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Davi Arnaut authored
The problem is that when statement-based replication was enabled, statements such as INSERT INTO .. SELECT FROM .. and CREATE TABLE .. SELECT FROM need to grab a read lock on the source table that does not permit concurrent inserts, which would in turn be denied if the source table is a log table because log tables can't be locked exclusively. The solution is to not take such a lock when the source table is a log table as it is unsafe to replicate log tables under statement based replication. Furthermore, the read lock that does not permits concurrent inserts is now only taken if statement-based replication is enabled and if the source table is not a log table. include/thr_lock.h: Introduce yet another lock type that my get upgraded depending on the binary log format. This is not a optimal solution but can be easily improved later. mysql-test/r/log_tables.result: Add test case result for Bug#34306 mysql-test/suite/binlog/r/binlog_stm_row.result: Add test case result for Bug#34306 mysql-test/suite/binlog/t/binlog_stm_row.test: Add test case for Bug#34306 mysql-test/t/log_tables.test: Add test case for Bug#34306 sql/lock.cc: Assert that TL_READ_DEFAULT is not a real lock type. sql/mysql_priv.h: Export new function. sql/mysqld.cc: Remove using_update_log. sql/sql_base.cc: Introduce function that returns the appropriate read lock type depending on how the statement is going to be replicated. It will only take a TL_READ_NO_INSERT log if the binary is enabled and the binary log format is statement-based and the table is not a log table. sql/sql_parse.cc: Remove using_update_log. sql/sql_update.cc: Use new function to choose read lock type. sql/sql_yacc.yy: The lock type is now decided at open_tables time. This old behavior was actually misleading as the binary log format can be dynamically switched and this would not change for statements that have already been parsed when the binary log format is changed (ie: prepared statements).
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