• unknown's avatar
    item_strfunc.cc: · 10805ec2
    unknown authored
      BUG #11104 
          Took out the offset-=delimiter_length-1 out of the for loop. It was causing
          basically this: 
          select substring_index('the king of the the hill', 'the', -2) to not work.
          The first iteration, offset would be initialised to 24, then strstr would 
          point at 'the king of the the* hill' ('*'means right before the 
          character following), returning a offset of 16. The for loop would then 
          decrement offset by two (3 - 1), to 14, now pointing at 
          "the king of th*e the hill", _skipping_ past the 'e' in the second to last
          'the', and therefore strstr would never have a chance of matching the 
          second to last 'the', then moving on to the 'the' at the begginning of the 
          string!
          In a nutshell, offset was being decremented by too great a value, preventing
          the second to last 'the' from being ever found, hence the result of 
          'king of the the hill' from the query that is reported in the bug report
    func_str.test:
      BUG #11104
      Added tests to make sure fix addresses issues in original bug report
    func_str.result:
      BUG #11104 
      New results for new tests
    
    
    mysql-test/r/func_str.result:
      BUG #11104 
      
      New results for new tests
    mysql-test/t/func_str.test:
      BUG #11104
      
      Added tests to make sure fix addresses issues in original bug report
    sql/item_strfunc.cc:
      BUG #11104 
          Took out the offset-=delimiter_length-1 out of the for loop. It was causing
          basically this: 
          select substring_index('the king of the the hill', 'the', -2) to not work.
          The first iteration, offset would be initialised to 24, then strstr would 
          point at 'the king of the the* hill' ('*'means right before the 
          character following), returning a offset of 16. The for loop would then 
          decrement offset by two (3 - 1), to 14, now pointing at 
          "the king of th*e the hill", _skipping_ past the 'e' in the second to last
          'the', and therefore strstr would never have a chance of matching the 
          second to last 'the', then moving on to the 'the' at the begginning of the 
          string!
      
          In a nutshell, offset was being decremented by too great a value, preventing
          the second to last 'the' from being ever found, hence the result of 
          'king of the the hill' from the query that is reported in the bug report
    10805ec2
func_str.result 46.3 KB