- 22 Mar, 2007 8 commits
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-5.0-opt
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
fix for cast( AS DATETIME) + 0 operation. I just implemented Item_datetime_typecast::val() method as it is usually done in other classes. Should be fixed more radically in 5.0
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-5.0-opt
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-5.0-opt
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-5.0-opt
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-4.1-opt
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/25492/my50-25492
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igor@olga.mysql.com authored
of its argument happened to be a decimal expression returning the NULL value. The crash was due to the fact the function in_decimal::set did not take into account that val_decimal() could return 0 if the decimal expression had been evaluated to NULL.
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- 21 Mar, 2007 3 commits
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kostja@bodhi.local authored
into bodhi.local:/opt/local/work/mysql-5.0-runtime
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evgen@moonbone.local authored
into moonbone.local:/mnt/gentoo64/work/23345-bug-5.0-opt-mysql
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evgen@moonbone.local authored
INTO clause can be specified only for the last select of a UNION and it receives the result of the whole query. But it was wrongly allowed in non-last selects of a UNION which leads to a confusing query result. Now INTO allowed only in the last select of a UNION.
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- 20 Mar, 2007 4 commits
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igor@olga.mysql.com authored
into olga.mysql.com:/home/igor/dev-opt/mysql-5.0-opt-bug27257
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igor@olga.mysql.com authored
aggregated in outer context returned wrong results. This happened only if the subquery did not contain any references to outer fields. As there were no references to outer fields the subquery erroneously was taken for non-correlated one. Now any set function aggregated in outer context makes the subquery correlated.
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gkodinov/kgeorge@magare.gmz authored
into magare.gmz:/home/kgeorge/mysql/autopush/B24484-5.0
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gkodinov/kgeorge@macbook.local authored
To correctly decide which predicates can be evaluated with a given table the optimizer must know the exact set of tables that a predicate depends on. If that mask is too wide (refer to non-existing tables) the optimizer can erroneously skip a predicate. One such case of wrong table usage mask were the aggregate functions. The have a all-1 mask (meaning depend on all tables, including non-existent ones). Fixed by making a real used_tables mask for the aggregates. The mask is constructed in the following way : 1. OR the table dependency masks of all the arguments of the aggregate. 2. If all the arguments of the function are from the local name resolution context and it is evaluated in the same name resolution context where it is referenced all the tables from that name resolution context are OR-ed to the dependency mask. This is to denote that an aggregate function depends on the number of rows it processes. 3. Handle correctly the case of an aggregate function optimization (such that the aggregate function can be pre-calculated and made a constant). Made sure that an aggregate function is never a constant (unless subject of a specific optimization and pre-calculation). One other flaw was revealed and fixed in the process : references were not calling the recalculation method for used_tables of their targets.
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- 19 Mar, 2007 2 commits
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evgen@moonbone.local authored
Removed wrong fix for the bug#27006. The bug was added by the fix for the bug#19978 and fixed by Monty on 2007/02/21. trigger.test, trigger.result: Corrected test case for the bug#27006.
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kostja@bodhi.local authored
into bodhi.local:/opt/local/work/mysql-5.0-runtime
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- 16 Mar, 2007 7 commits
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evgen@moonbone.local authored
UPDATE if the row wasn't actually changed. This bug was caused by fix for bug#19978. It causes AFTER UPDATE triggers not firing if a row wasn't actually changed by the update part of the INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE. Now triggers are always fired if a row is touched by the INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE.
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gkodinov/kgeorge@magare.gmz authored
into magare.gmz:/home/kgeorge/mysql/autopush/B26261-5.0-opt
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gkodinov/kgeorge@macbook.gmz authored
INSERT uses query_id to verify what fields are mentioned in the fields list of the INSERT command. However the check for that is made after the ON DUPLICATE KEY is processed. This causes all the fields mentioned in ON DUPLICATE KEY to be considered as mentioned in the fields list of INSERT. Moved the check up, right after processing the fields list.
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gluh@mysql.com/eagle.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/gluh/MySQL/Merge/5.0-opt
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gluh@mysql.com/eagle.(none) authored
The crash happens when 'skip-grant-tables' is enabled. We skip the filling of I_S privilege tables if acl_cache is not initialized.
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-5.0-opt
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-5.0-opt
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- 15 Mar, 2007 11 commits
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svoj@mysql.com/april.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/svoj/devel/bk/mysql-5.0-engines
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evgen@moonbone.local authored
into moonbone.local:/mnt/gentoo64/work/27033-bug-5.0-opt-mysql
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evgen@moonbone.local authored
touched but not actually changed. The LAST_INSERT_ID() is reset to 0 if no rows were inserted or changed. This is the case when an INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE updates a row with the same values as the row contains. Now the LAST_INSERT_ID() values is reset to 0 only if there were no rows successfully inserted or touched. The new 'touched' field is added to the COPY_INFO structure. It holds the number of rows that were touched no matter whether they were actually changed or not.
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-5.0-opt
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holyfoot/hf@mysql.com/hfmain.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/hf/work/mrg/mysql-5.0-opt
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dlenev@mockturtle.local authored
into mockturtle.local:/home/dlenev/src/mysql-4.1-merge
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dlenev@mockturtle.local authored
into mockturtle.local:/home/dlenev/src/mysql-5.0-merge
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dlenev@mockturtle.local authored
into mockturtle.local:/home/dlenev/src/mysql-5.0-bg25966-2
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dlenev@mockturtle.local authored
TABLE ... WRITE". Memory and CPU hogging occured when connection which had to wait for table lock was serviced by thread which previously serviced connection that was killed (note that connections can reuse threads if thread cache is enabled). One possible scenario which exposed this problem was when thread which provided binlog dump to replication slave was implicitly/automatically killed when the same slave reconnected and started pulling data through different thread/connection. The problem also occured when one killed particular query in connection (using KILL QUERY) and later this connection had to wait for some table lock. This problem was caused by the fact that thread-specific mysys_var::abort variable, which indicates that waiting operations on mysys layer should be aborted (this includes waiting for table locks), was set by kill operation but was never reset back. So this value was "inherited" by the following statements or even other connections (which reused the same physical thread). Such discrepancy between this variable and THD::killed flag broke logic on SQL-layer and caused CPU and memory hogging. This patch tries to fix this problem by properly resetting this member. There is no test-case associated with this patch since it is hard to test for memory/CPU hogging conditions in our test-suite.
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dlenev@mockturtle.local authored
TABLE ... WRITE". CPU hogging occured when connection which had to wait for table lock was serviced by thread which previously serviced connection that was killed (note that connections can reuse threads if thread cache is enabled). One possible scenario which exposed this problem was when thread which provided binlog dump to replication slave was implicitly/automatically killed when the same slave reconnected and started pulling data through different thread/connection. In 5.* versions memory hogging was added to CPU hogging. Moreover in those versions the problem also occured when one killed particular query in connection (using KILL QUERY) and later this connection had to wait for some table lock. This problem was caused by the fact that thread-specific mysys_var::abort variable, which indicates that waiting operations on mysys layer should be aborted (this includes waiting for table locks), was set by kill operation but was never reset back. So this value was "inherited" by the following statements or even other connections (which reused the same physical thread). Such discrepancy between this variable and THD::killed flag broke logic on SQL-layer and caused CPU and memory hogging. This patch tries to fix this problem by properly resetting this member. There is no test-case associated with this patch since it is hard to test for memory/CPU hogging conditions in our test-suite.
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- 14 Mar, 2007 5 commits
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malff/marcsql@weblab.(none) authored
into weblab.(none):/home/marcsql/TREE/mysql-5.0-26503
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malff/marcsql@weblab.(none) authored
Before this fix, the parser would accept illegal code in SQL exceptions handlers, that later causes the runtime to crash when executing the code, due to memory violations in the exception handler stack. The root cause of the problem is instructions within an exception handler that jumps to code located outside of the handler. This is illegal according to the SQL 2003 standard, since labels located outside the handler are not supposed to be visible (they are "out of scope"), so any instruction that jumps to these labels, like ITERATE or LEAVE, should not parse. The section of the standard that is relevant for this is : SQL:2003 SQL/PSM (ISO/IEC 9075-4:2003) section 13.1 <compound statement>, syntax rule 4 <quote> The scope of the <beginning label> is CS excluding every <SQL schema statement> contained in CS and excluding every <local handler declaration list> contained in CS. <beginning label> shall not be equivalent to any other <beginning label>s within that scope. </quote> With this fix, the C++ class sp_pcontext, which represent the "parsing context" tree (a.k.a symbol table) of a stored procedure, has been changed as follows: - constructors have been cleaned up, so that only building a root node for the tree is public; building nodes inside a tree is not public. - a new member, m_label_scope, indicates if a given syntactic context belongs to a DECLARE HANDLER block, - label resolution, in the method find_label(), has been changed to implement the restriction of scope regarding labels used in a compound statement. The actions in the parser, when parsing the body of a SQL exception handler, have been changed as follows: - the implementation of an exception handler (DECLARE HANDLER) now creates explicitly a new sp_pcontext, to isolate the code inside the handler from the containing compound statement context. - registering exception handlers as a result occurs in the parent context, see the rule sp_hcond_element - the code in sp_hcond_list has been cleaned up, to avoid code duplication In addition, the flags IN_SIMPLE_CASE and IN_HANDLER, declared in sp_head.h have been removed, since they are unused and broken by design (as seen with Bug 19194 (Right recursion in parser for CASE causes excessive stack usage, limitation), representing a stack in a single flag is not possible. Tests in sp-error have been added to show that illegal constructs are now rejected. Tests in sp have been added for code coverage, to show that ITERATE or LEAVE statements are legal when jumping to a label in scope, inside the body of an exception handler.
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kent@mysql.com/kent-amd64.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/kent/bk/tmp/mysql-5.0-build
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kent@mysql.com/kent-amd64.(none) authored
into mysql.com:/home/kent/bk/tmp/mysql-4.1-build
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kent@mysql.com/kent-amd64.(none) authored
Updated to version 0.6 of the text
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