This worklog aims at testing the two following scenarios:
1) Whenever the mysql_binlog_send method (dump thread)
reaches the end of file when reading events from the binlog, before
checking if it should wait for more events, there was a test to
check if the file being read was still active, i.e, it was the last
known binlog. However, it was possible that something was written to
the binary log and then a rotation would happen, after EOF was
detected and before the check for active was performed. In this
case, the end of the binary log would not be read by the dump
thread, and this would cause the slave to lose updates.
This test verifies that the problem has been fixed. It waits during
this window while forcing a rotation in the binlog.
2) Verify dump thread can send events in active file, correctly after
encountering an IO error.
This worklog aims at testing the two following scenarios:
1) Whenever the mysql_binlog_send method (dump thread)
reaches the end of file when reading events from the binlog, before
checking if it should wait for more events, there was a test to
check if the file being read was still active, i.e, it was the last
known binlog. However, it was possible that something was written to
the binary log and then a rotation would happen, after EOF was
detected and before the check for active was performed. In this
case, the end of the binary log would not be read by the dump
thread, and this would cause the slave to lose updates.
This test verifies that the problem has been fixed. It waits during
this window while forcing a rotation in the binlog.
2) Verify dump thread can send events in active file, correctly after
encountering an IO error.
DURING INNODB RECOVERY
Problem:
=======
The connection 'master' is dropped by mysqltest after
rpl_end.inc. At this point, dropping temporary tables
at the connection 'master' are not synced at slave.
So, the temporary tables replicated from master remain
on slave leading to an inconsistent close of the test.
The following test thus complains about the presence of
temporary table(s) left over from the previous test.
Fix:
===
- Put explicit drop commands in replication tests so
that the temporary tables are dropped at slave as well.
- Added the check for Slave_open_temp_tables in
mtr_check.sql to warn about the remaining temporary
table, if any, at the close of a test.
DURING INNODB RECOVERY
Problem:
=======
The connection 'master' is dropped by mysqltest after
rpl_end.inc. At this point, dropping temporary tables
at the connection 'master' are not synced at slave.
So, the temporary tables replicated from master remain
on slave leading to an inconsistent close of the test.
The following test thus complains about the presence of
temporary table(s) left over from the previous test.
Fix:
===
- Put explicit drop commands in replication tests so
that the temporary tables are dropped at slave as well.
- Added the check for Slave_open_temp_tables in
mtr_check.sql to warn about the remaining temporary
table, if any, at the close of a test.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/last_insert_id.result:
Test case for last_insert_id
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/last_insert_id.cnf:
Test case for last_insert_id
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/last_insert_id.test:
Test case for last_insert_id
sql/log_event.cc:
Added DBUG_PRINT
Set thd->first_successful_insert_id_in_prev_stmt_for_binlog when setting thd->first_successful_insert_id_in_prev_stmt.
This is required to get last_insert_id() replicated.
This is analog to how read_first_successful_insert_id_in_prev_stmt() works.
sql/rpl_utility.cc:
Added DBUG_PRINT
IN TIME RECOVERY FAILURE ON SLAVES
Problem:
DROP TEMP TABLE IF EXISTS commands can cause point
in time recovery (re-applying binlog) failures.
Analyses:
In RBR, 'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE' commands are
always binlogged by adding 'IF EXISTS' clauses.
Also, the slave SQL thread will not check replicate.* filter
rules for "DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS" queries.
If log-slave-updates is enabled on slave, these queries
will be binlogged in the format of "USE `db`;
DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS `t1`;" irrespective
of filtering rules and irrespective of the `db` existence.
When users try to recover slave from it's own binlog,
use `db` command might fail if `db` is not present on slave.
Fix:
At the time of writing the 'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE
IF EXISTS' query into the binlog, 'use `db`' will not be
present and the table name in the query will be a fully
qualified table name.
Eg:
'USE `db`; DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS `t1`;'
will be logged as
'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS `db`.`t1`;'.
IN TIME RECOVERY FAILURE ON SLAVES
Problem:
DROP TEMP TABLE IF EXISTS commands can cause point
in time recovery (re-applying binlog) failures.
Analyses:
In RBR, 'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE' commands are
always binlogged by adding 'IF EXISTS' clauses.
Also, the slave SQL thread will not check replicate.* filter
rules for "DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS" queries.
If log-slave-updates is enabled on slave, these queries
will be binlogged in the format of "USE `db`;
DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS `t1`;" irrespective
of filtering rules and irrespective of the `db` existence.
When users try to recover slave from it's own binlog,
use `db` command might fail if `db` is not present on slave.
Fix:
At the time of writing the 'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE
IF EXISTS' query into the binlog, 'use `db`' will not be
present and the table name in the query will be a fully
qualified table name.
Eg:
'USE `db`; DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS `t1`;'
will be logged as
'DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS `db`.`t1`;'.
MDEV-4489 "Replication of big5, cp932, gbk, sjis strings makes wrong values on slave"
has been fixed.
Problem:
String constants of some Asian charsets (big5,cp932,gbk,sjis)
can have backslash '\' (0x5C) in the second byte of multi-byte characters.
Replicating of such constants using the standard '\'-escaping is dangerous.
Therefore, constants of these charsets are replicated using hex notation:
INSERT INTO t1 (a) VALUES (0x815C);
However, 0xHHHH constants do not work well in some cases,
because they can behave as strings and as numbers, depending on context
(for example, depending on the data type of the column in an INSERT statement).
This SQL script was not replicated correctly with statement-based replication:
SET NAMES gbk;
PREPARE STMT FROM 'INSERT INTO t1 (a) VALUES (?)';
SET @a = '1';
EXECUTE STMT USING @a;
The INSERT statement was replicated as:
INSERT INTO t1 (a) VALUES (0x31);
'1' was correctly converted to the number 1 on master.
But the 0x31 constant was treated as number 49 on slave.
Fix:
1. Binary log now uses X'HHHH' instead of 0xHHHH constants.
2. The X'HHHH' constants now work always as strings, in all contexts.
This is the SQL standard compliant behaviour.
After the fix, the above statement is replicated as:
INSERT INTO t1 (a) VALUES (X'31');
X'31' is treated as string '1' on slave, and is correctly converted to 1.
modified:
@ mysql-test/r/ctype_cp932_binlog_stm.result
@ mysql-test/r/select.result
@ mysql-test/r/select_jcl6.result
@ mysql-test/r/select_pkeycache.result
@ mysql-test/r/user_var-binlog.result
@ mysql-test/r/varbinary.result
@ mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_stm_ctype_ucs.result
@ mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_stm_mix_innodb_myisam.result
@ mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_charset_sjis.result
@ mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_mdev382.result
@ mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_charset_sjis.test
@ mysql-test/t/ctype_cp932_binlog_stm.test
@ mysql-test/t/select.test
@ mysql-test/t/varbinary.test
Adding and updating tests
@ sql/item.cc
@ sql/item.h
@ sql/sql_yacc.yy
@ sql/sql_lex.cc
Splitting the implementations of X'HH' and 0xHH constants into two
separate classes. Fixing the parser to distinguish the two syntaxes.
@ sql/log_event.cc
Using X'HH' instead of 0xHH for binary logging for string constants
of the "dangerous" charsets.
@ sql/sql_string.h
Adding a helped method String::append_hex().
--BINLOG-IGNORE-DB AND FULLY QUALIFIED TABLE
Problem:
=======
An ALTER TABLE statement is not written to binlog if server
started with "--binlog-ignore-db some database" and 'fully
qualified' table names are used in the ALTER TABLE statement
altering table different from current database context.
Analysis:
========
The above mentioned problem not only affects "ALTER TABLE"
statements but also to all kind of statements. Once the
current default database becomes "NULL" none of the
statements will be binlogged.
The current behaviour is such that if the user has specified
restrictions on which database needs to be replicated and the
default db is not specified, then do not replicate.
This means that "NULL" is considered to be equivalent to
everything (default db = null implied ignore don't log the
statement).
Fix:
===
"NULL" should not be considered as equivalent to everything.
Since the filtering criteria is not equal to "NULL" the
statement should be logged into binlog.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_loaddata_m.result:
Earlier when defalut database was "NULL" DROP TABLE
was not getting logged. Post this fix it will be logged
and the DROP will fail at slave as the table creation
was skipped by master as --binlog-ignore-db=test.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_loaddata_m.test:
Earlier when defalut database was "NULL" DROP TABLE
was not getting logged. Post this fix it will be logged
and the DROP will fail at slave as the table creation
was skipped by master as --binlog-ignore-db=test.
sql/rpl_filter.cc:
Replaced DBUG_RETURN(0) with DBUG_RETURN(1).
--BINLOG-IGNORE-DB AND FULLY QUALIFIED TABLE
Problem:
=======
An ALTER TABLE statement is not written to binlog if server
started with "--binlog-ignore-db some database" and 'fully
qualified' table names are used in the ALTER TABLE statement
altering table different from current database context.
Analysis:
========
The above mentioned problem not only affects "ALTER TABLE"
statements but also to all kind of statements. Once the
current default database becomes "NULL" none of the
statements will be binlogged.
The current behaviour is such that if the user has specified
restrictions on which database needs to be replicated and the
default db is not specified, then do not replicate.
This means that "NULL" is considered to be equivalent to
everything (default db = null implied ignore don't log the
statement).
Fix:
===
"NULL" should not be considered as equivalent to everything.
Since the filtering criteria is not equal to "NULL" the
statement should be logged into binlog.
mysys/errors.c:
revert upstream's fix. use a much simpler one
mysys/my_write.c:
revert upstream's fix. use a simpler one
sql/item_xmlfunc.cc:
useless, but ok
sql/mysqld.cc:
simplify upstream's fix
storage/heap/hp_delete.c:
remove upstream's fix.
we'll use a much less expensive approach.
PLATFORM= MACOSX10.6 X86_64 MAX
Problem: The test was failing on pb2's mac machine because
it was not cleaned up properly. The test checks if
the command 'start slave until' throws a proper
error when issued with a wrong number/type of
parameters. After this,the replication stream was
stopped using the include file 'rpl_end.inc'.
The errors thrown earlier left the slave in an
inconsistent state to be closed by the include
file which was caught by the mac machine.
Fix: Started slave by invoking start_slave.inc to have a
working slave before calling rpl_reset.inc
Problem: The test file was not in a good shape. It tested
start slave until relay log file/pos combination
wrongly. A couple of commands were executed at
master and replicated at slave. Next, the
coordinates in terms of relay log file and pos
were noted down followed by reset slave and start
slave until saved relay log file/pos. Reset slave
deletes all relay log files and makes the slave
forget its replication position. So, using the
saved coordiantes after reset slave is wrong.
Fix: Split the test in two parts:
a) Test for start slave until master log file/pos and
checking for correct errors in the failure
scenarios.
b) Test for start slave until relay log file/pos.
Problem: The variables auto_increment_increment and
auto_increment_offset were set in the the include
file rpl_init.inc. This was only configured for
some connections that are rarely used by test
cases, so likely that it will cause confusion.
If replication tests want to setup these variables
they should do so explicitly.
Fix:
a) Removed code to set the variables
auto_increment_increment and auto_increment_offset
in the include file.
b) Updated tests files using the same.
PLATFORM= MACOSX10.6 X86_64 MAX
Problem: The test was failing on pb2's mac machine because
it was not cleaned up properly. The test checks if
the command 'start slave until' throws a proper
error when issued with a wrong number/type of
parameters. After this,the replication stream was
stopped using the include file 'rpl_end.inc'.
The errors thrown earlier left the slave in an
inconsistent state to be closed by the include
file which was caught by the mac machine.
Fix: Started slave by invoking start_slave.inc to have a
working slave before calling rpl_reset.inc
Problem: The test file was not in a good shape. It tested
start slave until relay log file/pos combination
wrongly. A couple of commands were executed at
master and replicated at slave. Next, the
coordinates in terms of relay log file and pos
were noted down followed by reset slave and start
slave until saved relay log file/pos. Reset slave
deletes all relay log files and makes the slave
forget its replication position. So, using the
saved coordiantes after reset slave is wrong.
Fix: Split the test in two parts:
a) Test for start slave until master log file/pos and
checking for correct errors in the failure
scenarios.
b) Test for start slave until relay log file/pos.
Problem: The variables auto_increment_increment and
auto_increment_offset were set in the the include
file rpl_init.inc. This was only configured for
some connections that are rarely used by test
cases, so likely that it will cause confusion.
If replication tests want to setup these variables
they should do so explicitly.
Fix:
a) Removed code to set the variables
auto_increment_increment and auto_increment_offset
in the include file.
b) Updated tests files using the same.
post push fix:
rpl_stm_until.test was disabled because of
this bug. Enabled and fixed it.
Removed a part of the test that was obsolete.
It tested replication from 4.0 master to 5.0
slave.
post push fix:
rpl_stm_until.test was disabled because of
this bug. Enabled and fixed it.
Removed a part of the test that was obsolete.
It tested replication from 4.0 master to 5.0
slave.
post push fix:
rpl_stm_until.test was disabled because of
this bug. Enabled and fixed it.
Removed a part of the test that was obsolete.
It tested replication from 4.0 master to 5.0
slave.
post push fix:
rpl_stm_until.test was disabled because of
this bug. Enabled and fixed it.
Removed a part of the test that was obsolete.
It tested replication from 4.0 master to 5.0
slave.
DOWNGRADED FROM 5.6.11 TO 5.6.10
Problem was new syntax not accepted by previous version.
Fixed by adding version comment of /*!50531 around the
new syntax.
Like this in the .frm file:
'PARTITION BY KEY /*!50611 ALGORITHM = 2 */ () PARTITIONS 3'
and also changing the output from SHOW CREATE TABLE to:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT)
/*!50100 PARTITION BY KEY */ /*!50611 ALGORITHM = 1 */ /*!50100 ()
PARTITIONS 3 */
It will always add the ALGORITHM into the .frm for KEY [sub]partitioned
tables, but for SHOW CREATE TABLE it will only add it in case it is the non
default ALGORITHM = 1.
Also notice that for 5.5, it will say /*!50531 instead of /*!50611, which
will make upgrade from 5.5 > 5.5.31 to 5.6 < 5.6.11 fail!
If one downgrades an fixed version to the same major version (5.5 or 5.6) the
bug 14521864 will be visible again, but unless the .frm is updated, it will
work again when upgrading again.
Also fixed so that the .frm does not get updated version
if a single partition check passes.
DOWNGRADED FROM 5.6.11 TO 5.6.10
Problem was new syntax not accepted by previous version.
Fixed by adding version comment of /*!50531 around the
new syntax.
Like this in the .frm file:
'PARTITION BY KEY /*!50611 ALGORITHM = 2 */ () PARTITIONS 3'
and also changing the output from SHOW CREATE TABLE to:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a INT)
/*!50100 PARTITION BY KEY */ /*!50611 ALGORITHM = 1 */ /*!50100 ()
PARTITIONS 3 */
It will always add the ALGORITHM into the .frm for KEY [sub]partitioned
tables, but for SHOW CREATE TABLE it will only add it in case it is the non
default ALGORITHM = 1.
Also notice that for 5.5, it will say /*!50531 instead of /*!50611, which
will make upgrade from 5.5 > 5.5.31 to 5.6 < 5.6.11 fail!
If one downgrades an fixed version to the same major version (5.5 or 5.6) the
bug 14521864 will be visible again, but unless the .frm is updated, it will
work again when upgrading again.
Also fixed so that the .frm does not get updated version
if a single partition check passes.
Due to an internal change in the server code in between 5.1 and 5.5
(wl#2649) the hash function used in KEY partitioning changed
for numeric and date/time columns (from binary hash calculation
to character based hash calculation).
Also enum/set changed from latin1 ci based hash calculation to
binary hash between 5.1 and 5.5. (bug#11759782).
These changes makes KEY [sub]partitioned tables on any of
the affected column types incompatible with 5.5 and above,
since the calculation of partition id differs.
Also since InnoDB asserts that a deleted row was previously
read (positioned), the server asserts on delete of a row that
is in the wrong partition.
The solution for this situation is:
1) The partitioning engine will check that delete/update will go to the
partition the row was read from and give an error otherwise, consisting
of the rows partitioning fields. This will avoid asserts in InnoDB and
also alert the user that there is a misplaced row. A detailed error
message will be given, including an entry to the error log consisting
of both table name, partition and row content (PK if exists, otherwise
all partitioning columns).
2) A new optional syntax for KEY () partitioning in 5.5 is allowed:
[SUB]PARTITION BY KEY [ALGORITHM = N] (list_of_cols)
Where N = 1 uses the same hashing as 5.1 (Numeric/date/time fields uses
binary hashing, ENUM/SET uses charset hashing) N = 2 uses the same
hashing as 5.5 (Numeric/date/time fields uses charset hashing,
ENUM/SET uses binary hashing). If not set on CREATE/ALTER it will
default to 2.
This new syntax should probably be ignored by NDB.
3) Since there is a demand for avoiding scanning through the full
table, during upgrade the ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY ... command is
considered a no-op (only .frm change) if everything except ALGORITHM
is the same and ALGORITHM was not set before, which allows manually
upgrading such table by something like:
ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 1 () or
ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 2 ()
4) Enhanced partitioning with CHECK/REPAIR to also check for/repair
misplaced rows. (Also works for ALTER TABLE t CHECK/REPAIR PARTITION)
CHECK FOR UPGRADE:
If the .frm version is < 5.5.3
and uses KEY [sub]partitioning
and an affected column type
then it will fail with an message:
KEY () partitioning changed, please run:
ALTER TABLE `test`.`t1` PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 1 (a)
PARTITIONS 12
(i.e. current partitioning clause, with the addition of
ALGORITHM = 1)
CHECK without FOR UPGRADE:
if MEDIUM (default) or EXTENDED options are given:
Scan all rows and verify that it is in the correct partition.
Fail for the first misplaced row.
REPAIR:
if default or EXTENDED (i.e. not QUICK/USE_FRM):
Scan all rows and every misplaced row is moved into its correct
partitions.
5) Updated mysqlcheck (called by mysql_upgrade) to handle the
new output from CHECK FOR UPGRADE, to run the ALTER statement
instead of running REPAIR.
This will allow mysql_upgrade (or CHECK TABLE t FOR UPGRADE) to upgrade
a KEY [sub]partitioned table that has any affected field type
and a .frm version < 5.5.3 to ALGORITHM = 1 without rebuild.
Also notice that if the .frm has a version of >= 5.5.3 and ALGORITHM
is not set, it is not possible to know if it consists of rows from
5.1 or 5.5! In these cases I suggest that the user does:
(optional)
LOCK TABLE t WRITE;
SHOW CREATE TABLE t;
(verify that it has no ALGORITHM = N, and to be safe, I would suggest
backing up the .frm file, to be used if one need to change to another
ALGORITHM = N, without needing to rebuild/repair)
ALTER TABLE t <old partitioning clause, but with ALGORITHM = N>;
which should set the ALGORITHM to N (if the table has rows from
5.1 I would suggest N = 1, otherwise N = 2)
CHECK TABLE t;
(here one could use the backed up .frm instead and change to a new N
and run CHECK again and see if it passes)
and if there are misplaced rows:
REPAIR TABLE t;
(optional)
UNLOCK TABLES;
Due to an internal change in the server code in between 5.1 and 5.5
(wl#2649) the hash function used in KEY partitioning changed
for numeric and date/time columns (from binary hash calculation
to character based hash calculation).
Also enum/set changed from latin1 ci based hash calculation to
binary hash between 5.1 and 5.5. (bug#11759782).
These changes makes KEY [sub]partitioned tables on any of
the affected column types incompatible with 5.5 and above,
since the calculation of partition id differs.
Also since InnoDB asserts that a deleted row was previously
read (positioned), the server asserts on delete of a row that
is in the wrong partition.
The solution for this situation is:
1) The partitioning engine will check that delete/update will go to the
partition the row was read from and give an error otherwise, consisting
of the rows partitioning fields. This will avoid asserts in InnoDB and
also alert the user that there is a misplaced row. A detailed error
message will be given, including an entry to the error log consisting
of both table name, partition and row content (PK if exists, otherwise
all partitioning columns).
2) A new optional syntax for KEY () partitioning in 5.5 is allowed:
[SUB]PARTITION BY KEY [ALGORITHM = N] (list_of_cols)
Where N = 1 uses the same hashing as 5.1 (Numeric/date/time fields uses
binary hashing, ENUM/SET uses charset hashing) N = 2 uses the same
hashing as 5.5 (Numeric/date/time fields uses charset hashing,
ENUM/SET uses binary hashing). If not set on CREATE/ALTER it will
default to 2.
This new syntax should probably be ignored by NDB.
3) Since there is a demand for avoiding scanning through the full
table, during upgrade the ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY ... command is
considered a no-op (only .frm change) if everything except ALGORITHM
is the same and ALGORITHM was not set before, which allows manually
upgrading such table by something like:
ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 1 () or
ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 2 ()
4) Enhanced partitioning with CHECK/REPAIR to also check for/repair
misplaced rows. (Also works for ALTER TABLE t CHECK/REPAIR PARTITION)
CHECK FOR UPGRADE:
If the .frm version is < 5.5.3
and uses KEY [sub]partitioning
and an affected column type
then it will fail with an message:
KEY () partitioning changed, please run:
ALTER TABLE `test`.`t1` PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 1 (a)
PARTITIONS 12
(i.e. current partitioning clause, with the addition of
ALGORITHM = 1)
CHECK without FOR UPGRADE:
if MEDIUM (default) or EXTENDED options are given:
Scan all rows and verify that it is in the correct partition.
Fail for the first misplaced row.
REPAIR:
if default or EXTENDED (i.e. not QUICK/USE_FRM):
Scan all rows and every misplaced row is moved into its correct
partitions.
5) Updated mysqlcheck (called by mysql_upgrade) to handle the
new output from CHECK FOR UPGRADE, to run the ALTER statement
instead of running REPAIR.
This will allow mysql_upgrade (or CHECK TABLE t FOR UPGRADE) to upgrade
a KEY [sub]partitioned table that has any affected field type
and a .frm version < 5.5.3 to ALGORITHM = 1 without rebuild.
Also notice that if the .frm has a version of >= 5.5.3 and ALGORITHM
is not set, it is not possible to know if it consists of rows from
5.1 or 5.5! In these cases I suggest that the user does:
(optional)
LOCK TABLE t WRITE;
SHOW CREATE TABLE t;
(verify that it has no ALGORITHM = N, and to be safe, I would suggest
backing up the .frm file, to be used if one need to change to another
ALGORITHM = N, without needing to rebuild/repair)
ALTER TABLE t <old partitioning clause, but with ALGORITHM = N>;
which should set the ALGORITHM to N (if the table has rows from
5.1 I would suggest N = 1, otherwise N = 2)
CHECK TABLE t;
(here one could use the backed up .frm instead and change to a new N
and run CHECK again and see if it passes)
and if there are misplaced rows:
REPAIR TABLE t;
(optional)
UNLOCK TABLES;
Give error for wrong parameters to CHANGE MASTER
Extend MASTER_PASSWORD and MASTER_HOST lengths
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_password_boundaries.result:
Test length of MASTER_PASSWORD, MASTER_HOST and MASTER_USER
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_semi_sync.result:
Use different password than user name for better test coverage
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_password_boundaries.test:
Test length of MASTER_PASSWORD, MASTER_HOST and MASTER_USER
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_semi_sync.test:
Use different password than user name for better test coverage
sql/rpl_mi.h:
Extend MASTER_PASSWORD and MASTER_HOST lengths
sql/sql_repl.cc:
Give error for wrong parameters to CHANGE MASTER
sql/sql_repl.h:
Extend MASTER_PASSWORD and MASTER_HOST lengths
RPL_ROW_UNTIL TIMES OUT
patch to fix post push falures in pb2
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_row_until.result:
changes to account for the changes made in
corresponding test file.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/disabled.def:
disabled test in macosx
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_row_until.test:
replaced static relayy log file by an mtr variable
which saves the name of relay log file.
RPL_ROTATE_LOGS has been failing sporadically in what seems a
problem related to routines that update the coordinates. However,
the test lacks proper assert statments and because of this the
debug information upon failure simply points to the content
mismatch between the test and the result file.
Not as a solution, but as a improvement to the test to better
debug this failure, new assert statments were added to the test.
@rpl_rotate_logs.test
Added new assert statments reducing the
dependency on the result file.
@rpl_rotate_logs.result
Added new content to the result file to
match the test changes
RPL_ROTATE_LOGS has been failing sporadically in what seems a
problem related to routines that update the coordinates. However,
the test lacks proper assert statments and because of this the
debug information upon failure simply points to the content
mismatch between the test and the result file.
Not as a solution, but as a improvement to the test to better
debug this failure, new assert statments were added to the test.
@rpl_rotate_logs.test
Added new assert statments reducing the
dependency on the result file.
@rpl_rotate_logs.result
Added new content to the result file to
match the test changes
Problem: The problem with the test is that the slave returns
from start_slave.inc call too early before the list
is actually actualised. This caused the slave stale
data to be reported.
Fix: Added a wait in the test till the slave's IO status is
changed to "Waiting for master to send event" which
which ensures the list is correctly updated.
Problem: The problem with the test is that the slave returns
from start_slave.inc call too early before the list
is actually actualised. This caused the slave stale
data to be reported.
Fix: Added a wait in the test till the slave's IO status is
changed to "Waiting for master to send event" which
which ensures the list is correctly updated.
When a binlog is replayed into a server, e.g.:
$ mysqlbinlog binlog.000001 | mysql
it sets a pseudo slave mode on the client connection in order to server
be able to read binlog events, there is, a format description event is
needed to correctly read following events.
Also this pseudo slave mode applies to the current connection
replication rules that are needed to correctly apply binlog events.
If a binlog dump is sourced on a connection, this pseudo slave mode will
remains after it, what will apply unexpected rules from customer
perspective to following commands.
Added a new SET statement to binlog dump that will unset pseudo slave
mode at the end of dump file.