and a ER_DELAYED_NOT_SUPPORTED
error is emitted (which is passed to the connection thread and
ultimately to the user).
mysql-test/r/merge.result:
Added test for bug #56251 "Deadlock with INSERT DELAYED and
MERGE tables".
mysql-test/t/merge.test:
Added test for bug #56251 "Deadlock with INSERT DELAYED and
MERGE tables".
sql/sql_base.cc:
Changed open_n_lock_single_table() to take prelocking strategy
as an argument instead of always using DML_prelocking_strategy.
sql/sql_base.h:
Changed open_n_lock_single_table() to take prelocking strategy
as an argument instead of always using DML_prelocking_strategy.
Added a version of this function which is compatible with old
signature.
sql/sql_insert.cc:
When opening MERGE table in delayed insert thread stop and emit
ER_DELAYED_NOT_SUPPORTED right after opening main table and
before opening underlying tables. This ensures that we won't
try to acquire metadata lock on underlying tables which might
lead to a deadlock.
This is achieved by using special prelocking strategy which
abort open_tables() process as soon as we discover that we
have opened table with engine which doesn't support delayed
inserts.
ORDER BY computed col
GROUP BY implies ORDER BY in the MySQL dialect of SQL. Therefore, when an
index on the first table in the query is used, and that index satisfies
ordering according to the GROUP BY clause, the query optimizer estimates the
number of tuples that need to be read from this index. If there is a LIMIT
clause, table statistics on tables following this 'sort table' are employed.
There may be a separate ORDER BY clause however, which mandates reading the
whole 'sort table' anyway. But the previous estimate was left untouched.
Fixed by removing the estimate from EXPLAIN output if GROUP BY is used in
conjunction with an ORDER BY clause that mandates using a temporary table.