ha_partition::init_record_priority_queue()
Cherry-pick rev.6b0ee0c795499cee7f9deb649fb010801e0be4c2 from mysql-5.6.
Bug #18305270 BACKPORT BUG#18694052 FIX
FOR ASSERTION `!M_ORDERED_REC_BUFFER'
FAILED TO 5.6
PROBLEM
-------
Missed to remove record priority queue if
init_index failed for a partition which
was causing the crash.
FIX
---
Remove priority queue if init_index fails
for partition.
Analysis: Current implementation will write and read at least one block
(sort_buffer_size bytes) from disk / index even if that block does not
contain any records.
Fix: Avoid writing / reading empty blocks to temporary files (disk).
Assertion `inited==INDEX' failed in int handler::ha_index_first(uchar*)
The crash was because errors from init_read_record_idx() was not taken care of.
(even when configured with --binlog-format=statement).
Before we got an error on the slave and the slave stopped if the master
was configured with --binlog-format=mixed or --binlog-format=row.
The test restarts the server and expects that the feedback plugin
will send a report on shutdown, and will write about it in the error
log. But the server is only given 10 sec to shut down properly,
which is not always enough.
Added a parameter to restart_mysqld.inc, and set it to a bigger
value in feedback_plugin_send
The culprit is the feedback_plugin_load test, which is run both separately
and from inside feedback_plugin_send.test. The test queries I_S.FEEDBACK,
and every time it does, 'FEEDBACK used' value is increased.
Fixed by checking that the value is increased instead of recording the actual
value in the result file.
The real problem is that when innodb.xa_recovery test intentionally
crashes the server, system tables can be opened and marked as crashed,
and the next test in line gets blamed for the error which appears
in the error log.
Fixed by flushing the tables before crashing the server
Use sync_with_master_gtid.inc instead of --sync_with_master. The latter is
not correct because the test case uses RESET MASTER; this invalidates the
existing binlog positions on the slave.
In this particular case, there was a small window where --sync_with_master
could trigger too early (on the old position), causing the test case to miss
one event.
Adjust the test case to try and avoid some sporadic failures on loaded test
hosts.
The wait for SQL thread to stop may complete before worker threads
have completed.
The code was using the wrong variable when comparing the binlog name
for the UNTIL position. This could cause the comparison to fail after
binlog rotation, in turn causing the UNTIL clause to not trigger slave
stop.