- 20 Oct, 2009 9 commits
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Kristofer Pettersson authored
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Satya B authored
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Satya B authored
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Satya B authored
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Kristofer Pettersson authored
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Satya B authored
grants are reapplied. After renaming a user and trying to re-apply grants results in additional grants. This is because we use username as part of the key for GRANT_TABLE structure. When the user is renamed, we only change the username stored and the hash key still contains the old user name and this results in the extra privileges Fixed by rebuilding the hash key and updating the column_priv_hash structure when the user is renamed mysql-test/r/grant3.result: Bug #41597 - After rename of user, there are additional grants when grants are reapplied. Testcase for BUG#41597 mysql-test/t/grant3.test: Bug #41597 - After rename of user, there are additional grants when grants are reapplied. Testcase for BUG#41597 sql/sql_acl.cc: Bug #41597 - After rename of user, there are additional grants when grants are reapplied. Fixed handle_grant_struct() to update the hash key when the user is renamed. Added to set_user_details() method to GRANT_NAME class
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Sergey Vojtovich authored
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Sergey Vojtovich authored
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unknown authored
There are some problems about help text: - It is stated that "auto" is the default twice. It need be stated only once. - It is stated that --base64-output is short for --base64-output=always. But that sounds like the default is "always", not "auto". Make the help text clear as following: Determine when the output statements should be base64-encoded BINLOG statements: 'never' disables it and works only for binlogs without row-based events; 'auto' prints base64 only when necessary (i.e., for row-based events and format description events); 'always' prints base64 whenever possible. 'always' is for debugging only and should not be used in a production system. If this argument is not given, the default is 'auto'; if it is given with no argument, 'always' is used.
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- 19 Oct, 2009 6 commits
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Alexander Barkov authored
Problem: the "caseinfo" member of CHARSET_INFO structure was not initialized for user-defined Unicode collations, which made the server crash. Fix: initializing caseinfo properly.
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Kristofer Pettersson authored
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Kristofer Pettersson authored
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Alexander Barkov authored
Adding tests for the bug.
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Alexander Barkov authored
A contributed patch by Andrei Boros (SCA signed). - Fixing locale definition file - Adding tests
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Kristofer Pettersson authored
Adding @@session and @@global prefixes to a declared variable in a stored procedure the server would lead to a crash. The reason was that during the parsing of the syntactic rule 'option_value' an uninitialized set_var object was pushed to the parameter stack of the SET statement. The parent rule 'option_type_value' interpreted the existence of variables on the parameter stack as an assignment and wrapped it in a sp_instr_set object. As the procedure later was executed an attempt was made to run the method 'check()' on an uninitialized member object (NULL value) belonging to the previously created but uninitialized object. sql/sql_yacc.yy: * Assign the option_type at once since it is needed by the next parsing rule (internal_variable_name) * Rearranged the if statement to reduce negations and gain more clarity of code. * Added check for option_type to better detect if current variable is a SP local variable or a system variable.
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- 18 Oct, 2009 1 commit
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Ramil Kalimullin authored
Problem: using null microsecond part in a WHERE condition (e.g. WHERE date_time_field <= "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.0000") may lead to wrong results due to improper DATETIMEs comparison in some cases. Fix: comparing DATETIMEs as strings we must trim trailing 0's in such cases. mysql-test/r/innodb_mysql.result: Fix for bug#47963: Wrong results when index is used - test result. mysql-test/t/innodb_mysql.test: Fix for bug#47963: Wrong results when index is used - test case. sql/item.cc: Fix for bug#47963: Wrong results when index is used - comparing DATETIMEs as strings we must trim trailing 0's in the microsecond part to ensure 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.000' == 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS'
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- 16 Oct, 2009 16 commits
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Alexey Kopytov authored
The problem was in incorrect handling of predicates involving NULL as a constant value by the range optimizer. For example, when creating a SEL_ARG node from a condition of the form "field < const" (which would normally result in the "NULL < field < const" SEL_ARG), the special case when "const" is NULL was not taken into account, so "NULL < field < NULL" was produced for the "field < NULL" condition. As a result, SEL_ARG structures of this form could not be further optimized which in turn could lead to incorrectly constructed SEL_ARG trees. In particular, code assuming SEL_ARG structures to always form a sequence of ordered disjoint intervals could enter an infinite loop under some circumstances. Fixed by changing get_mm_leaf() so that for any sargable predicate except "<=>" involving NULL as a constant, "empty" SEL_ARG is returned, since such a predicate is always false. mysql-test/r/partition_pruning.result: Fixed a broken test case. mysql-test/r/range.result: Added a test case for bug #47123. mysql-test/r/subselect.result: Fixed a broken test cases. mysql-test/t/range.test: Added a test case for bug #47123. sql/opt_range.cc: Fixed get_mm_leaf() so that for any sargable predicate except "<=>" involving NULL as a constant, "empty" SEL_ARG is returned, since such a predicate is always false.
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
Use "#ifdef", not plain "#if".
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Martin Hansson authored
view that has Group By When SELECT'ing from a view that mentions another, materialized, view, access was being denied. The issue was resolved by lifting a special case which avoided such access checking in check_single_table_access. In the past, this was necessary since if such a check were performed, the error message would be downgraded to a warning in the case of SHOW CREATE VIEW. The downgrading of errors was meant to handle only that scenario, but could not distinguish the two as it read only the error messages. The special case was needed in the fix of bug no 36086. Before that, views were confused with derived tables. After bug no 35996 was fixed, the manipulation of errors during SHOW CREATE VIEW execution is not dependent on the actual error messages in the queue, it rather looks at the actual cause of the error and takes appropriate action. Hence the aforementioned special case is now superfluous and the bug is fixed. mysql-test/r/view_grant.result: Bug#46019: Test result. mysql-test/t/view_grant.test: Bug#46019: Test case. sql/sql_parse.cc: Bug#46019: fix.
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Georgi Kodinov authored
Implemented the server infrastructure for the fix: 1. Added a function LEX_STRING *thd_query_string(THD) to return a LEX_STRING structure instead of char *. This is the function that must be called in innodb instead of thd_query() 2. Did some encapsulation in THD : aggregated thd_query and thd_query_length into a LEX_STRING and made accessor and mutator methods for easy code updating. 3. Updated the server code to use the new methods where applicable.
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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- 15 Oct, 2009 8 commits
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Joerg Bruehe authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Georgi Kodinov authored
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Alexey Kopytov authored
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Sergey Vojtovich authored
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