1. 11 Apr, 2011 6 commits
  2. 07 Apr, 2011 1 commit
  3. 22 Mar, 2011 2 commits
    • Magne Mahre's avatar
      Post-push fix for Bug 11896296 · 40af5949
      Magne Mahre authored
      Didn't build on Solaris.
      40af5949
    • Magne Mahre's avatar
      Bug#11896296 REMOVE LGPL LICENSED FILES IN MYSQL 5.0 · 7606856e
      Magne Mahre authored
      The LGPL license is used in some legacy code, and to
      adhere to current licensing polity, we remove those
      files that are no longer used, and reorganize the
      remaining LGPL code so it will be GPL licensed from
      now on.
      
      Note:  This patch only removed LGPL licensed files
             in MySQL 5.0, and is the first of a set of
             patches to remove LGPL from all trees.
             (See Bug# 11840513 for details)
      7606856e
  4. 21 Mar, 2011 3 commits
  5. 16 Mar, 2011 1 commit
  6. 09 Mar, 2011 2 commits
  7. 16 Feb, 2011 1 commit
  8. 10 Feb, 2011 1 commit
  9. 09 Feb, 2011 2 commits
  10. 08 Feb, 2011 2 commits
  11. 07 Feb, 2011 1 commit
    • Dmitry Lenev's avatar
      Fix for bug#36544 "DROP USER does not remove stored function · e960abc7
      Dmitry Lenev authored
      privileges".
      
      The first problem was that DROP USER didn't properly remove privileges 
      on stored functions from in-memory structures. So the dropped user
      could have called stored functions on which he had privileges before
      being dropped while his connection was still around.
      Even worse if a new user with the same name was created he would
      inherit privileges on stored functions from the dropped user.
      Similar thing happened with old user name and function privileges
      during RENAME USER.
      
      This problem stemmed from the fact that the handle_grant_data() function
      which handled DROP/RENAME USER didn't take any measures to update
      in-memory hash with information about function privileges after
      updating them on disk.
      
      This patch solves this problem by adding code doing just that.
      
      The second problem was that RENAME USER didn't properly update in-memory
      structures describing table-level privileges and privileges on stored 
      procedures. As result such privileges could have been lost after a rename
      (i.e. not associated with the new name of user) and inherited by a new
      user with the same name as the old name of the original user.
      
      This problem was caused by code handling RENAME USER in
      handle_grant_struct() which [sic!]:
      a) tried to update wrong (tables) hash when updating stored procedure
         privileges for new user name.
      b) passed wrong arguments to function performing the hash update and
         didn't take into account the way in which such update could have
         changed the order of the hash elements.
      
      This patch solves this problem by ensuring that a) the correct hash
      is updated, b) correct arguments are used for the hash_update()
      function and c) we take into account possible changes in the order
      of hash elements.
      e960abc7
  12. 02 Feb, 2011 2 commits
    • Georgi Kodinov's avatar
      6954b672
    • Georgi Kodinov's avatar
      Fixes for Bug #55755 and Bug #52315 part 2 · 59f68983
      Georgi Kodinov authored
      Bug #55755 : Date STD variable signness breaks server on FreeBSD and OpenBSD
      
      * Added a check to configure on the size of time_t
      * Created a macro to check for a valid time_t that is safe to use with datetime 
        functions and store in TIMESTAMP columns.
      * Used the macro consistently instead of the ad-hoc checks introduced by 52315
      * Fixed compliation warnings on platforms where the size of time_t is smaller than
        the size of a long (e.g. OpenBSD 4.8 64 amd64).
      
      Bug #52315: utc_date() crashes when system time > year 2037
      
      * Added a correct check for the timestamp range instead of just variable size check to
      SET TIMESTAMP.
      * Added overflow checking before converting to time_t. 
      * Using a correct localized error message in this case instead of the generic error.
      * Added a test suite.
      * fixed the checks so that they check for unsigned time_t as well. Used the checks 
        consistently across the source code.
      * fixed the original test case to expect the new error code.
      59f68983
  13. 28 Jan, 2011 1 commit
  14. 26 Jan, 2011 2 commits
  15. 15 Jan, 2011 1 commit
    • 's avatar
      BUG#49124 Security issue with /*!-versioned */ SQL statements on Slave · ade1c74b
      authored
      Backport to 5.0.
      
      /*![:version:] Query Code */, where [:version:] is a sequence of 5 
      digits representing the mysql server version(e.g /*!50200 ... */),
      is a special comment that the query in it can be executed on those 
      servers whose versions are larger than the version appearing in the 
      comment. It leads to a security issue when slave's version is larger 
      than master's. A malicious user can improve his privileges on slaves. 
      Because slave SQL thread is running with SUPER privileges, so it can
      execute queries that he/she does not have privileges on master.
            
      This bug is fixed with the logic below: 
      - To replace '!' with ' ' in the magic comments which are not applied on
        master. So they become common comments and will not be applied on slave.
            
      - Example:
        'INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1) /*!10000, (2)*/ /*!99999 ,(3)*/
         will be binlogged as
        'INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (1) /*!10000, (2)*/ /* 99999 ,(3)*/
      ade1c74b
  16. 13 Jan, 2011 2 commits
  17. 07 Jan, 2011 1 commit
  18. 29 Dec, 2010 1 commit
  19. 28 Dec, 2010 1 commit
    • Kent Boortz's avatar
      - Added/updated copyright headers · fddb1f1b
      Kent Boortz authored
      - Removed files specific to compiling on OS/2
      - Removed files specific to SCO Unix packaging
      - Removed "libmysqld/copyright", text is included in documentation
      - Removed LaTeX headers for NDB Doxygen documentation
      - Removed obsolete NDB files
      - Removed "mkisofs" binaries
      - Removed the "cvs2cl.pl" script
      - Changed a few GPL texts to use "program" instead of "library"
      fddb1f1b
  20. 17 Dec, 2010 2 commits
  21. 16 Dec, 2010 2 commits
    • Martin Hansson's avatar
      Merge. · 7d2b182d
      Martin Hansson authored
      7d2b182d
    • Martin Hansson's avatar
      Bug#54568: create view cause Assertion failed: 0, · ff15ebdd
      Martin Hansson authored
      file .\item_subselect.cc, line 836
           
      IN quantified predicates are never executed directly. They are rather wrapped
      inside nodes called IN Optimizers (Item_in_optimizer) which take care of the
      execution. However, this is not done during query preparation. Unfortunately
      the LIKE predicate pre-evaluates constant right-hand side arguments even
      during name resolution. Likely this is meant as an optimization.
            
      Fixed by not pre-evaluating LIKE arguments in view prepare mode.
      
      Back-ported to 5.0s
      ff15ebdd
  22. 15 Dec, 2010 1 commit
    • Alexander Nozdrin's avatar
      Patch for Bug#57952 (privilege change is not taken into account by EXECUTE). · 39036ca6
      Alexander Nozdrin authored
      The user-visible problem was that changes to column-level privileges,
      happened in between of PREPARE and EXECUTE of a prepared statement, were
      neglected. I.e. a prepared statement could be executed with the
      column-level privileges as of PREPARE-time. The problem existed for
      column-level privileges only.
      
      A similar problem existed for stored programs: the changes between
      executions didn't have an effect.
      
      Technically the thing is that table references are cached in
      Prepared_statement::prepare() call. In subsequent
      Prepared_statement::execute() calls those cached values are used.
      There are two functions to get a field by name: find_field_in_table() and
      find_field_in_table_ref(). On prepare-phase find_field_in_table_ref() is
      called, on execute-phase -- find_field_in_table() because the table is
      cached. find_field_in_table() does not check column-level privileges and
      expects the caller to do that. The problem was that this check was
      forgotten.
      
      The fix is to check them there as it happens in find_field_in_table_ref().
      39036ca6
  23. 14 Dec, 2010 1 commit
    • Gleb Shchepa's avatar
      backport of bug #54476 fix from 5.1-bugteam to 5.0-bugteam. · 01521a0a
      Gleb Shchepa authored
      Original revid: alexey.kopytov@sun.com-20100723115254-jjwmhq97b9wl932l
      
       > Bug #54476: crash when group_concat and 'with rollup' in
       >                      prepared statements
       >
       > Using GROUP_CONCAT() together with the WITH ROLLUP modifier
       > could crash the server.
       >
       > The reason was a combination of several facts:
       >
       > 1. The Item_func_group_concat class stores pointers to ORDER
       > objects representing the columns in the ORDER BY clause of
       > GROUP_CONCAT().
       >
       > 2. find_order_in_list() called from
       > Item_func_group_concat::setup() modifies the ORDER objects so
       > that their 'item' member points to the arguments list
       > allocated in the Item_func_group_concat constructor.
       >
       > 3. In some cases (e.g. in JOIN::rollup_make_fields) a copy of
       > the original Item_func_group_concat object could be created by
       > using the Item_func_group_concat::Item_func_group_concat(THD
       > *thd, Item_func_group_concat *item) copy constructor. The
       > latter essentially creates a shallow copy of the source
       > object. Memory for the arguments array is allocated on
       > thd->mem_root, but the pointers for arguments and ORDER are
       > copied verbatim.
       >
       > What happens in the test case is that when executing the query
       > for the first time, after a copy of the original
       > Item_func_group_concat object has been created by
       > JOIN::rollup_make_fields(), find_order_in_list() is called for
       > this new object. It then resolves ORDER BY by modifying the
       > ORDER objects so that they point to elements of the arguments
       > array which is local to the cloned object. When thd->mem_root
       > is freed upon completing the execution, pointers in the ORDER
       > objects become invalid. Those ORDER objects, however, are also
       > shared with the original Item_func_group_concat object which is
       > preserved between executions of a prepared statement. So the
       > first call to find_order_in_list() for the original object on
       > the second execution tries to dereference an invalid pointer.
       >
       > The solution is to create copies of the ORDER objects when
       > copying Item_func_group_concat to not leave any stale pointers
       > in other instances with different lifecycles.
      01521a0a
  24. 08 Dec, 2010 1 commit