FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS is disabled
- Referenced index can be null While renaming the referenced column name.
In that case, rename the referenced column name in dict_foreign_t and
find the equivalent referenced index.
In main.index_merge_myisam we remove the test that was added in
commit a2d24def8c because
it duplicates the test case that was added in
commit 5af12e4635.
FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS is disabled
- dict_foreign_find_index() can return NULL if InnoDB already dropped
the foreign index when FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS is disabled.
Simplify the logging of ALTER TABLE operations, by making use of the
TRX_UNDO_RENAME_TABLE undo log record that was introduced in
commit 0bc36758ba.
commit_try_rebuild(): Invoke row_rename_table_for_mysql() and
actually rename the files before committing the transaction.
fil_mtr_rename_log(), commit_cache_rebuild(),
log_append_on_checkpoint(), row_merge_rename_tables_dict(): Remove.
mtr_buf_copy_t, log_t::append_on_checkpoint: Remove.
row_rename_table_for_mysql(): If !use_fk, ignore missing foreign
keys. Remove a call to dict_table_rename_in_cache(), because
trx_rollback_to_savepoint() should invoke the function if needed.
Add support of referential constraints directly in column defininions:
create table t1 (id1 int primary key);
create table t2 (id2 int references t1(id1));
Referenced field name can be omitted if equal to foreign field name:
create table t1 (id int primary key);
create table t2 (id int references t1);
Until 10.5 this syntax was understood by the parser but was silently
ignored.
In case of generated columns this syntax is disabled at parser level
by ER_PARSE_ERROR. Note that separate FOREIGN KEY clause for generated
columns is disabled at storage engine level.
Currently InnoDB uses internal parser for adding foreign keys. Remove
internal parser and use data parsed by SQL parser (sql_yacc) for
adding foreign keys.
- create_table_info_t::create_foreign_keys() replacement for
dict_create_foreign_constraints_low();
- Pass constraint name via Foreign_key object.
Temporary until MDEV-20865:
- Pass alter_info as part of create_info.
This allows one to run the test suite even if any of the following
options are changed:
- character-set-server
- collation-server
- join-cache-level
- log-basename
- max-allowed-packet
- optimizer-switch
- query-cache-size and query-cache-type
- skip-name-resolve
- table-definition-cache
- table-open-cache
- Some innodb options
etc
Changes:
- Don't print out the value of system variables as one can't depend on
them to being constants.
- Don't set global variables to 'default' as the default may not
be the same as the test was started with if there was an additional
option file. Instead save original value and reset it at end of test.
- Test that depends on the latin1 character set should include
default_charset.inc or set the character set to latin1
- Test that depends on the original optimizer switch, should include
default_optimizer_switch.inc
- Test that depends on the value of a specific system variable should
set it in the test (like optimizer_use_condition_selectivity)
- Split subselect3.test into subselect3.test and subselect3.inc to
make it easier to set and reset system variables.
- Added .opt files for test that required specfic options that could
be changed by external configuration files.
- Fixed result files in rockdsb & tokudb that had not been updated for
a while.
dict_create_foreign_constraints_low(): Tolerate the keywords
IGNORE and ONLINE between the keywords ALTER and TABLE.
We should really remove the hacky FOREIGN KEY constraint parser
from InnoDB.
dict_create_foreign_constraints_low(): Clean up the way in
which the error messages are initialized, and ensure that
the table name is always initialized.
The code path where the table was not being rebuilt during ALTER TABLE
was not covered by the test. Add coverage, and remove the debug assertion
that could fail in this case.
ha_innobase::commit_inplace_alter_table(): Do not crash if
innobase_update_foreign_cache() returns an error. It can return
an error on ALTER TABLE if an inconsistent FOREIGN KEY constraint
was created earlier when SET foreign_key_checks=0 was in effect.
Instead, report a warning to the client that constraints cannot
be loaded.
In RENAME TABLE, when an error occurs while renaming FOREIGN KEY
constraint, that error would be overwritten when renaming the
InnoDB internal tables related to FULLTEXT INDEX.
row_rename_table_for_mysql(): Do not attempt to rename the internal
tables if an error already occurred.
This problem was originally reported as Oracle Bug#27545888.
row_ins_check_foreign_constraint(): Do not overwrite hard errors
with the soft error DB_LOCK_WAIT. This prevents an infinite
wait loop when DB_INTERRUPTED was returned. For DB_LOCK_WAIT,
row_insert_for_mysql() would keep invoking row_ins_step() and the
transaction would remain active until the server shutdown is initiated.
table_already_fk_prelocked() was looking for a table in the wrong
list (not the complete list of prelocked tables, but only in its tail,
starting from the current table - which is always empty for the last
added table), so for circular FKs it kept adding same tables to the list
indefinitely.
Backport of d6d7e169fb
MDEV-14222 Unnecessary 'cascade' memory allocation for every updated row
when there is no FOREIGN KEY
This reverts the MySQL 5.7.2 change
377774689b
which introduced these problems. MariaDB 10.2.2 inherited these problems
in commit 2e814d4702.
The FOREIGN KEY CASCADE and SET NULL operations implemented as
procedural recursion are consuming more than 8 kilobytes of stack
(9 stack frames) per iteration in a non-debug GNU/Linux AMD64 build.
This is why we need to limit the maximum recursion depth to 15 steps
instead of the 255 that it used to be in MySQL 5.7 and MariaDB 10.2.
A corresponding change was made in MySQL 5.7.21 in
7b26dc98a6
row_ins_check_foreign_constraint(): On timeout,
return DB_LOCK_WAIT_TIMEOUT instead of DB_LOCK_WAIT,
so that the lock wait will be properly terminated.
Also, replace some redundant assignments.
It looks like this bug was introduced in MySQL 5.7.8 by:
commit a97f6b91227c7e0fc3151cfe5421891e79c12d19
Author: Annamalai Gurusami <annamalai.gurusami@oracle.com>
Date: Tue Jun 9 16:02:31 2015 +0530
Bug #20953265 INNODB: FAILING ASSERTION: RESULT != FTS_INVALID