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kostja@vajra.(none) authored
Bug#4968 ""Stored procedure crash if cursor opened on altered table" Bug#6895 "Prepared Statements: ALTER TABLE DROP COLUMN does nothing" Bug#19182 "CREATE TABLE bar (m INT) SELECT n FROM foo; doesn't work from stored procedure." Bug#19733 "Repeated alter, or repeated create/drop, fails" Bug#22060 "ALTER TABLE x AUTO_INCREMENT=y in SP crashes server" Bug#24879 "Prepared Statements: CREATE TABLE (UTF8 KEY) produces a growing key length" (this bug is not fixed in 5.0) Re-execution of CREATE DATABASE, CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE statements in stored routines or as prepared statements caused incorrect results (and crashes in versions prior to 5.0.25). In 5.1 the problem occured only for CREATE DATABASE, CREATE TABLE SELECT and CREATE TABLE with INDEX/DATA DIRECTOY options). The problem of bugs 4968, 19733, 19282 and 6895 was that functions mysql_prepare_table, mysql_create_table and mysql_alter_table are not re-execution friendly: during their operation they modify contents of LEX (members create_info, alter_info, key_list, create_list), thus making the LEX unusable for the next execution. In particular, these functions removed processed columns and keys from create_list, key_list and drop_list. Search the code in sql_table.cc for drop_it.remove() and similar patterns to find evidence. The fix is to supply to these functions a usable copy of each of the above structures at every re-execution of an SQL statement. To simplify memory management, LEX::key_list and LEX::create_list were added to LEX::alter_info, a fresh copy of which is created for every execution. The problem of crashing bug 22060 stemmed from the fact that the above metnioned functions were not only modifying HA_CREATE_INFO structure in LEX, but also were changing it to point to areas in volatile memory of the execution memory root. The patch solves this problem by creating and using an on-stack copy of HA_CREATE_INFO in mysql_execute_command. Additionally, this patch splits the part of mysql_alter_table that analizes and rewrites information from the parser into a separate function - mysql_prepare_alter_table, in analogy with mysql_prepare_table, which is renamed to mysql_prepare_create_table.
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