causing crashes!
Adding a SPATIAL INDEX on a non-geometrical column caused a
segmentation fault when the table was subsequently
inserted into.
A test was added in mysql_prepare_create_table to explicitly
check whether non-geometrical columns are used in a
spatial index, and throw an error if so.
corruption and crash results
An index creation statement where the index key
is larger/wider than the column it references
should throw an error.
A statement like:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a CHAR(1), PRIMARY KEY (A(255)))
did not error, but a segmentation fault followed when
an insertion was attempted on the table
The partial key validiation clause has been
restructured to (hopefully) better document which
uses of partial keys are valid.
Problem was that in mysql-trunk the ER() macro is now dependent on current_thd
and the innodb monitor thread has no binding to that thd object. This cause
the crash because of bad derefencing.
Solution was to add a new macro which take the thd as an argument (which the innodb
thread uses for the call).
(Updated according to reviewers comments, i.e. added ER_THD_OR_DEFAULT and
moved test to suite parts.)
There was two problems:
The first was the symptom, caused by bad error handling in
ha_partition. It did not handle print_error etc. when
having no partitions (when used by dummy handler).
The second was the real problem that when dropping tables
it reused the table type (storage engine) from when the lock
was asked for, not the table type that it had when gaining
the exclusive name lock. So that it tried to delete tables
from wrong storage engines.
Solutions for the first problem was to accept some handler
calls to the partitioning handler even if it was not setup
with any partitions, and also if possible fallback
to use the base handler's default functions.
Solution for the second problem was to remove the optimization
to reuse the definition from the cache, instead always check
the frm-file when holding the LOCK_open mutex
(updated with a fix for a debug print crash and better
comments as required by reviewer, and removed optimization
to avoid reading the frm-file).
Rename method as to not hide a base.
Reorder attributes initialization.
Remove unused variable.
Rework code to silence a warning due to assignment used as truth value.
REORGANIZE PARTITION
There were several problems which lead to this this,
all related to bad error handling.
1) There was several bugs preventing the ddl-log to be used for
cleaning up created files on error.
2) The error handling after the copy partition rows did not close
and unlock the tables, resulting in deletion of partitions
which were in use, which lead InnoDB to put the partition to
drop in a background queue.
Conflicts:
Conflict adding files to server-tools. Created directory.
Conflict because server-tools is not versioned, but has versioned children. Versioned directory.
Conflict adding files to server-tools/instance-manager. Created directory.
Conflict because server-tools/instance-manager is not versioned, but has versioned children. Versioned directory.
Contents conflict in server-tools/instance-manager/instance_map.cc
Contents conflict in server-tools/instance-manager/listener.cc
Contents conflict in server-tools/instance-manager/options.cc
Contents conflict in server-tools/instance-manager/user_map.cc
The problem is a somewhat common misusage of the strmake function.
The strmake(dst, src, len) function writes at most /len/ bytes to
the string pointed to by src, not including the trailing null byte.
Hence, if /len/ is the exact length of the destination buffer, a
one byte buffer overflow can occur if the length of the source
string is equal to or greater than /len/.
<tmp_tbl> with RBL
When binlogging the statement, the server always handle the existing
object as a table, even though it is a view. However a view is
handled differently in other parts of the code thus leading the
statement to crash in RBL if the view exists.
This happens because the underlying tables for the view are not opened
when we try to call store_create_info() on the view in order to build
a CREATE TABLE statement.
This patch will only address the crash problem, other binlogging
problems related to CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS LIKE when the existing
object is a view will be solved by BUG 47442.
to 5.1 partially. This patch brings what was left to mysql-next-mr.
Original revisions in 6.0:
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.31.26
committer: Alexander Nozdrin <alik@sun.com>
branch nick: 6.0-rt-bug43138.3
timestamp: Thu 2009-04-30 19:31:30 +0400
message:
Fix for Bug#43138: DROP DATABASE failure does not clean up message list.
The problem was that the high-level function mysql_rm_db() invoked
low-level mysql_rm_table_part2(), which reported low-level error
(Unknown table) if SE refused to delete a table. Also when
mysql_rm_table_part2() reported an error, it didn't add corresponding
warning into the list (because it is used from other places where such
behaviour is required).
The fix is to
1. Remove no_warnings_for_error usage from sql_table.cc
2. Improve internal error handler support in THD, so that
a stack of error handlers is allowed.
3. Create an internal error handler (Drop_table_error_handler)
to silence useless warnings.
4. Use the handler in DROP DATABASE and DROP TABLE statements.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.69.38
committer: Alexander Nozdrin <alik@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-next-bugfixing-bug37431
timestamp: Mon 2009-08-24 21:52:09 +0400
message:
A test case for Bug#37431 (DROP TABLE does not report errors correctly).
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.31.29
committer: Dmitry Lenev <dlenev@mysql.com>
branch nick: mysql-6.0-runtime
timestamp: Fri 2009-05-01 17:37:34 +0400
message:
Follow-up for fix for bug "Bug#43138: DROP DATABASE failure
does not clean up message list".
Fixed drop.test failure under non-debug server by moving part
of test dependent on debug-only feature to separate .test file,
which won't be run for non-debug versions of server.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2617.45.17
committer: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mysql.com>
branch nick: 6.0-maria
timestamp: Wed 2009-05-13 20:08:58 +0200
message:
followup for bug#43138
if delete fails with a permission denied error, we want to show it
------------------------------------------------------------
The patch was backported to 5.1 in scope of Bug#42364 by
the following revision:
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2497.975.3
committer: Sergey Glukhov <Sergey.Glukhov@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-5.1-bugteam
timestamp: Fri 2009-07-03 13:22:06 +0500
message:
Bug#42364 SHOW ERRORS returns empty resultset after dropping non existent table
enabled message storing into error message list
for 'drop table' command
------------------------------------------------------------
2630.39.1, 2630.28.29, 2630.34.3, 2630.34.2, 2630.34.1, 2630.29.29,
2630.29.28, 2630.31.1, 2630.28.13, 2630.28.10, 2617.23.14 and
some other minor revisions.
This patch implements:
WL#4264 "Backup: Stabilize Service Interface" -- all the
server prerequisites except si_objects.{h,cc} themselves (they can
be just copied over, when needed).
WL#4435: Support OUT-parameters in prepared statements.
(and all issues in the initial patches for these two
tasks, that were discovered in pushbuild and during testing).
Bug#39519: mysql_stmt_close() should flush all data
associated with the statement.
After execution of a prepared statement, send OUT parameters of the invoked
stored procedure, if any, to the client.
When using the binary protocol, send the parameters in an additional result
set over the wire. When using the text protocol, assign out parameters to
the user variables from the CALL(@var1, @var2, ...) specification.
The following refactoring has been made:
- Protocol::send_fields() was renamed to Protocol::send_result_set_metadata();
- A new Protocol::send_result_set_row() was introduced to incapsulate
common functionality for sending row data.
- Signature of Protocol::prepare_for_send() was changed: this operation
does not need a list of items, the number of items is fully sufficient.
The following backward incompatible changes have been made:
- CLIENT_MULTI_RESULTS is now enabled by default in the client;
- CLIENT_PS_MULTI_RESUTLS is now enabled by default in the client.
A fix and a test case for Bug#34898 "mysql_info() reports 0 warnings
while mysql_warning_count() reports 1"
Review the patch by Chad Miller, implement review comments
(since Chad left) and push the patch.
This bug is actually not a bug. At least according to Monty.
See Bug#841 "wrong number of warnings" reported back in July 2003
and closed as "not a bug".
mysql_info() was printing the number of truncated columns, not
the number of warnings.
But since the message of mysql_info() was "Warnings: <number of truncated
columns>", people would expect to get the number
of warnings in it, not the number of truncated columns.
So a possible fix would be to change the message of mysql_info()
to say Rows changed: <n>, truncated: <m>.
Instead, put the number of warnings there. That is, remove the
feature that thd->cuted_fields (the number of truncated fields)
is exposed to the client. The number of truncated columns can be
calculated on the client, by analyzing SHOW WARNINGS output,
and in future we may remove thd->cuted_fields altogether.
So let's have one less thing to worry about.
Implemented the server infrastructure for the fix:
1. Added a function LEX_STRING *thd_query_string(THD) to return
a LEX_STRING structure instead of char *.
This is the function that must be called in innodb instead of
thd_query()
2. Did some encapsulation in THD : aggregated thd_query and
thd_query_length into a LEX_STRING and made accessor and mutator
methods for easy code updating.
3. Updated the server code to use the new methods where applicable.
storing and restoring information about foreign keys in the .FRM files and
properly displaying it in SHOW CREATE TABLE output and I_S tables.
The idea of this patch is to change type of Key_part_spec::field_name and
Key::name to LEX_STRING in order to avoid extra strlen() calls during
semantic analysis and statement execution, particularly, in code to be
implemented on the 2nd milestone of WL#148.
Note that since we are not using LEX_STRING everywhere yet (e.g. in
Create_field and KEY) and we want to limit scope of our changes we
have to do strlen() in places where we create Key and Key_part_spec
instances from objects using plain (char*) for strings. These calls
will go away during the process of further (char*) -> LEX_STRING
refactoring.
We have introduced these changes in 6.0 and backported them to 5.5
tree to make people aware of these changes as early as possible and
to simplify merges with mysql-fk and mysql-6.1-fk trees.
No test case is needed since this patch does not introduce any
user visible changes.
An ALTER TABLE statement which added a column and added
a non-partial index on it failed with:
"ERROR 1089 (HY000): Incorrect sub part key; the used
key part isn't a string, the used length is longer than
the key part, or the storage engine doesn't support unique
sub keys"
In a check introduced to fix an earlier bug (no. 26794),
to allow for indices on spatial type columns, the
test expression was flawed (a logical OR was used instead
of a logical AND), which led to this regression.
The code in question does a sanity check on the key, and
the flawed code mistakenly classified any index created
in the way specified above as a partial index. Since
many data types does not allow partial indices, the
statement would fail.
lowercasing table name".
In lower_case_table_names > 0 mode some queries to I_S left entries
with incorrect key in table definition cache. This wasted memory and
caused some of the further queries to I_S to produce stale results
in cases when table definition was changed by a DDL statement.
Also in combination with similar problem in CREATE TABLE (which also
has peeked into table definition cache using non-normalized key) this
issue led to to spurious ER_TABLE_EXISTS_ERROR errors when one tried
to create a table with the same name as a previously existing but
dropped table (assuming that table name contained characters in upper
case).
This problem occured due to fact that fill_schema_table_from_frm()
was not properly normalizing (lowercasing) database and table names
which it used for lookups in table definition cache.
This fix adds proper normalization to this function. It also solves
similar problem in CREATE TABLE's code by ensuring that it uses
properly normalized version of table name when it peeks into table
definition cache instead of non-normalized one.
In RBR, 'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS...' statement is binlogged when the table
does not exist.
In fact, 'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE ...' statement should never be binlogged in RBR
no matter if the table exists or not.
This patch addresses this by checking whether we are dropping a
temporary table or not, when building the custom drop statement.
Invalid (old?) table or database name in logs
Problem was still not completely fixed, due to
qouting.
This is the server side only fix (in explain_filename),
the change from filename_to_tablename to use explain_filename
in the InnoDB code must be done before the bug is
fixed.
checksum)"
The problem was that checksum of GEOMETRY type used memory addresses
in the computation, making it un-repeatable thus useless.
(This patch is a backport from 6.0 branch)
Despite copying the value of the old table's row type
we don't always have to mark row type as being specified.
Innodb uses this to check if it can do fast ALTER TABLE
or not.
Fixed by correctly flagging the presence of row_type
only when it's actually changed.
Added a test case for 39200.