• Alfranio Correia's avatar
    BUG#48091 valgrind errors when slave has double not null and master has double null · 4f164c4c
    Alfranio Correia authored
          
    Backporting BUG#43789 to mysql-5.1-bugteam
                                  
    The replication was generating corrupted data, warning messages on Valgrind
    and aborting on debug mode while replicating a "null" to "not null" field.
    Specifically the unpack_row routine, was considering the slave's table
    definition and trying to retrieve a field value, where there was nothing to be
    retrieved, ignoring the fact that the value was defined as "null" by the master.
                                  
    To fix the problem, we proceed as follows:
                                  
    1 - If it is not STRICT sql_mode, implicit default values are used, regardless
    if it is multi-row or single-row statement.
                                  
    2 - However, if it is STRICT mode, then a we do what follows:
                                  
    2.1 If it is a transactional engine, we do a rollback on the first NULL that is
    to be set into a NOT NULL column and return an error.
                                  
    2.2 If it is a non-transactional engine and it is the first row to be inserted
    with multi-row, we also return the error. Otherwise, we proceed with the
    execution, use implicit default values and print out warning messages.
                            
    Unfortunately, the current patch cannot mimic the behavior showed by the master
    for updates on multi-tables and multi-row inserts. This happens because such
    statements are unfolded in different row events. For instance, considering the
    following updates and strict mode:
                            
    (master)
    create table t1 (a int);
    create table t2 (a int not null);
    insert into t1 values (1);
    insert into t2 values (2);
    update t1, t2 SET t1.a=10, t2.a=NULL;
                            
    t1 would have (10) and t2 would have (0) as this would be handled as a
    multi-row update. On the other hand, if we had the following updates:
                            
    (master)
    create table t1 (a int);
    create table t2 (a int);
                            
    (slave)
    create table t1 (a int);
    create table t2 (a int not null);
                            
    (master)
    insert into t1 values (1);
    insert into t2 values (2);
    update t1, t2 SET t1.a=10, t2.a=NULL;
                            
    On the master t1 would have (10) and t2 would have (NULL). On
    the slave, t1 would have (10) but the update on t1 would fail.
    4f164c4c
rpl_not_null.test 10.5 KB