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Jorgen Loland authored
during EXPLAIN Before the patch, send_eof() of some subclasses of select_result (e.g., select_send::send_eof()) could handle being called after an error had occured while others could not. The methods that were not well-behaved would trigger an ASSERT on debug builds. Release builds were not affected. Consider the following query as an example for how the ASSERT could be triggered: A user without execute privilege on f() does SELECT MAX(key1) INTO @dummy FROM t1 WHERE f() < 1; resulting in "ERROR 42000: execute command denied to user..." The server would end the query by calling send_eof(). The fact that the error had occured would make the ASSERT trigger. select_dumpvar::send_eof() was the offending method in the bug report, but the problem also applied to other subclasses of select_result. This patch uniforms send_eof() of all subclasses of select_result to handle being called after an error has occured. mysql-test/r/not_embedded_server.result: Added test for BUG#54812 mysql-test/t/not_embedded_server.test: Added test for BUG#54812 sql/sql_class.cc: send_eof() of all subclasses of select_result can now handle being called after an error has occured. sql/sql_insert.cc: send_eof() of all subclasses of select_result can now handle being called after an error has occured. Also fix call to abort() in select_create::send_eof(), which was supposed to abort the result set, not terminate the server. This call to abort() should have been changed when the function was renamed from abort_result_set() but was forgotten. New test case added by BUG#54812 covered this line and terminated server. sql/sql_prepare.cc: send_eof() of all subclasses of select_result can now handle being called after an error has occured. sql/sql_update.cc: send_eof() of all subclasses of select_result can now handle being called after an error has occured.
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