- 05 Nov, 2009 12 commits
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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- 03 Nov, 2009 2 commits
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Kristofer Pettersson authored
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Vladislav Vaintroub authored
The reason for the bug is that mysqtest as well as other client tools running in test suite (mysqlbinlog, mysqldump) will first try to connect whatever database has created shared memory with default base name "MySQL" and use this. (Same effect could be seen on Unix if mtr would not care to calculate "port" and "socket" parameter). The fix ensures that all client tools and running in mtr use unique per-database shared memory base parameters, so there is no possibility to clash with already installed one. We use socket name for shared memory base (it's known to be unique). This shared-memory-base is written to the MTR config file to the [client] and [mysqld] sections. Fix made also made sure all client tools understand and correctly handle --shared-memory-base. Prior to this patch it was not the case for mysqltest, mysqlbinlog and mysql_client_test. All new connections done from mtr scripts via connect() will by default set shared-memory-base. And finally, there is a possibility to force shared memory or pipe connection and overwrite shared memory/pipe base name from within mtr scripts via optional PIPE or SHM modifier. This functionality was manually backported from 6.0 (original patch http://lists.mysql.com/commits/74749)
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- 02 Nov, 2009 2 commits
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Vladislav Vaintroub authored
Bug#31621: Windows server hanging during shutdown using named pipes and idle connection Problem: when idle pipe connection is forcefully closed with KILL statement or when the server goes down, thread that is closing connection would hang infinitely in CloseHandle(). The reason for the hang is that named pipe operations are performed synchronously. In this mode all IOs on pipe are serialized, that is CloseHandle() will not abort ReadFile() in another thread, but wait for ReadFile() to complete. The fix implements asynchrnous mode for named pipes, where operation of file are not synchronized. Read/Write operation would fire an async IO and wait for either IO completion or timeout. Note, that with this patch timeouts are properly handled for named pipes. Post-review: Win32 timeout code has been fixed for named pipes and shared memory. We do not store pointer to NET in vio structure, only the read and write timeouts.
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Tatiana A. Nurnberg authored
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- 01 Nov, 2009 1 commit
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Luis Soares authored
Conflicts ========= Text conflict in sql/sql_class.cc 1 conflicts encountered.
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- 31 Oct, 2009 2 commits
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Sergey Vojtovich authored
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Alexander Nozdrin authored
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- 30 Oct, 2009 12 commits
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Alexey Kopytov authored
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Alexey Kopytov authored
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Alexey Kopytov authored
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Alexey Kopytov authored
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Alexey Kopytov authored
with temporary tables There were two problems the test case from this bug was triggering: 1. JOIN::rollup_init() was supposed to wrap all constant Items into another object for queries with the WITH ROLLUP modifier to ensure they are never considered as constants and therefore are written into temporary tables if the optimizer chooses to employ them for DISTINCT/GROUP BY handling. However, JOIN::rollup_init() was called before make_join_statistics(), so Items corresponding to fields in const tables could not be handled as intended, which was causing all kinds of problems later in the query execution. In particular, create_tmp_table() assumed all constant items except "hidden" ones to be removed earlier by remove_const() which led to improperly initialized Field objects for the temporary table being created. This is what was causing crashes and valgrind errors in storage engines. 2. Even when the above problem had been fixed, the query from the test case produced incorrect results due to some DISTINCT/GROUP BY optimizations being performed by the optimizer that are inapplicable in the WITH ROLLUP case. Fixed by disabling inapplicable DISTINCT/GROUP BY optimizations when the WITH ROLLUP modifier is present, and splitting the const-wrapping part of JOIN::rollup_init() into a separate method which is now invoked after make_join_statistics() when the const tables are already known.
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
subquery returning multiple rows Error handling was missing when handling subqueires in WHERE and when assigning a SELECT result to a @variable. This caused crash(es). Fixed by adding error handling code to both the WHERE condition evaluation and to assignment to an @variable.
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
having clause... The fix for bug 46184 was not very complete. It was not covering views using temporary tables and multiple tables in a FROM clause. Fixed by reverting the fix for 46184 and making a more general check that is checking at the right execution stage and for all of the non-supported cases. Now PROCEDURE ANALYZE on non-top level SELECT is also forbidden. Updated the analyse.test and subselect.test accordingly.
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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- 29 Oct, 2009 3 commits
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Tatiana A. Nurnberg authored
If an outer query is broken, a subquery might not even get set up. EXPLAIN EXTENDED did not expect this and merrily tried to de-ref all of the half-setup info. We now catch this case and print as much as we have, as it doesn't cost us anything (doesn't make regular execution slower).
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Georgi Kodinov authored
Queries with nested outer joins may lead to crashes or bad results because an internal data structure is not handled correctly. The optimizer uses bitmaps of nested JOINs to determine if certain table can be placed at a certain place in the JOIN order. It does maintain a bitmap describing in which JOINs last placed table is nested. When it puts a table it makes sure the bit of every JOIN that contains the table in question is set (because JOINs can be nested). It does that by recursively setting the bit for the next enclosing JOIN when this is the first table in the JOIN and recursively resetting the bit if it's the last table in the JOIN. When it removes a table from the join order it should do the opposite : recursively unset the bit if it's the only remaining table in this join and and recursively set the bit if it's removing the last table of a JOIN. There was an error in how the bits was set for the upper levels : when removing a table it was setting the bit for all the enclosing nested JOINs even if there were more tables left in the current JOIN (which practically means that the upper nested JOINs were not affected). Fixed by stopping the recursion at the relevant level.
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The 'rpl_get_master_version_and_clock' test verifies if the slave I/O thread tries to reconnect to master when it tries to get the values of the UNIX_TIMESTAMP, SERVER_ID from master under network disconnection. So the master server is restarted for making the transient network disconnection. Restarting master server can bring two problems as following: 1. The time out error is encountered sporadically. The slave I/O thread tries to reconnect master ten times, which is set in my.cnf. So in the test framework sporadically the slave I/O thread really stoped when it can't reconnect to master in the ten times successfully before the master starts, then the time out error will be encountered while waiting for the slave to start. 2. These warnings and errors are produced in server log file when the slave I/O thread tries to get the values of the UNIX_TIMESTAMP, SERVER_ID from master under the transient network disconnection. To fix problem 1, increase the master retry count to sixty times, so that the slave I/O thread has enough time to reconnect master successfully. To fix problem 2, suppress these warnings and errors by mtr suppression, because they are expected.
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- 28 Oct, 2009 5 commits
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Sergey Vojtovich authored
XA START may cause assertion failure/server crash when it is called after unilateral roll back issued by the Resource Manager (both in regular transaction and after XA transaction). The problem was that rm_error variable wasn't set/reset properly.
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Konstantin Osipov authored
Bug#46539 Various crashes on INSERT IGNORE SELECT + SELECT FOR UPDATE. If a transaction was rolled back inside InnoDB due to a deadlock or lock wait timeout, and the statement had IGNORE clause, the server could crash at the end of the statement or on shutdown. This was caused by the error handling infrastructure's attempt to ignore a non-ignorable error. When a transaction rollback request is raised, switch off current_select->no_error flag, so that the following error won't be ignored. Instead, we could add !thd->is_fatal_sub_stmt_error to my_message_sql(), but since in write_record() we switch off no_error, the same approach is used in thd_mark_transaction_to_rollback(). @todo: call thd_mark_transaction_to_rollback() from handler::print_error(), then we can easily make sure that the error reported by print_error is not ignored.
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Sergey Glukhov authored
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Sergey Glukhov authored
test result fix
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- 27 Oct, 2009 1 commit
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Sergey Vojtovich authored
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