1. 29 Jun, 2007 3 commits
  2. 28 Jun, 2007 1 commit
    • anozdrin/alik@ibm.'s avatar
      Patch for the following bugs: · 9fae9ef6
      anozdrin/alik@ibm. authored
        - BUG#11986: Stored routines and triggers can fail if the code
          has a non-ascii symbol
        - BUG#16291: mysqldump corrupts string-constants with non-ascii-chars
        - BUG#19443: INFORMATION_SCHEMA does not support charsets properly
        - BUG#21249: Character set of SP-var can be ignored
        - BUG#25212: Character set of string constant is ignored (stored routines)
        - BUG#25221: Character set of string constant is ignored (triggers)
      
      There were a few general problems that caused these bugs:
      1. Character set information of the original (definition) query for views,
         triggers, stored routines and events was lost.
      2. mysqldump output query in client character set, which can be
         inappropriate to encode definition-query.
      3. INFORMATION_SCHEMA used strings with mixed encodings to display object
         definition;
      
      1. No query-definition-character set.
      
      In order to compile query into execution code, some extra data (such as
      environment variables or the database character set) is used. The problem
      here was that this context was not preserved. So, on the next load it can
      differ from the original one, thus the result will be different.
      
      The context contains the following data:
        - client character set;
        - connection collation (character set and collation);
        - collation of the owner database;
      
      The fix is to store this context and use it each time we parse (compile)
      and execute the object (stored routine, trigger, ...).
      
      2. Wrong mysqldump-output.
      
      The original query can contain several encodings (by means of character set
      introducers). The problem here was that we tried to convert original query
      to the mysqldump-client character set.
      
      Moreover, we stored queries in different character sets for different
      objects (views, for one, used UTF8, triggers used original character set).
      
      The solution is
        - to store definition queries in the original character set;
        - to change SHOW CREATE statement to output definition query in the
          binary character set (i.e. without any conversion);
        - introduce SHOW CREATE TRIGGER statement;
        - to dump special statements to switch the context to the original one
          before dumping and restore it afterwards.
      
      Note, in order to preserve the database collation at the creation time,
      additional ALTER DATABASE might be used (to temporary switch the database
      collation back to the original value). In this case, ALTER DATABASE
      privilege will be required. This is a backward-incompatible change.
      
      3. INFORMATION_SCHEMA showed non-UTF8 strings
      
      The fix is to generate UTF8-query during the parsing, store it in the object
      and show it in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.
      
      Basically, the idea is to create a copy of the original query convert it to
      UTF8. Character set introducers are removed and all text literals are
      converted to UTF8.
      
      This UTF8 query is intended to provide user-readable output. It must not be
      used to recreate the object.  Specialized SHOW CREATE statements should be
      used for this.
      
      The reason for this limitation is the following: the original query can
      contain symbols from several character sets (by means of character set
      introducers).
      
      Example:
      
        - original query:
          CREATE VIEW v1 AS SELECT _cp1251 'Hello' AS c1;
      
        - UTF8 query (for INFORMATION_SCHEMA):
          CREATE VIEW v1 AS SELECT 'Hello' AS c1;
      9fae9ef6
  3. 27 Jun, 2007 1 commit
  4. 25 Jun, 2007 12 commits
  5. 24 Jun, 2007 4 commits
    • gshchepa/uchum@gleb.loc's avatar
      Merge gleb.loc:/home/uchum/work/bk/5.1 · a1ebc859
      gshchepa/uchum@gleb.loc authored
      into  gleb.loc:/home/uchum/work/bk/5.1-opt
      a1ebc859
    • igor@olga.mysql.com's avatar
      Merge olga.mysql.com:/home/igor/mysql-5.0-opt · da416060
      igor@olga.mysql.com authored
      into  olga.mysql.com:/home/igor/dev-opt/mysql-5.0-opt-bug25602
      da416060
    • gshchepa/uchum@gleb.loc's avatar
      Merge gleb.loc:/home/uchum/work/bk/5.0 · 684d0ced
      gshchepa/uchum@gleb.loc authored
      into  gleb.loc:/home/uchum/work/bk/5.0-opt
      684d0ced
    • igor@olga.mysql.com's avatar
      Fixed bug #25602. A query with DISTINCT in the select list to which · 59b9077c
      igor@olga.mysql.com authored
      the loose scan optimization for grouping queries was applied returned 
      a wrong result set when the query was used with the SQL_BIG_RESULT
      option.
      
      The SQL_BIG_RESULT option forces to use sorting algorithm for grouping
      queries instead of employing a suitable index. The current loose scan
      optimization is applied only for one table queries when the suitable
      index is covering. It does not make sense to use sort algorithm in this
      case. However the create_sort_index function does not take into account
      the possible choice of the loose scan to implement the DISTINCT operator
      which makes sorting unnecessary. Moreover the current implementation of
      the loose scan for queries with distinct assumes that sorting will
      never happen. Thus in this case create_sort_index should not call
      the function filesort.
      59b9077c
  6. 23 Jun, 2007 6 commits
  7. 22 Jun, 2007 13 commits