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* Create 'main' test directory and move 't' and 'r' thereMichael Widenius2018-03-291-1/+1
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* Bug#41049 does syntax "grant" case insensitive?Sergey Glukhov2009-10-271-0/+4
Problem 1: column_priv_hash uses utf8_general_ci collation for the key comparison. The key consists of user name, db name and table name. Thus user with privileges on table t1 is able to perform the same operation on T1 (the similar situation with user name & db name, see acl_cache). So collation which is used for column_priv_hash and acl_cache should be case sensitive. The fix: replace system_charset_info with my_charset_utf8_bin for column_priv_hash and acl_cache Problem 2: The same situation with proc_priv_hash, func_priv_hash, the only difference is that Routine name is case insensitive. So the fix is to use my_charset_utf8_bin for proc_priv_hash & func_priv_hash and convert routine name into lower case before writing the element into the hash and before looking up the key. Additional fix: mysql.procs_priv Routine_name field collation is changed to utf8_general_ci. It's necessary for REVOKE command (to find a field by routine hash element values). Note: It's safe for lower-case-table-names mode too because db name & table name are converted into lower case (see GRANT_NAME::GRANT_NAME). mysql-test/include/have_case_insensitive_fs.inc: test case mysql-test/r/case_insensitive_fs.require: test case mysql-test/r/grant_lowercase_fs.result: test result mysql-test/r/lowercase_fs_off.result: test result mysql-test/r/ps_grant.result: test result mysql-test/r/system_mysql_db.result: changed Routine_name field collation to case insensitive mysql-test/t/grant_lowercase_fs.test: test case mysql-test/t/lowercase_fs_off.test: test case scripts/mysql_system_tables.sql: changed Routine_name field collation to case insensitive scripts/mysql_system_tables_fix.sql: changed Routine_name field collation to case insensitive sql/sql_acl.cc: Problem 1: column_priv_hash uses utf8_general_ci collation for the key comparison. The key consists of user name, db name and table name. Thus user with privileges on table t1 is able to perform the same operation on T1 (the similar situation with user name & db name, see acl_cache). So collation which is used for column_priv_hash and acl_cache should be case sensitive. The fix: replace system_charset_info with my_charset_utf8_bin for column_priv_hash and acl_cache Problem 2: The same situation with proc_priv_hash, func_priv_hash, the only difference is that Routine name is case insensitive. So the fix is to use my_charset_utf8_bin for proc_priv_hash & func_priv_hash and convert routine name into lower case before writing the element into the hash and before looking up the key. Additional fix: mysql.procs_priv Routine_name field collation is changed to utf8_general_ci. It's necessary for REVOKE command (to find a field by routine hash element values). Note: It's safe for lower-case-table-names mode too because db name & table name are converted into lower case (see GRANT_NAME::GRANT_NAME).