Error happens because sp_head::MULTI_RESULTS is not set for SP
which has 'show table status' command.
The fix is to add a SQLCOM_SHOW_TABLE_STATUS case into
sp_get_flags_for_command() func.
When the thread executing a DDL was killed after finished its
execution but before writing the binlog event, the error code in
the binlog event could be set wrongly to ER_SERVER_SHUTDOWN or
ER_QUERY_INTERRUPTED.
This patch fixed the problem by ignoring the kill status when
constructing the event for DDL statements.
This patch also included the following changes in order to
provide the test case.
1) modified mysqltest to support variable for connection command
2) modified mysql-test-run.pl, add new variable MYSQL_SLAVE to
run mysql client against the slave mysqld.
When the thread executing a DDL was killed after finished its
execution but before writing the binlog event, the error code in
the binlog event could be set wrongly to ER_SERVER_SHUTDOWN or
ER_QUERY_INTERRUPTED.
This patch fixed the problem by ignoring the kill status when
constructing the event for DDL statements.
This patch also included the following changes in order to
provide the test case.
1) modified mysqltest to support variable for connection command
2) modified mysql-test-run.pl, add new variable MYSQL_SLAVE to
run mysql client against the slave mysqld.
due to name_const substitution
Problem:
"In general, statements executed within a stored procedure
are written to the binary log using the same rules that
would apply were the statements to be executed in standalone
fashion. Some special care is taken when logging procedure
statements because statement execution within procedures
is not quite the same as in non-procedure context".
For example, each reference to a local variable in SP's
statements is replaced by NAME_CONST(var_name, var_value).
Queries like
"CREATE TABLE ... SELECT FUNC(local_var ..."
are logged as
"CREATE TABLE ... SELECT FUNC(NAME_CONST("local_var", var_value) ..."
that leads to differrent field names and
might result in "Incorrect column name" if var_value is long enough.
Fix: in 5.x we'll issue a warning in such a case.
In 6.0 we should get rid of NAME_CONST().
Note: this issue and change should be described in the documentation
("Binary Logging of Stored Programs").
mysql-test/r/binlog.result:
Fix for bug#35383: binlog playback and replication breaks
due to name_const substitution
- test result.
mysql-test/t/binlog.test:
Fix for bug#35383: binlog playback and replication breaks
due to name_const substitution
- test case.
sql/sp_head.cc:
Fix for bug#35383: binlog playback and replication breaks
due to name_const substitution
- set thd->query_name_consts if there's NAME_CONST()
substitution(s).
sql/sql_parse.cc:
Fix for bug#35383: binlog playback and replication breaks
due to name_const substitution
- issue a warning if there's NAME_CONST() substitution and
binary logging is on for "CREATE TABLE ... SELECT ...".
due to name_const substitution
Problem:
"In general, statements executed within a stored procedure
are written to the binary log using the same rules that
would apply were the statements to be executed in standalone
fashion. Some special care is taken when logging procedure
statements because statement execution within procedures
is not quite the same as in non-procedure context".
For example, each reference to a local variable in SP's
statements is replaced by NAME_CONST(var_name, var_value).
Queries like
"CREATE TABLE ... SELECT FUNC(local_var ..."
are logged as
"CREATE TABLE ... SELECT FUNC(NAME_CONST("local_var", var_value) ..."
that leads to differrent field names and
might result in "Incorrect column name" if var_value is long enough.
Fix: in 5.x we'll issue a warning in such a case.
In 6.0 we should get rid of NAME_CONST().
Note: this issue and change should be described in the documentation
("Binary Logging of Stored Programs").
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
- Remove bothersome warning messages. This change focuses on the warnings
that are covered by the ignore file: support-files/compiler_warnings.supp.
- Strings are guaranteed to be max uint in length
from stored procedure.
Problem: we replace all references to local variables in stored procedures
with NAME_CONST(name, value) logging to the binary log. However, if the
value's collation differs we might get an 'illegal mix of collation'
error as we don't pass the collation to the function.
Fix: pass the value's collation to NAME_CONST().
Note: actually we should pass to NAME_CONST() the value's derivation as well.
It's impossible without the parser modifying. Now we always set the
derivation to DERIVATION_IMPLICIT, the same as local variables have.
mysql-test/r/binlog.result:
Fix for bug#39182: Binary log producing incompatible character set query
from stored procedure.
- test result.
mysql-test/r/ctype_cp932_binlog.result:
Fix for bug#39182: Binary log producing incompatible character set query
from stored procedure.
- results adjusted.
mysql-test/r/rpl_sp.result:
Fix for bug#39182: Binary log producing incompatible character set query
from stored procedure.
- results adjusted.
mysql-test/t/binlog.test:
Fix for bug#39182: Binary log producing incompatible character set query
from stored procedure.
- test case.
sql/item.cc:
Fix for bug#39182: Binary log producing incompatible character set query
from stored procedure.
- allow NAME_CONST() to get _charset'foo' COLLATE 'bar' strings
(see Item_func_set_collation).
sql/sp_head.cc:
Fix for bug#39182: Binary log producing incompatible character set query
from stored procedure.
- pass the value's collation to NAME_CONST().
from stored procedure.
Problem: we replace all references to local variables in stored procedures
with NAME_CONST(name, value) logging to the binary log. However, if the
value's collation differs we might get an 'illegal mix of collation'
error as we don't pass the collation to the function.
Fix: pass the value's collation to NAME_CONST().
Note: actually we should pass to NAME_CONST() the value's derivation as well.
It's impossible without the parser modifying. Now we always set the
derivation to DERIVATION_IMPLICIT, the same as local variables have.
JOIN for the subselect wasn't cleaned if we came upon an error
during sub_select() execution. That leads to the assertion failure
in close_thread_tables()
part of the 6.0 code backported
per-file comments:
mysql-test/r/sp-error.result
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
test result
mysql-test/t/sp-error.test
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
test case
sql/sp_head.cc
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
lex->unit.cleanup() call added if not substatement
JOIN for the subselect wasn't cleaned if we came upon an error
during sub_select() execution. That leads to the assertion failure
in close_thread_tables()
part of the 6.0 code backported
per-file comments:
mysql-test/r/sp-error.result
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
test result
mysql-test/t/sp-error.test
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
test case
sql/sp_head.cc
Bug#37949 Crash if argument to SP is a subquery that returns more than one row
lex->unit.cleanup() call added if not substatement
This fix is for 5.0 only : back porting the 6.0 patch manually
The parser code in sql/sql_yacc.yy needs to be more robust to out of
memory conditions, so that when parsing a query fails due to OOM,
the thread gracefully returns an error.
Before this fix, a new/alloc returning NULL could:
- cause a crash, if dereferencing the NULL pointer,
- produce a corrupted parsed tree, containing NULL nodes,
- alter the semantic of a query, by silently dropping token values or nodes
With this fix:
- C++ constructors are *not* executed with a NULL "this" pointer
when operator new fails.
This is achieved by declaring "operator new" with a "throw ()" clause,
so that a failed new gracefully returns NULL on OOM conditions.
- calls to new/alloc are tested for a NULL result,
- The thread diagnostic area is set to an error status when OOM occurs.
This ensures that a request failing in the server properly returns an
ER_OUT_OF_RESOURCES error to the client.
- OOM conditions cause the parser to stop immediately (MYSQL_YYABORT).
This prevents causing further crashes when using a partially built parsed
tree in further rules in the parser.
No test scripts are provided, since automating OOM failures is not
instrumented in the server.
Tested under the debugger, to verify that an error in alloc_root cause the
thread to returns gracefully all the way to the client application, with
an ER_OUT_OF_RESOURCES error.
This fix is for 5.0 only : back porting the 6.0 patch manually
The parser code in sql/sql_yacc.yy needs to be more robust to out of
memory conditions, so that when parsing a query fails due to OOM,
the thread gracefully returns an error.
Before this fix, a new/alloc returning NULL could:
- cause a crash, if dereferencing the NULL pointer,
- produce a corrupted parsed tree, containing NULL nodes,
- alter the semantic of a query, by silently dropping token values or nodes
With this fix:
- C++ constructors are *not* executed with a NULL "this" pointer
when operator new fails.
This is achieved by declaring "operator new" with a "throw ()" clause,
so that a failed new gracefully returns NULL on OOM conditions.
- calls to new/alloc are tested for a NULL result,
- The thread diagnostic area is set to an error status when OOM occurs.
This ensures that a request failing in the server properly returns an
ER_OUT_OF_RESOURCES error to the client.
- OOM conditions cause the parser to stop immediately (MYSQL_YYABORT).
This prevents causing further crashes when using a partially built parsed
tree in further rules in the parser.
No test scripts are provided, since automating OOM failures is not
instrumented in the server.
Tested under the debugger, to verify that an error in alloc_root cause the
thread to returns gracefully all the way to the client application, with
an ER_OUT_OF_RESOURCES error.