Commit f66d0161 authored by Jan Lindström's avatar Jan Lindström

MDEV-9471: Server crashes or returns an error while trying to alter...

MDEV-9471: Server crashes or returns an error while trying to alter partitioning on a table moved from Windows to Linux

At alter table when server renames the table to temporal name,
old name uses normal partioned table naming rules. However,
if tables are created on Windows and then transfered to Linux
and lower-case-table-names=1 we should modify the old name
on rename to lower case to be able to find it from the
InnoDB dictionary.
parent 603c0960
......@@ -3838,6 +3838,7 @@ row_rename_table_for_mysql(
ibool old_is_tmp, new_is_tmp;
pars_info_t* info = NULL;
int retry;
char* is_part = NULL;
ut_a(old_name != NULL);
ut_a(new_name != NULL);
......@@ -3872,6 +3873,54 @@ row_rename_table_for_mysql(
table = dict_table_get_low(old_name, DICT_ERR_IGNORE_NONE);
/* We look for pattern #P# to see if the table is partitioned
MySQL table. */
#ifdef __WIN__
is_part = strstr(old_name, "#p#");
#else
is_part = strstr(old_name, "#P#");
#endif /* __WIN__ */
/* MySQL partition engine hard codes the file name
separator as "#P#". The text case is fixed even if
lower_case_table_names is set to 1 or 2. This is true
for sub-partition names as well. InnoDB always
normalises file names to lower case on Windows, this
can potentially cause problems when copying/moving
tables between platforms.
1) If boot against an installation from Windows
platform, then its partition table name could
be all be in lower case in system tables. So we
will need to check lower case name when load table.
2) If we boot an installation from other case
sensitive platform in Windows, we might need to
check the existence of table name without lowering
case them in the system table. */
if (!table &&
is_part &&
innobase_get_lower_case_table_names() == 1) {
char par_case_name[MAX_FULL_NAME_LEN + 1];
#ifndef __WIN__
/* Check for the table using lower
case name, including the partition
separator "P" */
memcpy(par_case_name, old_name,
strlen(old_name));
par_case_name[strlen(old_name)] = 0;
innobase_casedn_str(par_case_name);
#else
/* On Windows platfrom, check
whether there exists table name in
system table whose name is
not being normalized to lower case */
normalize_table_name_low(
par_case_name, old_name, FALSE);
#endif
table = dict_table_get_low(par_case_name, DICT_ERR_IGNORE_NONE);
}
if (!table) {
err = DB_TABLE_NOT_FOUND;
ut_print_timestamp(stderr);
......
......@@ -3978,6 +3978,7 @@ row_rename_table_for_mysql(
ibool old_is_tmp, new_is_tmp;
pars_info_t* info = NULL;
int retry;
char* is_part = NULL;
ut_a(old_name != NULL);
ut_a(new_name != NULL);
......@@ -4012,6 +4013,54 @@ row_rename_table_for_mysql(
table = dict_table_get_low(old_name, DICT_ERR_IGNORE_NONE);
/* We look for pattern #P# to see if the table is partitioned
MySQL table. */
#ifdef __WIN__
is_part = strstr(old_name, "#p#");
#else
is_part = strstr(old_name, "#P#");
#endif /* __WIN__ */
/* MySQL partition engine hard codes the file name
separator as "#P#". The text case is fixed even if
lower_case_table_names is set to 1 or 2. This is true
for sub-partition names as well. InnoDB always
normalises file names to lower case on Windows, this
can potentially cause problems when copying/moving
tables between platforms.
1) If boot against an installation from Windows
platform, then its partition table name could
be all be in lower case in system tables. So we
will need to check lower case name when load table.
2) If we boot an installation from other case
sensitive platform in Windows, we might need to
check the existence of table name without lowering
case them in the system table. */
if (!table &&
is_part &&
innobase_get_lower_case_table_names() == 1) {
char par_case_name[MAX_FULL_NAME_LEN + 1];
#ifndef __WIN__
/* Check for the table using lower
case name, including the partition
separator "P" */
memcpy(par_case_name, old_name,
strlen(old_name));
par_case_name[strlen(old_name)] = 0;
innobase_casedn_str(par_case_name);
#else
/* On Windows platfrom, check
whether there exists table name in
system table whose name is
not being normalized to lower case */
normalize_table_name_low(
par_case_name, old_name, FALSE);
#endif
table = dict_table_get_low(par_case_name, DICT_ERR_IGNORE_NONE);
}
if (!table) {
err = DB_TABLE_NOT_FOUND;
ut_print_timestamp(stderr);
......
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