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Problem #1: INSERT...SELECT INSERT ... SELECT with the same table on both sides (hidden below a MERGE table) does now work by buffering the select result. The duplicate detection works now after open_and_lock_tables() on the locks. I did not find a test case that failed without the change in sql_update.cc. I made the change anyway as it should in theory fix a possible MERGE table problem with multi-table update. mysql-test/r/create.result: BUG#5390 - problems with merge tables Removed a duplicate test. mysql-test/r/merge.result: BUG#5390 - problems with merge tables Problem #1: INSERT...SELECT Added test results. mysql-test/t/create.test: BUG#5390 - problems with merge tables Removed a duplicate test. mysql-test/t/merge.test: BUG#5390 - problems with merge tables Problem #1: INSERT...SELECT Added tests. sql/lock.cc: BUG#5390 - problems with merge tables Problem #1: INSERT...SELECT Added a new function to find a duplicate lock in a list of tables. sql/mysql_priv.h: BUG#5390 - problems with merge tables Problem #1: INSERT...SELECT Added a declaration for the new function. sql/sql_parse.cc: BUG#5390 - problems with merge tables Problem #1: INSERT...SELECT Changed the duplicate tables detection for INSERT ... SELECT to use the new function, which does also work for MERGE tables. sql/sql_update.cc: BUG#5390 - problems with merge tables Changed the duplicate tables detection for UPDATE to use the new function, which does also work for MERGE tables.
This directory contains a test suite for mysql daemon. To run the currently existing test cases, simply execute ./mysql-test-run in this directory. It will fire up the newly built mysqld and test it. Note that you do not have to have to do make install, and you could actually have a co-existing MySQL installation - the tests will not conflict with it. All tests must pass. If one or more of them fail on your system, please read the following manual section of how to report the problem: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/MySQL_test_suite.html You can create your own test cases. To create a test case: cd t vi test_case_name.test in the file, put a set of SQL commands that will create some tables, load test data, run some queries to manipulate it. We would appreciate if the test tables were called t1, t2, t3 ... (to not conflict too much with existing tables). Your test should begin by dropping the tables you are going to create and end by dropping them again. This will ensure that one can run the test over and over again. If you are using mysqltest commands (like result file names) in your test case you should do create the result file as follows: mysql-test-run --record test_case_name or mysqltest --record < t/test_case_name.test If you only have a simple test cases consistent of SQL commands and comments you can create the test case one of the following ways: mysql-test-run --record test_case_name mysql test < t/test_case_name.test > r/test_case_name.result mysqltest --record --record-file=r/test_case_name.result < t/test_case_name.test When this is done, take a look at r/test_case_name.result - If the result is wrong, you have found a bug; In this case you should edit the test result to the correct results so that we can verify that the bug is corrected in future releases. To submit your test case, put your .test file and .result file(s) into a tar.gz archive, add a README that explains the problem, ftp the archive to ftp://support.mysql.com/pub/mysql/secret/ and send a mail to bugs@lists.mysql.com