| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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When restoring lastinx last_key.keyinfo must be updated as well. The
good example is in _ma_check_index().
The point of failure is extra(HA_EXTRA_NO_KEYREAD) in
ha_maria::get_auto_increment():
1. extra(HA_EXTRA_KEYREAD) saves lastinx;
2. maria_rkey() changes index, so the lastinx and last_key.keyinfo;
3. extra(HA_EXTRA_NO_KEYREAD) restores lastinx but not
last_key.keyinfo.
So we have discrepancy between lastinx and last_key.keyinfo after 3.
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my_copy_fix_mb() passed MIN(src_length,dst_length) to
my_append_fix_badly_formed_tail(). It could break a multi-byte
character in the middle, which put the question mark to the
destination.
Fixing the code to pass the true src_length to
my_append_fix_badly_formed_tail().
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There is a server startup option --gdb a.k.a. --debug-gdb that requests
signals to be set for more convenient debugging. Most notably, SIGINT
(ctrl-c) will not be ignored, and you will be able to interrupt the
execution of the server while GDB is attached to it.
When we are debugging, the signal handlers that would normally display
a terse stack trace are useless.
When we are debugging with rr, the signal handlers may interfere with
a SIGKILL that could be sent to the process by the environment, and ruin
the rr replay trace, due to a Linux kernel bug
https://lkml.org/lkml/2021/10/31/311
To be able to diagnose bugs in kill+restart tests, we may really need
both a trace before the SIGKILL and a trace of the failure after a
subsequent server startup. So, we had better avoid hitting the problem
by simply not installing those signal handlers.
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in row_merge_fts_doc_tokenize, stack smashing
strmake() puts one extra 0x00 byte at the end of the string.
The code in my_strnxfrm_tis620[_nopad] did not take this into
account, so in the reported scenario the 0x00 byte was put outside
of a stack variable, which made ASAN crash.
This problem is already fixed in in MySQL:
commit 19bd66fe43c41f0bde5f36bc6b455a46693069fb
Author: bin.x.su@oracle.com <>
Date: Fri Apr 4 11:35:27 2014 +0800
But the fix does not seem to be correct, as it breaks when finds a zero byte
in the source string.
Using memcpy() instead of strmake().
- Unlike strmake(), memcpy() it does not write beyond the destination
size passed.
- Unlike the MySQL fix, memcpy() does not break on the first 0x00 byte found
in the source string.
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temporary table
When transaction creates or drops temporary tables and afterward its statement
faces an error even the transactional table statement's cached ROW
format events get involved into binlog and are visible after the transaction's commit.
Fixed with proper analysis of whether the errored-out statement needs
to be rolled back in binlog.
For instance a fact of already cached CREATE or DROP for temporary
tables by previous statements alone
does not cause to retain the being errored-out statement events in the
cache.
Conversely, if the statement creates or drops a temporary table
itself it can't be rolled back - this rule remains.
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let's not run them under valgrind
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The initial test case for MySQL Bug #33053297 is based on
mysql/mysql-server@27130e25078864b010d81266f9613d389d4a229b.
innobase_get_field_from_update_vector is not a suitable function to fetch
updated row info, as well as parent table's update vector is not always
suitable. For instance, in case of DELETE it contains undefined data.
castade->update vector seems to be good enough to fetch all base columns
update data, and besides faster, and less error-prone.
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The assert inside String::copy() prevents copying from from "str"
if its own String::Ptr also points to the same memory.
The idea of the assert is that copy() performs memory reallocation,
and this reallocation can free (and thus invalidate) the memory pointed by Ptr,
which can lead to further copying from a freed memory.
The assert was incomplete: copy() can free the memory pointed by its Ptr
only if String::alloced is true!
If the String is not alloced, it is still safe to copy even from
the location pointed by Ptr.
This scenario demonstrates a safe copy():
const char *tmp= "123";
String str1(tmp, 3);
String str2(tmp, 3);
// This statement is safe:
str2.copy(str1->ptr(), str1->length(), str1->charset(), cs_to, &errors);
Inside the copy() the parameter "str" is equal to String::Ptr in this example.
But it's still ok to reallocate the memory for str2, because str2
was a constant before the copy() call. Thus reallocation does not
make the memory pointed by str1->ptr() invalid.
Adjusting the assert condition to allow copying for constant strings.
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Happens with Innodb engine.
Move unlock_locked_table() past drop_open_table(), and
rollback current statement, so that we can actually unlock the table.
Anything else results in assertions, in drop, or unlock, or in close_table.
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DBUG_ASSERT removed as the AUTO INCREMENT can actually be 0 when the
SET insert_id= 0; was done.
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Get rid of the global big_buffer.
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$opt_vs_config to $multiconfig to use with other cmake multiconfig generators
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Based on mysql/mysql-server@bc9c46bf2894673d0df17cd0ee872d0d99663121
but without sleeps.
The test was verified to hit the debug assertion if the change to
fts_add_doc_by_id() in commit 2d98b967e31623d9027c0db55330dde2c9d1d99a
was reverted.
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InnoDB commit fails when consecutive FTS_DOC_ID value
is greater than 4294967295.
Fix is that InnoDB should remove the delta FTS_DOC_ID
value limitations and fts should encode 8 byte value,
remove FTS_DOC_ID_MAX_STEP variable. Replaced the
fts0vlc.ic file with fts0vlc.h
fts_encode_int(): Should be able to encode 10 bytes value
fts_get_encoded_len(): Should get the length of the value
which has 10 bytes
fts_decode_vlc(): Add debug assertion to verify the maximum
length allowed is 10.
mach_read_uint64_little_endian(): Reads 64 bit stored in
little endian format
Added a unit test case which check for minimum and maximum
value to do the fts encoding
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create_table_info_t::innobase_table_flags(): Refuse to create
a PAGE_COMPRESSED table with PAGE_COMPRESSION_LEVEL=0 if also
innodb_compression_level=0.
The parameter value innodb_compression_level=0 was only somewhat
meaningful for testing or debugging ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables.
For the page_compressed format, it never made any sense, and the
check in dict_tf_is_valid_not_redundant() that was added in
72378a25830184f91005be7e80cfb28381c79f23 (MDEV-12873) would cause
the server to crash.
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The assertion is absolutely correct since no data access is possible after
XA PREPARE.
The check is added in mysql_ha_read.
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This is a duplicate of MDEV-18278 89936f11e965, but I will add an
additional assertion
Description:
The frm corruption should not be reported during CREATE TABLE. Normally
it doesn't, and the data to fill TABLE is taken by open_table_from_share
call. However, the vcol data is stored as SQL string in
table->s->vcol_defs.str and is anyway parsed on each table open.
It is impossible [or hard] to avoid, because it's hard to clone the
expression tree in general (it's easier to parse).
Normally parse_vcol_defs should only fail on semantic errors. If so,
error_reported is set to true. Any other failure is not expected during
table creation. There is either unhandled/unacknowledged error, or
something went really wrong, like memory reject. This all should be
asserted anyway.
Solution:
* Set *error_reported=true for the forward references check;
* Assert for every unacknowledged error during table creation.
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We should set the charset in
Item_func_json_format::fix_length_and_dec().
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Let us use a minimal-size buffer pool to ensure that page flushing
will be slow enough so that LRU eviction cannot be avoided.
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for their definitions
Do not print illegal table field names for non-top-level SELECT list,
they will not be refered in any case but create problem for parsing
of printed result.
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WRITE_CACHE' failed
Problem:
========
This patch addresses two issues.
First, if a CHANGE MASTER command is issued and an error happens
while locating the replica’s relay logs, the logs can be put into an
invalid state where future updates fail and future CHANGE MASTER
calls crash the server. More specifically, right before a replica
purges the relay logs (part of the `CHANGE MASTER TO` logic), the
relay log is temporarily closed with state LOG_TO_BE_OPENED. If the
server errors in-between the temporary log closure and purge, i.e.
during the function find_log_pos, the log should be closed.
MDEV-25284 reveals the log is not properly closed.
Second, upon issuing a RESET SLAVE ALL command, a slave’s GTID
filters are not cleared (DO_DOMAIN_IDS, IGNORE_DOMIAN_IDS,
IGNORE_SERVER_IDS). MySQL had a similar bug report, Bug #18816897,
which fixed this issue to clear IGNORE_SERVER_IDS after issuing
RESET SLAVE ALL in version 5.7.
Solution:
=========
To fix the first problem, the CHANGE MASTER error handling logic was
extended to transition the relay log state to LOG_CLOSED from
LOG_TO_BE_OPENED.
To fix the second problem, the RESET SLAVE ALL logic is extended to
clear the domain_id filter and ignore_server_ids.
Reviewed By:
============
Andrei Elkin <andrei.elkin@mariadb.com>
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Schema and table names in a veiw FRM files are:
- in upper case on Linux
- in lower case on Windows
Using the LOWER() function when displaying an FRM file fragment,
to avoid the OS-specific difference.
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This happens upon CREATE USER and DROP ROLE.
The underlying problem is that our HASH implementation shuffles elements
around when performing an update or delete. This means that when doing a
scan through the HASH table by index, in search of elements to delete or
update one must restart the scan to make sure nothing is missed if at least
one delete / update happened.
More specifically, what happened in this case:
The hash has 131 element, DROP ROLE removes the element
[119]. Its [119]->next was element [129], so [129] is moved to [119].
Now we need to compact the hash, removing the last element [130]. It
gets one bit off its hash value and becomes element [2]. The existing
element [2] is moved to [129], and old [130] is moved to [2].
We cannot simply move [130] to [129] and make [2]->next=130, it won't
work if [2] is itself in the collision list and doesn't belong in [2].
The handle_grant_struct code assumed that it is safe to continue by only
reexamining the currently modified / deleted element index, but that is
not true.
Missing to delete an element in the hash triggered the assertion in
the test case. DROP ROLE would not clear all necessary role->role or
role->user mappings.
To fix the problem we ensure that the scan is restarted, only if an
element was deleted / updated, similar to how bubble-sort keeps sorting
until it finds no more elements to swap.
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`!alias_arg || strlen(alias_arg->str) == alias_arg->length' failed with certain connection charset
There were two independent problems which lead to the crash
and to the non-relevant records returned in I_S queries:
- The code in the I_S implementation was not secure
about values with 0x00 bytes.
It's fixed by using check_db_name() and check_table_name()
inside make_table_name_list(), and by adding the test for
0x00 inside check_table_name().
- The code in Item_string::print() did not convert
strings without introducers when restoring
the CREATE VIEW statement from an Item tree.
This made wrong literals inside the "query" line in the view FRM file
in cases when the VIEW parse time
character_set_client!=character_set_connection.
That's fixed by adding a proper conversion.
This change also fixed a similar problem in SHOW PROCEDURE CODE -
the literals were displayed in wrong character set in SP instructions
in cases when the SP parse time
character_set_client!=character_set_connection.
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Add wait_conditions to stabilize
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Also fixes MDEV-24467 Memory not freed after failed INSERT DELAYED
Description:
In case of an error (e.g. data truncation) during mysql_insert()
handling an INSERT DELAYED, the data type specific data in
fields (e.g. Field_blob::value) is not taken over by the delayed
writer thread.
All fields in table_list->table are freed by free_root()
immediately after mysql_insert(). To avoid a memory leak,
we need to free the specific data before exiting mysql_insert()
on error.
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ft_boolean_syntax
The crash happened because my_isalnum() does not support character
sets with mbminlen>1.
The value of "ft_boolean_syntax" is converted to utf8 in do_string_check().
So calling my_isalnum() is combination with "default_charset_info" was wrong.
Adding new parameters (size_t length, CHARSET_INFO *cs) to
ft_boolean_check_syntax_string() and passing self->charset(thd)
as the character set.
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The crash happened because Item_aes_crypt::val_str() did not
set the character set of the result.
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If error_reported is not set upper caller open_table_from_share()
throws error ER_NOT_FORM_FILE itself via open_table_error().
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On deadlock transaction is rolled back (and trx->state is cleared) but
SELECT continued the loop because evaluate_join_record() ignored the
error status returned from lower join evaluation. val_int() does not
return error status so it is checked by thd->is_error().
Test case was created by Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani
<thiru@mariadb.com>
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In commit 3690c549c6e72646ba74f6b4c83813ee4ac3aea4
this test was not adjusted.
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Note: This patch backports commits 10cd281 and 1755ea4 from 10.3.
10cd281:
Problem:- Some binary data is inserted into the table using
Jconnector. When binlog dump of the data is applied using mysql
client it gives syntax error.
Reason:-
After investigating it turns out to be a issue of mysql client not
able to properly handle \\0 <0 in binary>. In all binary files
where mysql client fails to insert
these 2 bytes are common (0x5c00)
Solution:-
I have changed mysql.cc to include for the possibility that binary
string can have \\0 in it
1755ea4:
Changes on top of Sachin’s patch. Specifically:
1) Refined the parsing break condition to only change the parser’s
behavior for parsing strings in binary mode (behavior of \0 outside
of strings is unchanged).
2) Prefixed binary_zero_insert.test with ‘mysql_’ to more clearly
associate the purpose of the test.
3) As the input of the test contains binary zeros (0x5c00),
different text editors can visualize this sequence differently, and
Github would not display it at all. Therefore, the input itself was
consolidated into the test and created out of hex sequences to make
it easier to understand what is happening.
4) Extended test to validate that the rows which correspond to the
INSERTS with 0x5c00 have the correct binary zero data.
Reviewed By:
============
Andrei Elkin <andrei.elkin@mariadb.com>
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If a table has no unique indexes, write set key information will be collected on all columns in the table.
The write set key information has space only for max 3500 bytes for individual column, and if a varchar colummn of such non-primary key table is longer than
this limit, currently a crash follows.
The fix in this commit, is to truncate key values extracted from such long varhar columns to max 3500 bytes.
This may potentially lead to false positive certification failures for transactions, which operate on separate cluster nodes, and update/insert/delete table rows, which differ only in the part of such long columns after 3500 bytes border.
Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
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Let us mask the actual values of the defragmentation-related fields,
because they may vary. Also, remove the dependency on purge,
and instead delete records by a ROLLBACK of INSERT.
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Use in_sum_func (and so nest_level) only in LEX to which SELECT lex belong to
Reduce usage of current_select (because it does not always point on the correct
SELECT_LEX, for example with prepare.
Change context for all classes inherited from Item_ident (was only for Item_field) in case of pushing down it to HAVING.
Now name resolution context have to have SELECT_LEX reference if the context is present.
Fixed feedback plugin stack usage.
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Revert 88a4be75a5f3b8d59ac8f6347ff2c197813c05dc and
9d97f92febc89941784d17d59c60275e21140ce0, which had been
prematurely pushed by accident.
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This reverts commit 30dea4599e44e3008fb9bc5fe79ab5747841f21f.
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This patch is the plan D variant for fixing potetial mutex locking
order exercised by BF aborting and KILL command execution.
In this approach, KILL command is replicated as TOI operation.
This guarantees total isolation for the KILL command execution
in the first node: there is no concurrent replication applying
and no concurrent DDL executing. Therefore there is no risk of
BF aborting to happen in parallel with KILL command execution
either. Potential mutex deadlocks between the different mutex
access paths with KILL command execution and BF aborting cannot
therefore happen.
TOI replication is used, in this approach, purely as means
to provide isolated KILL command execution in the first node.
KILL command should not (and must not) be applied in secondary
nodes. In this patch, we make this sure by skipping KILL
execution in secondary nodes, in applying phase, where we
bail out if applier thread is trying to execute KILL command.
This is effective, but skipping the applying of KILL command
could happen much earlier as well.
This patch also fixes mutex locking order and unprotected
THD member accesses on bf aborting case. We try to hold
THD::LOCK_thd_data during bf aborting. Only case where it
is not possible is at wsrep_abort_transaction before
call wsrep_innobase_kill_one_trx where we take InnoDB
mutexes first and then THD::LOCK_thd_data.
This will also fix possible race condition during
close_connection and while wsrep is disconnecting
connections.
Added wsrep_bf_kill_debug test case
Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
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At least since commit 055a3334adc004bd3a897990c2f93178e6bb5f90
(MDEV-13564) the undo log truncation in InnoDB did not work correctly.
The main issue is that during the execution of
trx_purge_truncate_history() some pages of the newly truncated
undo tablespace could be discarded.
fsp_try_extend_data_file(): Apply the peculiar rounding of
fil_space_t::size_in_header only to the system tablespace,
whose size can be expressed in megabytes in a configuration parameter.
Other files may freely grow by a number of pages.
fseg_alloc_free_page_low(): Do allow the extension of undo tablespaces,
and mention the file name in the error message.
mtr_t::commit_shrink(): Implement crash-safe shrinking of a tablespace
file. First, durably write the log, then shrink the file, and finally
release the page latches of the rebuilt tablespace. Refactored from
trx_purge_truncate_history().
log_write_and_flush_prepare(), log_write_and_flush(): New functions
to durably write log during mtr_t::commit_shrink().
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btr_defragment_save_defrag_stats_if_needed(): Do not save
defragmentation statistics for temporary tables.
They are exempt of defragmentation anyway
(ha_innobase::optimize() never invokes defragmentation for them),
and the user-visible names are not available inside InnoDB.
Furthermore, InnoDB assumes that temporary tables are never accessed
by other threads than the one that handles the session with which
the temporary table is associated with.
Furthermore, we simplify the test innodb.innodb_defrag_stats
and include a test case that demonstrates that defragmentation
statistics are no longer being saved for temporary tables.
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Test case fail to include undo tablespace while waiting for the
encryption thread to encrypt all existing tablespace
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The st_blksize returned by fstat(2) is not documented to be
a power of 2, like we assumed in
commit 58252fff15acfe7c7b0452a87e202e3f8e454e19 (MDEV-26040).
While on Linux, the st_blksize appears to report the file system
block size (which hopefully is not smaller than the sector size
of the underlying block device), on FreeBSD we observed
st_blksize values that might have been something similar to st_size.
Also IBM AIX was affected by this. A simple test case would
lead to a crash when using the minimum innodb_buffer_pool_size=5m
on both FreeBSD and AIX:
seq -f 'create table t%g engine=innodb select * from seq_1_to_200000;' \
1 100|mysql test&
seq -f 'create table u%g engine=innodb select * from seq_1_to_200000;' \
1 100|mysql test&
We will fix this by not trusting st_blksize at all, and assuming that
the smallest allowed write size (for O_DIRECT) is 4096 bytes. We hope
that no storage systems with larger block size exist. Anything larger
than 4096 bytes should be unlikely, given that it is the minimum
virtual memory page size of many contemporary processors.
MariaDB Server on Microsoft Windows was not affected by this.
While the 512-byte sector size of the venerable Seagate ST-225 is still
in widespread use, the minimum innodb_page_size is 4096 bytes, and
innodb_log_file_size can be set in integer multiples of 65536 bytes.
The only occasion where InnoDB uses smaller data file block sizes than
4096 bytes is with ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables with KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=1
or KEY_BLOCK_SIZE=2 (or innodb_page_size=4096). For such tables,
we will from now on preallocate space in integer multiples of 4096 bytes
and let regular writes extend the file by 1024, 2048, or 3072 bytes.
The view INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_SYS_TABLESPACES.FS_BLOCK_SIZE
should report the raw st_blksize.
For page_compressed tables, the function fil_space_get_block_size()
will map to 512 any st_blksize value that is larger than 4096.
os_file_set_size(): Assume that the file system block size is 4096 bytes,
and only support extending files to integer multiples of 4096 bytes.
fil_space_extend_must_retry(): Round down the preallocation size to
an integer multiple of 4096 bytes.
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