CAST() now produces warnings when casting a wrong INTEGER or CHAR values. This also applies to implicite string to number casts. (Bug #5912)
ALTER TABLE now fails in STRICT mode if it generates warnings.
Inserting a zero date in a DATE, DATETIME or TIMESTAMP column during TRADITIONAL mode now produces an error. (Bug #5933)
Added new logic to ACL system:
1) If GRANT OPTION (not mysql db):
Ok to update existing user, but not password.
Not allowed to make a new user.
2) If UPDATE_ACL to mysql DB:
Ok to update current user, but not make a new one.
3) If INSERT_ACL to mysql DB:
Ok to add a new user, but not modify existing.
4) If GRANT OPTION to mysql DB:
All modifications OK.
First one is related to Bug#7905. One should not be allowed to
create new user with password without UPDATE privilege to
MySQL database. Furthermore, executing the same GRANT statement
twice would actually crash the server and corrupt privilege database.
Other bug was that one could update a column, using the existing
value as basis to calculate the new value (e.g. UPDATE t1 SET a=a+1)
without SELECT privilege to the field (a in the above example)
Fixed tests grant.pl and grant2, which were wrong.
Enabled VARCHAR testing for innodb
NOTE: innodb.test currently fails becasue of a bug in InnoDB.
I have informed Heikki about this and expect him to fix this ASAP
The idea is to use TABLE_LIST::lock_type for passing type of lock for
target table to mysql_load() instead of using LEX::lock_option
(which were rewritten by first subselect in SET clause).
This should also fix potential problem with LOAD DATA in SP
(it is important for them to have right lock_type in the table
list by the end of statement parsing).
Now one can use user variables as target for data loaded from file
(besides table's columns). Also LOAD DATA got new SET-clause in which
one can specify values for table columns as expressions.
For example the following is possible:
LOAD DATA INFILE 'words.dat' INTO TABLE t1 (a, @b) SET c = @b + 1;
This patch also implements new way of replicating LOAD DATA.
Now we do it similarly to other queries.
We store LOAD DATA query in new Execute_load_query event
(which is last in the sequence of events representing LOAD DATA).
When we are executing this event we simply rewrite part of query which
holds name of file (we use name of temporary file) and then execute it
as usual query. In the beggining of this sequence we use Begin_load_query
event which is almost identical to Append_file event
Rework to resolve ambigious grammer: conflict in join expression
handling of parentheses for nested joins and derived tables.
Tests included of failing statements
Optimize item construction for AND/OR logical expressions