Before this fix, the performance schema tables were defined in UPPERCASE.
This was incompatible with the lowercase_table_names option, and caused
issues with the install / upgrade process, when changing the lower case
table names setting *after* the install or upgrade.
With this fix, all performance schema tables are exposed with lowercase names.
As a result, the name of the performance schema table is always lowercase,
no matter how / if / when the lowercase_table_names setting if changed.
Before this fix, the performance schema tables were defined in UPPERCASE.
This was incompatible with the lowercase_table_names option, and caused
issues with the install / upgrade process, when changing the lower case
table names setting *after* the install or upgrade.
With this fix, all performance schema tables are exposed with lowercase names.
As a result, the name of the performance schema table is always lowercase,
no matter how / if / when the lowercase_table_names setting if changed.
This change is to align the 5.5 performance_schema.THREADS
table definition with the 5.6 performance_schema.THREADS table,
to facilitate the 5.5 -> 5.6 migration later.
In the table performance_schema.THREADS:
- renamed ID to PROCESSLIST_ID, removed not null
- changed NAME from varchar(64) to varchar(128)
to match the columns definitions from 5.6
Adjusted the test cases accordingly.
Note: this fix is for 5.5 only, to null merge into 5.6
This change is to align the 5.5 performance_schema.THREADS
table definition with the 5.6 performance_schema.THREADS table,
to facilitate the 5.5 -> 5.6 migration later.
In the table performance_schema.THREADS:
- renamed ID to PROCESSLIST_ID, removed not null
- changed NAME from varchar(64) to varchar(128)
to match the columns definitions from 5.6
Adjusted the test cases accordingly.
Note: this fix is for 5.5 only, to null merge into 5.6
Before this fix, the test output for perfschema.server_init would
vary between executions, because some of the objects tested were
not guaranteed to exist in all configurations / code paths.
This fix removes these weak tests.
Also, comments referring to abandonned code have been cleaned up.
Before this fix, the test output for perfschema.server_init would
vary between executions, because some of the objects tested were
not guaranteed to exist in all configurations / code paths.
This fix removes these weak tests.
Also, comments referring to abandonned code have been cleaned up.
Before this fix, the server could crash inside a memcpy when reading data
from the EVENTS_WAITS_CURRENT / HISTORY / HISTORY_LONG tables.
The root cause is that the length used in a memcpy could be corrupted,
when another thread writes data in the wait record being read.
Reading unsafe data is ok, per design choice, and the code does sanitize
the data in general, but did not sanitize the length given to memcpy.
The fix is to also sanitize the schema name / object name / file name
length when extracting the data to produce a row.
Before this fix, the server could crash inside a memcpy when reading data
from the EVENTS_WAITS_CURRENT / HISTORY / HISTORY_LONG tables.
The root cause is that the length used in a memcpy could be corrupted,
when another thread writes data in the wait record being read.
Reading unsafe data is ok, per design choice, and the code does sanitize
the data in general, but did not sanitize the length given to memcpy.
The fix is to also sanitize the schema name / object name / file name
length when extracting the data to produce a row.
Before this fix, the server did not recognize 'short' (as in -a)
options but only 'long' (as in --ansi) options
in the startup command line, due to earlier changes in 5.5
introduced for the performance schema.
The root cause is that handle_options() did not honor the
my_getopt_skip_unknown flag when parsing 'short' options.
The fix changes handle_options(), so that my_getopt_skip_unknown is
honored in all cases.
Note that there are limitations to this,
see the added doxygen documentation in handle_options().
The current usage of handle_options() by the server to
parse early performance schema options fits within the limitations.
This has been enforced by an assert for PARSE_EARLY options, for safety.
Before this fix, the server did not recognize 'short' (as in -a)
options but only 'long' (as in --ansi) options
in the startup command line, due to earlier changes in 5.5
introduced for the performance schema.
The root cause is that handle_options() did not honor the
my_getopt_skip_unknown flag when parsing 'short' options.
The fix changes handle_options(), so that my_getopt_skip_unknown is
honored in all cases.
Note that there are limitations to this,
see the added doxygen documentation in handle_options().
The current usage of handle_options() by the server to
parse early performance schema options fits within the limitations.
This has been enforced by an assert for PARSE_EARLY options, for safety.
The reason for the bug above is unclear but
- Modify pfs_upgrade so that it's result is easier to analyze in case something fails
- Fix several minor weaknesses which could cause that a successing test (either an
already existing or a to be developed one) fails because of imperfect cleanup,
too slow disconnected sessions etc.
should either fix the bug or reduce it's probability or at least
make the analysis of failures easier.
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/include/upgrade_check.inc:
New include file which contains redundant stuff taken from pfs_upgrade.test.
Remove any file which might harm analysis of suspicious results.
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/r/query_cache.result:
Updated results
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/r/selects.result:
Updated results
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/bad_option_1.test:
Add the missing remove_file at beginning and end of test.
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/bad_option_2.test:
Add the missing remove_file at beginning and end of test.
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/global_read_lock.test:
Add a wait routine which ensures that the disconnect is really completed when the test ends.
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/pfs_upgrade.test:
- Move redundant actions to include/upgrade_check.inc
- Add preemptive removal of files
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/privilege.test:
Add a wait routine which ensures that the disconnect is really completed when the test ends.
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/query_cache.test:
Add "flush status" so that counters are reset. (./mtr --repeat=2 perfschema.query_cache failed)
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/read_only.test:
Add a wait routine which ensures that the disconnect is really completed when the test ends.
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/selects-master.opt:
Needed for running with enabled event-scheduler
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/selects.test:
- Correct the sub test for the EVENT scheduler
- Replace "sleep" by wait_routine
- Add premptive cleanups like "DROP ... IF EXISTS ..."
The reason for the bug above is unclear but
- Modify pfs_upgrade so that it's result is easier to analyze in case something fails
- Fix several minor weaknesses which could cause that a successing test (either an
already existing or a to be developed one) fails because of imperfect cleanup,
too slow disconnected sessions etc.
should either fix the bug or reduce it's probability or at least
make the analysis of failures easier.
DATABASE with open HANDLER"
Remove LOCK_create_db, database name locks, and use metadata locks instead.
This exposes CREATE/DROP/ALTER DATABASE statements to the graph-based
deadlock detector in MDL, and paves the way for a safe, deadlock-free
implementation of RENAME DATABASE.
Database DDL statements will now take exclusive metadata locks on
the database name, while table/view/routine DDL statements take
intention exclusive locks on the database name. This prevents race
conditions between database DDL and table/view/routine DDL.
(e.g. DROP DATABASE with concurrent CREATE/ALTER/DROP TABLE)
By adding database name locks, this patch implements
WL#4450 "DDL locking: CREATE/DROP DATABASE must use database locks" and
WL#4985 "DDL locking: namespace/hierarchical locks".
The patch also changes code to use init_one_table() where appropriate.
The new lock_table_names() function requires TABLE_LIST::db_length to
be set correctly, and this is taken care of by init_one_table().
This patch also adds a simple template to help work with
the mysys HASH data structure.
Most of the patch was written by Konstantin Osipov.
DATABASE with open HANDLER"
Remove LOCK_create_db, database name locks, and use metadata locks instead.
This exposes CREATE/DROP/ALTER DATABASE statements to the graph-based
deadlock detector in MDL, and paves the way for a safe, deadlock-free
implementation of RENAME DATABASE.
Database DDL statements will now take exclusive metadata locks on
the database name, while table/view/routine DDL statements take
intention exclusive locks on the database name. This prevents race
conditions between database DDL and table/view/routine DDL.
(e.g. DROP DATABASE with concurrent CREATE/ALTER/DROP TABLE)
By adding database name locks, this patch implements
WL#4450 "DDL locking: CREATE/DROP DATABASE must use database locks" and
WL#4985 "DDL locking: namespace/hierarchical locks".
The patch also changes code to use init_one_table() where appropriate.
The new lock_table_names() function requires TABLE_LIST::db_length to
be set correctly, and this is taken care of by init_one_table().
This patch also adds a simple template to help work with
the mysys HASH data structure.
Most of the patch was written by Konstantin Osipov.
mysql-test/suite/perfschema/t/no_threads-master.opt:
Innodb will start multiple threads, which is
not compatible with --one-thread. Disable
innodb to be able to run the test case.
Clarified error messages related to unsafe statements:
- avoid the internal technical term "row injection"
- use 'binary log' instead of 'binlog'
- avoid the word 'unsafeness'
Before this fix, mysql_upgrade would always drop and re create
the performance_schema database.
This in theory could destroy user data created using 5.1 or older versions.
With this fix, mysql_upgrade checks the content of the
performance_schema database before droping it.
Before this fix, mysql_upgrade would always drop and re create
the performance_schema database.
This in theory could destroy user data created using 5.1 or older versions.
With this fix, mysql_upgrade checks the content of the
performance_schema database before droping it.
Before this fix, the performance schema file instrumentation would treat:
- a relative path to a file
- an absolute path to the same file
as two different files.
This would lead to:
- separate aggregation counters
- file leaks when a file is removed.
With this fix, a relative and absolute path are resolved to the same file instrument.
Before this fix, the performance schema file instrumentation would treat:
- a relative path to a file
- an absolute path to the same file
as two different files.
This would lead to:
- separate aggregation counters
- file leaks when a file is removed.
With this fix, a relative and absolute path are resolved to the same file instrument.