- 05 Jul, 2013 1 commit
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Aditya A authored
MULTI-FILE TABLESPACE ANALYSIS -------- When a tablespace has multiple data files, InnoDB fails to open the tablespace. This is because for each ibd file, the first page is checked.But the first page of all ibd file need not be the first page of the tablespace. Only the first page of the tablespace contains the tablespace header. When we check the first page of an ibd file that is not the first page of the tablespace, then the "tablespace flags" is not really available.This was wrongly used to check if a page is corrupt or not. FIX --- Use the tablespace flags only if the page number is 0 in a tablespace. [Approved by Inaam rb#2836 ]
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- 04 Jul, 2013 1 commit
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Venkata Sidagam authored
WITH UTF8_UNICODE_CI COLLATION Problem Description: When comparing datetime values with strings, the utf8_unicode_ci collation prevents correct comparisons. Consider the below set of queries, it is not showing any results on a table which has tuples that satisfies the query. But for collation utf8_general_ci it shows one tuple. set names utf8 collate utf8_unicode_ci;; select * from lang where dt='1979-12-09'; Analysis: The comparison function is not chosen in case of collation utf8_unicode_ci. In agg_item_set_converter() because the collation state is having "MY_CS_NONASCII" for collation type "utf8_unicode_ci". The conversion of the collation is happening for the date field. And because of that it is unable to pickup proper compare function(i.e CMP_DATE_WITH_STR). Actually the bug is accidentally introduced by the WL#3759 in 5.5. And in 5.6 it is been fixed by the WL#3664. Fix: I have backported the changes from the file strings/ctype-uca.c which are related to "utf8" introduced by the WL#3664. This change helps in choosing the correct comparison function for all the collations of utf8 charset.
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- 01 Jul, 2013 3 commits
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Tor Didriksen authored
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Tor Didriksen authored
Cleanup test case (left outfile in data dir)
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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- 28 Jun, 2013 2 commits
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Mattias Jonsson authored
ALTER TABLE ... ALGORITHM= ... STATEMENT The problem was an intermediate buffer of smaller size, which truncated the alter statement. Solved by providing the size of the buffer to be allocated through the function call, instead of using an one-size-fits-all stack buffer inside the function.
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- 27 Jun, 2013 2 commits
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Balasubramanian Kandasamy authored
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Balasubramanian Kandasamy authored
Bug16785036 - RPM REQUIRES: MISSING PACKAGES ON RHEL 6 (AND PROBABLY 5) Bug 16878042 - CANNOT KEEP SEVERAL MAJOR VERSIONS OF MYSQL IN THE SAME YUM REPOSITORY
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- 26 Jun, 2013 3 commits
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Balasubramanian Kandasamy authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
Backported the deprecation warnings from WL#6978 to 5.5
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Annamalai Gurusami authored
Problem: The problem is that explain_filename-t is not printing a test plan as required by the TAP protocol. The test invokes plan(NO_PLAN) but does not invoke exit_status() at the end, where the plan would be printed. Solution: Invoke exit_status() at the end.
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- 25 Jun, 2013 1 commit
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bin.x.su@oracle.com authored
Straight forward backport. Approved by Jimmy, rb#2656
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- 24 Jun, 2013 3 commits
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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Sujatha Sivakumar authored
LOAD DATA CAN CAUSE SQL INJECTION Problem: ======= A long SET expression in LOAD DATA is incorrectly truncated when written to the binary log. Analysis: ======== LOAD DATA statements are reconstructed once again before they are written to the binary log. When SET clauses are specified as part of LOAD DATA statement, these SET clause user command strings need to be stored as it is inorder to reconstruct the original user command. At present these strings are stored as part of SET clause item tree's top most Item node's name itself which is incorrect. As an Item::name can be of MAX_ALIAS_NAME (256) size. Hence the name will get truncated to "255". Because of this the rewritten LOAD DATA statement will be terminated incorrectly. When this statment is read back by the mysqlbinlog tool it reads a starting single quote and continuos to read till it finds an ending quote. Hence any statement written post ending quote will be considered as a new statement. Fix: === As name field has length restriction the string value should not be stored in Item::name. A new String list is maintained to store the SET expression values and this list is read during reconstrution.
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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- 21 Jun, 2013 1 commit
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Tor Didriksen authored
Sys_var_keycache inherits from some variant of Sys_var_integer Instances of Sys_var_keycache are initialized using the KEYCACHE_VAR macro, which takes an offset within st_key_cache. However, the Sys_var_integer CTOR treats the offset as if it was within global_system_variables (hidden within some layers of macros and fuction pointers) The result is that we write arbitrary data to arbitrary locations in memory. This all happens during static initialization of global objects, i.e. before we have even entered the main() function. Bug#12325449 TYPO IN CMAKE/DTRACE.CMAKE Fix typo in dtrace.cmake
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- 19 Jun, 2013 2 commits
- 18 Jun, 2013 4 commits
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Vasil Dimov authored
DDL AND I_S QUERIES Skip partially created indexes (ones whose name starts with TEMP_INDEX_PREFIX) from stats gathering. Because InnoDB reports HA_INPLACE_ADD_INDEX_NO_WRITE to MySQL, the latter allows parallel execution of ha_innobase::add_index() and ha_innobase::info(). Reviewed by: Inaam (rb:2613)
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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- 17 Jun, 2013 1 commit
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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- 14 Jun, 2013 7 commits
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kevin.lewis@oracle.com authored
IF IT HAS A WRONG COUNT If CHECK TABLE finds that a secondary index contains the wrong number of entries, it used to report an error but not mark the index as corrupt. The error means that the index should be rebuilt, which can be done with ALTER TABLE DROP INDEX and ALTER TABLE ADD INDEX. But just in case the DBA does not pay any attention to the output of CHECK TABLE, the secondary index should be marked as corrupted so that it is not used again. Approved by Inaam in RB:2607
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Tor Didriksen authored
Backport to 5.5
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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Tor Didriksen authored
Backport to 5.5 (external Bug#69407 Build warnings with mysql)
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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Aditya A authored
TO INCONSISTENCY [Merge from 5.1]
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Aditya A authored
TO INCONSISTENCY PROBLEM -------- When we drop a partitoned table , we first gather the information about partitions in the table from the table_name.par file and store it in an internal data structure.Then we delete this file and the data in the table. If the server crashes after deleting the file,then after recovering we cannot access the table .Even we cannot drop the table ,because drop algorithm requires par file to read the partition information. FIX --- 1. We move the part of deleting par file after deleting all the table data from the storage egine. 2. During drop operation if we detect that the par file is missing then we delete the .frm file,since there is no way of recovering without par file. [Approved by Mattias rb#2576 ]
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- 13 Jun, 2013 1 commit
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Annamalai Gurusami authored
ON DELETION ORDER Problem: When a InnoDB index page is under-filled, we will merge it with either the left sibling node or the right sibling node. But this checking is incorrect. When the left sibling node is available, even if merging is not possible with left sibling node, we do not check for the possibility of merging with the right sibling node. Solution: If left sibling node is available, and merging with left sibling node is not possible, then check if merge with right sibling node is possible. rb#2506 approved by jimmy & ima.
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- 12 Jun, 2013 2 commits
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Sivert Sorumgard authored
CAN LEAD TO MISSING TABLES Overview -------- If the FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS system variable is set to 0, it is possible to break a foreign key constraint by changing the type or character set of the foreign key column, or by dropping the foreign key index (without carrying out corresponding changes on another table in the relationship). If we subsequently set FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS to 1 and execute ALTER TABLE involving the COPY algorithm on such a table, the following happens: 1) If ALTER TABLE does not contain a RENAME clause, the attempt to install the new version of the table instead of the old one will fail due to the fact that the inconsistency will be detected. An attempt to revert the partially executed alter table operation by restoring the old table definition will fail as well due to FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS == 1. As a result, the table being altered will be lost. 2) If ALTER TABLE contains the RENAME clause, the inconsistency will not be detected (most probably due to other bugs). But if an attempt to install the new version of the table fails (for example, due to a failure when updating triggers associated with the table), reverting the partially executed alter table by restoring the old table definition will fail too. So the table being altered might be lost as well. Suggested fix ------------- The suggested fix is to temporarily unset the option bit representing FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS when the old table definition is restored while reverting the partially executed operation.
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mysql-builder@oracle.com authored
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- 10 Jun, 2013 3 commits
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Murthy Narkedimilli authored
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Murthy Narkedimilli authored
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Murthy Narkedimilli authored
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- 07 Jun, 2013 2 commits
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Olav Sandstaa authored
Revert fix since it caused mtr tests to not run in pushbuild.
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sayantan dutta authored
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- 06 Jun, 2013 1 commit
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Murthy Narkedimilli authored
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