- 10 Jul, 2012 7 commits
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
No commit message
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Andrei Elkin authored
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Andrei Elkin authored
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Bjorn Munch authored
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Andrei Elkin authored
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Sujatha Sivakumar authored
Problem: ======= The return value from my_b_write is ignored by: `my_b_write_quoted', `my_b_write_bit',`Query_log_event::print_query_header' Most callers of `my_b_printf' ignore the return value. `log_event.cc' has many calls to it. Analysis: ======== `my_b_write' is used to write data into a file. If the write fails it sets appropriate error number and error message through my_error() function call and sets the IO_CACHE::error == -1. `my_b_printf' function is also used to write data into a file, it internally invokes my_b_write to do the write operation. Upon success it returns number of characters written to file and on error it returns -1 and sets the error through my_error() and also sets IO_CACHE::error == -1. Most of the event specific print functions for example `Create_file_log_event::print', `Execute_load_log_event::print' etc are the ones which make several calls to the above two functions and they do not check for the return value after the 'print' call. All the above mentioned abuse cases deal with the client side. Fix: === As part of bug fix a check for IO_CACHE::error == -1 has been added at a very high level after the call to the 'print' function. There are few more places where the return value of "my_b_write" is ignored those are mentioned below. +++ mysys/mf_iocache2.c 2012-06-04 07:03:15 +0000 @@ -430,7 +430,8 @@ memset(buffz, '0', minimum_width - length2); else memset(buffz, ' ', minimum_width - length2); - my_b_write(info, buffz, minimum_width - length2); +++ sql/log.cc 2012-06-08 09:04:46 +0000 @@ -2388,7 +2388,12 @@ { end= strxmov(buff, "# administrator command: ", NullS); buff_len= (ulong) (end - buff); - my_b_write(&log_file, (uchar*) buff, buff_len); At these places appropriate return value handlers have been added.
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Bjorn Munch authored
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- 09 Jul, 2012 2 commits
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Bjorn Munch authored
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Bjorn Munch authored
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- 05 Jul, 2012 2 commits
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Andrei Elkin authored
Fixes for BUG11761686 left a flaw that managed to slip away from testing. Only effective filtering branch was actually tested with a regression test added to rpl_filter_tables_not_exist. The reason of the failure is destuction of too early mem-root-allocated memory at the end of the deferred User-var's do_apply_event(). Fixed with bypassing free_root() in the deferred execution branch. Deallocation of created in do_apply_event() items is done by the base code through THD::cleanup_after_query() -> free_items() that the parent Query can't miss.
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Georgi Kodinov authored
HANDLE_FATAL_SIGNAL IN STRNLEN Fixed the following bounds checking problems : 1. in check_if_legal_filename() make sure the null terminated string is long enough before accessing the bytes in it. Prevents pottential read-past-buffer-end 2. in my_wc_mb_filename() of the filename charset check for the end of the destination buffer before sending single byte characters into it. Prevents write-past-end-of-buffer (and garbaling stack in the cases reported here) errors. Added test cases.
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- 03 Jul, 2012 1 commit
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Rohit Kalhans authored
This is a followup patch for the bug enabling the test i_binlog.binlog_mysqlbinlog_file_write.test this was disabled in mysql trunk and mysql 5.5 as in the release build mysqlbinlog was not debug compiled whereas the mysqld was. Since have_debug.inc script checks only for mysqld to be debug compiled, the test was not being skipped on release builds. We resolve this problem by creating a new inc file mysqlbinlog_have_debug.inc which checks exclusively for mysqlbinlog to be debug compiled. if not it skips the test.
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- 29 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Gleb Shchepa authored
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- 28 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Georgi Kodinov authored
Several fixes : * sql-common/client.c Added a validity check of the fields metadata packet sent by the server. Now libmysql will check if the length of the data sent by the server matches what's expected by the protocol before using the data. * client/mysqltest.cc Fixed the error handling code in mysqltest to avoid sending new commands when the reading the result set failed (and there are unread data in the pipe). * sql_common.h + libmysql/libmysql.c + sql-common/client.c unpack_fields() now generates a proper error when it fails. Added a new argument to this function to support the error generation. * sql/protocol.cc Added a debug trigger to cause the server to send a NULL insted of the packet expected by the client for testing purposes.
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- 29 Jun, 2012 2 commits
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Jon Olav Hauglid authored
This patch fixes various compilation warnings of the type "error: narrowing conversion of 'x' from 'datatype1' to 'datatype2'
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Gleb Shchepa authored
Print the warning(note): YEAR(x) is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Please use YEAR(4) instead on "CREATE TABLE ... YEAR(x)" or "ALTER TABLE MODIFY ... YEAR(x)", where x != 4
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- 28 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Norvald H. Ryeng authored
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- 19 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Harin Vadodaria authored
INC_HOST_ERRORS() IS CALLED. Description: Reverting patch 3755 for bug#11753779
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- 18 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Norvald H. Ryeng authored
Problem: Some queries with subqueries and a HAVING clause that consists only of a column not in the select or grouping lists causes the server to crash. During parsing, an Item_ref is constructed for the HAVING column. The name of the column is resolved when JOIN::prepare calls fix_fields() on its having clause. Since the column is not mentioned in the select or grouping lists, a ref pointer is not found and a new Item_field is created instead. The Item_ref is replaced by the Item_field in the tree of HAVING clauses. Since the tree consists only of this item, the pointer that is updated is JOIN::having. However, st_select_lex::having still points to the Item_ref as the root of the tree of HAVING clauses. The bug is triggered when doing filesort for create_sort_index(). When find_all_keys() calls select->cond->walk() it eventually reaches Item_subselect::walk() where it continues to walk the having clauses from lex->having. This means that it finds the Item_ref instead of the new Item_field, and Item_ref::walk() tries to dereference the ref pointer, which is still null. The crash is reproducible only in 5.5, but the problem lies latent in 5.1 and trunk as well. Fix: After calling fix_fields on the having clause in JOIN::prepare(), set select_lex::having to point to the same item as JOIN::having. This patch also fixes a bug in 5.1 and 5.5 that is triggered if the query is executed as a prepared statement. The Item_field is created in the runtime arena when the query is prepared, and the pointer to the item is saved by st_select_lex::fix_prepare_information() and brought back as a dangling pointer when the query is executed, after the runtime arena has been reclaimed. Fix: Backport fix from trunk that switches to the permanent arena before calling Item_ref::fix_fields() in JOIN::prepare().
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- 15 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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kent.boortz@oracle.com authored
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- 14 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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sayantan.dutta@oracle.com authored
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- 13 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Harin Vadodaria authored
INC_HOST_ERRORS() IS CALLED. Issue : Sequence of calling inc_host_errors() and reset_host_errors() required some changes in order to maintain correct connection error count. Solution : Call to reset_host_errors() is shifted to a location after which no calls to inc_host_errors() are made.
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- 12 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Manish Kumar authored
Problem ======== Replication breaks in the cases if the event length exceeds the size of master Dump thread's max_allowed_packet. The reason why this failure is occuring is because the event length is more than the total size of the max_allowed_packet, on addition of the max_event_header length exceeds the max_allowed_packet of the DUMP thread. This causes the Dump thread to break replication and throw an error. That can happen e.g with row-based replication in Update_rows event. Fix ==== The problem is fixed in 2 steps: 1.) The Dump thread limit to read event is increased to the upper limit i.e. Dump thread reads whatever gets logged in the binary log. 2.) On the slave side we increase the the max_allowed_packet for the slave's threads (IO/SQL) by increasing it to 1GB. This is done using the new server option (slave_max_allowed_packet) included, is used to regulate the max_allowed_packet of the slave thread (IO/SQL) by the DBA, and facilitates the sending of large packets from the master to the slave. This causes the large packets to be received by the slave and apply it successfully.
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- 05 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Tor Didriksen authored
Patch for 5.1 and 5.5: fix typo in byte comparison in rr_cmp()
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- 01 Jun, 2012 1 commit
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Annamalai Gurusami authored
WHEN KILLING Suppose there is a query waiting for a lock. If the user kills this query, then "Got error -1 when reading table" error message must not be logged in the server log file. Since this is a user requested interruption, no spurious error message must be logged in the server log. This patch will remove the error message from the log. approved by joh and tatjana
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- 31 May, 2012 2 commits
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
No commit message
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
No commit message
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- 30 May, 2012 2 commits
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
No commit message
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Rohit Kalhans authored
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- 29 May, 2012 1 commit
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Rohit Kalhans authored
Problem: mysqlbinlog exits without any error code in case of file write error. It is because of the fact that the calls to Log_event::print() method does not return a value and the thus any error were being ignored. Resolution: We resolve this problem by checking for the IO_CACHE::error == -1 after every call to Log_event:: print() and terminating the further execution.
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- 24 May, 2012 1 commit
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Inaam Rana authored
rb://1088 approved by: Marko Makela This bug was introduced in early stages of plugin. We were not checking for an implicit lock on sec index rec for trx_id that is stamped on current version of the clust_index in case where the clust_index has a previous delete marked version.
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- 21 May, 2012 2 commits
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Annamalai Gurusami authored
INNODB_AUTOINC_LOCK_MODE=1 AND USING TRIGGER When an insert stmt like "insert into t values (1),(2),(3)" is executed, the autoincrement values assigned to these three rows are expected to be contiguous. In the given lock mode (innodb_autoinc_lock_mode=1), the auto inc lock will be released before the end of the statement. So to make the autoincrement contiguous for a given statement, we need to reserve the auto inc values at the beginning of the statement. Modified the fix based on review comment by Svoj.
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Manish Kumar authored
Problem ======== SQL statements close to the size of max_allowed_packet produce binary log events larger than max_allowed_packet. The reason why this failure is occuring is because the event length is more than the total size of the max_allowed_packet + max_event_header length. Now since the event length exceeds this size master Dump thread is unable to send the packet on to the slave. That can happen e.g with row-based replication in Update_rows event. Fix ==== The problem was fixed by increasing the max_allowed_packet for the slave's threads (IO/SQL) by increasing it to 1GB. This is done using the new server option included which is used to regulate the max_allowed_packet of the slave thread (IO/SQL). This causes the large packets to be received by the slave and apply it successfully.
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- 18 May, 2012 1 commit
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Rohit Kalhans authored
Problem: After the fix for Bug#12589870, a new field that stores the length of db name was added in the buffer that stores the query to be executed. Unlike for the plain user session, the replication execution did not allocate the necessary chunk in Query-event constructor. This caused an invalid read while accessing this field. Solution: We fix this problem by allocating a necessary chunk in the buffer created in the Query_log_event::Query_log_event() and store the length of database name.
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- 17 May, 2012 3 commits
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Gopal Shankar authored
PROBLEM: Threads end-up in deadlock due to locks acquired as described below, con1: Run Query on a table. It is important that this SELECT must back-off while trying to open the t1 and enter into wait_for_condition(). The SELECT then is blocked trying to lock mysys_var->mutex which is held by con3. The very significant fact here is that mysys_var->current_mutex will still point to LOCK_open, even if LOCK_open is no longer held by con1 at this point. con2: Try dropping table used in con1 or query some table. It will hold LOCK_open and be blocked trying to lock kernel_mutex held by con4. con3: Try killing the query run by con1. It will hold THD::LOCK_thd_data belonging to con1 while trying to lock mysys_var->current_mutex belonging to con1. But current_mutex will point to LOCK_open which is held by con2. con4: Get innodb engine status It will hold kernel_mutex, trying to lock THD::LOCK_thd_data belonging to con1 which is held by con3. So while technically only con2, con3 and con4 participate in the deadlock, con1's mysys_var->current_mutex pointing to LOCK_open is a vital component of the deadlock. CYCLE = (THD::LOCK_thd_data -> LOCK_open -> kernel_mutex -> THD::LOCK_thd_data) FIX: LOCK_thd_data has responsibility of protecting, 1) thd->query, thd->query_length 2) VIO 3) thd->mysys_var (used by KILL statement and shutdown) 4) THD during thread delete. Among above responsibilities, 1), 2)and (3,4) seems to be three independent group of responsibility. If there is different LOCK owning responsibility of (3,4), the above mentioned deadlock cycle can be avoid. This fix introduces LOCK_thd_kill to handle responsibility (3,4), which eliminates the deadlock issue. Note: The problem is not found in 5.5. Introduction MDL subsystem caused metadata locking responsibility to be moved from TDC/TC to MDL subsystem. Due to this, responsibility of LOCK_open is reduced. As the use of LOCK_open is removed in open_table() and mysql_rm_table() the above mentioned CYCLE does not form. Revision ID for changes, open_table() = dlenev@mysql.com-20100727133458-m3ua9oslnx8fbbvz mysql_rm_table() = jon.hauglid@oracle.com-20101116100012-kxep9txz2fxy3nmw
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
No commit message
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
No commit message
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- 16 May, 2012 3 commits
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Annamalai Gurusami authored
The following scenario crashes our mysql server: 1. set global innodb_file_per_table=1; 2. create table t1(c1 int) engine=innodb; 3. alter table t1 discard tablespace; 4. alter table t1 add unique index(c1); Step 4 crashes the server. This patch introduces a check on discarded tablespace to avoid the crash. rb://1041 approved by Marko Makela
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Venkata Sidagam authored
FULLTEXT INDEX AND CONCURRENT DML. Problem Statement: ------------------ 1) Create a table with FT index. 2) Enable concurrent inserts. 3) In multiple threads do below operations repeatedly a) truncate table b) insert into table .... c) select ... match .. against .. non-boolean/boolean mode After some time we could observe two different assert core dumps Analysis: -------- 1)assert core dump at key_read_cache(): Two select threads operating in-parallel on same key root block. 1st select thread block->status is set to BLOCK_ERROR because the my_pread() in read_block() is returning '0'. Truncate table made the index file size as 1024 and pread was asked to get the block of count bytes(1024 bytes) from offset of 1024 which it cannot read since its "end of file" and retuning '0' setting "my_errno= HA_ERR_FILE_TOO_SHORT" and the key_file_length, key_root[0] is same i.e. 1024. Since block status has BLOCK_ERROR the 1st select thread enter into the free_block() and will be under wait on conditional mutex by making status as BLOCK_REASSIGNED and goes for wait_on_readers(). Other select thread will also work on the same block and sees the status as BLOCK_ERROR and enters into free_block(), checks for BLOCK_REASSIGNED and asserting the server. 2)assert core dump at key_write_cache(): One select thread and One insert thread. Select thread gets the unlocks the 'keycache->cache_lock', which allows other threads to continue and gets the pread() return value as'0'(please see the explanation above) and tries to get the lock on 'keycache->cache_lock' and waits there for the lock. Insert thread requests for the block, block will be assigned from the hash list and makes the page_status as 'PAGE_WAIT_TO_BE_READ' and goes for the read_block(), waits in the queue since there are some other threads performing reads on the same block. Select thread which was waiting for the 'keycache->cache_lock' mutex in the read_block() will continue after getting the my_pread() value as '0' and sets the block status as BLOCK_ERROR and goes to the free_block() and go to the wait_for_readers(). Now the insert thread will awake and continues. and checks block->status as not BLOCK_READ and it asserts. Fix: --- In the full text code, multiple readers of index file is not guarded. Hence added below below code in _ft2_search() and walk_and_match(). to lock the key_root I have used below code in _ft2_search() if (info->s->concurrent_insert) mysql_rwlock_rdlock(&share->key_root_lock[0]); and to unlock if (info->s->concurrent_insert) mysql_rwlock_unlock(&share->key_root_lock[0]);
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Annamalai Gurusami authored
INNODB_AUTOINC_LOCK_MODE=1 AND USING TRIGGER When an insert stmt like "insert into t values (1),(2),(3)" is executed, the autoincrement values assigned to these three rows are expected to be contiguous. In the given lock mode (innodb_autoinc_lock_mode=1), the auto inc lock will be released before the end of the statement. So to make the autoincrement contiguous for a given statement, we need to reserve the auto inc values at the beginning of the statement. rb://1074 approved by Alexander Nozdrin
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