Table of Contents
This appendix lists the changes from version to version in MySQL Enterprise, including MySQL Enterprise Server. Releases in MySQL Enterprise Server are divided into the following release packs:
Rapid Update Service Packs are issued once a month and incorporate all the bug fixes and security updates introduced since the previous MySQL Enterprise Server release. A single Service Pack can be used to update MySQL Enterprise Server; it is not necessary to install intervening service packs to bring your system up to date.
Quarterly Service Packs are issued each quarter and incorporate all the bug fixes and security updates introduced since the previous MySQL Enterprise Server release. A single Service Pack can be used to update MySQL Enterprise Server; it is not necessary to install intervening service packs to bring your system up to date.
Hot-fix releases incorporate fixes for bugs that caused significant issues that are not released as part of a Service Pack.
The Release Notes are updated as bugs are fixed and features are incorporated, so that everybody can follow the development process.
Note that we tend to update the manual at the same time we make changes to MySQL. If you find a recent version of MySQL listed here that you can't find on our download page (http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/), it means that the version has not yet been released (and will normally be marked so in the appropriate Release Note section).
The date mentioned with a release version is the date of the last change done internally at MySQL AB (the BitKeeper ChangeSet) on which the release was based, not the date when the packages were made available. The binaries are usually made available a few days after the date of the tagged ChangeSet, because building and testing all packages takes some time.
For information on how to determine your current version and release type, see Section 2.2, “Determining your current MySQL version”.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes, beginning with the first MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.28), that are made available through hot-fixes, and through service packs.
For a full list of changes, please refer to the changelog sections for each individual 5.0.x release.
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bugfixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.56). If you would like to receive more fine-grained and personalized update alerts about fixes that are relevant to the version and features you use, please consider subscribing to MySQL Enterprise (a commercial MySQL offering). For more details please see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
Functionality added or changed:
Cluster API: Important Change:
Because NDB_LE_MemoryUsage.page_size_kb
shows
memory page sizes in bytes rather than kilobytes, it has been
renamed to page_size_bytes
. The name
page_size_kb
is now deprecated and thus
subject to removal in a future release, although it currently
remains supported for reasons of backwards compatibility. See
The Ndb_logevent_type
Type, for more information about
NDB_LE_MemoryUsage
.
(Bug#30271)
The ndbd and ndb_mgmd manpages have been reclassified from volume 1 to volume 8. (Bug#34642)
mysqltest now has mkdir
and rmdir
commands for creating and removing
directories.
(Bug#31004)
Bugs fixed:
MySQL Cluster: The failure of a DDL statement could sometimes lead to node failures when attempting to execute subsequent DDL statements. (Bug#34160)
MySQL Cluster:
Extremely long SELECT
statements (where the
text of the statement was in excess of 50000 characters) against
NDB
tables returned empty results.
(Bug#34107)
MySQL Cluster:
A periodic failure to flush the send buffer by the
NDB
TCP transporter could cause a unnecessary
delay of 10 ms between operations.
(Bug#34005)
MySQL Cluster:
When all data and SQL nodes in the cluster were shut down
abnormally (that is, other than by using STOP
in the cluster management client), ndb_mgm
used excessive amounts of CPU.
(Bug#33237)
MySQL Cluster: Transaction atomicity was sometimes not preserved between reads and inserts under high loads. (Bug#31477)
MySQL Cluster: Numerous test failures occurred in builds compiled using icc on IA64 platforms. (Bug#31239)
MySQL Cluster: Having tables with a great many columns could cause Cluster backups to fail. (Bug#30172)
MySQL Cluster:
Issuing an INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
concurrently with or following a TRUNCATE
statement on an NDB
table failed with
NDB
error 4350 Transaction already
aborted.
(Bug#29851)
MySQL Cluster:
It was possible in config.ini
to define
cluster nodes having node IDs greater than the maximum allowed
value.
(Bug#28298)
Cluster API:
When reading a BIT(64)
value using
NdbOperation:getValue()
, 12 bytes were
written to the buffer rather than the expected 8 bytes.
(Bug#33750)
mysql_explain_log concatenated multiple-line
statements, causing malformed results for statements that
contained SQL comments beginning with --
.
(Bug#34339)
An internal buffer in mysql was too short. Overextending it could cause stack problems or segmentation violations on some architectures. (This is not a problem that could be exploited to run arbitrary code.) (Bug#33841)
Large unsigned integers were improperly handled for prepared statements, resulting in truncation or conversion to negative numbers. (Bug#33798)
SHOW STATUS
caused a server crash if
InnoDB
had not been initialized.
(Bug#32083)
The mysqld crash handler failed on Windows. (Bug#31745)
mysqlhotcopy silently skipped databases with names consisting of two alphanumeric characters. (Bug#28460)
mysql did not use its completion table. Also, the table contained few entries. (Bug#24624)
mysql_config output did not include
-lmygcc
on some platforms when it was needed.
(Bug#21158)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bugfixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.54). If you would like to receive more fine-grained and personalized update alerts about fixes that are relevant to the version and features you use, please consider subscribing to MySQL Enterprise (a commercial MySQL offering). For more details please see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
Bugs fixed:
Important Change: MySQL Cluster:
AUTO_INCREMENT
columns had the following
problems when used in NDB
tables:
The AUTO_INCREMENT
counter was not
updated correctly when such a column was updated.
AUTO_INCREMENT
values were not
prefetched beyond statement boundaries.
AUTO_INCREMENT
values were not handled
correctly with INSERT IGNORE
statements.
After being set,
ndb_autoincrement_prefetch_sz
showed a
value of 1, regardless of the value it had actually been
set to.
As part of this fix, the behavior of
ndb_autoincrement_prefetch_sz
has changed.
Setting this to less than 32 no longer has any effect on
prefetching within statements (where IDs are now always obtained
in batches of 32 or more), but only between statements. The
default value for this variable has also changed, and is now
1
.
(Bug#25176, Bug#31956, Bug#32055)
Important Change: Replication:
When the master crashed during an update on a transactional
table while in AUTOCOMMIT
mode, the slave
failed. This fix causes every transaction (including
AUTOCOMMIT
transactions) to be recorded in
the binlog as starting with a BEGIN
and
ending with a COMMIT
or
ROLLBACK
.
(Bug#26395)
MySQL Cluster:
An improperly reset internal signal was observed as a hang when
using events in the NDB
API but could result
in various errors.
(Bug#33206)
MySQL Cluster: Incorrectly handled parameters could lead to a crash in the Transaction Coordinator during a node failure, causing other data nodes to fail. (Bug#33168)
MySQL Cluster: The failure of a master node could lead to subsequent failures in local checkpointing. (Bug#32160)
MySQL Cluster:
Primary keys on variable-length columns (such as
VARCHAR
) did not work correctly.
(Bug#31635)
MySQL Cluster:
When inserting a row into an NDB
table with a
duplicate value for a non-primary unique key, the error issued
would reference the wrong key.
This improves on an initial fix for this issue made in MySQL 5.0.30 and MySQL 5.0.33 (Bug#21072)
Replication:
A CREATE USER
, DROP USER
,
or RENAME USER
statement that fails on the
master, or that is a duplicate of any of these statements, is no
longer written to the binlog; previously, either of these
occurrences could cause the slave to fail.
See also Bug#29749
Replication:
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
could fail when the binlog
contained one or more events whose size was close to the value
of max_allowed_packet
.
(Bug#33413)
Replication:
SQL statements containing comments using --
syntax were not replayable by mysqlbinlog,
even though such statements replicated correctly.
(Bug#32205)
Replication:
Issuing a DROP VIEW
statement caused
replication to fail if the view did not actually exist.
(Bug#30998)
Replication:
Setting server_id
did not update its value
for the current session.
(Bug#28908)
Replication: Network timeouts between the master and the slave could result in corruption of the relay log. (Bug#26489)
The server crashed when executing a query that had a subquery
containing an equality X=Y where Y referred to a named select
list expression from the parent select. The server crashed when
trying to use the X=Y equality for ref
-based
access.
(Bug#33794)
Use of uninitialized memory for filesort
in a
subquery caused a server crash.
(Bug#33675)
The server could crash when REPEAT
or another
control instruction was used in conjunction with labels and a
LEAVE
instruction.
(Bug#33618)
The parser allowed control structures in compound statements to have mismatched beginning and ending labels. (Bug#33618)
SET GLOBAL myisam_max_sort_file_size=DEFAULT
set myisam_max_sort_file_size
to an incorrect
value.
(Bug#33382)
See also Bug#31177
CREATE TABLE ... SELECT
created tables that
for date columns used the obsolete Field_date
type instead of Field_newdate
.
(Bug#33256)
For DECIMAL
columns used with the
ROUND(
or
X
,D
)TRUNCATE(
function with a non-constant value of
X
,D
)D
, adding an ORDER
BY
for the function result produced misordered output.
(Bug#33143)
Some valid SELECT
statements could not be
used as views due to incorrect column reference resolution.
(Bug#33133)
The fix for Bug#11230 and Bug#26215 introduced a significant input-parsing slowdown for the mysql client. This has been corrected. (Bug#33057)
UNION
constructs cannot contain
SELECT ... INTO
except in the final
SELECT
. However, if a
UNION
was used in a subquery and an
INTO
clause appeared in the top-level query,
the parser interpreted it as having appeared in the
UNION
and raised an error.
(Bug#32858)
The correct data type for a NULL
column
resulting from a UNION
could be determined
incorrectly in some cases: 1) Not correctly inferred as
NULL
depending on the number of selects; 2)
Not inferred correctly as NULL
if one select
used a subquery.
(Bug#32848)
For queries containing GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT
, there was a
limitation that the col_list
ORDER BY
col_list
)DISTINCT
columns had to
be the same as ORDER BY
columns. Incorrect
results could be returned if this was not true.
(Bug#32798)
HOUR()
,
MINUTE()
, and
SECOND()
could return non-zero
values for DATE
arguments.
(Bug#31990)
Name resolution for correlated subqueries and
HAVING
clauses failed to distinguish which of
two was being performed when there was a reference to an outer
aliased field. This could result in error messages about a
HAVING
clause for queries that had no such
clause.
(Bug#31797)
An assertion failure occurred for queries containing two subqueries if both subqueries were evaluated using a semi-join strategy. (Bug#31040)
ROUND(
or
X
,D
)TRUNCATE(
for non-constant values of X
,D
)D
could
crash the server if these functions were used in an
ORDER BY
that was resolved using
filesort
.
(Bug#30889)
Replication of LOAD DATA INFILE
could fail
when read_buffer_size
was larger than
max_allowed_packet
.
(Bug#30435)
Views were treated as insertable even if some base table columns with no default value were omitted from the view definition. (This is contrary to the condition for insertability that a view must contain all columns in the base table that do not have a default value.) (Bug#29477)
With the read_only
system variable enabled,
CREATE DATABASE
and DROP
DATABASE
were allowed to users who did not have the
SUPER
privilege.
(Bug#27440)
resolveip failed to produce correct results for hostnames that begin with a digit. (Bug#27427)
mysqlcheck -A -r did not correctly identify all tables that needed repairing. (Bug#25347)
For Windows Vista, MySQLInstanceConfig.exe did not include a proper manifest enabling it to run with administrative privileges. (Bug#22563)
See also Bug#24732
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This is a bugfix release that replaces MySQL 5.0.54.
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix: Three vulnerabilities in yaSSL versions 1.7.5 and earlier were discovered that could lead to a server crash or execution of unauthorized code. The exploit requires a server with yaSSL enabled and TCP/IP connections enabled, but does not require valid MySQL account credentials. The exploit does not apply to OpenSSL.
The proof-of-concept exploit is freely available on the Internet. Everyone with a vulnerable MySQL configuration is advised to upgrade immediately.
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bugfixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.52). If you would like to receive more fine-grained and personalized update alerts about fixes that are relevant to the version and features you use, please consider subscribing to MySQL Enterprise (a commercial MySQL offering). For more details please see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
Functionality added or changed:
The mysql_odbc_escape_string()
C API
function has been removed. It has multi-byte character escaping
issues, doesn't honor the
NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES
SQL mode and is not
needed anymore by Connector/ODBC as of 3.51.17.
(Bug#29592)
The argument for the mysql-test-run.pl
--do-test
and --skip-test
options is now interpreted as a Perl regular expression if there
is a pattern metacharacter in the argument value. This allows
more flexible specification of which tests to perform or skip.
Bugs fixed:
Security Enhancement: It was possible to force an error message of excessive length which could lead to a buffer overflow. This has been made no longer possible as a security precaution. (Bug#32707)
Incompatible Change: It was possible for option files to be read twice at program startup, if some of the standard option file locations turned out to be the same directory. Now duplicates are removed from the list of files to be read.
Also, users could not override system-wide settings using
~/.my.cnf
because
was read last. The latter file now is read earlier so that
SYSCONFDIR
/my.cnf~/.my.cnf
can override system-wide
settings.
(Bug#20748)
Replication: It was possible for the name of the relay log file to exceed the amount of memory reserved for it, possibly leading to a crash of the server. (Bug#31836)
See also Bug#28597
Replication: Corruption of log events caused the server to crash on 64-bit Linux systems having 4 GB of memory or more. (Bug#31793)
Replication: One thread could read uninitialized memory from the stack of another thread. This issue was only known to occur in a mysqld process acting as both a master and a slave. (Bug#30752)
Replication: Due a previous change in how the default name and location of the binlog file were determined, replication failed following some upgrades. (Bug#28597, Bug#28603)
See also Bug#31836
This regression was introduced by Bug#20166
Replication:
Stored procedures having BIT
parameters were
not replicated correctly.
(Bug#26199)
Replication:
Issuing SHOW SLAVE STATUS
as
mysqld was shutting down could cause a crash.
(Bug#26000)
Replication:
An UPDATE
statement using a stored function
that modified a non-transactional table was not logged if it
failed. This caused the copy of the non-transactional table on
the master have a row that the copy on the slave did not.
(Bug#23333)
See also Bug#12713
Replication:
A replication slave sometimes failed to reconnect because it was
unable to run SHOW SLAVE HOSTS
. It was not
necessary to run this statement on slaves (since the master
should track connection IDs), and the execution of this
statement by slaves was removed.
(Bug#21132)
An ORDER BY
query using IS
NULL
in the WHERE
clause did not
return correct results.
(Bug#32815)
Use of the cp932
character set with
CAST()
in an ORDER
BY
clause could cause a server crash.
(Bug#32726)
A subquery using an IS NULL
check of a column
defined as NOT NULL
in a table used in the
FROM
clause of the outer query produced an
invalid result.
(Bug#32694)
Specifying a non-existent column for an INSERT
DELAYED
statement caused a server crash rather than
producing an error.
(Bug#32676)
Use of CLIENT_MULTI_QUERIES
caused
libmysqld
to crash.
(Bug#32624)
The INTERVAL()
function
incorrectly handled NULL
values in the value
list.
(Bug#32560)
Use of a NULL
-returning GROUP
BY
expression in conjunction with WITH
ROLLUP
could cause a server crash.
(Bug#32558)
See also Bug#31095
A SELECT ... GROUP BY
query failed
with an assertion if the length of the bit_column
BIT
column used for the GROUP BY
was not an
integer multiple of 8.
(Bug#32556)
Using SELECT INTO OUTFILE
with 8-bit
ENCLOSED BY
characters led to corrupted data
when the data was reloaded using LOAD DATA INFILE. This was
because SELECT INTO OUTFILE
failed to escape
the 8-bit characters.
(Bug#32533)
For FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
, the server
failed to properly detect write-locked tables when running with
low-priority updates, resulting in a crash or deadlock.
(Bug#32528)
Sending several KILL QUERY
statements to
target a connection running SELECT SLEEP()
could freeze the server.
(Bug#32436)
ssl-cipher
values in option files were not
being read by libmysqlclient
.
(Bug#32429)
Repeated execution of a query containing a
CASE
expression and numerous
AND
and OR
relations could
crash the server. The root cause of the issue was determined to
be that the internal SEL_ARG
structure was
not properly initialized when created.
(Bug#32403)
Referencing within a subquery an alias used in the
SELECT
list of the outer query was
incorrectly permitted.
(Bug#32400)
An ORDER BY
query on a view created using a
FEDERATED
table as a base table caused the
server to crash.
(Bug#32374)
Comparison of a BIGINT NOT NULL
column with a
constant arithmetic expression that evaluated to NULL mistakenly
caused the error Column '...' cannot be
null (error 1048).
(Bug#32335)
Assigning a 65,536-byte string to a TEXT
column (which can hold a maximum of 65,535 bytes) resulted in
truncation without a warning. Now a truncation warning is
generated.
(Bug#32282)
The LAST_DAY()
function returns
a DATE
value, but internally the value did
not have the time fields zeroed and calculations involving the
value could return incorrect results.
(Bug#32270)
MIN()
and
MAX()
could return incorrect
results when an index was present if a loose index scan was
used.
(Bug#32268)
Memory corruption could occur due to large index map in
Range checked for each record
status reported
by EXPLAIN SELECT
. The problem was based in
an incorrectly calculated length of the buffer used to store a
hexadecimal representation of an index map, which could result
in buffer overrun and stack corruption under some circumstances.
(Bug#32241)
Various test program cleanups were made: 1)
mytest and libmysqltest
were removed. 2) bug25714 displays an error
message when invoked with incorrect arguments or the
--help
option. 3)
mysql_client_test exits cleanly with a proper
error status.
(Bug#32221)
For comparisons of the form date_col OP
datetime_const
(where
OP
is
=
,
<
,
>
,
<=
,
or
>=
),
the comparison is done using DATETIME
values,
per the fix for Bug#27590. However that fix caused any index on
date_col
not to be used and
compromised performance. Now the index is used again.
(Bug#32198)
DATETIME
arguments specified in numeric form
were treated by DATE_ADD()
as
DATE
values.
(Bug#32180)
InnoDB
does not support
SPATIAL
indexes, but could crash when asked
to handle one. Now an error is returned.
(Bug#32125)
With lower_case_table_names
set,
CREATE TABLE LIKE
was treated differently by
libmysqld
than by the non-embedded server.
(Bug#32063)
Within a subquery, UNION
was handled
differently than at the top level, which could result in
incorrect results or a server crash.
(Bug#32036, Bug#32051)
Changing the SQL mode to cause dates with “zero”
parts to be considered invalid (such as
'1000-00-00'
) could result in indexed and
non-indexed searches returning different results for a column
that contained such dates.
(Bug#31928)
ucs2
does not work as a client character set,
but attempts to use it as such were not rejected. Now
character_set_client
cannot be set to
ucs2
. This also affects statements such as
SET NAMES
and SET CHARACTER
SET
.
(Bug#31615)
Killing a CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
statement
that was waiting for a name lock caused a server crash. When the
statement was killed, the server attempted to release locks that
were not held.
(Bug#31479)
myisamchk --unpack could corrupt a table that when unpacked has static (fixed-length) row format. (Bug#31277)
Server variables could not be set to their current values on Linux platforms. (Bug#31177)
See also Bug#6958
Data in BLOB
or GEOMETRY
columns could be cropped when performing a
UNION
query.
(Bug#31158)
The server crashed in the parser when running out of memory. Memory handling in the parser has been improved to gracefully return an error when out-of-memory conditions occur in the parser. (Bug#31153)
MySQL declares a UNIQUE
key as a
PRIMARY
key if it doesn't have
NULL
columns and is not a partial key, and
the PRIMARY
key must alway be the first key.
However, in some cases, a non-first key could be reported as
PRIMARY
, leading to an assert failure by
InnoDB
. This is fixed by correcting the key
sort order.
(Bug#31137)
REGEXP
operations could cause
a server crash for character sets such as
ucs2
. Now the arguments are converted to
utf8
if possible, to allow correct results to
be produced if the resulting strings contain only 8-bit
characters.
(Bug#31081)
Many nested subqueries in a single query could led to excessive memory consumption and possibly a crash of the server. (Bug#31048)
The optimizer incorrectly optimized conditions out of the
WHERE
clause in some queries involving
subqueries and indexed columns.
(Bug#30788)
Improper calculation of CASE
expression results could lead to value truncation.
(Bug#30782)
A multiple-table UPDATE
involving
transactional and non-transactional tables caused an assertion
failure.
(Bug#30763)
mysql-test-run.pl could not run
mysqld with root
privileges.
(Bug#30630)
The options available to the CHECK TABLE
statement were also allowed in OPTIMIZE TABLE
and ANALYZE TABLE
statements, but caused
corruption during their execution. These options were never
supported for the these statements, and an error is now raised
if you try to apply these options to these statements.
(Bug#30495)
When casting a string value to an integer, cases where the input
string contained a decimal point and was long enough to overrun
the unsigned long long
type were not handled
correctly. The position of the decimal point was not taken into
account which resulted in miscalculated numbers and incorrect
truncation to appropriate SQL data type limits.
(Bug#30453)
For CREATE ... SELECT ... FROM
, where the
resulting table contained indexes, adding
SQL_BUFFER_RESULT
to the
SELECT
part caused index corruption in the
table.
(Bug#30384)
The optimizer made incorrect assumptions about the value of the
is_member
value for user-defined functions,
sometimes resulting in incorrect ordering of UDF results.
(Bug#30355)
Some valid euc-kr
characters having the
second byte in the ranges [0x41..0x5A]
and
[0x61..0x7A]
were rejected.
(Bug#30315)
Simultaneous ALTER TABLE
statements for
BLACKHOLE
tables caused 100% CPU use due to
locking problems.
(Bug#30294)
Tables with a GEOMETRY
column could be marked
as corrupt if you added a non-SPATIAL
index
on a GEOMETRY
column.
(Bug#30284)
On some 64-bit systems, inserting the largest negative value
into a BIGINT
column resulted in incorrect
data.
(Bug#30069)
InnoDB
had a race condition for an adaptive
hash rw-lock waiting for an X-lock.
(Bug#29560)
The mysql client program now ignores Unicode byte order mark (BOM) characters at the beginning of input files. Previously, it read them and sent them to the server, resulting in a syntax error.
Presence of a BOM does not cause mysql to
change its default character set. To do that, invoke
mysql with an option such as
--default-character-set=utf8
.
(Bug#29323)
For transactional tables, an error during a multiple-table
DELETE
statement did not roll back the
statement.
(Bug#29136)
Denormalized double-precision numbers cannot be handled properly by old MIPS pocessors. For IRIX, this is now handled by enabling a mode to use a software workaround. (Bug#29085)
When doing a DELETE
on table that involved a
JOIN
with MyISAM
or
MERGE
tables and the JOIN
referred to the same table, the operation could fail reporting
ERROR 1030 (HY000): Got error 134 from storage
engine
. This was because scans on the table contents
would change because of rows that had already been deleted.
(Bug#28837)
A race condition between killing a statement and the thread executing the statement could lead to a situation such that the binary log contained an event indicating that the statement was killed, whereas the statement actually executed to completion. (Bug#27571)
Some queries using the
NAME_CONST()
function failed to
return either a result or an error to the client, causing it to
hang. This was due to the fact that there was no check to insure
that both arguments to this function were constant expressions.
(Bug#27545, Bug#32559)
mysqld sometimes miscalculated the number of
digits required when storing a floating-point number in a
CHAR
column. This caused the value to be
truncated, or (when using a debug build) caused the server to
crash.
(Bug#26788)
See also Bug#12860
If the expected precision of an arithmetic expression exceeded the maximum precision supported by MySQL, the precision of the result was reduced by an unpredictable or arbitrary amount, rather than to the maximum precision. In some cases, exceeding the maximum supported precision could also lead to a crash of the server. (Bug#24907)
Zero-padding of exponent values was not the same across platforms. (Bug#12860)
If an INSERT ... SELECT
statement is
executed, and no automatically generated value is successfully
inserted, then
mysql_insert_id()
returns the
ID of the last inserted row.
If no automatically generated value is successfully inserted,
then mysql_insert_id()
returns
0.
(Bug#9481)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bugfixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.50). If you would like to receive more fine-grained and personalized update alerts about fixes that are relevant to the version and features you use, please consider subscribing to MySQL Enterprise (a commercial MySQL offering). For more details please see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
Functionality added or changed:
mysqldump produces a -- Dump
completed on
comment
at the end of the dump if DATE
--comments
is given.
The date causes dump files for identical data take at different
times to appear to be different. The new options
--dump-date
and
--skip-dump-date
control whether the date is
added to the comment. --skip-dump-date
suppresses date printing. The default is
--dump-date
(include the date in the comment).
(Bug#31077)
The default value of the connect_timeout
system variable was increased from 5 to 10 seconds. This might
help in cases where clients frequently encounter errors of the
form Lost connection to MySQL server at
'
.
(Bug#28359)XXX
', system error:
errno
The use on InnoDB hash indexes now can be controlled by setting
the new innodb_adaptive_hash_index
system
variable at server startup. By default, this variable is
enabled. See Section 13.2.13.3, “Adaptive Hash Indexes”.
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix:
Using RENAME TABLE
against a table with
explicit DATA DIRECTORY
and INDEX
DIRECTORY
options can be used to overwrite system
table information by replacing the symbolic link points. the
file to which the symlink points.
MySQL will now return an error when the file to which the symlink points already exists. (Bug#32111, CVE-2007-5969)
Security Fix:
ALTER VIEW
retained the original
DEFINER
value, even when altered by another
user, which could allow that user to gain the access rights of
the view. Now ALTER VIEW
is allowed only to
the original definer or users with the SUPER
privilege.
(Bug#29908)
Security Fix:
When using a FEDERATED
table, the local
server could be forced to crash if the remote server returned a
result with fewer columns than expected.
(Bug#29801)
MySQL Cluster:
An uninitialized variable in the NDB
storage
engine code led to AUTO_INCREMENT
failures
when the server was compiled with gcc 4.2.1.
(Bug#31848)
This regression was introduced by Bug#27437
MySQL Cluster:
An error with an if
statement in
sql/ha_ndbcluster.cc
could potentially lead
to an infinite loop in case of failure when working with
AUTO_INCREMENT
columns in
NDB
tables.
(Bug#31810)
MySQL Cluster:
The NDB
storage engine code was not safe for
strict-alias optimization in gcc 4.2.1.
(Bug#31761)
MySQL Cluster: Transaction timeouts were not handled well in some circumstances, leading to excessive number of transactions being aborted unnecessarily. (Bug#30379)
MySQL Cluster: In some cases, the cluster managment server logged entries multiple times following a restart of mgmd. (Bug#29565)
MySQL Cluster: An interpreted program of sufficient size and complexity could cause all cluster data nodes to shut down due to buffer overruns. (Bug#29390)
MySQL Cluster:
UPDATE IGNORE
could sometimes fail on
NDB
tables due to the use of unitialized data
when checking for duplicate keys to be ignored.
(Bug#25817)
A build problem introduced in MySQL 5.0.52 was resolved: The x86 32-bit Intel icc-compiled server binary had unwanted dependences on Intel icc runtime libraries. (Bug#32514)
The rules for valid column names were being applied differently for base tables and views. (Bug#32496)
The default grant tables on Windows contained information for
host production.mysql.com
, which should not
be there.
(Bug#32219)
Under certain conditions, the presence of a GROUP
BY
clause could cause an ORDER BY
clause to be ignored.
(Bug#32202)
The server crashed on optimizations involving a join of
INT
and MEDIUMINT
columns
and a system variable in the WHERE
clause.
(Bug#32103)
User-defined functions are not loaded if the server is started
with the --skip-grant-tables
option, but the
server did not properly handle this case and issued an
Out of memory error message instead.
(Bug#32020)
A column with malformed multi-byte characters could cause the full-text parser to go into an infinite loop. (Bug#31950)
In debug builds, testing the result of an IN
subquery against NULL
caused an assertion
failure.
(Bug#31884)
Comparison results for BETWEEN
were different from those for operators like
<
and
>
for DATETIME
-like values with trailing extra
characters such as '2007-10-01 00:00:00
GMT-6'
. BETWEEN
treated the values as DATETIME
, whereas the
other operators performed a binary-string comparison. Now they
all uniformly use a DATETIME
comparison, but
generate warnings for values with trailing garbage.
(Bug#31800)
With ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
SQL mode enabled,
queries such as SELECT a FROM t1 HAVING
COUNT(*)>2
were not being rejected as they should
have been.
(Bug#31794)
The server could crash during filesort
for
ORDER BY
based on expressions with
INET_NTOA()
or
OCT()
if those functions
returned NULL
.
(Bug#31758)
For a fatal error during filesort in
find_all_keys()
, the error was returned
without the necessary handler uninitialization, causing an
assertion failure. Fixed by uninitializing the handler before
returning the error.
(Bug#31742)
The examined-rows count was not incremented for
const
queries.
(Bug#31700)
The mysql_change_user()
C API
function was subject to buffer overflow.
(Bug#31669)
For SELECT ... INTO OUTFILE
, if the
ENCLOSED BY
string is empty and the
FIELDS TERMINATED BY
string started with a
special character (one of n
,
t
, r
,
b
, 0
,
Z
, or N
), every occurrence
of the character within field values would be duplicated.
(Bug#31663)
SHOW COLUMNS
and DESCRIBE
displayed null
as the column type for a view
with no valid definer. This caused mysqldump
to produce a non-reloadable dump file for the view.
(Bug#31662)
The mysqlbug script did not include the
correct values of CFLAGS
and
CXXFLAGS
that were used to configure the
distribution.
(Bug#31644)
A buffer used when setting variables was not dimensioned to
accommodate the trailing '\0'
byte, so a
single-byte buffer overrun was possible.
(Bug#31588)
HAVING
could treat lettercase of table
aliases incorrectly if lower_case_table_names
was enabled.
(Bug#31562)
The fix for Bug#24989 introduced a problem such that a
NULL
thread handler could be used during a
rollback operation. This problem is unlikely to be seen in
practice.
(Bug#31517)
The length of the result from
IFNULL()
could be calculated
incorrectly because the sign of the result was not taken into
account.
(Bug#31471)
Queries that used the ref
access method or
index-based subquery execution over indexes that have
DECIMAL
columns could fail with an error
Column
.
(Bug#31450)col_name
cannot be
null
SELECT 1 REGEX NULL
caused an assertion
failure for debug servers.
(Bug#31440)
Executing RENAME
while tables were open for
use with HANDLER
statements could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#31409)
mysql-test-run.pl tried to create files in a
directory where it could not be expected to have write
permission. mysqltest created
.reject
files in a directory other than the
one where test results go.
(Bug#31398)
DROP USER
caused an increase in memory usage.
(Bug#31347)
For an almost-full MyISAM
table, an insert
that failed could leave the table in a corrupt state.
(Bug#31305)
CONVERT(
would fail on invalid input, but processing
was not aborted for the val
,
DATETIME)WHERE
clause, leading
to a server crash.
(Bug#31253)
Allocation of an insufficiently large group-by buffer following creation of a temporary table could lead to a server crash. (Bug#31249)
Use of DECIMAL(
in
n
,
n
) ZEROFILLGROUP_CONCAT()
could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#31227)
WIth small values of myisam_sort_buffer_size
,
REPAIR TABLE
for MyISAM
tables could cause a server crash.
(Bug#31174)
Use of the @@hostname
system variable in
inserts in mysql_system_tables_data.sql
did
not replicate. The workaround is to select its value into a user
variable (which does replicate) and insert that.
(Bug#31167)
If MAKETIME()
returned
NULL
when used in an ORDER
BY
that was evaluated using
filesort
, a server crash could result.
(Bug#31160)
Full-text searches on ucs2
columns caused a
server crash. (FULLTEXT
indexes on
ucs2
columns cannot be used, but it should be
possible to perform IN BOOLEAN MODE
searches
on ucs2
columns without a crash.)
(Bug#31159)
An assertion designed to detect a bug in the
ROLLUP
implementation would incorrectly be
triggered when used in a subquery context with non-cacheable
statements.
(Bug#31156)
Selecting spatial types in a UNION
could
cause a server crash.
(Bug#31155)
Use of GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT
caused an
assertion failure.
(Bug#31154)bit_column
)
GROUP BY NULL WITH ROLLUP
could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#31095)
See also Bug#32558
Internal conversion routines could fail for several multi-byte
character sets (big5
,
cp932
, euckr
,
gb2312
, sjis
) for empty
strings or during evaluation of SOUNDS
LIKE
.
(Bug#31069, Bug#31070)
The MOD()
function and the
%
operator crashed the server for a divisor
less than 1 with a very long fractional part.
(Bug#31019)
On Windows, the pthread_mutex_trylock()
implementation was incorrect.
(Bug#30992)
A character set introducer followed by a hexadecimal or bit-value literal did not check its argument and could return an ill-formed result for invalid input. (Bug#30986)
CHAR(
did not check its
argument and could return an ill-formed result for invalid
input.
(Bug#30982)str
USING
charset
)
The result from
CHAR(
) did not add a leading 0x00 byte for input
strings with an odd number of bytes.
(Bug#30981)str
USING
ucs2
The GeomFromText()
function
could cause a server crash if the first argument was
NULL
or the empty string.
(Bug#30955)
MAKEDATE()
incorrectly moved
year values in the 100-200 range into the 1970-2069 range. (This
is legitimate for 00-99, but three-digit years should be used
unchanged.)
(Bug#30951)
When invoked with constant arguments,
STR_TO_DATE()
could use a cached
value for the format string and return incorrect results.
(Bug#30942)
GROUP_CONCAT()
returned
','
rather than an empty string when the
argument column contained only empty strings.
(Bug#30897)
For MEMORY
tables, lookups for
NULL
values in BTREE
indexes could return incorrect results.
(Bug#30885)
Calling NAME_CONST()
with
non-constant arguments triggered an assertion failure.
Non-constant arguments are now disallowed.
(Bug#30832)
For a spatial column with a regular
(non-SPATIAL
) index, queries failed if the
optimizer tried to use the index.
(Bug#30825)
Values for the --tc-heuristic-recover
option
incorrectly were treated as values for the
--myisam-stats-method
option.
(Bug#30821)
On Windows, the pthread_mutex_trylock()
implementation was incorrect. One symptom was that invalidating
the query cache could cause a server crash.
(Bug#30768)
Under some circumstances, CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT
could crash the server or incorrectly report
that the table row size was too large.
(Bug#30736)
Using the MIN()
or
MAX()
function to select one
part of a multi-part key could cause a crash when the function
result was NULL
.
(Bug#30715)
The optimizer could ignore ORDER BY
in cases
when the result set is ordered by filesort
,
resulting in rows being returned in incorrect order.
(Bug#30666)
MyISAM
tables could not exceed 4294967295
(2^32 - 1) rows on Windows.
(Bug#30638)
For MEMORY
tables, DELETE
statements that remove rows based on an index read could fail to
remove all matching rows.
(Bug#30590)
Using GROUP BY
on an expression of the form
caused a server
crash due to incorrect calculation of number of decimals.
(Bug#30587)timestamp_col
DIV
number
When expanding a *
in a
USING
or NATURAL
join, the
check for table access for both tables in the join was done
using only the grant information of the first table.
(Bug#30468)
Versions of mysqldump from MySQL 4.1 or
higher tried to use START TRANSACTION WITH CONSISTENT
SNAPSHOT
if the --single-transaction
and --master-data
options were given, even with
servers older than 4.1 that do not support consistent snapshots.
(Bug#30444)
Setting certain values on a table using a spatial index could cause the server to crash. (Bug#30286)
Some INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables are intended
for internal use, but could be accessed by using
SHOW
statements.
(Bug#30079)
Specifying the --without-geometry
option for
configure caused server compilation to fail.
(Bug#29972)
Under some circumstances, a UDF initialization function could be passed incorrect argument lengths. (Bug#29804)
configure did not find nss
on some Linux platforms.
(Bug#29658)
The log
and
log_slow_queries
system variables were
displayed by SHOW VARIABLES
but could not be
accessed in expressions as @@log
and
@@log_slow_queries
. Also, attempting to set
them with SET
produced an incorrect
Unknown system variable
message. Now these
variables can be accessed in expressions and attempting to set
their values produces an error message that the variable is read
only.
(Bug#29131)
SHOW VARIABLES
did not display the
relay_log
,
relay_log_index
, or
relay_log_info_file
system variables.
(Bug#28893)
On Windows, mysql_upgrade created temporary
files in C:\
and did not clean them up.
(Bug#28774)
Index hints specified in view definitions were ignored when using the view to select from the base table. (Bug#28702)
Views do not have indexes, so index hints do not apply. Use of index hints when selecting from a view is now disallowed. (Bug#28701)
After changing the SQL mode to a restrictive value that would make already-inserted dates in a column be considered invalid, searches returned different results depending on whether the column was indexed. (Bug#28687)
The result from CHAR()
was
incorrectly assumed in some contexts to return a single-byte
result.
(Bug#28550)
The parser confused user-defined function (UDF) and stored
function creation for CREATE FUNCTION
and
required that there be a default database when creating UDFs,
although there is no such requirement.
(Bug#28318, Bug#29816)
The result of a comparison between VARBINARY
and BINARY
columns differed depending on
whether the VARBINARY
column was indexed.
(Bug#28076)
The metadata in some MYSQL_FIELD
members
could be incorrect when a temporary table was used to evaluate a
query.
(Bug#27990)
comp_err created files with permissions such that they might be inaccessible during make install operations. (Bug#27789)
It was possible to create a view having a column whose name consisted of an empty string or space characters only. (Bug#27695)
See also Bug#31202
The anonymous accounts were not being created during MySQL installation. (Bug#27692)
Several functions and operators returned an incorrect result
type (string) when given DATE
parameters:
COALESCE()
,
IF()
,
IFNULL()
,
LEAST()
,
GREATEST()
,
CASE
. These now aggregate
DATE
(or DATETIME
)
parameters to produce a DATE
(or
DATETIME
result. In addition, the result type
of the STR_TO_DATE()
function is
now DATETIME
by default.
(Bug#27216)
Hostnames sometimes were treated as case sensitive in
account-management statements (CREATE USER
,
GRANT
, REVOKE
, and so
forth).
(Bug#19828)
The readline
library has been updated to
version 5.2. This addresses issues in the
mysql client where history and editing within
the client would fail to work as expected.
(Bug#18431)
The Aborted_clients
status variable was
incremented twice if a client exited without calling
mysql_close()
.
(Bug#16918)
Clients were ignoring the TCP/IP port number specified as the default port via the --with-tcp-port configuration option. (Bug#15327)
Values of types REAL ZEROFILL
,
DOUBLE ZEROFILL
, FLOAT
ZEROFILL
, were not zero-filled when converted to a
character representation in the C prepared statement API.
(Bug#11589)
mysql stripped comments from statements sent
to the server. Now the --comments
or
--skip-comments
option can be used to control
whether to retain or strip comments. The default is
--skip-comments
.
(Bug#11230, Bug#26215)
Several buffer-size system variables were either being handled incorrectly for large values (for settings larger than 4GB, they were truncated to values less than 4GB without a warning), or were limited unnecessarily to 4GB even on 64-bit systems. The following changes were made:
For key_buffer_size
, values larger than
4GB are allowed on 64-bit platforms (except Windows, for
which large values are truncated to 4GB with a warning).
For join_buffer_size
,
sort_buffer_size
, and
myisam_sort_buffer_size
, values are
limited to 4GB on all platforms. Larger values are truncated
to 4GB with a warning.
In addition, settings for read_buffer_size
and read_rnd_buffer_size
are limited to 2GB
on all platforms. Larger values are truncated to 2GB with a
warning.
(Bug#5731, Bug#29419, Bug#29446)
Executing DISABLE KEYS
and ENABLE
KEYS
on a non-empty table would cause the size of the
index file for the table to grow considerable. This was because
the DISABLE KEYS
operation would only mark
the existing index, without deleting the index blocks. The
ENABLE KEYS
operation would re-create the
index, adding new blocks, while the previous index blocks would
remain. Existing indexes are now dropped and recreated when the
ENABLE KEYS
statement is executed.
(Bug#4692)
This is a Service Pack release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This is a bugfix release that replaces MySQL 5.0.50sp1.
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix: Three vulnerabilities in yaSSL versions 1.7.5 and earlier were discovered that could lead to a server crash or execution of unauthorized code. The exploit requires a server with yaSSL enabled and TCP/IP connections enabled, but does not require valid MySQL account credentials. The exploit does not apply to OpenSSL.
The proof-of-concept exploit is freely available on the Internet. Everyone with a vulnerable MySQL configuration is advised to upgrade immediately.
This is a Service Pack release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bugfixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.50). If you would like to receive more fine-grained and personalized update alerts about fixes that are relevant to the version and features you use, please consider subscribing to MySQL Enterprise (a commercial MySQL offering). For more details please see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix:
Using RENAME TABLE
against a table with
explicit DATA DIRECTORY
and INDEX
DIRECTORY
options can be used to overwrite system
table information by replacing the symbolic link points. the
file to which the symlink points.
MySQL will now return an error when the file to which the symlink points already exists. (Bug#32111, CVE-2007-5969)
Security Fix:
ALTER VIEW
retained the original
DEFINER
value, even when altered by another
user, which could allow that user to gain the access rights of
the view. Now ALTER VIEW
is allowed only to
the original definer or users with the SUPER
privilege.
(Bug#29908)
Security Fix:
When using a FEDERATED
table, the local
server could be forced to crash if the remote server returned a
result with fewer columns than expected.
(Bug#29801)
A build problem introduced in MySQL 5.0.52 was resolved: The x86 32-bit Intel icc-compiled server binary had unwanted dependences on Intel icc runtime libraries. (Bug#32514)
InnoDB
does not support
SPATIAL
indexes, but could crash when asked
to handle one. Now an error is returned.
(Bug#32125)
mysql-test-run.pl could not run
mysqld with root
privileges.
(Bug#30630)
InnoDB
had a race condition for an adaptive
hash rw-lock waiting for an X-lock.
(Bug#29560)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bugfixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.48). If you would like to receive more fine-grained and personalized update alerts about fixes that are relevant to the version and features you use, please consider subscribing to MySQL Enterprise (a commercial MySQL offering). For more details please see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
Functionality added or changed:
Incompatible Change:
The parser accepted statements that contained /* ...
*/
that were not properly closed with
*/
, such as SELECT 1 /* +
2
. Statements that contain unclosed
/*
-comments now are rejected with a syntax
error.
This fix has the potential to cause incompatibilities. Because
of Bug#26302, which caused the trailing */
to be truncated from comments in views, stored routines,
triggers, and events, it is possible that objects of those types
may have been stored with definitions that now will be rejected
as syntactically invalid. Such objects should be dropped and
re-created so that their definitions do not contain truncated
comments. If a stored object definition contains only a single
statement (does not use a BEGIN ... END
block) and contains a comment within the statement, the comment
should be moved to follow the statement or the object should be
rewritten to use a BEGIN ... END
block. For
example, this statement:
CREATE PROCEDURE p() SELECT 1 /* my comment */ ;
Can be rewritten in either of these ways:
CREATE PROCEDURE p() SELECT 1; /* my comment */ CREATE PROCEDURE p() BEGIN SELECT 1 /* my comment */ ; END;
MySQL Cluster:
Mapping of NDB
error codes to MySQL storage
engine error codes has been improved.
(Bug#28423)
MySQL Cluster: The output from the cluster management client showing the progress of data node starts has been improved. (Bug#23354)
Server parser performance was improved for expression parsing by lowering the number of state transitions and reductions needed. (Bug#30625)
Server parser performance was improved for boolean expressions. (Bug#30237)
Bugs fixed:
Incompatible Change:
The file mysqld.exe
was mistakenly included
in binary distributions between MySQL 5.0.42 and 5.0.48. You
should use mysqld-nt.exe
.
(Bug#32197)
MySQL Cluster: Packaging:
Some commercial MySQL Cluster RPM packages included support for
the InnoDB
storage engine.
(InnoDB
is not part of the standard
commercial MySQL Cluster offering.)
(Bug#31989)
MySQL Cluster: Attempting to restore a backup made on a cluster host using one endian to a machine using the other endian could cause the cluster to fail. (Bug#29674)
MySQL Cluster:
Reads on BLOB
columns were not locked when
they needed to be to guarantee consistency.
(Bug#29102)
See also Bug#31482
MySQL Cluster:
A query using joins between several large tables and requiring
unique index lookups failed to complete, eventually returning
Uknown Error after a very long period of
time. This occurred due to inadequate handling of instances
where the Transaction Coordinator ran out of
TransactionBufferMemory
, when the cluster
should have returned NDB error code 4012 (Request
ndbd time-out).
(Bug#28804)
MySQL Cluster:
The description of the --print
option provided
in the output from ndb_restore --help
was incorrect.
(Bug#27683)
MySQL Cluster:
An invalid subselect on an NDB
table could
cause mysqld to crash.
(Bug#27494)
MySQL Cluster:
An attempt to perform a SELECT ... FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
whose result included
information about NDB
tables for which the
user had no privileges crashed the MySQL Server on which the
query was performed.
(Bug#26793)
When a TIMESTAMP
with a non-zero time part
was converted to a DATE
value, no warning was
generated. This caused index lookups to assume that this is a
valid conversion and was returning rows that match a comparison
between a TIMESTAMP
value and a
DATE
keypart. Now a warning is generated so
that TIMESTAMP
with a non-zero time part will
not match DATE
values.
(Bug#31221)
A server crash could occur when a
non-DETERMINISTIC
stored function was used in
a GROUP BY
clause.
(Bug#31035)
For an InnoDB
table if a
SELECT
was ordered by the primary key and
also had a WHERE field = value
clause on a
different field that was indexed, a DESC
order instruction would be ignored.
(Bug#31001)
A failed HANDLER ... READ
operation could
leave the table in a locked state.
(Bug#30632)
The optimization that uses a unique index to remove
GROUP BY
did not ensure that the index was
actually used, thus violating the ORDER BY
that is implied by GROUP BY
.
(Bug#30596)
SHOW STATUS LIKE 'Ssl_cipher_list'
from a
MySQL client connected via SSL returned an empty string rather
than a list of available ciphers.
(Bug#30593)
Issuing a DELETE
statement having both an
ORDER BY
clause and a
LIMIT
clause could cause
mysqld to crash.
(Bug#30385)
The Last_query_cost
status variable value can
be computed accurately only for simple “flat”
queries, not complex queries such as those with subqueries or
UNION
. However, the value was not
consistently being set to 0 for complex queries.
(Bug#30377)
Queries that had a GROUP BY
clause and
selected COUNT(DISTINCT
returned
incorrect results.
(Bug#30324)bit_column
)
Using DISTINCT
or GROUP BY
on a BIT
column in a
SELECT
statement caused the column to be cast
internally as an integer, with incorrect results being returned
from the query.
(Bug#30245)
Multiple-table DELETE
statements could delete
rows from the wrong table.
(Bug#30234)
Short-format mysql commands embedded within
/*! ... */
comments were parsed incorrectly
by mysql, which discarded the rest of the
comment including the terminating */
characters. The result was a malformed (unclosed) comment. Now
mysql does not discard the
*/
characters.
(Bug#30164)
When mysqldump wrote DROP
DATABASE
statements within version-specific comments,
it included the terminating semicolon in the wrong place,
causing following statements to fail when the dump file was
reloaded.
(Bug#30126)
If a view used a function in its SELECT
statement, the columns from the view were not inserted into the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
table.
(Bug#29408)
Killing an SSL connection on platforms where MySQL is compiled
with -DSIGNAL_WITH_VIO_CLOSE
(Windows, Mac OS
X, and some others) could crash the server.
(Bug#28812)
A SELECT
in one connection could be blocked
by INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
in
another connection even when
low_priority_updates
is set.
(Bug#28587)
mysql_upgrade could run binaries dynamically linked against incorrect versions of shared libraries. (Bug#28560)
SHOW COLUMNS
returned NULL
instead of the empty string for the Default
value of columns that had no default specified.
(Bug#27747)
With recent versions of DBD::mysql, mysqlhotcopy generated table names that were doubly qualified with the database name. (Bug#27694)
For InnoDB
tables, CREATE TABLE a AS
SELECT * FROM A
would fail.
(Bug#25164)
Under heavy load with a large query cache, invalidating part of the cache could cause the server to freeze (that is, to be unable to service other operations until the invalidation was complete). (Bug#21074)
Worked around an icc problem with an incorrect machine instruction being generated in the context of software pre-fetching after a subroutine got in-lined. (Upgrading to icc 10.0.026 makes the workaround unnecessary.) (Bug#20803)
Parameters of type DATETIME
or
DATE
in stored procedures were silently
converted to VARBINARY
.
(Bug#13675)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This release was withdrawn from production and is no longer available.
This section documents all changes and bugfixes that have been applied since the last last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.46). If you would like to receive more fine-grained and personalized update alerts about fixes that are relevant to the version and features you use, please consider subscribing to MySQL Enterprise (a commercial MySQL offering). For more details please see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
Functionality added or changed:
If a MyISAM
table is created with no
DATA DIRECTORY
option, the
.MYD
file is created in the database
directory. By default, if MyISAM
finds an
existing .MYD
file in this case, it
overwrites it. The same applies to .MYI
files for tables created with no INDEX
DIRECTORY
option. To suppress this behavior, start the
server with the new --keep_files_on_create
option, in which case MyISAM
will not
overwrite existing files and returns an error instead.
(Bug#29325)
The EXAMPLE
storage engine is now enabled by
default.
Bugs fixed:
MySQL Cluster:
Warnings and errors generated by ndb_config
--config-file=
were sent to file
stdout
, rather than to
stderr
.
(Bug#25941)
MySQL Cluster:
When a cluster backup was terminated using the ABORT
BACKUP
command in the management client, a misleading
error message Backup aborted by application:
Permanent error: Internal error was returned. The
error message returned in such cases now reads Backup
aborted by user request.
(Bug#21052)
MySQL Cluster: Large file support did not work in AIX server binaries. (Bug#10776)
Replication:
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
failed when slave I/O was
about to terminate.
(Bug#34305)
Memory corruption occurred for some queries with a top-level
OR
operation in the WHERE
condition if they contained equality predicates and other
sargable predicates in disjunctive parts of the condition.
(Bug#30396)
The server created temporary tables for filesort operations in
the working directory, not in the directory specified by the
tmpdir
system variable.
(Bug#30287)
The query cache does not support retrieval of statements for which column level access control applies, but the server was still caching such statements, thus wasting memory. (Bug#30269)
GROUP BY
on BIT
columns
produced incorrect results.
(Bug#30219)
Using KILL QUERY
or KILL
CONNECTION
to kill a SELECT
statement caused a server crash if the query cache was enabled.
(Bug#30201)
Prepared statements containing
CONNECTION_ID()
could be written
improperly to the binary log.
(Bug#30200)
When a thread executing a DROP TABLE
statement was killed, the table name locks that had been
acquired were not released.
(Bug#30193)
Use of local variables with non-ASCII names in stored procedures crashed the server. (Bug#30120)
On Windows, client libraries lacked symbols required for linking. (Bug#30118)
--myisam-recover=''
(empty option value) did
not disable MyISAM
recovery.
(Bug#30088)
The IS_UPDATABLE
column in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS
table was not always
set correctly.
(Bug#30020)
Statements within stored procedures ignored the value of the
low_priority_updates
system variable.
(Bug#29963)
See also Bug#26162
For MyISAM
tables on Windows,
INSERT
, DELETE
, or
UPDATE
followed by ALTER
TABLE
within LOCK TABLES
could
cause table corruption.
(Bug#29957)
With auto-reconnect enabled, row fetching for a prepared statement could crash after reconnect occurred because loss of the statement handler was not accounted for. (Bug#29948)
LOCK TABLES did not pre-lock tables used in triggers of the
locked tables. Unexpected locking behavior and statement
failures similar to failed: 1100: Table
'xx
' was not locked with LOCK
TABLES could result.
(Bug#29929)
INSERT ... VALUES(CONNECTION_ID(), ...)
statements were written to the binary log in such a way that
they could not be properly restored.
(Bug#29928)
Adding DISTINCT
could cause incorrect rows to
appear in a query result.
(Bug#29911)
Using the DATE()
function in a
WHERE
clause did not return any records after
encountering NULL
. However, using
TRIM
or CAST
produced the
correct results.
(Bug#29898)
Very long prepared statements in stored procedures could cause a server crash. (Bug#29856)
If query execution involved a temporary table,
GROUP_CONCAT()
could return a
result with an incorrect character set.
(Bug#29850)
If one thread was performing concurrent inserts, other threads reading from the same table using equality key searches could see the index values for new rows before the data values had been written, leading to reports of table corruption. (Bug#29838)
Repeatedly accessing a view in a stored procedure (for example, in a loop) caused a small amount of memory to be allocated per access. Although this memory is deallocated on disconnect, it could be a problem for a long running stored procedures that make repeated access of views. (Bug#29834)
mysqldump produced output that incorrectly
discarded the NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO
value of
the SQL_MODE
variable after dumping triggers.
(Bug#29788)
An assertion failure occurred within yaSSL for very long keys. (Bug#29784)
For MEMORY
tables, the
index_merge
union access method could return
incorrect results.
(Bug#29740)
Comparison of TIME
values using the
BETWEEN
operator led to string
comparison, producing incorrect results in some cases. Now the
values are compared as integers.
(Bug#29739)
The thread ID was not reset properly after execution of
mysql_change_user()
, which
could cause replication failure when replicating temporary
tables.
(Bug#29734)
For a table with a DATE
column
date_col
such that selecting rows
with WHERE
yielded
a non-empty result, adding date_col
=
'date_val
00:00:00'GROUP BY
caused the result
to be empty.
(Bug#29729)date_col
In some cases, INSERT INTO ... SELECT ... GROUP
BY
could insert rows even if the
SELECT
by itself produced an empty result.
(Bug#29717)
For the embedded server, the
mysql_stmt_store_result()
C API
function caused a memory leak for empty result sets.
(Bug#29687)
EXPLAIN
produced Impossible
where
for statements of the form SELECT ...
FROM t WHERE c=0
, where c
was an
ENUM
column defined as a primary key.
(Bug#29661)
On Windows, ALTER TABLE
hung if records were
locked in share mode by a long-running transaction.
(Bug#29644)
A left join between two views could produce incorrect results. (Bug#29604)
Certain statements with unions, subqueries, and joins could result in huge memory consumption. (Bug#29582)
Clients using SSL could hang the server. (Bug#29579)
A slave running with --log-slave-updates
would
fail to write INSERT DELAY IGNORE
statements
to its binary log, resulting in different binary log contents on
the master and slave.
(Bug#29571)
An incorrect result was returned when comparing string values
that were converted to TIME
values with
CAST()
.
(Bug#29555)
Operations that used the time zone replicated the time zone only for successful operations, but did not replicate the time zone for errors that need to know it. (Bug#29536)
Conversion of ASCII DEL (0x7F
) to Unicode
incorrectly resulted in QUESTION MARK (0x3F
)
rather than DEL.
(Bug#29499)
A field packet with NULL
fields caused a
libmysqlclient
crash.
(Bug#29494)
When using a combination of HANDLER... READ
and DELETE
on a table, MySQL continued to
open new copies of the table every time, leading to an
exhaustion of file descriptors.
(Bug#29474)
This regression was introduced by Bug#21587
On Windows, the mysql client died if the user entered a statement and Return after entering Control-C. (Bug#29469)
Failure to consider collation when comparing space characters could lead to incorrect index entry order, making it impossible to find some index values. (Bug#29461)
Killing an INSERT DELAYED
thread caused a
server crash.
(Bug#29431)
The special “zero” ENUM
value
was coerced to the normal empty string ENUM
value during a column-to-column copy. This affected
CREATE ... SELECT
statements and
SELECT
statements with aggregate functions on
ENUM
columns in the GROUP
BY
clause.
(Bug#29360)
Optimization of queries with DETERMINISTIC
stored functions in the WHERE
clause was
ineffective: A sequential scan was always used.
(Bug#29338)
MyISAM
corruption could occur with the
cp932_japanese_ci
collation for the
cp932
character set due to incorrect
comparison for trailing space.
(Bug#29333)
The mysql_list_fields()
C API
function incorrectly set
MYSQL_FIELD::decimals
for some view columns.
(Bug#29306)
InnoDB
refused to start on some versions of
FreeBSD with LinuxThreads. This is fixed by enabling file
locking on FreeBSD.
(Bug#29155)
INSERT DELAYED
statements on a master server
are replicated as non-DELAYED
inserts on
slaves (which is normal, to preserve serialization), but the
inserts on the slave did not use concurrent inserts. Now
INSERT DELAYED
on a slave is converted to a
concurrent insert when possible, and to a normal insert
otherwise.
(Bug#29152)
A maximum of 4TB InnoDB
free space was
reported by SHOW TABLE STATUS,
which is
incorrect on systems with more than 4TB space.
(Bug#29097)
A byte-order issue in writing a spatial index to disk caused bad index files on some systems. (Bug#29070)
Creation of a legal stored procedure could fail if no default database had been selected. (Bug#29050)
Coercion of ASCII values to character sets that are a superset of ASCII sometimes was not done, resulting in illegal mix of collations errors. These cases now are resolved using repertoire, a new string expression attribute (see Section 9.1.6, “String Repertoire”). (Bug#28875)
Fast ALTER TABLE
(that works without
rebuilding the table) acquired duplicate locks in the storage
engine. In MyISAM
, if ALTER
TABLE
was issued under LOCK TABLE
,
it caused all data inserted after LOCK TABLE
to disappear.
(Bug#28838)
Tables using the InnoDB
storage engine
incremented AUTO_INCREMENT
values incorrectly
with ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
.
(Bug#28781)
Starting the server with an
innodb_force_recovery
value of 4 did not
work.
(Bug#28604)
For InnoDB
tables, MySQL unnecessarily sorted
records in certain cases when the records were retrieved by
InnoDB
in the proper order already.
(Bug#28591)
mysql_install_db could fail to find script files that it needs. (Bug#28585)
If a stored procedure was created and invoked prior to selecting
a default database with USE
, a No
database selected error occurred.
(Bug#28551)
On Mac OS X, shared-library installation pathnames were incorrect. (Bug#28544)
Using the --skip-add-drop-table
option with
mysqldump generated incorrect SQL if the
database included any views. The recreation of views requires
the creation and removal of temporary tables. This option
suppressed the removal of those temporary tables. The same
applied to --compact
since this option also
invokes --skip-add-drop-table
.
(Bug#28524)
A race condition in the interaction between
MyISAM
and the query cache code caused the
query cache not to invalidate itself for concurrently inserted
data.
(Bug#28249)
Indexing column prefixes in InnoDB
tables
could cause table corruption.
(Bug#28138)
Index creation could fail due to truncation of key values to the maximum key length rather than to a mulitiple of the maximum character length. (Bug#28125)
On Windows, symbols for yaSSL and taocrypt were missing from
mysqlclient.lib
, resulting in unresolved
symbol errors for clients linked against that library.
(Bug#27861)
Some SHOW
statements and
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
queries could expose
information not allowed by the user's access privileges.
(Bug#27629)
Some character mappings in the ascii.xml
file were incorrect.
(Bug#27562)
An error that happened inside INSERT
,
UPDATE
, or DELETE
statements performed from within a stored function or trigger
could cause inconsistency between master and slave servers.
(Bug#27417)
A SELECT
with more than 31 nested dependent
subqueries returned an incorrect result.
(Bug#27352)
INSERT INTO ... SELECT
caused a crash if
innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog
was enabled.
(Bug#27294)
FEDERATED
tables had an artificially low
maximum of key length.
(Bug#26909)
After the first read of a TEMPORARY
table,
CHECK TABLE
could report the table as being
corrupt.
(Bug#26325)
If an operation had an InnoDB
table, and two
triggers, AFTER UPDATE
and AFTER
INSERT
, competing for different resources (such as two
distinct MyISAM
tables), the triggers were
unable to execute concurrently. In addition,
INSERT
and UPDATE
statements for the InnoDB
table were unable
to run concurrently.
(Bug#26141)
ALTER DATABASE
did not require at least one
option.
(Bug#25859)
Using HANDLER
to open a table having a
storage engine not supported by HANDLER
properly returned an error, but also improperly prevented the
table from being dropped by other connections.
(Bug#25856)
When using a FEDERATED
table, the value of
last_insert_id()
would not correctly update
the C API interface, which would affect the autogenerated ID
returned both through the C API and the MySQL protocol,
affecting Connectors that used the protocol and/or C API.
(Bug#25714)
The server was blocked from opening other tables while the
FEDERATED
engine was attempting to open a
remote table. Now the server does not check the correctness of a
FEDERATED
table at CREATE
TABLE
time, but waits until the table actually is
accessed.
(Bug#25679)
Several InnoDB
assertion failures were
corrected.
(Bug#25645)
In a stored function or trigger, when InnoDB
detected deadlock, it attempted rollback and displayed an
incorrect error message (Explicit or implicit commit
is not allowed in stored function or trigger). Now
InnoDB
returns an error under these
conditions and does not attempt rollback. Rollback is handled
outside of InnoDB
above the function/trigger
level.
(Bug#24989)
Dropping a temporary InnoDB
table that had
been locked with LOCK TABLES
caused a server
crash.
(Bug#24918)
On Windows, executables did not include Vista manifests. (Bug#24732)
See also Bug#22563
Slave servers could incorrectly interpret an out-of-memory error from the master and reconnect using the wrong binary log position. (Bug#24192)
If MySQL/InnoDB
crashed very quickly after
starting up, it would not force a checkpoint. In this case,
InnoDB
would skip crash recovery at next
startup, and the database would become corrupt. Fix: If the redo
log scan at InnoDB
startup goes past the last
checkpoint, force crash recovery.
(Bug#23710)
SHOW INNODB STATUS
caused an assertion
failure under high load.
(Bug#22819)
A statement of the form CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS t1
SELECT f1() AS i
failed with a deadlock error if the
stored function f1()
referred to a table with
the same name as the to-be-created table. Now it correctly
produces a message that the table already exists.
(Bug#22427)
Read lock requests that were blocked by a pending write lock request were not allowed to proceed if the statement requesting the write lock was killed. (Bug#21281)
mysql-stress-test.pl and mysqld_multi.server.sh were missing from some binary distributions. (Bug#21023, Bug#25486)
On Windows, the server used 10MB of memory for each connection thread, resulting in memory exhaustion. Now each thread uses 1MB. (Bug#20815)
InnoDB
produced an unnecessary (and harmless)
warning: InnoDB: Error: trying to declare trx to enter
InnoDB, but InnoDB: it already is declared
.
(Bug#20090)
SQL_BIG_RESULT
had no effect for
CREATE TABLE ... SELECT SQL_BIG_RESULT ...
statements.
(Bug#15130)
mysql_setpermission tried to grant global-only privileges at the database level. (Bug#14618)
For the general query log, logging of prepared statements
executed via the C API differed from logging of prepared
statements performed with PREPARE
and
EXECUTE
. Logging for the latter was missing
the Prepare
and Execute
lines.
(Bug#13326)
Backup software can cause
ERROR_SHARING_VIOLATION
or
ERROR_LOCK_VIOLATION
conditions during file
operations. InnoDB
now retries forever until
the condition goes away.
(Bug#9709)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bugfixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.44). If you would like to receive more fine-grained and personalized update alerts about fixes that are relevant to the version and features you use, please consider subscribing to MySQL Enterprise (a commercial MySQL offering). For more details please see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
Functionality added or changed:
MySQL Cluster:
auto_increment_increment
and
auto_increment_offset
are now supported for
NDB
tables.
(Bug#26342)
If a MERGE
table cannot be opened or used
because of a problem with an underlying table, CHECK
TABLE
now displays information about which table
caused the problem.
(Bug#26976)
The SQL_MODE
,
FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS
,
UNIQUE_CHECKS
, character set/collations, and
SQL_AUTO_IS_NULL
sesstion variables are
written to the binary log and honoured during replication. See
Section 5.2.3, “The Binary Log”.
Bugs fixed:
MySQL Cluster: When restarting a data node, queries could hang during that node's start phase 5, and continue only after the node had entered phase 6. (Bug#29364)
MySQL Cluster: Replica redo logs were inconsistently handled during a system restart. (Bug#29354)
MySQL Cluster:
The management client's response to START BACKUP
WAIT COMPLETED
did not include the backup ID.
(Bug#27640)
On the IBM i5 platform, the installation script in the
.savf
binaries unconditionally executed the
mysql_install_db script.
(Bug#30084)
gcov coverage-testing information was not written if the server crashed. (Bug#29543)
Corrupt data resulted from use of SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE '
, where
file_name
' FIELDS ENCLOSED
BY 'c
'c
is a digit or minus sign, followed
by LOAD DATA INFILE
'
.
(Bug#29442)file_name
' FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
'c
'
Use of SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
for a non-existent
log file followed by PURGE MASTER LOGS
caused
a server crash.
(Bug#29420)
Assertion failure could occur for grouping queries that employed
DECIMAL
user variables with assignments to
them.
(Bug#29417)
For CAST(
,
the limits of 65 and 30 on the precision
(expr
AS
DECIMAL(M
,D
))M
) and scale
(D
) were not enforced.
(Bug#29415)
Results for a select query that aliases the column names against
a view could duplicate one column while omitting another. This
bug could occur for a query over a multiple-table view that
includes an ORDER BY
clause in its
definition.
(Bug#29392)
mysqldump created a stray file when a given a too-long filename argument. (Bug#29361)
FULLTEXT
indexes could be corrupted by
certain gbk
characters.
(Bug#29299)
SELECT ... INTO OUTFILE
followed by
LOAD DATA
could result in garbled characters
when the FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
clause named a
delimiter of '0'
, 'b'
,
'n'
, 'r'
,
't'
, 'N'
, or
'Z'
due to an interaction of character
encoding and doubling for data values containing the enclosed-by
character.
(Bug#29294)
Sort order of the collation wasn't used when comparing trailing
spaces. This could lead to incorrect comparison results,
incorrectly created indexes, or incorrect result set order for
queries that include an ORDER BY
clause.
(Bug#29261)
If an ENUM
column contained
''
as one of its members (represented with
numeric value greater than 0), and the column contained error
values (represented as 0 and displayed as
''
), using ALTER TABLE
to
modify the column definition caused the 0 values to be given the
numeric value of the non-zero ''
member.
(Bug#29251)
Calling mysql_options()
after
mysql_real_connect()
could
cause clients to crash.
(Bug#29247)
CHECK TABLE
for ARCHIVE
tables could falsely report table corruption or cause a server
crash.
(Bug#29207)
Mixing binary and utf8
columns in a union
caused field lengths to be calculated incorrectly, resulting in
truncation.
(Bug#29205)
AsText()
could fail with a buffer overrun.
(Bug#29166)
LOCK TABLES
was not atomic when more than one
InnoDB
tables were locked.
(Bug#29154)
A network structure was initialized incorrectly, leading to embedded server crashes. (Bug#29117)
An assertion failure occurred if a query contained a conjunctive
predicate of the form
in
the view_column
= constantWHERE
clause and the GROUP
BY
clause contained a reference to a different view
column. The fix also enables application of an optimization that
was being skipped if a query contained a conjunctive predicate
of the form
in the view_column
=
constantWHERE
clause and
the GROUP BY
clause contained a reference to
the same view column.
(Bug#29104)
If an INSERT INTO ... SELECT
statement
inserted into the same table that the SELECT
retrieved from, and the SELECT
included
ORDER BY
and LIMIT
clauses, different data was inserted than the data produced by
the SELECT
executed by itself.
(Bug#29095)
Queries that performed a lookup into a BINARY
index containing key values ending with spaces caused an
assertion failure for debug builds and incorrect results for
non-debug builds.
(Bug#29087)
The semantics of BIGINT
depended on
platform-specific characteristics.
(Bug#29079)
If one of the queries in a UNION
used the
SQL_CACHE
option and another query in the
UNION
contained a nondeterministic function,
the result was still cached. For example, this query was
incorrectly cached:
SELECT NOW() FROM t1 UNION SELECT SQL_CACHE 1 FROM t1;
DROP USER
statements that named multiple
users, only some of which could be dropped, were replicated
incorrectly.
(Bug#29030)
REPLACE
, INSERT IGNORE
,
and UPDATE IGNORE
did not work for
FEDERATED
tables.
(Bug#29019)
Inserting into InnoDB
tables and executing
RESET MASTER
in multiple threads cause
assertion failure in debug server binaries.
(Bug#28983)
For a ucs2
column,
GROUP_CONCAT()
did not convert
separators to the result character set before inserting them,
producing a result containing a mixture of two different
character sets.
(Bug#28925)
Queries using UDFs or stored functions were cached. (Bug#28921)
For a join with GROUP BY
and/or
ORDER BY
and a view reference in the
FROM
list, the query metadata erroneously
showed empty table aliases and database names for the view
columns.
(Bug#28898)
Non-utf8
characters could get mangled when
stored in CSV
tables.
(Bug#28862)
ALTER VIEW
is not supported as a prepared
statement but was not being rejected. ALTER
VIEW
is now prohibited as a prepared statement or when
called within stored routines.
(Bug#28846)
In strict SQL mode, errors silently stopped the SQL thread even
for errors named using the --slave-skip-errors
option.
(Bug#28839)
Runtime changes to the
log_queries_not_using_indexes
system variable
were ignored.
(Bug#28808)
Selecting a column not present in the selected-from table caused
an extra error to be produced by SHOW ERRORS
.
(Bug#28677)
For a statement of the form CREATE t1 SELECT
, the
server created the column using the integer_constant
DECIMAL
data type for large negative values that are within the range of
BIGINT
.
(Bug#28625)
When one thread attempts to lock two (or more) tables and
another thread executes a statement that aborts these locks
(such as REPAIR TABLE
, OPTIMIZE
TABLE
, or CHECK TABLE
), the thread
might get a table object with an incorrect lock type in the
table cache. The result is table corruption or a server crash.
(Bug#28574)
mysqlbinlog --hexdump generated incorrect
output due to omission of the “ #
” comment character for some comment lines.
(Bug#28293)
The LOCATE()
function returned
NULL
if any of its arguments evaluated to
NULL
. Likewise, the predicate,
LOCATE(
, erroneously evaluated to
str
,NULL)
IS NULLFALSE
.
(Bug#27932)
The modification of a table by a partially completed multi-column update was not recorded in the binlog, rather than being marked by an event and a corresponding error code. (Bug#27716)
A stack overrun could occur when storing
DATETIME
values using repeated prepared
statements.
(Bug#27592)
Dropping a user-defined function could cause a server crash if the function was still in use by another thread. (Bug#27564)
Fixed a case of unsafe aliasing in the source that caused a client library crash when compiled with gcc 4 at high optimization levels. (Bug#27383)
Index-based range reads could fail for comparisons that involved
contraction characters (such as ch
in Czech
or ll
in Spanish).
(Bug#27345)
Aggregations in subqueries that refer to outer query columns were not always correctly referenced to the proper outer query. (Bug#27333)
Error returns from the time()
system call
were ignored.
(Bug#27198)
Phantom reads could occur under InnoDB
serializable isolation level.
(Bug#27197)
The SUBSTRING()
function
returned the entire string instead of an empty string when it
was called from a stored procedure and when the length parameter
was specified by a variable with the value “
0
”.
(Bug#27130)
ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE KEYS
could cause
mysqld to crash when executed on a table
containing on a MyISAM
table containing
billions of rows.
(Bug#27029)
Binary content 0x00
in a
BLOB
column sometimes became 0x5C
0x00
following a dump and reload, which could cause
problems with data using multi-byte character sets such as
GBK
(Chinese). This was due to a problem with
SELECT INTO OUTFILE
whereby LOAD
DATA
later incorrectly interpreted
0x5C
as the second byte of a multi-byte
sequence rather than as the SOLIDUS
(“\”) character, used by MySQL as the escape
character.
(Bug#26711)
Index creation could corrupt the table definition in the
.frm
file: 1) A table with the maximum
number of key segments and maximum length key name would have a
corrupted .frm
file, due to incorrect
calculation of the total key length. 2)
MyISAM
would reject a table with the maximum
number of keys and the maximum number of key segments in all
keys. (It would allow one less than this total maximum.) Now
MyISAM
accepts a table defined with the
maximum.
(Bug#26642)
The index merge union access algorithm could produce incorrect
results with InnoDB
tables. The problem could
also occur for queries that used DISTINCT
.
(Bug#25798)
Under ActiveState Perl, mysql-test-run.pl
could kill itself when attempting to kill other processes.
(Bug#25657)
A query with DISTINCT
in the select list to
which the loose-scan optimization for grouping queries was
applied returned an incorrect result set when the query was used
with the SQL_BIG_RESULT
option.
(Bug#25602)
For a multiple-row insert into a FEDERATED
table that refers to a remote transactional table, if the insert
failed for a row due to constraint failure, the remote table
would contain a partial commit (the rows preceding the failed
one) instead of rolling back the statement completely. This
occurred because the rows were treated as individual inserts.
Now FEDERATED
performs bulk-insert handling
such that multiple rows are sent to the remote table in a batch.
This provides a performance improvement and enables the remote
table to perform statement rollback properly should an error
occur. This capability has the following limitations:
The size of the insert cannot exceed the maximum packet size between servers. If the insert exceeds this size, it is broken into multiple packets and the rollback problem can occur.
Bulk-insert handling does not occur for INSERT ...
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
.
The FEDERATED
storage engine failed silently
for INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
if a
duplicate key violation occurred. FEDERATED
does not support ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
, so
now it correctly returns an ER_DUP_KEY
error
if a duplicate key violation occurs.
(Bug#25511)
A too-long shared-memory-base-name
value
could cause a buffer overflow and crash the server or clients.
(Bug#24924)
The server deducted some bytes from the
key_cache_block_size
option value and reduced
it to the next lower 512 byte boundary. The resulting block size
was not a power of two. Setting the
key_cache_block_size
system variable to a
value that is not a power of two resulted in
MyISAM
table corruption.
(Bug#23068, Bug#28478, Bug#25853)
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS
displayed incorrect values
of End_log_pos
for events associated with
transactional storage engines.
(Bug#22540)
Under ActiveState Perl, mysql-test-run.pl
would not run.
(Bug#18415)
The server crashed when the size of an
ARCHIVE
table grew larger than 2GB.
(Bug#15787)
On 64-bit Windows systems, the Config Wizard failed to complete
the setup because 64-bit Windows does not resolve dynamic
linking of the 64-bit libmysql.dll
to a
32-bit application like the Config Wizard.
(Bug#14649)
The server returned data from SHOW CREATE
TABLE
statement or a SELECT
statement on an INFORMATION_SCHEMA table using the
binary
character set.
(Bug#10491)
Bulk-insert handling does not occur for INSERT ... ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
.
The size of the insert cannot exceed the maximum packet size between servers. If the insert exceeds this size, it is broken into multiple packets and the rollback problem can occur.
This is a Service Pack release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.44).
Functionality added or changed:
MySQL Cluster: The server source tree now includes scripts to simplify building MySQL with SCI support. For more information about SCI interconnects and these build scripts, see Section 16.11.1, “Configuring MySQL Cluster to use SCI Sockets”. (Bug#25470)
Enterprise builds did not include the CSV
storage engine. CSV
is now included in
Enterprise builds for all platforms except Windows, QNX, and
NetWare.
(Bug#28844)
INSERT DELAYED
statements on
BLACKHOLE
tables are now rejected, due to the
fact that the BLACKHOLE
storage engine does
not support them.
(Bug#27998)
A new status variable, Com_call_procedure
,
indicates the number of calls to stored procedures.
(Bug#27994)
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix: A malformed password packet in the connection protocol could cause the server to crash. Thanks for Dormando for reporting this bug, and for providing details and a proof of concept. (Bug#28984, CVE-2007-3780)
Security Fix:
CREATE TABLE LIKE
did not require any
privileges on the source table. Now it requires the
SELECT
privilege.
In addition, CREATE TABLE LIKE
was not
isolated from alteration by other connections, which resulted in
various errors and incorrect binary log order when trying to
execute concurrently a CREATE TABLE LIKE
statement and either DDL statements on the source table or DML
or DDL statements on the target table.
(Bug#23667, Bug#25578, CVE-2007-3781)
Incompatible Change:
When mysqldump was run with the
--delete-master-logs
option, binary log files
were deleted before it was known that the dump had succeeded,
not after. (The method for removing log files used
RESET MASTER
prior to the dump. This also
reset the binary log sequence numbering to
.000001
.) Now mysqldump
flushes the logs (which creates a new binary log number with the
next sequence number), performs the dump, and then uses
PURGE MASTER LOGS
to remove the log files
older than the new one. This also preserves log numbering
because the new log with the next number is generated and only
the preceding logs are removed. However, this may affect
applications if they rely on the log numbering sequence being
reset.
(Bug#24733)
Incompatible Change:
The use of an ORDER BY
or
DISTINCT
clause with a query containing a
call to the GROUP_CONCAT()
function caused results from previous queries to be redisplayed
in the current result. The fix for this includes replacing a
BLOB
value used internally for sorting with a
VARCHAR
. This means that for long results
(more than 65,535 bytes), it is possible for truncation to
occur; if so, an appropriate warning is issued.
(Bug#23856, Bug#28273)
MySQL Cluster: A corrupt schema file could cause a File already open error. (Bug#28770)
MySQL Cluster:
Setting InitialNoOpenFiles
equal to
MaxNoOfOpenFiles
caused an error. This was
due to the fact that the actual value of
MaxNoOfOpenFiles
as used by the cluster was
offset by 1 from the value set in
config.ini
.
(Bug#28749)
MySQL Cluster:
UPDATE IGNORE
statements involving the
primary keys of multiple tables could result in data corruption.
(Bug#28719)
MySQL Cluster:
A race condition could result when non-master nodes (in addition
to the master node) tried to update active status due to a local
checkpoint (that is, between NODE_FAILREP
and
COPY_GCIREQ
events). Now only the master
updates the active status.
(Bug#28717)
MySQL Cluster: A fast global checkpoint under high load with high usage of the redo buffer caused data nodes to fail. (Bug#28653)
MySQL Cluster:
When an API node sent more than 1024 signals in a single batch,
NDB
would process only the first 1024 of
these, and then hang.
(Bug#28443)
MySQL Cluster:
A delay in obtaining AUTO_INCREMENT
IDs could
lead to excess temporary errors.
(Bug#28410)
MySQL Cluster: A failure to release internal resources following an error could lead to problems with single user mode. (Bug#25818)
On the IBM i5 platform, the installation script in the
.savf
binaries unconditionally executed the
mysql_install_db script. This problem was
fixed in a repackaged distribution numbered 5.0.44b.
(Bug#30084)
Long pathnames for internal temporary tables could cause stack overflows. (Bug#29015)
Using an INTEGER
column from a table to
ROUND()
a number produced
different results than using a constant with the same value as
the INTEGER
column.
(Bug#28980)
If a program binds a given number of parameters to a prepared
statement handle and then somehow changes
stmt->param_count
to a different number,
mysql_stmt_execute()
could
crash the client or server.
(Bug#28934)
INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
could under
some circumstances silently update rows when it should not have.
(Bug#28904)
Queries that used UUID()
were
incorrectly allowed into the query cache. (This should not
happen because UUID()
is
non-deterministic.)
(Bug#28897)
Using a VIEW
created with a non-existing
DEFINER
could lead to incorrect results under
some circumstances.
(Bug#28895)
For InnoDB
tables that use the
utf8
character set, incorrect results could
occur for DML statements such as DELETE
or
UPDATE
that use an index on character-based
columns.
(Bug#28878)
See also Bug#29449, Bug#30485, Bug#31395
This regression was introduced by Bug#13195
On Windows, USE_TLS
was not defined for
mysqlclient.lib
.
(Bug#28860)
A subquery with ORDER BY
and LIMIT
1
could cause a server crash.
(Bug#28811)
Using BETWEEN
with non-indexed
date columns and short formats of the date string could return
incorrect results.
(Bug#28778)
Selecting GEOMETRY
columns in a
UNION
caused a server crash.
(Bug#28763)
When constructing the path to the original
.frm
file, ALTER ..
RENAME
was unnecessarily (and incorrectly) lowercasing
the entire path when not on a case-insensitive filesystem,
causing the statement to fail.
(Bug#28754)
Searches on indexed and non-indexed ENUM
columns could return different results for empty strings.
(Bug#28729)
Executing EXPLAIN EXTENDED
on a query using a
derived table over a grouping subselect could lead to a server
crash. This occurred only when materialization of the derived
tables required creation of an auxiliary temporary table, an
example being when a grouping operation was carried out with
usage of a temporary table.
(Bug#28728)
The result of evaluation for a view's CHECK
OPTION
option over an updated record and records of
merged tables was arbitrary and dependant on the order of
records in the merged tables during the execution of the
SELECT
statement.
(Bug#28716)
The “manager thread” of the LinuxThreads implementation was unintentionally started before mysqld had dropped privileges (to run as an unprivileged user). This caused signaling between threads in mysqld to fail when the privileges were finally dropped. (Bug#28690)
For debug builds, ALTER TABLE
could trigger
an assertion failure due to occurrence of a deadlock when
committing changes.
(Bug#28652)
After an upgrade, the names of stored routines referenced by
views were no longer displayed by SHOW CREATE
VIEW
.
(Bug#28605)
This regression was introduced by Bug#23491
Killing from one connection a long-running EXPLAIN
QUERY
started from another connection caused
mysqld to crash.
(Bug#28598)
Outer join queries with ON
conditions over
constant outer tables did not return
NULL
-complemented rows when conditions were
evaluated to FALSE
.
(Bug#28571)
An update on a multiple-table view with the CHECK OPTION clause and a subquery in the WHERE condition could cause an assertion failure. (Bug#28561)
PURGE MASTER LOGS BEFORE
(
caused a server
crash. Subqueries are forbidden in the subquery
)BEFORE
clause now.
(Bug#28553)
mysqldump calculated the required memory for a hex-blob string incorrectly causing a buffer overrun. This in turn caused mysqldump to crash silently and produce incomplete output. (Bug#28522)
Passing a DECIMAL
value as a parameter of a
statement prepared with PREPARE
resulted in
an error.
(Bug#28509)
mysql_affected_rows()
could
return an incorrect result for INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE
KEY UPDATE
if the CLIENT_FOUND_ROWS
flag was set.
(Bug#28505)
A query that grouped by the result of an expression returned a different result when the expression was assigned to a user variable. (Bug#28494)
Subselects returning LONG
values in MySQL
versions later than 5.0.24a returned LONGLONG
prior to this. The previous behavior was restored.
(Bug#28492)
This regression was introduced by Bug#19714
Forcing the use of an index on a SELECT
query
when the index had been disabled would raise an error without
running the query. The query now executes, with a warning
generated noting that the use of a disabled index has been
ignored.
(Bug#28476)
The result of executing of a prepared statement created with
PREPARE s FROM "SELECT 1 LIMIT ?"
was not replicated correctly.
(Bug#28464)
The query SELECT '2007-01-01' + INTERVAL
caused
mysqld to fail.
(Bug#28450)column_name
DAY FROM
table_name
A server crash could happen under rare conditions such that a
temporary table outgrew heap memory reserved for it and the
remaining disk space was not big enough to store the table as a
MyISAM
table.
(Bug#28449)
mysql_upgrade failed if certain SQL modes were set. Now it sets the mode itself to avoid this problem. (Bug#28401)
The test case for mysqldump failed with
bin-log
disabled.
(Bug#28372)
Attempting to LOAD_FILE
from an empty floppy
drive under Windows, caused the server to hang. For example, if
you opened a connection to the server and then issued the
command SELECT LOAD_FILE('a:test');, with no
floppy in the drive, the server was inaccessible until the modal
pop-up dialog box was dismissed.
(Bug#28366)
A buffer overflow could occur when using
DECIMAL
columns on Windows operating systems.
(Bug#28361)
libmysql.dll
could not be dynamically loaded
on Windows.
(Bug#28358)
Grouping queries with correlated subqueries in
WHERE
conditions could produce incorrect
results.
(Bug#28337)
mysqltest used a too-large stack size on PPC/Debian Linux, causing thread-creation failure for tests that use many threads. (Bug#28333)
EXPLAIN
for a query on an empty table
immediately after its creation could result in a server crash.
(Bug#28272)
The IS_UPDATABLE
column in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS
table was not always
set correctly.
(Bug#28266)
Comparing a DATETIME
column value with a user
variable yielded incorrect results.
(Bug#28261)
For CAST()
of a
NULL
value with type
DECIMAL
, the return value was incorrectly
initialized, producing a runtime error for binaries built using
Visual C++ 2005.
(Bug#28250)
Recreating a view that already exists on the master would cause a replicating slave to terminate replication with a 'different error message on slave and master' error. (Bug#28244)
Portability problems caused by use of isinf()
were corrected.
(Bug#28240)
When dumping procedures, mysqldump
--compact
generated output that
restored the session variable SQL_MODE
without first capturing it. When dumping routines,
mysqldump --compact
neither
set nor retrieved the value of SQL_MODE
.
(Bug#28223)
Comparison of the string value of a date showed as unequal to
CURTIME()
. Similar behavior was
exhibited for DATETIME
values.
(Bug#28208)
The Bytes_received
and
Bytes_sent
status variables could hold only
32-bit values (not 64-bit values) on some platforms.
(Bug#28149)
Storing a large number into a FLOAT
or
DOUBLE
column with a fixed length could
result in incorrect truncation of the number if the column's
length was greater than 31.
(Bug#28121)
DECIMAL
values beginning with nine
9
digits could be incorrectly rounded.
(Bug#27984)
The second execution of a prepared statement from a
UNION
query with ORDER BY
RAND()
caused the server to crash. This problem could
also occur when invoking a stored procedure containing such a
query.
(Bug#27937)
For attempts to open a non-existent table, the server should
report ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE
but sometimes
reported ER_TABLE_NOT_LOCKED
.
(Bug#27907)
A stored program that uses a variable name containing multibyte characters could fail to execute. (Bug#27876)
ON
conditions from JOIN
expressions were ignored when checking the CHECK
OPTION
clause while updating a multiple-table view
that included such a clause.
(Bug#27827)
On some systems, udf_example.c
returned an
incorrect result length. Also on some systems,
mysql-test-run.pl could not find the shared
object built from udf_example.c
.
(Bug#27741)
HASH
indexes on VARCHAR
columns with binary collations did not ignore trailing spaces
from strings before comparisons. This could result in duplicate
records being successfully inserted into a
MEMORY
table with unique key constraints. A
consequence was that internal MEMORY
tables
used for GROUP BY
calculation contained
duplicate rows that resulted in duplicate-key errors when
converting those temporary tables to MyISAM
,
and that error was incorrectly reported as a table is
full
error.
(Bug#27643)
An error occurred trying to connect to mysqld-debug.exe. (Bug#27597)
Selecting MIN()
on an indexed
column that contained only NULL
values caused
NULL
to be returned for other result columns.
(Bug#27573)
If a stored function or trigger was killed, it aborted but no error was thrown, allowing the calling statement to continue without noticing the problem. This could lead to incorrect results. (Bug#27563)
When ALTER TABLE
was used to add a new
DATE
column with no explicit default value,
'0000-00-00'
was used as the default even if
the SQL mode included the NO_ZERO_DATE
mode
to prohibit that value. A similar problem occurred for
DATETIME
columns.
(Bug#27507)
Using a TEXT
local variable in a stored
routine in an expression such as SET
produced
an incorrect result.
(Bug#27415)var
=
SUBSTRING(var
, 3)
The error message for error number 137
did
not report which database/table combination reported the
problem.
(Bug#27173)
A large filesort could result in a division by zero error and a server crash. (Bug#27119)
Binary logging of prepared statements could produce syntactically incorrect queries in the binary log, replacing some parameters with variable names rather than variable values. This could lead to incorrect results on replication slaves. (Bug#26842, Bug#12826)
Connections from one mysqld server to another
failed on Mac OS X, affecting replication and
FEDERATED
tables.
(Bug#26664)
See also Bug#29083
Some test suite files were missing from some MySQL-test packages. (Bug#26609)
Statements within triggers ignored the value of the
low_priority_updates
system variable.
(Bug#26162)
See also Bug#29963
Running CHECK TABLE
concurrently with a
SELECT
, INSERT
or other
statement on Windows could corrupt a MyISAM table.
(Bug#25712)
On Windows, connection handlers did not properly decrement the server's thread count when exiting. (Bug#25621)
Due to a race condition, executing FLUSH
PRIVILEGES
in one thread could cause brief table
unavailability in other threads.
(Bug#24988)
When mysqld was run as a Windows service, shared memory objects were not created in the global namespace and could not be used by clients to connect. (Bug#24731)
On some Linux distributions where LinuxThreads and NPTL
glibc
versions both are available, statically
built binaries can crash because the linker defaults to
LinuxThreads when linking statically, but calls to external
libraries (such as libnss
) are resolved to
NPTL versions. This cannot be worked around in the code, so
instead if a crash occurs on such a binary/OS combination, print
an error message that provides advice about how to fix the
problem.
(Bug#24611)
Implicit conversion of 9912101
to
DATE
did not match
CAST(9912101 AS DATE)
.
(Bug#23093)
Conversion errors could occur when constructing the condition
for an IN
predicate. The predicate was
treated as if the affected column contains
NULL
, but if the IN
predicate is inside NOT
, incorrect results
could be returned.
(Bug#22855)
When using transactions and replication, shutting down the master in the middle of a transaction would cause all slaves to stop replicating. (Bug#22725)
Linux binaries were unable to dump core after executing a
setuid()
call.
(Bug#21723)
Stack overflow caused server crashes. (Bug#21476)
CURDATE()
is less than
NOW()
, either when comparing
CURDATE()
directly
(CURDATE() < NOW()
is true) or when
casting CURDATE()
to
DATE
(CAST(CURDATE() AS DATE) <
NOW()
is true). However, storing
CURDATE()
in a
DATE
column and comparing
incorrectly yielded false. This is fixed by comparing a
col_name
< NOW()DATE
column as DATETIME
for comparisons to a DATETIME
constant.
(Bug#21103)
For dates with 4-digit year parts less than 200, an incorrect
implicit conversion to add a century was applied for date
arithmetic performed with
DATE_ADD()
,
DATE_SUB()
, +
INTERVAL
, and - INTERVAL
. (For
example, DATE_ADD('0050-01-01 00:00:00',
INTERVAL 0 SECOND)
became '2050-01-01
00:00:00'
.)
(Bug#18997)
Using CREATE TABLE LIKE ...
would raise an
assertion when replicated to a slave.
(Bug#18950)
Granting access privileges to an individual table where the database or table name contained an underscore would fail. (Bug#18660)
The -lmtmalloc
library was removed from the
output of mysql_config on Solaris, as it
caused problems when building DBD::mysql
(and
possibly other applications) on that platform that tried to use
dlopen() to access the client library.
(Bug#18322)
The check-cpu script failed to detect AMD64 Turion processors correctly. (Bug#17707)
Trying to shut down the server following a failed LOAD
DATA INFILE
caused mysqld to crash.
(Bug#17233)
Using up-arrow for command-line recall in mysql could cause a segmentation fault. (Bug#10218)
The result for CAST()
when
casting a value to UNSIGNED
was limited to
the maximum signed BIGINT
value
(9223372036854775808), rather than the maximum unsigned value
(18446744073709551615).
(Bug#8663)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.42).
Functionality added or changed:
MySQL Cluster: The server source tree now includes scripts to simplify building MySQL with SCI support. For more information about SCI interconnects and these build scripts, see Section 16.11.1, “Configuring MySQL Cluster to use SCI Sockets”. (Bug#25470)
Enterprise builds did not include the CSV
storage engine. CSV
is now included in
Enterprise builds for all platforms except Windows, QNX, and
NetWare.
(Bug#28844)
INSERT DELAYED
statements on
BLACKHOLE
tables are now rejected, due to the
fact that the BLACKHOLE
storage engine does
not support them.
(Bug#27998)
A new status variable, Com_call_procedure
,
indicates the number of calls to stored procedures.
(Bug#27994)
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix: A malformed password packet in the connection protocol could cause the server to crash. Thanks for Dormando for reporting this bug, and for providing details and a proof of concept. (Bug#28984, CVE-2007-3780)
Security Fix:
CREATE TABLE LIKE
did not require any
privileges on the source table. Now it requires the
SELECT
privilege.
In addition, CREATE TABLE LIKE
was not
isolated from alteration by other connections, which resulted in
various errors and incorrect binary log order when trying to
execute concurrently a CREATE TABLE LIKE
statement and either DDL statements on the source table or DML
or DDL statements on the target table.
(Bug#23667, Bug#25578, CVE-2007-3781)
Incompatible Change:
When mysqldump was run with the
--delete-master-logs
option, binary log files
were deleted before it was known that the dump had succeeded,
not after. (The method for removing log files used
RESET MASTER
prior to the dump. This also
reset the binary log sequence numbering to
.000001
.) Now mysqldump
flushes the logs (which creates a new binary log number with the
next sequence number), performs the dump, and then uses
PURGE MASTER LOGS
to remove the log files
older than the new one. This also preserves log numbering
because the new log with the next number is generated and only
the preceding logs are removed. However, this may affect
applications if they rely on the log numbering sequence being
reset.
(Bug#24733)
Incompatible Change:
The use of an ORDER BY
or
DISTINCT
clause with a query containing a
call to the GROUP_CONCAT()
function caused results from previous queries to be redisplayed
in the current result. The fix for this includes replacing a
BLOB
value used internally for sorting with a
VARCHAR
. This means that for long results
(more than 65,535 bytes), it is possible for truncation to
occur; if so, an appropriate warning is issued.
(Bug#23856, Bug#28273)
MySQL Cluster: A corrupt schema file could cause a File already open error. (Bug#28770)
MySQL Cluster:
Setting InitialNoOpenFiles
equal to
MaxNoOfOpenFiles
caused an error. This was
due to the fact that the actual value of
MaxNoOfOpenFiles
as used by the cluster was
offset by 1 from the value set in
config.ini
.
(Bug#28749)
MySQL Cluster:
UPDATE IGNORE
statements involving the
primary keys of multiple tables could result in data corruption.
(Bug#28719)
MySQL Cluster:
A race condition could result when non-master nodes (in addition
to the master node) tried to update active status due to a local
checkpoint (that is, between NODE_FAILREP
and
COPY_GCIREQ
events). Now only the master
updates the active status.
(Bug#28717)
MySQL Cluster: A fast global checkpoint under high load with high usage of the redo buffer caused data nodes to fail. (Bug#28653)
MySQL Cluster:
When an API node sent more than 1024 signals in a single batch,
NDB
would process only the first 1024 of
these, and then hang.
(Bug#28443)
MySQL Cluster:
A delay in obtaining AUTO_INCREMENT
IDs could
lead to excess temporary errors.
(Bug#28410)
MySQL Cluster: A failure to release internal resources following an error could lead to problems with single user mode. (Bug#25818)
On the IBM i5 platform, the installation script in the
.savf
binaries unconditionally executed the
mysql_install_db script. This problem was
fixed in a repackaged distribution numbered 5.0.44b.
(Bug#30084)
Long pathnames for internal temporary tables could cause stack overflows. (Bug#29015)
Using an INTEGER
column from a table to
ROUND()
a number produced
different results than using a constant with the same value as
the INTEGER
column.
(Bug#28980)
If a program binds a given number of parameters to a prepared
statement handle and then somehow changes
stmt->param_count
to a different number,
mysql_stmt_execute()
could
crash the client or server.
(Bug#28934)
INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
could under
some circumstances silently update rows when it should not have.
(Bug#28904)
Queries that used UUID()
were
incorrectly allowed into the query cache. (This should not
happen because UUID()
is
non-deterministic.)
(Bug#28897)
Using a VIEW
created with a non-existing
DEFINER
could lead to incorrect results under
some circumstances.
(Bug#28895)
For InnoDB
tables that use the
utf8
character set, incorrect results could
occur for DML statements such as DELETE
or
UPDATE
that use an index on character-based
columns.
(Bug#28878)
See also Bug#29449, Bug#30485, Bug#31395
This regression was introduced by Bug#13195
On Windows, USE_TLS
was not defined for
mysqlclient.lib
.
(Bug#28860)
A subquery with ORDER BY
and LIMIT
1
could cause a server crash.
(Bug#28811)
Using BETWEEN
with non-indexed
date columns and short formats of the date string could return
incorrect results.
(Bug#28778)
Selecting GEOMETRY
columns in a
UNION
caused a server crash.
(Bug#28763)
When constructing the path to the original
.frm
file, ALTER ..
RENAME
was unnecessarily (and incorrectly) lowercasing
the entire path when not on a case-insensitive filesystem,
causing the statement to fail.
(Bug#28754)
Searches on indexed and non-indexed ENUM
columns could return different results for empty strings.
(Bug#28729)
Executing EXPLAIN EXTENDED
on a query using a
derived table over a grouping subselect could lead to a server
crash. This occurred only when materialization of the derived
tables required creation of an auxiliary temporary table, an
example being when a grouping operation was carried out with
usage of a temporary table.
(Bug#28728)
The result of evaluation for a view's CHECK
OPTION
option over an updated record and records of
merged tables was arbitrary and dependant on the order of
records in the merged tables during the execution of the
SELECT
statement.
(Bug#28716)
The “manager thread” of the LinuxThreads implementation was unintentionally started before mysqld had dropped privileges (to run as an unprivileged user). This caused signaling between threads in mysqld to fail when the privileges were finally dropped. (Bug#28690)
For debug builds, ALTER TABLE
could trigger
an assertion failure due to occurrence of a deadlock when
committing changes.
(Bug#28652)
After an upgrade, the names of stored routines referenced by
views were no longer displayed by SHOW CREATE
VIEW
.
(Bug#28605)
This regression was introduced by Bug#23491
Killing from one connection a long-running EXPLAIN
QUERY
started from another connection caused
mysqld to crash.
(Bug#28598)
Outer join queries with ON
conditions over
constant outer tables did not return
NULL
-complemented rows when conditions were
evaluated to FALSE
.
(Bug#28571)
An update on a multiple-table view with the CHECK OPTION clause and a subquery in the WHERE condition could cause an assertion failure. (Bug#28561)
PURGE MASTER LOGS BEFORE
(
caused a server
crash. Subqueries are forbidden in the subquery
)BEFORE
clause now.
(Bug#28553)
mysqldump calculated the required memory for a hex-blob string incorrectly causing a buffer overrun. This in turn caused mysqldump to crash silently and produce incomplete output. (Bug#28522)
Passing a DECIMAL
value as a parameter of a
statement prepared with PREPARE
resulted in
an error.
(Bug#28509)
mysql_affected_rows()
could
return an incorrect result for INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE
KEY UPDATE
if the CLIENT_FOUND_ROWS
flag was set.
(Bug#28505)
A query that grouped by the result of an expression returned a different result when the expression was assigned to a user variable. (Bug#28494)
Subselects returning LONG
values in MySQL
versions later than 5.0.24a returned LONGLONG
prior to this. The previous behavior was restored.
(Bug#28492)
This regression was introduced by Bug#19714
Forcing the use of an index on a SELECT
query
when the index had been disabled would raise an error without
running the query. The query now executes, with a warning
generated noting that the use of a disabled index has been
ignored.
(Bug#28476)
The result of executing of a prepared statement created with
PREPARE s FROM "SELECT 1 LIMIT ?"
was not replicated correctly.
(Bug#28464)
The query SELECT '2007-01-01' + INTERVAL
caused
mysqld to fail.
(Bug#28450)column_name
DAY FROM
table_name
A server crash could happen under rare conditions such that a
temporary table outgrew heap memory reserved for it and the
remaining disk space was not big enough to store the table as a
MyISAM
table.
(Bug#28449)
mysql_upgrade failed if certain SQL modes were set. Now it sets the mode itself to avoid this problem. (Bug#28401)
The test case for mysqldump failed with
bin-log
disabled.
(Bug#28372)
Attempting to LOAD_FILE
from an empty floppy
drive under Windows, caused the server to hang. For example, if
you opened a connection to the server and then issued the
command SELECT LOAD_FILE('a:test');, with no
floppy in the drive, the server was inaccessible until the modal
pop-up dialog box was dismissed.
(Bug#28366)
A buffer overflow could occur when using
DECIMAL
columns on Windows operating systems.
(Bug#28361)
libmysql.dll
could not be dynamically loaded
on Windows.
(Bug#28358)
Grouping queries with correlated subqueries in
WHERE
conditions could produce incorrect
results.
(Bug#28337)
mysqltest used a too-large stack size on PPC/Debian Linux, causing thread-creation failure for tests that use many threads. (Bug#28333)
EXPLAIN
for a query on an empty table
immediately after its creation could result in a server crash.
(Bug#28272)
The IS_UPDATABLE
column in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS
table was not always
set correctly.
(Bug#28266)
Comparing a DATETIME
column value with a user
variable yielded incorrect results.
(Bug#28261)
For CAST()
of a
NULL
value with type
DECIMAL
, the return value was incorrectly
initialized, producing a runtime error for binaries built using
Visual C++ 2005.
(Bug#28250)
Recreating a view that already exists on the master would cause a replicating slave to terminate replication with a 'different error message on slave and master' error. (Bug#28244)
Portability problems caused by use of isinf()
were corrected.
(Bug#28240)
When dumping procedures, mysqldump
--compact
generated output that
restored the session variable SQL_MODE
without first capturing it. When dumping routines,
mysqldump --compact
neither
set nor retrieved the value of SQL_MODE
.
(Bug#28223)
Comparison of the string value of a date showed as unequal to
CURTIME()
. Similar behavior was
exhibited for DATETIME
values.
(Bug#28208)
The Bytes_received
and
Bytes_sent
status variables could hold only
32-bit values (not 64-bit values) on some platforms.
(Bug#28149)
Storing a large number into a FLOAT
or
DOUBLE
column with a fixed length could
result in incorrect truncation of the number if the column's
length was greater than 31.
(Bug#28121)
DECIMAL
values beginning with nine
9
digits could be incorrectly rounded.
(Bug#27984)
The second execution of a prepared statement from a
UNION
query with ORDER BY
RAND()
caused the server to crash. This problem could
also occur when invoking a stored procedure containing such a
query.
(Bug#27937)
For attempts to open a non-existent table, the server should
report ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE
but sometimes
reported ER_TABLE_NOT_LOCKED
.
(Bug#27907)
A stored program that uses a variable name containing multibyte characters could fail to execute. (Bug#27876)
ON
conditions from JOIN
expressions were ignored when checking the CHECK
OPTION
clause while updating a multiple-table view
that included such a clause.
(Bug#27827)
On some systems, udf_example.c
returned an
incorrect result length. Also on some systems,
mysql-test-run.pl could not find the shared
object built from udf_example.c
.
(Bug#27741)
HASH
indexes on VARCHAR
columns with binary collations did not ignore trailing spaces
from strings before comparisons. This could result in duplicate
records being successfully inserted into a
MEMORY
table with unique key constraints. A
consequence was that internal MEMORY
tables
used for GROUP BY
calculation contained
duplicate rows that resulted in duplicate-key errors when
converting those temporary tables to MyISAM
,
and that error was incorrectly reported as a table is
full
error.
(Bug#27643)
An error occurred trying to connect to mysqld-debug.exe. (Bug#27597)
Selecting MIN()
on an indexed
column that contained only NULL
values caused
NULL
to be returned for other result columns.
(Bug#27573)
If a stored function or trigger was killed, it aborted but no error was thrown, allowing the calling statement to continue without noticing the problem. This could lead to incorrect results. (Bug#27563)
When ALTER TABLE
was used to add a new
DATE
column with no explicit default value,
'0000-00-00'
was used as the default even if
the SQL mode included the NO_ZERO_DATE
mode
to prohibit that value. A similar problem occurred for
DATETIME
columns.
(Bug#27507)
Using a TEXT
local variable in a stored
routine in an expression such as SET
produced
an incorrect result.
(Bug#27415)var
=
SUBSTRING(var
, 3)
The error message for error number 137
did
not report which database/table combination reported the
problem.
(Bug#27173)
A large filesort could result in a division by zero error and a server crash. (Bug#27119)
Binary logging of prepared statements could produce syntactically incorrect queries in the binary log, replacing some parameters with variable names rather than variable values. This could lead to incorrect results on replication slaves. (Bug#26842, Bug#12826)
Connections from one mysqld server to another
failed on Mac OS X, affecting replication and
FEDERATED
tables.
(Bug#26664)
See also Bug#29083
Some test suite files were missing from some MySQL-test packages. (Bug#26609)
Statements within triggers ignored the value of the
low_priority_updates
system variable.
(Bug#26162)
See also Bug#29963
Running CHECK TABLE
concurrently with a
SELECT
, INSERT
or other
statement on Windows could corrupt a MyISAM table.
(Bug#25712)
On Windows, connection handlers did not properly decrement the server's thread count when exiting. (Bug#25621)
Due to a race condition, executing FLUSH
PRIVILEGES
in one thread could cause brief table
unavailability in other threads.
(Bug#24988)
When mysqld was run as a Windows service, shared memory objects were not created in the global namespace and could not be used by clients to connect. (Bug#24731)
On some Linux distributions where LinuxThreads and NPTL
glibc
versions both are available, statically
built binaries can crash because the linker defaults to
LinuxThreads when linking statically, but calls to external
libraries (such as libnss
) are resolved to
NPTL versions. This cannot be worked around in the code, so
instead if a crash occurs on such a binary/OS combination, print
an error message that provides advice about how to fix the
problem.
(Bug#24611)
Implicit conversion of 9912101
to
DATE
did not match
CAST(9912101 AS DATE)
.
(Bug#23093)
Conversion errors could occur when constructing the condition
for an IN
predicate. The predicate was
treated as if the affected column contains
NULL
, but if the IN
predicate is inside NOT
, incorrect results
could be returned.
(Bug#22855)
When using transactions and replication, shutting down the master in the middle of a transaction would cause all slaves to stop replicating. (Bug#22725)
Linux binaries were unable to dump core after executing a
setuid()
call.
(Bug#21723)
Stack overflow caused server crashes. (Bug#21476)
CURDATE()
is less than
NOW()
, either when comparing
CURDATE()
directly
(CURDATE() < NOW()
is true) or when
casting CURDATE()
to
DATE
(CAST(CURDATE() AS DATE) <
NOW()
is true). However, storing
CURDATE()
in a
DATE
column and comparing
incorrectly yielded false. This is fixed by comparing a
col_name
< NOW()DATE
column as DATETIME
for comparisons to a DATETIME
constant.
(Bug#21103)
For dates with 4-digit year parts less than 200, an incorrect
implicit conversion to add a century was applied for date
arithmetic performed with
DATE_ADD()
,
DATE_SUB()
, +
INTERVAL
, and - INTERVAL
. (For
example, DATE_ADD('0050-01-01 00:00:00',
INTERVAL 0 SECOND)
became '2050-01-01
00:00:00'
.)
(Bug#18997)
Using CREATE TABLE LIKE ...
would raise an
assertion when replicated to a slave.
(Bug#18950)
Granting access privileges to an individual table where the database or table name contained an underscore would fail. (Bug#18660)
The -lmtmalloc
library was removed from the
output of mysql_config on Solaris, as it
caused problems when building DBD::mysql
(and
possibly other applications) on that platform that tried to use
dlopen() to access the client library.
(Bug#18322)
The check-cpu script failed to detect AMD64 Turion processors correctly. (Bug#17707)
Trying to shut down the server following a failed LOAD
DATA INFILE
caused mysqld to crash.
(Bug#17233)
Using up-arrow for command-line recall in mysql could cause a segmentation fault. (Bug#10218)
The result for CAST()
when
casting a value to UNSIGNED
was limited to
the maximum signed BIGINT
value
(9223372036854775808), rather than the maximum unsigned value
(18446744073709551615).
(Bug#8663)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.40).
Functionality added or changed:
Incompatible Change:
INSERT DELAYED
is now downgraded to a normal
INSERT
if the statement uses functions that
access tables or triggers, or that is called from a function or
a trigger.
This was done to resolve the following interrelated issues:
The server could abort or deadlock for INSERT
DELAYED
statements for which another insert was
performed implicitly (for example, via a stored function
that inserted a row).
A trigger using an INSERT DELAYED
caused the error INSERT DELAYED can't be used
with table ... because it is locked with LOCK
TABLES although the target table was not
actually locked.
INSERT DELAYED
into a table with a
BEFORE INSERT
or AFTER
INSERT
trigger gave an incorrect
NEW
pseudocolumn value and caused the
server to deadlock or abort.
Prior to this release, when DATE
values were
compared with DATETIME
values the time
portion of the DATETIME
value was ignored.
Now a DATE
value is coerced to the
DATETIME
type by adding the time portion as
“00:00:00”. To mimic the old behavior use the
CAST() function in the following way: SELECT
.
(Bug#28929)date_field
= CAST(NOW() as
DATE);
mysqld_multi now understands the
--no-defaults
,
--defaults-file
, and
--defaults-extra-file
options. The
--config-file
option is deprecated; if given,
it is treated like --defaults-extra-file
.
(Bug#27390)
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix: Use of a view could allow a user to gain update privileges for tables in other databases. (Bug#27878, CVE-2007-3782)
Security Fix:
The requirement of the DROP
privilege for
RENAME TABLE
was not enforced.
(Bug#27515, CVE-2007-2691)
Security Fix:
If a stored routine was declared using SQL SECURITY
INVOKER
, a user who invoked the routine could gain
privileges.
(Bug#27337, CVE-2007-2692)
MySQL Cluster: The cluster waited 30 seconds instead of 30 milliseconds before reading table statistics. (Bug#28093)
MySQL Cluster:
INSERT IGNORE
wrongly ignored
NULL
values in unique indexes.
(Bug#27980)
MySQL Cluster: The name of the month “March” was given incorrectly in the cluster error log. (Bug#27926)
MySQL Cluster:
It was not possible to add a unique index to an
NDB
table while in single user mode.
(Bug#27710)
MySQL Cluster:
Repeated insertion of data generated by
mysqldump into NDB
tables
could eventually lead to failure of the cluster.
(Bug#27437)
MySQL Cluster:
ndb_connectstring
did not appear in the
output of SHOW VARIABLES
.
(Bug#26675)
Cluster API:
For BLOB
reads on operations with lock mode
LM_CommittedRead
, the lock mode was not
upgraded to LM_Read
before the state of the
BLOB
had already been calculated. The
NDB
API methods affected by this problem
included the following:
NdbOperation::readTuple()
NdbScanOperation::readTuples()
NdbIndexScanOperation::readTuples()
On the IBM i5 platform, the installation script in the
.savf
binaries unconditionally executed the
mysql_install_db script. This problem was
fixed in a repackaged distribution numbered 5.0.42b.
(Bug#30084)
A query with a NOT IN
subquery predicate
could cause a crash when the left operand of the predicate
evaluated to NULL
.
(Bug#28375)
For InnoDB
, in some rare cases the optimizer
preferred a more expensive ref
access to a
less expensive range access.
(Bug#28189)
A performance degradation was observed for outer join queries to which a not-exists optimization was applied. (Bug#28188)
SELECT * INTO OUTFILE ... FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SCHEMATA
failed with an
Access denied error, even for a user who
had the FILE
privilege.
(Bug#28181)
Comparisons of DATE
or
DATETIME
values for the
IN()
function could yield
incorrect results.
(Bug#28133)
The server could hang for INSERT IGNORE ... ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
if an update failed.
(Bug#28000)
For INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statements that affected many rows, updates could be applied to
the wrong rows.
(Bug#27954)
Early NULL
-filtering optimization did not
work for eq_ref
table access.
(Bug#27939)
Non-grouped columns were allowed by *
in
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
SQL mode.
(Bug#27874)
Debug builds on Windows generated false alarms about uninitialized variables with some Visual Studio runtime libraries. (Bug#27811)
Certain queries that used uncorrelated scalar subqueries caused
EXPLAIN
to crash.
(Bug#27807)
Changes to some system variables should invalidate statements in the query cache, but invalidation did not happen. (Bug#27792)
Performing a UNION
on two views that had
ORDER BY
clauses resulted in an
Unknown column
error.
(Bug#27786)
mysql_install_db is supposed to detect existing system tables and create only those that do not exist. Instead, it was exiting with an error if tables already existed. (Bug#27783)
mysqld did not check the length of option values and could crash with a buffer overflow for long values. (Bug#27715)
Comparisons using row constructors could fail for rows
containing NULL
values.
(Bug#27704)
LOAD DATA
did not use
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
as the default value for a
TIMESTAMP
column for which no value was
provided.
(Bug#27670)
mysqldump could not connect using SSL. (Bug#27669)
On Linux, the server could not create temporary tables if
lower_case_table_names
was set to 1 and the
value of tmpdir
was a directory name
containing any uppercase letters.
(Bug#27653)
For InnoDB
tables, a multiple-row
INSERT
of the form INSERT INTO t
(id...) VALUES (NULL...) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
id=VALUES(id)
, where id
is an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column, could cause
ERROR 1062 (23000): Duplicate entry...
errors
or lost rows.
(Bug#27650)
The XML output representing an empty result was an empty string
rather than an empty <resultset/>
element.
(Bug#27608)
Comparison of a DATE
with a
DATETIME
did not treat the
DATE
as having a time part of
00:00:00
.
(Bug#27590)
See also Bug#32198
The fix for Bug#17212 provided correct sort order for misordered output of certain queries, but caused significant overall query performance degradation. (Results were correct (good), but returned much more slowly (bad).) The fix also affected performance of queries for which results were correct. The performance degradation has been addressed. (Bug#27531)
The CRC32()
function returns an
unsigned integer, but the metadata was signed, which could cause
certain queries to return incorrect results. (For example,
queries that selected a CRC32()
value and used that value in the GROUP BY
clause.)
(Bug#27530)
An interaction between SHOW TABLE STATUS
and
other concurrent statements that modify the table could result
in a divide-by-zero error and a server crash.
(Bug#27516)
A race condition between DROP TABLE
and
SHOW TABLE STATUS
could cause the latter to
display incorrect information.
(Bug#27499)
Nested aggregate functions could be improperly evaluated. (Bug#27363)
A stored function invocation in the WHERE
clause was treated as a constant.
(Bug#27354)
Failure to allocate memory associated with
transaction_prealloc_size
could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#27322)
mysqldump crashed if it got no data from
SHOW CREATE PROCEDURE
(for example, when
trying to dump a routine defined by a different user and for
which the current user had no privileges). Now it prints a
comment to indicate the problem. It also returns an error, or
continues if the --force
option is given.
(Bug#27293)
mysqlbinlog produced different output with
the -R
option than without it.
(Bug#27171)
Flow control optimization in stored routines could cause exception handlers to never return or execute incorrect logic. (Bug#26977)
mysqldump would not dump a view for which the
DEFINER
no longer exists.
(Bug#26817)
Creating a temporary table with InnoDB when using the
one-file-per-table setting, and when the host filesystem for
temporary tables was tmpfs
, would cause an
assertion within mysqld
. This was due to the
use of O_DIRECT
when opening the temporary
table file.
(Bug#26662)
mysql_upgrade did not detect failure of external commands that it runs. (Bug#26639)
Aborting a statement on the master that applied to a non-transactional statement broke replication. The statement was written to the binary log but not completely executed on the master. Slaves receiving the statement executed it completely, resulting in loss of data synchrony. Now an error code is written to the error log so that the slaves stop without executing the aborted statement. (That is, replication stops, but synchrony to the point of the stop is preserved and you can investigate the problem.) (Bug#26551)
Index hints (USE INDEX
, IGNORE
INDEX
, FORCE INDEX
) cannot be used
with FULLTEXT
indexes, but were not being
ignored.
(Bug#25951)
If CREATE TABLE t1 LIKE t2
failed due to a
full disk, an empty t2.frm
file could be
created but not removed. This file then caused subsequent
attempts to create a table named t2
to fail.
This is easily corrected at the filesystem level by removing the
t2.frm
file manually, but now the server
removes the file if the create operation does not complete
successfully.
(Bug#25761)
mysql_upgrade did not pass a password to mysqlcheck if one was given. (Bug#25452)
On Windows, mysql_upgrade was sensitive to lettercase of the names of some required components. (Bug#25405)
For storage engines that allow the current auto-increment value
to be set, using ALTER TABLE ... ENGINE
to
convert a table from one such storage engine to another caused
loss of the current value. (For storage engines that do not
support setting the value, it cannot be retained anyway when
changing the storage engine.)
(Bug#25262)
Restoration of the default database after stored routine or trigger execution on a slave could cause replication to stop if the database no longer existed. (Bug#25082)
Several math functions produced incorrect results for large
unsigned values. ROUND()
produced incorrect results or a crash for a large
number-of-decimals argument.
(Bug#24912)
The result set of a query that used WITH
ROLLUP
and DISTINCT
could lack some
rollup rows (rows with NULL
values for
grouping attributes) if the GROUP BY
list
contained constant expressions.
(Bug#24856)
For queries that used ORDER BY
with
InnoDB
tables, if the optimizer chose an
index for accessing the table but found a covering index that
enabled the ORDER BY
to be skipped, no
results were returned.
(Bug#24778)
Concurrent execution of CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT
and other statements involving the target table
suffered from various race conditions, some of which might have
led to deadlocks.
(Bug#24738)
An attempt to execute CREATE TABLE ... SELECT
when a temporary table with the same name already existed led to
the insertion of data into the temporary table and creation of
an empty non-temporary table.
(Bug#24508)
The MERGE
storage engine could return
incorrect results when several index values that compare
equality were present in an index (for example,
'gross'
and 'gross '
,
which are considered equal but have different lengths).
(Bug#24342)
Some upgrade problems are detected and better error messages suggesting that mysql_upgrade be run are produced. (Bug#24248)
Some views could not be created even when the user had the requisite privileges. (Bug#24040)
Using CAST()
to convert
DATETIME
values to numeric values did not
work.
(Bug#23656)
The AUTO_INCREMENT
value would not be
correctly reported for InnoDB tables when using SHOW
CREATE TABLE
statement or mysqldump
command.
(Bug#23313)
SELECT COUNT(*)
from a table containing a
DATETIME NOT NULL
column could produce
spurious warnings with the NO_ZERO_DATE
SQL
mode enabled.
(Bug#22824)
Using SET GLOBAL
to change the
lc_time_names
system variable had no effect
on new connections.
(Bug#22648)
A multiple-table UPDATE
could return an
incorrect rows-matched value if, during insertion of rows into a
temporary table, the table had to be converted from a
MEMORY
table to a MyISAM
table.
(Bug#22364)
yaSSL crashed on pre-Pentium Intel CPUs. (Bug#21765)
A slave that used --master-ssl-cipher
could not
connect to the master.
(Bug#21611)
Quoted labels in stored routines were mishandled, rendering the routines unusable. (Bug#21513)
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT
caused
a server crash if the target table already existed and had a
BEFORE INSERT
trigger.
(Bug#20903)
Deadlock occurred for attempts to execute CREATE TABLE
IF NOT EXISTS ... SELECT
when LOCK
TABLES
had been used to acquire a read lock on the
target table.
(Bug#20662, Bug#15522)
Changing a utf8
column in an
InnoDB
table to a shorter length did not
shorten the data values.
(Bug#20095)
The omission of leading zeros in dates could lead to erroneous results when these were compared with the output of certain date and time functions. (Bug#16377)
INSERT...ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
could cause
Error 1032: Can't find record in ...
for
inserts into an InnoDB
table unique index
using key column prefixes with an underlying
utf8
string column.
(Bug#13191)
Having the EXECUTE
privilege for a routine in
a database should make it possible to USE
that database, but the server returned an error instead. This
has been corrected. As a result of the change, SHOW
TABLES
for a database in which you have only the
EXECUTE
privilege returns an empty set rather
than an error.
(Bug#9504)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.38).
Functionality added or changed:
MySQL Cluster: The behavior of the ndb_restore utility has been changed as follows:
It is now possible to restore selected databases or tables using ndb_restore.
Several options have been added for use with
ndb_restore --print_data
to facilitate the creation of structured data
dump files. These options can be used to make dumps made
using ndb_restore more like those
produced by mysqldump.
For details of these changes, see Section 16.9.3, “ndb_restore — Restore a Cluster Backup”. (Bug#26899, Bug#26900)
If a set function S
with an outer
reference
cannot be aggregated in the outer query against which the outer
reference has been resolved, MySQL interprets S
(outer_ref
)
the same way that it would interpret S
(outer_ref
)
.
However, standard SQL requires throwing an error in this
situation. An error now is thrown for such queries if the
S
(const
)ANSI
SQL mode is enabled.
(Bug#27348)
Added the --service-startup-timeout
option for
mysql.server to specify how long to wait for
the server to start. If the server does not start within the
timeout period, mysql.server exits with an
error.
(Bug#26952)
Prefix lengths for columns in SPATIAL
indexes
are no longer displayed in SHOW CREATE TABLE
output. mysqldump uses that statement, so if
a table with SPATIAL
indexes containing
prefixed columns is dumped and reloaded, the index is created
with no prefixes. (The full column width of each column is
indexed.)
(Bug#26794)
The output of mysql --xml
and mysqldump --xml
now
includes a valid XML namespace.
(Bug#25946)
If you use SSL for a client connection, you can tell the client
not to authenticate the server certificate by specifying neither
--ssl-ca
nor --ssl-capath
. The
server still verifies the client according to any applicable
requirements established via GRANT
statements
for the client, and it still uses any
--ssl-ca
/--ssl-capath
values
that were passed to server at startup time.
(Bug#25309)
The syntax for index hints has been extended to enable explicit specification that the hint applies only to join processing. See Section 12.2.7.2, “Index Hint Syntax”.
This is a new fix for this issue, and replaces the fix made in MySQL 5.0.25 and reverted in 5.0.26. (Bug#21174)
The mysql_create_system_tables script was removed because mysql_install_db no longer uses it in MySQL 5.0.
Bugs fixed:
Important Note: The parser accepted invalid code in SQL condition handlers, leading to server crashes or unexpected execution behavior in stored programs. Specifically, the parser allowed a condition handler to refer to labels for blocks that enclose the handler declaration. This was incorrect because block label scope does not include the code for handlers declared within the labeled block.
The parser now rejects this invalid construct, but if you upgrade in place (without dumping and reloading your databases), existing handlers that contain the construct are still invalid — even if they appear to function as you expect — and should be rewritten.
To find affected handlers, use mysqldump to dump all stored functions and procedures, triggers, and events. Then attempt to reload them into an upgraded server. Handlers that contain illegal label references will be rejected.
For more information about condition handlers and writing them
to avoid invalid jumps, see Section 18.2.8.2, “DECLARE
Handlers”.
(Bug#26503)
MySQL Cluster:
NDB
tables having MEDIUMINT
AUTO_INCREMENT
columns were not restored correctly by
ndb_restore, causing spurious duplicate key
errors. This issue did not affect TINYINT
,
INT
, or BIGINT
columns
with AUTO_INCREMENT
.
(Bug#27775)
MySQL Cluster:
NDB
tables with indexes whose names contained
space characters were not restored correctly by
ndb_restore (the index names were truncated).
(Bug#27758)
MySQL Cluster:
Under certain rare circumstances performing a DROP
TABLE
or TRUNCATE
on an
NDB
table could cause a node failure or
forced cluster shutdown.
(Bug#27581)
MySQL Cluster: Memory usage of a mysqld process grew even while idle. (Bug#27560)
MySQL Cluster:
It was not possible to set
LockPagesInMainMemory
equal to
0
.
(Bug#27291)
MySQL Cluster: A race condition could sometimes occur if the node acting as master failed while node IDs were still being allocated during startup. (Bug#27286)
MySQL Cluster: When a data node was taking over as the master node, a race condition could sometimes occur as the node was assuming responsibility for handling of global checkpoints. (Bug#27283)
MySQL Cluster: Error messages displayed when running in single user mode were inconsistent. (Bug#27021)
MySQL Cluster: The failure of a data node while restarting could cause other data nodes to hang or crash. (Bug#27003)
MySQL Cluster:
On Solaris, the value of an NDB
table column
declared as BIT(33)
was always displayed as
0
.
(Bug#26986)
MySQL Cluster: mysqld processes would sometimes crash under high load. (Bug#26825)
MySQL Cluster:
The output from ndb_restore
--print_data
was incorrect for a
backup made of a database containing tables with
TINYINT
or SMALLINT
columns.
(Bug#26740)
MySQL Cluster:
In some cases, AFTER UPDATE
and
AFTER DELETE
triggers on
NDB
tables that referenced subject table did
not see the results of operation which caused invocation of the
trigger, but rather saw the row as it was prior to the update or
delete operation.
This was most noticeable when an update operation used a
subquery to obtain the rows to be updated. An example would be
UPDATE tbl1 SET col2 = val1 WHERE tbl1.col1 IN (SELECT
col3 FROM tbl2 WHERE c4 = val2)
where there was an
AFTER UPDATE
trigger on table
tbl1
. In such cases, the trigger would fail
to execute.
The problem occurred because the actual update or delete
operations were deferred to be able to perform them later as one
batch. The fix for this bug solves the problem by disabling this
optimization for a given update or delete if the table has an
AFTER
trigger defined for this operation.
(Bug#26242)
MySQL Cluster: Condition pushdown did not work with prepared statements. (Bug#26225)
MySQL Cluster:
Joins on multiple tables containing BLOB
columns could cause data nodes run out of memory, and to crash
with the error NdbObjectIdMap::expand unable to
expand.
(Bug#26176)
MySQL Cluster:
After entering single user mode it was not possible to alter
non-NDB
tables on any SQL nodes other than
the one having sole access to the cluster.
(Bug#25275)
MySQL Cluster: When a cluster data node suffered a “hard” failure (such as a power failure or loss of a network connection) TCP sockets to the missing node were maintained indefinitely. Now socket-based transporters check for a response and terminate the socket if there is no activity on the socket after 2 hours. (Bug#24793)
MySQL Cluster:
The management client command
displayed
the message node_id
STATUSNode
when node_id
:
not connectednode_id
was not the node ID of a data node.
The ALL STATUS
command in the cluster
management client still displays status information for data
nodes only. This is by design. See
Section 16.7.2, “Commands in the MySQL Cluster Management Client”, for more
information.
MySQL Cluster:
Some values of MaxNoOfTables
caused the error
Job buffer congestion to occur.
(Bug#19378)
MySQL Cluster:
When trying to create tables on an SQL node not connected to the
cluster, a misleading error message Table
'tbl_name
' already exists
was generated. The error now generated is Could not
connect to storage engine.
(Bug#18676)
Replication: Some queries that updated multiple tables were not backed up correctly. (Bug#27748)
Replication: Out-of-memory errors were not reported. Now they are written to the error log. (Bug#26844)
Cluster API:
Using NdbBlob::writeData()
to write data in
the middle of an existing blob value (that is, updating the
value) could overwrite some data past the end of the data to be
changed.
(Bug#27018)
Cluster API:
After defining a delete operation (using
NdbOperation::deleteTuple()
) on a nonexistent
primary key of a table having a BLOB
or
TEXT
column, invoking
NdbTransaction::execute()
caused the calling
application to enter an endless loop rather than raising an
error.
This issue also affected ndb_restore; when
restoring tables containing BLOB
or
TEXT
columns, this could cause it to consume
all available memory and then crash.
(Bug#24028)
Some equi-joins containing a WHERE
clause
that included a NOT IN
subquery caused a
server crash.
(Bug#27870)
SELECT DISTINCT
could return incorrect
results if the select list contained duplicated columns.
(Bug#27659)
With NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO
SQL mode enabled,
LOAD DATA
operations could assign incorrect
AUTO_INCREMENT
values.
(Bug#27586)
Incorrect results could be returned for some queries that
contained a select list expression with IN
or
BETWEEN
together with an
ORDER BY
or GROUP BY
on
the same expression using NOT IN
or
NOT BETWEEN
.
(Bug#27532)
Evaluation of an IN()
predicate containing a
decimal-valued argument caused a server crash.
(Bug#27513, Bug#27362, CVE-2007-2583)
In out-of-memory conditions, the server might crash or otherwise not report an error to the Windows event log. (Bug#27490)
Passing nested row expressions with different structures to an
IN
predicate caused a server crash.
(Bug#27484)
The decimal.h
header file was incorrectly
omitted from binary distributions.
(Bug#27456)
With innodb_file_per_table
enabled,
attempting to rename an InnoDB
table to a
non-existent database caused the server to exit.
(Bug#27381)
A subquery could get incorrect values for references to outer query columns when it contained aggregate functions that were aggregated in outer context. (Bug#27321)
The server did not shut down cleanly. (Bug#27310)
In a view, a column that was defined using a
GEOMETRY
function was treated as having the
LONGBLOB
data type rather than the
GEOMETRY
type.
(Bug#27300)
Queries containing subqueries with
COUNT(*)
aggregated in an outer
context returned incorrect results. This happened only if the
subquery did not contain any references to outer columns.
(Bug#27257)
Use of an aggregate function from an outer context as an
argument to GROUP_CONCAT()
caused a server crash.
(Bug#27229)
String truncation upon insertion into an integer or year column did not generate a warning (or an error in strict mode). (Bug#27176, Bug#26359)
Storing NULL
values in spatial fields caused
excessive memory allocation and crashes on some systems.
(Bug#27164)
Row equalities in WHERE
clauses could cause
memory corruption.
(Bug#27154)
GROUP BY
on a ucs2
column
caused a server crash when there was at least one empty string
in the column.
(Bug#27079)
Duplicate members in SET
definitions were not
detected. Now they result in a warning; if strict SQL mode is
enabled, an error occurs instead.
(Bug#27069)
For INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statements on tables containing
AUTO_INCREMENT
columns,
LAST_INSERT_ID()
was reset to 0
if no rows were successfully inserted or changed. “Not
changed” includes the case where a row was updated to its
current values, but in that case,
LAST_INSERT_ID()
should not be
reset to 0. Now LAST_INSERT_ID()
is reset to 0 only if no rows were successfully inserted or
touched, whether or not touched rows were changed.
(Bug#27033)
This regression was introduced by Bug#19978
mysql_install_db could terminate with an error after failing to determine that a system table already existed. (Bug#27022)
In a MEMORY
table, using a
BTREE
index to scan for updatable rows could
lead to an infinite loop.
(Bug#26996)
Invalid optimization of pushdown conditions for queries where an outer join was guaranteed to read only one row from the outer table led to results with too few rows. (Bug#26963)
Windows binaries contained no debug symbol file. Now
.map
and .pdb
files are
included in 32-bit builds for mysqld-nt.exe,
mysqld-debug.exe, and
mysqlmanager.exe.
(Bug#26893)
Improved out-of-memory detection when sending logs from a master server to slaves, and log a message when allocation fails. (Bug#26837)
For InnoDB
tables having a clustered index
that began with a CHAR
or
VARCHAR
column, deleting a record and then
inserting another before the deleted record was purged could
result in table corruption.
(Bug#26835)
Duplicates were not properly identified among (potentially) long
strings used as arguments for
GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT)
.
(Bug#26815)
ALTER VIEW
requires the CREATE
VIEW
and DROP
privileges for the
view. However, if the view was created by another user, the
server erroneously required the SUPER
privilege.
(Bug#26813)
A result set column formed by concatention of string literals
was incomplete when the column was produced by a subquery in the
FROM
clause.
(Bug#26738)
When using the result of
SEC_TO_TIME()
for time value
greater than 24 hours in an ORDER BY
clause,
either directly or through a column alias, the rows were sorted
incorrectly as strings.
(Bug#26672)
The range optimizer could cause the server to run out of memory. (Bug#26625)
The range optimizer could consume a combinatorial amount of
memory for certain classes of WHERE
clauses.
(Bug#26624)
mysqldump
could crash or exhibit incorrect
behavior when some options were given very long values, such as
--fields-terminated-by="
. The code has been cleaned
up to remove a number of fixed-sized buffers and to be more
careful about error conditions in memory allocation.
(Bug#26346)some very long
string
"
If the server was started with
--skip-grant-tables
, Selecting from
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables causes a server
crash.
(Bug#26285)
For an INSERT
statement that should fail due
to a column with no default value not being assigned a value,
the statement succeeded with no error if the column was assigned
a value in an ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause,
even if that clause was not used.
(Bug#26261)
The temporary file-creation code was cleaned up on Windows to improve server stability. (Bug#26233)
For MyISAM
tables,
COUNT(*)
could return an
incorrect value if the WHERE
clause compared
an indexed TEXT
column to the empty string
(''
). This happened if the column contained
empty strings and also strings starting with control characters
such as tab or newline.
(Bug#26231)
For INSERT INTO ... SELECT
where index
searches used column prefixes, insert errors could occur when
key value type conversion was done.
(Bug#26207)
For DELETE FROM
(with no
tbl_name
ORDER BY
col_name
WHERE
or LIMIT
clause),
the server did not check whether
col_name
was a valid column in the
table.
(Bug#26186)
REPAIR TABLE ... USE_FRM
with an
ARCHIVE
table deleted all records from the
table.
(Bug#26138)
mysqldump crashed for
MERGE
tables if the
--complete-insert
(-c
) option
was given.
(Bug#25993)
Setting a column to NOT NULL
with an
ON DELETE SET NULL
clause foreign key crashes
the server.
(Bug#25927)
On Windows, debug builds of mysqld could fail with heap assertions. (Bug#25765)
In certain situations, MATCH ... AGAINST
returned false hits for NULL
values produced
by LEFT JOIN
when no full-text index was
available.
(Bug#25729)
When RAND()
was called multiple
times inside a stored procedure, the server did not write the
correct random seed values to the binary log, resulting in
incorrect replication.
(Bug#25543)
OPTIMIZE TABLE
might fail on Windows when it
attempts to rename a temporary file to the original name if the
original file had been opened, resulting in loss of the
.MYD
file.
(Bug#25521)
For SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS
, the
LATEST DEADLOCK INFORMATION
was not always
cleared properly.
(Bug#25494)
mysql_stmt_fetch()
did an
invalid memory deallocation when used with the embedded server.
(Bug#25492)
GRANT
statements were not replicated if the
server was started with the
--replicate-ignore-table
or
--replicate-wild-ignore-table
option.
(Bug#25482)
Difficult repair or optimization operations could cause an assertion failure, resulting in a server crash. (Bug#25289)
Duplicate entries were not assessed correctly in a
MEMORY
table with a BTREE
primary key on a utf8
ENUM
column.
(Bug#24985)
Selecting the result of AVG()
within a UNION
could produce incorrect
values.
(Bug#24791)
MBROverlaps()
returned incorrect values in
some cases.
(Bug#24563)
Increasing the width of a DECIMAL
column
could cause column values to be changed.
(Bug#24558)
A problem in handling of aggregate functions in subqueries caused predicates containing aggregate functions to be ignored during query execution. (Bug#24484)
The test for the
MYSQL_OPT_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT
option for
mysql_options()
was performed
incorrectly. Also changed as a result of this bugfix: The
arg
option for the
mysql_options()
C API function
was changed from char *
to void
*
.
(Bug#24121)
Replication between master and slave would infinitely retry
binary log transmission where the
max_allowed_packet
on the master was larger
than that on the slave if the size of the transfer was between
these two values.
(Bug#23775)
On Windows, debug builds of mysqlbinlog could fail with a memory error. (Bug#23736)
The values displayed for the
Innodb_row_lock_time
,
Innodb_row_lock_time_avg
, and
Innodb_row_lock_time_max
status variables
were incorrect.
(Bug#23666)
SHOW CREATE VIEW
qualified references to
stored functions in the view definition with the function's
database name, even when the database was the default database.
This affected mysqldump (which uses
SHOW CREATE VIEW
to dump views) because the
resulting dump file could not be used to reload the database
into a different database. SHOW CREATE VIEW
now suppresses the database name for references to functions in
the default database.
(Bug#23491)
An INTO OUTFILE
clause is allowed only for
the final SELECT
of a
UNION
, but this restriction was not being
enforced correctly.
(Bug#23345)
With the NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO
SQL mode
enabled, LAST_INSERT_ID()
could
return 0 after INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY
UPDATE
. Additionally, the next rows inserted (by the
same INSERT
, or the following
INSERT
with or without ON DUPLICATE
KEY UPDATE
), would insert 0 for the auto-generated
value if the value for the AUTO_INCREMENT
column was NULL
or missing.
(Bug#23233)
SOUNDEX()
returned an invalid
string for international characters in multi-byte character
sets.
(Bug#22638)
COUNT(
sometimes generated a spurious truncation warning.
(Bug#21976)decimal_expr
)
For InnoDB
, fixed consistent-read behavior of
the first read statement, if the read was served from the query
cache, for the READ COMMITTED
isolation
level.
(Bug#21409)
For a stored procedure containing a SELECT
statement that used a complicated join with an
ON
expression, the expression could be
ignored during re-execution of the procedure, yielding an
incorrect result.
(Bug#20492)
In some cases, the optimizer preferred a range or full index scan access method over lookup access methods when the latter were much cheaper. (Bug#19372)
Conversion of DATETIME
values in numeric
contexts sometimes did not produce a double
(YYYYMMDDHHMMSS.uuuuuu
) value.
(Bug#16546)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.36).
Functionality added or changed:
The server now includes a timestamp in error messages that are
logged as a result of unhandled signals (such as mysqld
got signal 11
messages).
(Bug#24878)
Added the --secure-file-priv
option for
mysqld, which limits the effect of the
LOAD_FILE()
function and the
LOAD DATA
and SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
statements to work only with files in a given
directory.
(Bug#18628)
Added the hostname
system variable, which the
server sets at startup to the server hostname.
To satisfy different user requirements, we provide several servers. mysqld is an optimized server that is a smaller, faster binary. Each package now also includes mysqld-debug, which is compiled with debugging support but is otherwise configured identically to the non-debug server.
Bugs fixed:
Incompatible Change:
INSERT DELAYED
statements are not supported
for MERGE
tables, but the
MERGE
storage engine was not rejecting such
statements, resulting in table corruption. Applications
previously using INSERT DELAYED
into
MERGE
table will break when upgrading to
versions with this fix. To avoid the problem, remove
DELAYED
from such statements.
(Bug#26464)
MySQL Cluster: An inadvertent use of unaligned data caused ndb_restore to fail on some 64-bit platforms, including Sparc and Itanium-2. (Bug#26739)
MySQL Cluster: An infinite loop in an internal logging function could cause trace logs to fill up with Unknown Signal type error messages and thus grow to unreasonable sizes. (Bug#26720)
MySQL Cluster:
An invalid pointer was returned following a
FSCLOSECONF
signal when accessing the REDO
logs during a node restart or system restart.
(Bug#26515)
MySQL Cluster:
The failure of a data node when restarting it with
--initial
could lead to failures of subsequent
data node restarts.
(Bug#26481)
MySQL Cluster: Takeover for local checkpointing due to multiple failures of master nodes was sometimes incorrectly handled. (Bug#26457)
MySQL Cluster:
The LockPagesInMemory
parameter was not read
until after distributed communication had already started
between cluster nodes. When the value of this parameter was
1
, this could sometimes result in data node
failure due to missed heartbeats.
(Bug#26454)
MySQL Cluster: Under some circumstances, following the restart of a management node, all data nodes would connect to it normally, but some of them subsequently failed to log any events to the management node. (Bug#26293)
MySQL Cluster:
The message Error 0 in readAutoIncrementValue(): no
Error was written to the error log whenever
SHOW TABLE STATUS
was performed on a Cluster
table that did not have an AUTO_INCREMENT
column.
(Bug#21033)
SELECT ... INTO OUTFILE
with a long
FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
value could crash the
server.
(Bug#27231)
An INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statement might modify values in a table but not flush affected
data from the query cache, causing subsequent selects to return
stale results. This made the combination of query cache plus
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
very unreliable.
(Bug#27210)
This regression was introduced by Bug#19978
For MERGE
tables defined on underlying tables
that contained a short VARCHAR
column
(shorter than four characters), using ALTER
TABLE
on at least one but not all of the underlying
tables caused the table definitions to be considered different
from that of the MERGE
table, even if the
ALTER TABLE
did not change the definition.
(Bug#26881)
Use of a subquery containing GROUP BY
and
WITH ROLLUP
caused a server crash.
(Bug#26830)
Added support for --debugger=dbx
for
mysql-test-run.pl and fixed support for
--debugger=devenv
,
--debugger=DevEnv
, and
--debugger=
.
(Bug#26792)/path/to
/devenv
SSL connections failed on Windows. (Bug#26678)
Use of a subquery containing a UNION
with an
invalid ORDER BY
clause caused a server
crash.
(Bug#26661)
In some error messages, inconsistent format specifiers were used for the translations in different languages. comp_err (the error message compiler) now checks for mismatches. (Bug#26571)
Views that used a scalar correlated subquery returned incorrect results. (Bug#26560)
UNHEX() IS NULL
comparisons failed when
UNHEX()
returned
NULL
.
(Bug#26537)
On 64-bit Windows, large timestamp values could be handled incorrectly. (Bug#26536)
For some values of the position argument, the
INSERT()
function could insert a
NUL byte into the result.
(Bug#26281)
INSERT DELAYED
statements inserted incorrect
values into BIT
columns.
(Bug#26238)
A multiple-row delayed insert with an auto-increment column could cause duplicate entries to be created on the slave in a replication environment. (Bug#26116, Bug#25507)
BENCHMARK()
did not work
correctly for expressions that produced a
DECIMAL
result.
(Bug#26093)
LOAD DATA INFILE
sent an okay to the client
before writing the binary log and committing the changes to the
table had finished, thus violating ACID requirements.
(Bug#26050)
X() IS NULL
and Y() IS
NULL
comparisons failed when
X()
and
Y()
returned
NULL
.
(Bug#26038)
Indexes on TEXT
columns were ignored when
ref
accesses were evaluated.
(Bug#25971)
If a thread previously serviced a connection that was killed, excessive memory and CPU use by the thread occurred if it later serviced a connection that had to wait for a table lock. (Bug#25966)
VIEW
restrictions were applied to
SELECT
statements after a CREATE
VIEW
statement failed, as though the
CREATE
had succeeded.
(Bug#25897)
Several deficiencies in resolution of column names for
INSERT ... SELECT
statements were corrected.
(Bug#25831)
Inserting utf8
data into a
TEXT
column that used a single-byte character
set could result in spurious warnings about truncated data.
(Bug#25815)
In certain cases it could happen that deleting a row corrupted
an RTREE
index. This affected indexes on
spatial columns.
(Bug#25673)
Expressions involving SUM()
,
when used in an ORDER BY
clause, could lead
to out-of-order results.
(Bug#25376)
Use of a GROUP BY
clause that referred to a
stored function result together with WITH
ROLLUP
caused incorrect results.
(Bug#25373)
A stored procedure that made use of cursors failed when the procedure was invoked from a stored function. (Bug#25345)
On Windows, the server exhibited a file-handle leak after reaching the limit on the number of open file descriptors. (Bug#25222)
The REPEAT()
function did not
allow a column name as the count
parameter.
(Bug#25197)
Duplicating the usage of a user variable in a stored procedure or trigger would not be replicated correctly to the slave. (Bug#25167)
A reference to a non-existent column in the ORDER
BY
clause of an UPDATE ... ORDER BY
statement could cause a server crash.
(Bug#25126)
A view on a join is insertable for INSERT
statements that store values into only one table of the join.
However, inserts were being rejected if the inserted-into table
was used in a self-join because MySQL incorrectly was
considering the insert to modify multiple tables of the view.
(Bug#25122)
MySQL would not compile when configured using
--without-query-cache
.
(Bug#25075)
IF(expr
,
unsigned_expr
,
unsigned_expr
) was evaluated to a
signed result, not unsigned. This has been corrected. The fix
also affects constructs of the form IS [NOT]
{TRUE|FALSE}
, which were transformed internally into
IF()
expressions that evaluated
to a signed result.
For existing views that were defined using IS [NOT]
{TRUE|FALSE}
constructs, there is a related
implication. The definitions of such views were stored using the
IF()
expression, not the
original construct. This is manifest in that SHOW
CREATE VIEW
shows the transformed
IF()
expression, not the
original one. Existing views will evaluate correctly after the
fix, but if you want SHOW CREATE VIEW
to
display the original construct, you must drop the view and
re-create it using its original definition. New views will
retain the construct in their definition.
(Bug#24532)
DROP TRIGGER
statements would not be filtered
on the slave when using the
replication-wild-do-table
option.
(Bug#24478)
For INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
statements where some AUTO_INCREMENT
values
were generated automatically for inserts and some rows were
updated, one auto-generated value was lost per updated row,
leading to faster exhaustion of the range of the
AUTO_INCREMENT
column.
Because the original problem can affect replication (different values on master and slave), it is recommended that the master and its slaves be upgraded to the current version. (Bug#24432)
A user-defined variable could be assigned an incorrect value if a temporary table was employed in obtaining the result of the query used to determine its value. (Bug#24010)
Queries that used a temporary table for the outer query when evaluating a correlated subquery could return incorrect results. (Bug#23800)
When using certain server SQL modes, the
mysql.proc
table was not created by
mysql_install_db.
(Bug#23669)
DOUBLE
values such as
20070202191048.000000
were being treated as
illegal arguments by WEEK()
.
(Bug#23616)
The server could crash if two or more threads initiated query cache resize operation at moments very close in time. (Bug#23527)
NOW()
returned the wrong value
in statements executed at server startup with the
--init-file
option.
(Bug#23240)
When nesting stored procedures within a trigger on a table, a
false dependency error was thrown when one of the nested
procedures contained a DROP TABLE
statement.
(Bug#22580)
Instance Manager did not remove the angel PID file on a clean shutdown. (Bug#22511)
EXPLAIN EXTENDED
did not show
WHERE
conditions that were optimized away.
(Bug#22331)
IN ((
,
subquery
))IN (((
,
and so forth, are equivalent to subquery
)))IN
(
, which is always
interpreted as a table subquery (so that it is allowed to return
more than one row). MySQL was treating the
“over-parenthesized” subquery as a single-row
subquery and rejecting it if it returned more than one row. This
bug primarily affected automatically generated code (such as
queries generated by Hibernate), because humans rarely write the
over-parenthesized forms.
(Bug#21904)subquery
)
An INSERT
trigger invoking a stored routine
that inserted into a table other than the one on which the
trigger was defined would fail with a Table '...'
doesn't exist referring to the second table when
attempting to delete records from the first table.
(Bug#21825)
When a stored routine attempted to execute a statement accessing a nonexistent table, the error was not caught by the routine's exception handler. (Bug#20713, Bug#8407)
The conditions checked by the optimizer to allow use of indexes
in IN
predicate calculations were
unnecessarily tight and were relaxed.
(Bug#20420)
When a TIME_FORMAT()
expression
was used as a column in a GROUP BY
clause,
the expression result was truncated.
(Bug#20293)
The creation of MySQL system tables was not checked for by mysql-test-run.pl. (Bug#20166)
For index reads, the BLACKHOLE
engine did not
return end-of-file (which it must because
BLACKHOLE
tables contain no rows), causing
some queries to crash.
(Bug#19717)
For
, the result
could be incorrect if expr
IN(value_list
)BIGINT UNSIGNED
values
were used for expr
or in the value
list.
(Bug#19342)
When attempting to call a stored procedure creating a table from
a trigger on a table tbl
in a database
db
, the trigger failed with ERROR
1146 (42S02): Table 'db.tbl' doesn't exist. However,
the actual reason that such a trigger fails is due to the fact
that CREATE TABLE
causes an implicit
COMMIT
, and so a trigger cannot invoke a
stored routine containing this statement. A trigger which does
so now fails with ERROR 1422 (HY000): Explicit or
implicit commit is not allowed in stored function or
trigger, which makes clear the reason for the
trigger's failure.
(Bug#18914)
The update columns for INSERT ... SELECT ... ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
could be assigned incorrect
values if a temporary table was used to evaluate the
SELECT
.
(Bug#16630)
For SUBSTRING()
evaluation using
a temporary table, when
SUBSTRING()
was used on a
LONGTEXT column, the max_length
metadata
value of the result was incorrectly calculated and set to 0.
Consequently, an empty string was returned instead of the
correct result.
(Bug#15757)
Loading data using LOAD DATA INFILE
may not
replicate correctly (due to character set incompatibilities) if
the character_set_database
variable is set
before the data is loaded.
(Bug#15126)
User defined variables used within stored procedures and triggers are not replicated correctly when operating in statement-based replication mode. (Bug#14914, Bug#20141)
Local variables in stored routines or triggers, when declared as
the BIT
type, were interpreted as strings.
(Bug#12976)
CONNECTION
is no longer treated as a reserved
word.
(Bug#12204)
This is a Service Pack release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.36).
Bugs fixed:
SELECT ... INTO OUTFILE
with a long
FIELDS ENCLOSED BY
value could crash the
server.
(Bug#27231)
For MERGE
tables defined on underlying tables
that contained a short VARCHAR
column
(shorter than four characters), using ALTER
TABLE
on at least one but not all of the underlying
tables caused the table definitions to be considered different
from that of the MERGE
table, even if the
ALTER TABLE
did not change the definition.
(Bug#26881)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
After release, a trigger failure problem was found to have been introduced. (Bug#27006) Users affected by this issue should upgrade to MySQL 5.0.38, which corrects the problem.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.34).
Functionality added or changed:
Incompatible Change: MySQL Cluster:
The LockPagesInMainMemory
configuration
parameter has changed its type and possible values. For more
information, see
LockPagesInMainMemory
.
The values true
and
false
are no longer accepted for this
parameter. If you were using this parameter and had it set to
false
in a previous release, you must
change it to 0
. If you had this parameter
set to true
, you should instead use
1
to obtain the same behavior as
previously, or 2
to take advantage of new
functionality introduced with this release, as described in
the section cited above.
Incompatible Change:
Previously, the DATE_FORMAT()
function returned a binary string. Now it returns a string with
a character set and collation given by
character_set_connection
and
collation_connection
so that it can return
month and weekday names containing non-ASCII characters.
(Bug#22646)
The localhost
anonymous user account created
during MySQL installation on Windows now has no global
privileges. Formerly this account had all global privileges. For
operations that require global privileges, the
root
account can be used instead.
(Bug#24496)
When using MERGE
tables the definition of
the MERGE
table and the
MyISAM
tables are checked each time the
tables are opened for access (including any
SELECT
or INSERT
statement. Each table is compared for column order, types,
sizes and associated. If there is a difference in any one of
the tables then the statement will fail.
The bundled yaSSL library was upgraded to version 1.5.8.
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix:
Using an INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table with
ORDER BY
in a subquery could cause a server
crash.
We would like to thank Oren Isacson of Flowgate Security Consulting and Stefan Streichsbier of SEC Consult for informing us of this problem. (Bug#24630, Bug#26556, CVE-2007-1420)
Incompatible Change:
For ENUM
columns that had enumeration values
containing commas, the commas were mapped to
0xff
internally. However, this rendered the
commas indistinguishable from true 0xff
characters in the values. This no longer occurs. However, the
fix requires that you dump and reload any tables that have
ENUM
columns containing any true
0xff
values. Dump the tables using
mysqldump with the current server before
upgrading from a version of MySQL 5.0 older than 5.0.36 to
version 5.0.36 or newer.
(Bug#24660)
MySQL Cluster:
A query with an IN
clause against an
NDB
table employing explicit user-defined
partitioning did not always return all matching rows.
(Bug#25821)
MySQL Cluster:
It was not possible to create an NDB
table
with a key on two VARCHAR
columns where both
columns had a storage length in excess of 256.
(Bug#25746)
MySQL Cluster: In some circumstances, shutting down the cluster could cause connected mysqld processes to crash. (Bug#25668)
MySQL Cluster:
Memory allocations for TEXT
columns were
calculated incorrectly, resulting in space being wasted and
other issues.
(Bug#25562)
MySQL Cluster: The failure of a master node during a node restart could lead to a resource leak, causing later node failures. (Bug#25554)
MySQL Cluster:
An UPDATE
using an IN
clause on an NDB
table on which there was a
trigger caused mysqld to crash.
(Bug#25522)
MySQL Cluster: A node shutdown occurred if the master failed during a commit. (Bug#25364)
MySQL Cluster:
Creating a non-unique index with the USING
HASH
clause silently created an ordered index instead
of issuing a warning.
(Bug#24820)
MySQL Cluster:
The ndb_size.tmpl
file (necessary for using
the ndb_size.pl
script) was missing from
binary distributions.
(Bug#24191)
MySQL Cluster: The management server did not handle logging of node shutdown events correctly in certain cases. (Bug#22013)
MySQL Cluster:
SELECT
statements with a
BLOB
or TEXT
column in the
selected column list and a WHERE
condition
including a primary key lookup on a VARCHAR
primary key produced empty result sets.
(Bug#19956)
MySQL Cluster: The loss of one or more data nodes could sometimes cause ndb_mgmd to use a high amount of CPU (15 percent or more, as opposed to 1 to 2 percent normally).
Cluster API:
Deletion of an Ndb_cluster_connection
object
took a very long time.
(Bug#25487)
Cluster API:
libndbclient.so
was not versioned.
(Bug#13522)
Using ORDER BY
or GROUP BY
could yield different results when selecting from a view and
selecting from the underlying table.
(Bug#26209)
DISTINCT
queries that were executed using a
loose scan for an InnoDB
table that had been
emptied caused a server crash.
(Bug#26159)
A WHERE
clause that used
BETWEEN
for
DATETIME
values could be treated differently
for a SELECT
and a view defined as that
SELECT
.
(Bug#26124)
Collation for LEFT JOIN
comparisons could be
evaluated incorrectly, leading to improper query results.
(Bug#26017)
The WITH CHECK OPTION
clause for views was
ignored for updates of multiple-table views when the updates
could not be performed on fly and the rows to update had to be
put into temporary tables first.
(Bug#25931)
LOAD DATA INFILE
did not work with pipes.
(Bug#25807)
The SEC_TO_TIME()
and
QUARTER()
functions sometimes
did not handle NULL
values correctly.
(Bug#25643)
The InnoDB
parser sometimes did not account
for null bytes, causing spurious failure of some queries.
(Bug#25596)
View definitions that used the !
operator
were treated as containing the NOT
operator,
which has a different precedence and can produce different
results. .
(Bug#25580)
An error in the name resolution of nested JOIN ...
USING
constructs was corrected.
(Bug#25575)
GROUP BY
and DISTINCT
did
not group NULL
values for columns that have a
UNIQUE
index. .
(Bug#25551)
The --with-readline
option for
configure did not work for commercial source
packages, but no error message was printed to that effect. Now a
message is printed.
(Bug#25530)
A yaSSL program named test was installed, causing conflicts with the test system utility. It is no longer installed. (Bug#25417)
For a UNIQUE
index containing many
NULL
values, the optimizer would prefer the
index for
conditions over other more selective indexes. .
(Bug#25407)col
IS
NULL
An AFTER UPDATE
trigger on an
InnoDB
table with a composite primary key
caused the server to crash.
(Bug#25398)
Passing a NULL
value to a user-defined
function from within a stored procedure crashes the server.
(Bug#25382)
perror crashed on some platforms due to
failure to handle a NULL
pointer.
(Bug#25344)
mysql.server stop timed out too quickly (35 seconds) waiting for the server to exit. Now it waits up to 15 minutes, to ensure that the server exits. (Bug#25341)
A query that contained an EXIST
subquery with
a UNION
over correlated and uncorrelated
SELECT
queries could cause the server to
crash.
(Bug#25219)
mysql_kill()
caused a server
crash when used on an SSL connection.
(Bug#25203)
yaSSL was sensitive to the presence of whitespace at the ends of lines in PEM-encoded certificates, causing a server crash. (Bug#25189)
A query with ORDER BY
and GROUP
BY
clauses where the ORDER BY
clause had more elements than the GROUP BY
clause caused a memory overrun leading to a crash of the server.
(Bug#25172)
Use of ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
defeated the
usual restriction against inserting into a join-based view
unless only one of the underlying tables is used.
(Bug#25123)
ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE KEYS
acquired a global
lock, preventing concurrent execution of other statements that
use tables. .
(Bug#25044)
A return value of -1
from user-defined
handlers was not handled well and could result in conflicts with
server code.
(Bug#24987)
Accessing a fixed record format table with a crashed key definition results in server/myisamchk segmentation fault. (Bug#24855)
mysqld_multi and
mysqlaccess looked for option files in
/etc
even if the
--sysconfdir
option for
configure had been given to specify a
different directory.
(Bug#24780)
If there was insufficient memory available to mysqld, this could sometimes cause the server to hang during startup. (Bug#24751)
If an ORDER BY
or GROUP BY
list included a constant expression being optimized away and, at
the same time, containing single-row subselects that returned
more that one row, no error was reported. If a query required
sorting by expressions containing single-row subselects that
returned more than one row, execution of the query could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#24653)
For ALTER TABLE
, using ORDER BY
could cause a
server crash. Now the expression
ORDER BY
clause allows
only column names to be specified as sort criteria (which was
the only documented syntax, anyway).
(Bug#24562)
A workaround was implemented to avoid a race condition in the
NPTL pthread_exit()
implementation.
(Bug#24507)
mysqltest crashed with a stack overflow. (Bug#24498)
Within stored routines or prepared statements, inconsistent
results occurred with multiple use of INSERT ... SELECT
... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
when the ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
clause erroneously tried to
assign a value to a column mentioned only in its
SELECT
part.
(Bug#24491)
Expressions of the form (a, b) IN (SELECT a, MIN(b)
FROM t GROUP BY a)
could produce incorrect results
when column a
of table t
contained NULL
values while column
b
did not.
(Bug#24420)
If a prepared statement accessed a view, access to the tables listed in the query after that view was checked in the security context of the view. (Bug#24404)
Attempts to access a MyISAM
table with a
corrupt column definition caused a server crash.
(Bug#24401)
When opening a corrupted .frm
file during a
query, the server crashes.
(Bug#24358)
A query using WHERE
could
cause the server to crash.
(Bug#24261)unsigned_column
NOT IN
('negative_value
')
When SET PASSWORD
was written to the binary
log double quotes were included in the statement. If the slave
was running in with the server SQL mode set to
ANSI_QUOTES
, then the event failed, which
halted the replication process.
(Bug#24158)
Expressions of the form (a, b) IN (SELECT c, d
...)
could produce incorrect results if
a
, b
, or both were
NULL
.
(Bug#24127)
A FETCH
statement using a cursor on a table
which was not in the table cache could sometimes cause the
server to crash.
(Bug#24117)
Queries that evaluate NULL IN (SELECT ... UNION SELECT
...)
could produce an incorrect result
(FALSE
instead of NULL
).
(Bug#24085)
Hebrew-to-Unicode conversion failed for some characters. Definitions for the following Hebrew characters (as specified by the ISO/IEC 8859-8:1999) were added: LEFT-TO-RIGHT MARK (LRM), RIGHT-TO-LEFT MARK (RLM) (Bug#24037)
Some UPDATE
statements were slower than in
previous versions when the search key could not be converted to
a valid value for the type of the search column.
(Bug#24035)
ISNULL(DATE(NULL))
and
ISNULL(CAST(NULL AS DATE))
erroneously returned false.
(Bug#23938)
Within a stored routine, accessing a declared routine variable
with PROCEDURE ANALYSE()
caused a server
crash.
(Bug#23782)
When reading from the standard input on Windows, mysqlbinlog opened the input in text mode rather than binary mode and consequently misinterpreted some characters such as Control-Z. (Bug#23735)
A stored procedure, executed from a connection using a binary character set, and which wrote multibyte data, would write incorrectly escaped entries to the binary log. This caused syntax errors, and caused replication to fail. (Bug#23619, Bug#24492)
For an InnoDB
table with any ON
DELETE
trigger, TRUNCATE TABLE
mapped to DELETE
and activated triggers. Now
a fast truncation occurs and triggers are not activated. .
(Bug#23556)
The row count for MyISAM
tables was not
updated properly, causing SHOW TABLE STATUS
to report incorrect values.
(Bug#23526)
With ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
enables, the server
was too strict: Some expressions involving only aggregate values
were rejected as non-aggregate (for example,
MAX(a)
–
MIN(a)
).
(Bug#23417)
The arguments to the ENCODE()
and the DECODE()
functions were
not printed correctly, causing problems in the output of
EXPLAIN EXTENDED
and in view definitions.
(Bug#23409)
Some queries against INFORMATION_SCHEMA
that
used subqueries failed. .
(Bug#23299)
readline
detection did not work correctly on
NetBSD.
(Bug#23293)
If there was insufficient memory to store or update a blob
record in a MyISAM
table then the table will
marked as crashed.
(Bug#23196)
LAST_INSERT_ID()
was not reset
to 0 if INSERT ... SELECT
inserted no rows.
(Bug#23170)
The number of setsockopt()
calls performed
for reads and writes to the network socket was reduced to
decrease system call overhead.
(Bug#22943)
mysql_upgrade failed when called with a
basedir
pathname containing spaces.
(Bug#22801)
SET lc_time_names =
allowed only exact literal values, not expression
values.
(Bug#22647)value
Changes to the lc_time_names
system variable
were not replicated.
(Bug#22645)
The STDDEV()
function returned a
positive value for data sets consisting of a single value.
(Bug#22555)
Storing values specified as hexadecimal values 64 or more bits
long in BIT(64)
, BIGINT
,
or BIGINT UNSIGNED
columns did not raise any
warning or error if the value was out of range.
(Bug#22533)
SHOW COLUMNS
reported some NOT
NULL
columns as NULL
.
(Bug#22377)
Type conversion errors during formation of index search conditions were not correctly checked, leading to incorrect query results. (Bug#22344)
The code for generating USE
statements for
binary logging of CREATE PROCEDURE
statements
resulted in confusing output from mysqlbinlog
for DROP PROCEDURE
statements.
(Bug#22043)
For the IF()
and
COALESCE()
function and
CASE
expressions, large
unsigned integer values could be mishandled and result in
warnings.
(Bug#22026)
SSL connections could hang at connection shutdown. (Bug#21781, Bug#24148)
When updating a table that used a JOIN
of the
table itself (for example, when building trees) and the table
was modified on one side of the expression, the table would
either be reported as crashed or the wrong rows in the table
would be updated.
(Bug#21310)
Inserting DEFAULT
into a column with no
default value could result in garbage in the column. Now the
same result occurs as when inserting NULL
into a NOT NULL
column.
(Bug#20691)
A stored routine containing semicolon in its body could not be reloaded from a dump of a binary log. (Bug#20396)
SELECT ... FOR UPDATE
, SELECT ...
LOCK IN SHARE MODE
, DELETE
, and
UPDATE
statements executed using a full table
scan were not releasing locks on rows that did not satisfy the
WHERE
condition.
(Bug#20390)
On Windows, if the server was installed as a service, it did not auto-detect the location of the data directory. (Bug#20376)
The BUILD/check-cpu script did not recognize Celeron processors. (Bug#20061)
If a duplicate key value was present in the table,
INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
reported a
row count indicating that a record was updated, even when no
record actually changed due to the old and new values being the
same. Now it reports a row count of zero.
(Bug#19978)
For SET
, SELECT
, and
DO
statements that invoked a stored function
from a database other than the default database, the function
invocation could fail to be replicated.
(Bug#19725)
ORDER BY
values of the
DOUBLE
or DECIMAL
types
could change the result returned by a query.
(Bug#19690)
The readline
library wrote to uninitialized
memory, causing mysql to crash.
(Bug#19474)
mysqltest incorrectly tried to retrieve result sets for some queries where no result set was available. (Bug#19410)
Use of already freed memory caused SSL connections to hang forever. (Bug#19209)
The server might fail to use an appropriate index for
DELETE
when ORDER BY
,
LIMIT
, and a non-restricting
WHERE
are present.
(Bug#17711)
No warning was issued for use of the DATA
DIRECTORY
or INDEX DIRECTORY
table
options on a platform that does not support them.
(Bug#17498)
When a prepared statement failed during the prepare operation, the error code was not cleared when it was reused, even if the subsequent use was successful. (Bug#15518)
On Windows, the SLEEP()
function
could sleep too long, especially after a change to the system
clock.
(Bug#14094, Bug#24686, Bug#17635)
mysqldump --order-by-primary failed if the primary key name was an identifier that required quoting. (Bug#13926)
To enable installation of MySQL RPMs on Linux systems running RHEL 4 (which includes SE-Linux) additional information was provided to specify some actions that are allowed to the MySQL binaries. (Bug#12676)
The presence of ORDER BY
in a view definition
prevented the MERGE
algorithm from being used
to resolve the view even if nothing else in the definition
required the TEMPTABLE
algorithm.
(Bug#12122)
If a slave server closed its relay log (for example, due to an error during log rotation), the I/O thread did not recognize this and still tried to write to the log, causing a server crash. (Bug#10798)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.32).
Functionality added or changed:
The --skip-thread-priority
option now is
enabled by default for binary Mac OS X distributions. Use of
thread priorities degrades performance on Mac OS X.
(Bug#18526)
Added the --disable-grant-options
option to
configure. If configure is
run with this option, the --bootstrap
,
--skip-grant-tables
, and
--init-file
options for
mysqld are disabled and cannot be used. For
Windows, the configure.js script recognizes
the DISABLE_GRANT_OPTIONS
flag, which has the
same effect.
Bugs fixed:
MySQL Cluster: Hosts in clusters with large numbers of nodes could experience excessive CPU usage while obtaining configuration data. (Bug#25711)
MySQL Cluster:
When a data node was shut down using the management client
STOP
command, a connection event
(NDB_LE_Connected
) was logged instead of a
disconnection event (NDB_LE_Disconnected
).
(Bug#22773)
Cluster API:
Invoking the NdbTransaction::execute()
method
using execution type Commit
and abort option
AO_IgnoreError
could lead to a crash of the
transaction coordinator (DBTC
).
(Bug#25090)
Cluster API: A unique index lookup on a non-existent tuple could lead to a data node timeout (error 4012). (Bug#25059)
Referencing an ambiguous column alias in an expression in the
ORDER BY
clause of a query caused the server
to crash.
(Bug#25427)
Using a view in combination with a USING
clause caused column aliases to be ignored.
(Bug#25106)
A multiple-table DELETE QUICK
could sometimes
cause one of the affected tables to become corrupted.
(Bug#25048)
An assertion failed incorrectly for prepared statements that
contained a single-row uncorrelated subquery that was used as an
argument of the IS NULL
predicate.
(Bug#25027)
Optimizations that are legal only for subqueries without tables
and WHERE
conditions were applied for any
subquery without tables.
(Bug#24670)
Some joins in which one of the joined tables was a view could return erroneous results or crash the server. (Bug#24345)
A view was not handled correctly if the
SELECT
part contained “
\Z
”.
(Bug#24293)
The server was built even when configure was
run with the --without-server
option.
(Bug#23973)
OPTIMIZE TABLE
tried to sort R-tree indexes
such as spatial indexes, although this is not possible (see
Section 12.5.2.5, “OPTIMIZE TABLE
Syntax”).
(Bug#23578)
User-defined variables could consume excess memory, leading to a
crash caused by the exhaustion of resources available to the
MEMORY
storage engine, due to the fact that
this engine is used by MySQL for variable storage and
intermediate results of GROUP BY
queries.
Where SET
had been used, such a condition
could instead give rise to the misleading error message
You may only use constant expressions with
SET, rather than Out of memory (Needed
NNNNNN bytes).
(Bug#23443)
A table created with the ROW_FORMAT = FIXED
table option lost the option if an index was added or dropped
with CREATE INDEX
or DROP
INDEX
.
(Bug#23404)
A deadlock could occur, with the server hanging on
Closing tables
, with a sufficient number of
concurrent INSERT DELAYED
, FLUSH
TABLES
, and ALTER TABLE
operations.
(Bug#23312)
A compressed MyISAM
table that became
corrupted could crash myisamchk and possibly
the MySQL Server.
(Bug#23139)
Changing the value of MI_KEY_BLOCK_LENGTH
in
myisam.h
and recompiling MySQL resulted in
a myisamchk that saw existing
MyISAM
tables as corrupt.
(Bug#22119)
A crash of the MySQL Server could occur when unpacking a
BLOB
column from a row in a corrupted MyISAM
table. This could happen when trying to repair a table using
either REPAIR TABLE
or
myisamchk; it could also happen when trying
to access such a “broken” row using statements like
SELECT
if the table was not marked as
crashed.
(Bug#22053)
The FEDERATED
storage engine did not support
the euckr
character set.
(Bug#21556)
mysqld_error.h
was not installed when only
the client libraries were built.
(Bug#21265)
InnoDB
: During a restart of the MySQL Server
that followed the creation of a temporary table using the
InnoDB
storage engine, MySQL failed to clean
up in such a way that InnoDB
still attempted
to find the files associated with such tables.
(Bug#20867)
Some CASE
statements inside stored routines
could lead to excessive resource usage or a crash of the server.
(Bug#19194, Bug#24854)
Instance Manager could crash during shutdown. (Bug#19044)
The FEDERATED
storage engine did not support
the utf8
character set.
(Bug#17044)
The optimizer removes expressions from GROUP
BY
and DISTINCT
clauses if they
happen to participate in
predicates of the
expression
=
constant
WHERE
clause, the idea being that, if the
expression is equal to a constant, then it cannot take on
multiple values. However, for predicates where the expression
and the constant item are of different result types (for
example, when a string column is compared to 0), this is not
valid, and can lead to invalid results in such cases. The
optimizer now performs an additional check of the result types
of the expression and the constant; if their types differ, then
the expression is not removed from the GROUP
BY
list.
(Bug#15881)
Dropping a user-defined function sometimes did not remove the
UDF entry from the mysql.proc
table.
(Bug#15439)
Inserting a row into a table without specifying a value for a
BINARY(
column caused the column to be set to spaces, not zeroes.
(Bug#14171)N
) NOT NULL
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.30).
Functionality added or changed:
Incompatible Change:
InnoDB
rolls back only the last statement on
a transaction timeout. A new option,
--innodb_rollback_on_timeout
, causes
InnoDB
to abort and roll back the entire
transaction if a transaction timeout occurs (the same behavior
as in MySQL 5.0.13 and earlier).
(Bug#24200)
Incompatible Change:
The prepared_stmt_count
system variable has
been converted to the Prepared_stmt_count
global status variable (viewable with the SHOW GLOBAL
STATUS
statement).
(Bug#23159)
MySQL Cluster:
Setting the configuration parameter
LockPagesInMainMemory
had no effect.
(Bug#24461)
MySQL Cluster:
It is now possible to create a unique hashed index on a column
that is not defined as NOT NULL
.
This change applies only to tables using the
NDB
storage engine.
Unique indexes on columns in NDB
tables do
not store null values because they are mapped to primary keys in
an internal index table (and primary keys cannot contain nulls).
Normally, an additional ordered index is created when one
creates unique indexes on NDB
table columns;
this can be used to search for NULL
values.
However, if USING HASH
is specified when such
an index is created, no ordered index is created.
The reason for permitting unique hash indexes with null values
is that, in some cases, the user wants to save space if a large
number of records are pre-allocated but not fully initialized.
This also assumes that the user will not
try to search for null values. Since MySQL does not support
indexes that are not allowed to be searched in some cases, the
NDB
storage engine uses a full table scan
with pushed conditions for the referenced index columns to
return the correct result.
A warning is returned if one creates a unique nullable hash
index, since the query optimizer should be provided a hint not
to use it with NULL
values if this can be
avoided.
(Bug#21507)
DROP TRIGGER
now supports an IF
EXISTS
clause.
(Bug#23703)
The Com_create_user
status variable was added
(for counting CREATE USER
statements).
(Bug#22958)
The --memlock
option relies on system calls
that are unreliable on some operating systems. If a crash
occurs, the server now checks whether --memlock
was specified and if so issues some information about possible
workarounds.
(Bug#22860)
mysqldump now accepts the
--debug-info
option, which displays debugging
information and memory and CPU usage statistics at program exit.
The bundled yaSSL library was upgraded to version 1.5.0.
Bugs fixed:
MySQL Cluster: The failure of a data node failure during a schema operation could lead to additional node failures. (Bug#24752)
MySQL Cluster: A committed read could be attempted before a data node had time to connect, causing a timeout error. (Bug#24717)
MySQL Cluster: Sudden disconnection of an SQL or data node could lead to shutdown of data nodes with the error failed ndbrequire. (Bug#24447)
MySQL Cluster: ndb_config failed when trying to use 2 management servers and node IDs. (Bug#23887)
MySQL Cluster:
If the value set for MaxNoOfAttributes
is
excessive, a suitable error message is now returned.
(Bug#19352)
MySQL Cluster:
A unique constraint violation was not ignored by an
UPDATE IGNORE
statement when the constraint
violation occurred on a non-primary key.
(Bug#18487, Bug#24303)
Cluster API:
Using BIT
values with any of the comparison
methods of the NdbScanFilter
class caused
data nodes to fail.
(Bug#24503)
Cluster API: Some MGM API function calls could yield incorrect return values in certain cases where the cluster was operating under a very high load, or experienced timeouts in inter-node communications. (Bug#24011)
The REPEAT()
function could
return NULL
when passed a column for the
count argument.
(Bug#24947)
mysql_upgrade failed if the
--password
(or -p
) option
was given.
(Bug#24896)
With innodb_file_per_table
enabled,
InnoDB
displayed incorrect file times in the
output from SHOW TABLE STATUS
.
(Bug#24712)
ALTER ENABLE KEYS
or ALTER TABLE
DISABLE KEYS
combined with another ALTER
TABLE
option other than RENAME TO
did nothing. In addition, if ALTER TABLE was used on a table
having disabled keys, the keys of the resulting table were
enabled.
(Bug#24395)
The InnoDB
mutex structure was simplified to
reduce memory load.
(Bug#24386)
The --extern
option for
mysql-test-run.pl did not function correctly.
(Bug#24354)
Foreign key identifiers for InnoDB
tables
could not contain certain characters.
(Bug#24299)
The mysql.server script used the source command, which is less portable than the . command; it now uses . instead. (Bug#24294)
ALTER TABLE
statements that performed both
RENAME TO
and {ENABLE|DISABLE}
KEYS
operations caused a server crash.
(Bug#24219)
The loose index scan optimization for GROUP
BY
with MIN
or
MAX
was not applied within other queries,
such as CREATE TABLE ... SELECT ...
,
INSERT ... SELECT ...
, or in the
FROM
clauses of subqueries.
(Bug#24156)
Subqueries for which a pushed-down condition did not produce exactly one key field could cause a server crash. (Bug#24056)
The size of MEMORY
tables and internal
temporary tables was limited to 4GB on 64-bit Windows systems.
(Bug#24052)
ROW_COUNT()
did not work
properly as an argument to a stored procedure.
(Bug#23760)
LAST_DAY('0000-00-00')
could
cause a server crash.
(Bug#23653)
A trigger that invoked a stored function could cause a server crash when activated by different client connections. (Bug#23651)
The stack size for NetWare binaries was increased to 128KB to prevent problems caused by insufficient stack size. (Bug#23504)
If elements in a non-top-level IN
subquery
were accessed by an index and the subquery result set included a
NULL
value, the quantified predicate that
contained the subquery was evaluated to NULL
when it should return a non-NULL
value.
(Bug#23478)
When applying the group_concat_max_len
limit,
GROUP_CONCAT()
could truncate
multi-byte characters in the middle.
(Bug#23451)
mysql_affected_rows()
could
return values different from
mysql_stmt_affected_rows()
for
the same sequence of statements.
(Bug#23383)
Accuracy was improved for comparisons between
DECIMAL
columns and numbers represented as
strings.
(Bug#23260)
Calculation of COUNT(DISTINCT)
,
AVG(DISTINCT)
, or
SUM(DISTINCT)
when they are
referenced more than once in a single query with GROUP
BY
could cause a server crash.
(Bug#23184)
Changes to character set variables prior to an action on a replication-ignored table were forgotten by slave servers. (Bug#22877)
Queries using a column alias in an expression as part of an
ORDER BY
clause failed, an example of such a
query being SELECT mycol + 1 AS mynum FROM mytable
ORDER BY 30 - mynum
.
(Bug#22457)
Using EXPLAIN
caused a server crash for
queries that selected from INFORMATION_SCHEMA
in a subquery in the FROM
clause.
(Bug#22413)
A server crash occurred when using LOAD DATA
to load a table containing a NOT NULL
spatial
column, when the statement did not load the spatial column. Now
a NULL supplied to NOT NULL column
error
occurs.
(Bug#22372)
DATE_ADD()
requires complete
dates with no “zero” parts, but sometimes did not
return NULL
when given such a date.
(Bug#22229)
Some small double precision numbers (such as
1.00000001e-300
) that should have been
accepted were truncated to zero.
(Bug#22129)
For a nonexistent table, DROP TEMPORARY TABLE
failed with an incorrect error message if
read_only
was enabled.
(Bug#22077)
Trailing spaces were not removed from Unicode
CHAR
column values when used in indexes. This
resulted in excessive usage of storage space, and could affect
the results of some ORDER BY
queries that
made use of such indexes.
When upgrading, it is necessary to re-create any existing
indexes on Unicode CHAR
columns in order to
take advantage of the fix. This can be done by using a
REPAIR TABLE
statement on each affected
table.
STR_TO_DATE()
returned
NULL
if the format string contained a space
following a non-format character.
(Bug#22029)
In some cases, the parser failed to distinguish a user-defined function from a stored function. (Bug#21809)
Inserting a default or invalid value into a spatial column could
fail with Unknown error
rather than a more
appropriate error.
(Bug#21790)
It was possible to use DATETIME
values whose
year, month, and day parts were all zeroes but whose hour,
minute, and second parts contained nonzero values, an example of
such an illegal DATETIME
being
'0000-00-00 11:23:45'
.
This fix was reverted in MySQL 5.0.40.
See also Bug#25301
yaSSL crashed on pre-Pentium Intel CPUs. (Bug#21765)
Evaluation of subqueries that require the filesort algorithm
were allocating and freeing the
sort_buffer_size
buffer many times, resulting
in slow performance. Now the buffer is allocated once and
reused.
(Bug#21727)
Through the C API, the member strings in
MYSQL_FIELD
for a query that contains
expressions may return incorrect results.
(Bug#21635)
Using FLUSH TABLES
in one connection while
another connection is using HANDLER
statements caused a server crash.
This fix was reverted in MySQL 5.0.48
See also Bug#29474
View columns were always handled as having implicit derivation,
leading to illegal mix of collation errors
for some views in UNION
operations. Now view
column derivation comes from the original expression given in
the view definition.
(Bug#21505)
InnoDB
crashed while performing XA recovery
of prepared transactions.
(Bug#21468)
INET_ATON()
returned a signed
BIGINT
value, not an unsigned value.
(Bug#21466)
It was possible to set the backslash character (“
\
”) as the delimiter character using
DELIMITER
, but not actually possible to use
it as the delimiter.
(Bug#21412)
Selecting into variables sometimes returned incorrect wrong results. (Bug#20836)
On slave servers, transactions that exceeded the lock wait timeout failed to roll back properly. (Bug#20697)
CONCURRENT
did not work correctly for
LOAD DATA INFILE
.
(Bug#20637)
mysql_fix_privilege_tables.sql
altered the
table_privs.table_priv
column to contain too
few privileges, causing loss of the CREATE
VIEW
and SHOW VIEW
privileges.
(Bug#20589)
With lower_case_table_names
set to 1,
SHOW CREATE TABLE
printed incorrect output
for table names containing Turkish I (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I
WITH DOT ABOVE).
(Bug#20404)
A query with a subquery that references columns of a view from
the outer SELECT
could return an incorrect
result if used from a prepared statement.
(Bug#20327)
For queries that select from a view, the server was returning
MYSQL_FIELD
metadata inconsistently for view
names and table names. For view columns, the server now returns
the view name in the table
field and, if the
column selects from an underlying table, the table name in the
org_table
field.
(Bug#20191)
Invalidating the query cache caused a server crash for
INSERT INTO ... SELECT
statements that
selected from a view.
(Bug#20045)
Unsigned BIGINT
values treated as signed
values by the MOD()
function.
(Bug#19955)
Compiling PHP 5.1 with the MySQL static libraries failed on some versions of Linux. (Bug#19817)
The DELIMITER
statement did not work
correctly when used in an SQL file run using the
SOURCE
statement.
(Bug#19799)
For a cast of a DATETIME
value containing
microseconds to DECIMAL
, the microseconds
part was truncated without generating a warning. Now the
microseconds part is preserved.
(Bug#19491)
SQL statements close to the size of
max_allowed_packet
could produce binary log
events larger than max_allowed_packet
that
could not be read by slave servers.
(Bug#19402)
VARBINARY
column values inserted on a MySQL
4.1 server had trailing zeroes following upgrade to MySQL 5.0 or
later.
(Bug#19371)
The server could send incorrect column count information to the client for queries that produce a larger number of columns than can fit in a two-byte number. (Bug#19216)
For some problems relating to character set conversion or
incorrect string values for INSERT
or
UPDATE
, the server was reporting truncation
or length errors instead.
(Bug#18908)
Constant expressions and some numeric constants used as input parameters to user-defined functions were not treated as constants. (Bug#18761)
myisampack wrote to unallocated memory, causing a crash. (Bug#17951)
FLUSH LOGS
or mysqladmin
flush-logs caused a server crash if the binary log was
not open.
(Bug#17733)
mysql_fix_privilege_tables did not handle a password containing embedded space or apostrophe characters. (Bug#17700)
Attempting to use a view containing DEFINER
information for a non-existent user resulted in an error message
that revealed the definer account. Now the definer is revealed
only to superusers. Other users receive only an access
denied
message.
(Bug#17254)
IN()
and
CHAR()
can return
NULL
, but did not signal that to the query
processor, causing incorrect results for
IS NULL
operations.
(Bug#17047)
Slave servers would retry the execution of a SQL statement an
infinite number of times, ignoring the value
SLAVE_TRANSACTION_RETRIES
when using the NDB
engine.
(Bug#16228)
Warnings were generated when explicitly casting a character to a
number (for example, CAST('x' AS
SIGNED)
), but not for implicit conversions in simple
arithmetic operations (such as 'x' + 0
). Now
warnings are generated in all cases.
(Bug#11927)
Metadata for columns calculated from scalar subqueries was limited to integer, double, or string, even if the actual type of the column was different. (Bug#11032)
Subqueries of the form NULL IN (SELECT ...)
returned invalid results.
(Bug#8804, Bug#23485)
This is a Service Pack release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.30).
Functionality added or changed:
Incompatible Change:
InnoDB
rolls back only the last statement on
a transaction timeout. A new option,
--innodb_rollback_on_timeout
, causes
InnoDB
to abort and roll back the entire
transaction if a transaction timeout occurs (the same behavior
as in MySQL 5.0.13 and earlier).
(Bug#24200)
Bugs fixed:
The loose index scan optimization for GROUP
BY
with MIN
or
MAX
was not applied within other queries,
such as CREATE TABLE ... SELECT ...
,
INSERT ... SELECT ...
, or in the
FROM
clauses of subqueries.
(Bug#24156)
The size of MEMORY
tables and internal
temporary tables was limited to 4GB on 64-bit Windows systems.
(Bug#24052)
A stored procedure, executed from a connection using a binary character set, and which wrote multibyte data, would write incorrectly escaped entries to the binary log. This caused syntax errors, and caused replication to fail. (Bug#23619, Bug#24492)
Accuracy was improved for comparisons between
DECIMAL
columns and numbers represented as
strings.
(Bug#23260)
Calculation of COUNT(DISTINCT)
,
AVG(DISTINCT)
, or
SUM(DISTINCT)
when they are
referenced more than once in a single query with GROUP
BY
could cause a server crash.
(Bug#23184)
Evaluation of subqueries that require the filesort algorithm
were allocating and freeing the
sort_buffer_size
buffer many times, resulting
in slow performance. Now the buffer is allocated once and
reused.
(Bug#21727)
InnoDB
crashed while performing XA recovery
of prepared transactions.
(Bug#21468)
Certain malformed INSERT
statements could
crash the mysql client.
(Bug#21142)
CONCURRENT
did not work correctly for
LOAD DATA INFILE
.
(Bug#20637)
Several string functions could return incorrect results when given very large length arguments. (Bug#10963)
This is a Monthly Rapid Update release of the MySQL Enterprise Server 5.0.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last MySQL Enterprise Server release (5.0.28).
Functionality added or changed:
MySQL Cluster:
The ndb_config utility now accepts
-c
as a short form of the
--ndb-connectstring
option.
(Bug#22295)
MySQL Cluster: Added the --bind-address option for ndbd. This allows a data node process to be bound to a specific network interface. (Bug#22195)
MySQL Cluster:
The NDB
storage engine could leak memory
during file operations.
(Bug#21858)
MySQL Cluster:
The Ndb_number_of_storage_nodes
system
variable was renamed to
Ndb_number_of_data_nodes
.
(Bug#20848)
MySQL Cluster:
The HELP
command in the Cluster management
client now provides command-specific help. For example,
HELP RESTART
in ndb_mgm
provides detailed information about the
RESTART
command.
(Bug#19620)
If the user specified the server options
--max-connections=
or N
--table-open-cache=
, a warning would be given in some cases that some
values were recalculated, with the result that
M
--table-open-cache
could be assigned greater
value.
It should be noted that, in such cases, both the warning and the
increase in the --table-open-cache
value were
completely harmless. Note also that it is not possible for the
MySQL Server to predict or to control limitations on the maximum
number of open files, since this is determined by the operating
system.
The recalculation code has now been fixed to ensure that the
value of --table-open-cache
is no longer
increased automatically, and that a warning is now given only if
some values had to be decreased due to operating system limits.
(Bug#21915)
For the CALL
statement, stored procedures
that take no arguments now can be invoked without parentheses.
That is, CALL p()
and CALL
p
are equivalent.
(Bug#21462)
mysql_upgrade
now passes all the parameters
specified on the command line to both
mysqlcheck
and mysql
using
the upgrade_defaults
file.
(Bug#20100)
SHOW STATUS
is no longer logged to the slow
query log.
(Bug#19764)
mysqldump --single-transaction now uses
START TRANSACTION /*!40100 WITH CONSISTENT SNAPSHOT
*/
rather than BEGIN
to start a
transaction, so that a consistent snapshot will be used on those
servers that support it.
(Bug#19660)
Bugs fixed:
MySQL Cluster: Backup of a cluster failed if there were any tables with 128 or more columns. (Bug#23502)
MySQL Cluster: Cluster backups failed when there were more than 2048 schema objects in the cluster. (Bug#23499)
MySQL Cluster:
The management client command ALL DUMP 1000
would cause the cluster to crash if data nodes were connected to
the cluster but not yret fully started.
(Bug#23203)
MySQL Cluster:
INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
on an
NDB
table could lead to deadlocks and memory
leaks.
(Bug#23200)
MySQL Cluster: (NDB API): Inacivity timeouts for scans were not correctly handled. (Bug#23107)
MySQL Cluster: If a node restart could not be performed from the REDO log, no node takeover took place. This could cause partitions to be left empty during a system restart. (Bug#22893)
MySQL Cluster: Multiple node restarts in rapid succession could cause a system restart to fail , or induce a race condition. (Bug#22892, Bug#23210)
MySQL Cluster:
(NDB API): Attempting to read a nonexistent tuple using
Commit
mode for
NdbTransaction::execute()
caused node
failures.
(Bug#22672)
MySQL Cluster:
The --help
output from NDB
binaries did not include file-related options.
(Bug#21994)
MySQL Cluster: (NDB API): Scans closed before being executed were still placed in the send queue. (Bug#21941)
MySQL Cluster: A scan timeout returned Error 4028 (Node failure caused abort of transaction) instead of Error 4008 (Node failure caused abort of transaction...). (Bug#21799)
MySQL Cluster:
The node recovery algorithm was missing a version check for
tables in the ALTER_TABLE_COMMITTED
state (as
opposed to the TABLE_ADD_COMMITTED
state,
which has the version check). This could cause inconsistent
schemas across nodes following node recovery.
(Bug#21756)
MySQL Cluster: Partition distribution keys were updated only for the primary and starting replicas during node recovery. This could lead to node failure recovery for clusters having an odd number of replicas.
We recommend values for NumberOfReplicas
that are even powers of 2, for best results.
MySQL Cluster: The ndb_mgm management client did not set the exit status on errors, always returning 0 instead. (Bug#21530)
MySQL Cluster:
Attempting to create an NDB
table on a MySQL
with an existing non-Cluster table with the same name in the
same database could result in data loss or corruption. MySQL now
issues a warning when a SHOW TABLES
or other
statement causing table discovery finds such a table.
(Bug#21378)
MySQL Cluster: Cluster logs were not rotated following the first rotation cycle. (Bug#21345)
MySQL Cluster:
When inserting a row into an NDB
table with a
duplicate value for a non-primary unique key, the error issued
would reference the wrong key.
(Bug#21072)
MySQL Cluster:
Condition pushdown did not work correctly with
DATETIME
columns.
(Bug#21056)
MySQL Cluster: Under some circumstances, local checkpointing would hang, keeping any unstarted nodes from being started. (Bug#20895)
MySQL Cluster:
Using an invalid node ID with the management client
STOP
command could cause
ndb_mgm to hang.
(Bug#20575)
MySQL Cluster: Data nodes added while the cluster was running in single user mode were all assigned node ID 0, which could later cause multiple node failures. Adding nodes while in single user mode is no longer possible. (Bug#20395)
MySQL Cluster:
In some cases where SELECT COUNT(*)
from an
NDB
table should have yielded an error,
MAX_INT
was returned instead.
(Bug#19914)
MySQL Cluster: Following the restart of a management node, the Cluster management client did not automatically reconnect. (Bug#19873)
MySQL Cluster:
Error messages given when trying to make online changes
parameters such as NoOfReplicas
thast can
only be changed via a complete shutdown and restart of the
cluster did not indicate the true nature of the problem.
(Bug#19787)
MySQL Cluster: ndb_restore did not always make clear that it had recovered successfully from temporary errors while restoring a cluster backup. (Bug#19651)
MySQL Cluster:
In rare situations with resource shortages, a crash could result
from insufficient IndexScanOperations
.
(Bug#19198)
MySQL Cluster: ndb_mgm -e show | head would hang after displaying the first 10 lines of output. (Bug#19047)
MySQL Cluster: The error returned by the cluster when too many nodes were defined did not make clear the nature of the problem. (Bug#19045)
MySQL Cluster:
The ndb_config utility did not perform host
lookups correctly when using the --host
option
(Bug#17582)
MySQL Cluster: A problem with takeover during a system restart caused ordered indexes to be rebuilt incorrectly. (Bug#15303)
Cluster API:
The NdbOperation::getBlobHandle()
method,
when called with the name of a nonexistent column, caused a
segmentation fault.
(Bug#21036)
Cluster API: When multiple processes or threads in parallel performed the same ordered scan with exclusive lock and updated the retrieved records, the scan could skip some records, which as a result were not updated. (Bug#20446)
There was a race condition in the InnoDB
fil_flush_file_spaces()
function.
(Bug#24089)
This regression was introduced by Bug#15653
Some yaSSL-related memory leaks detected by Valgrind were fixed. (Bug#23981)
The internal SQL interpreter of InnoDB
placed
an unnecessary lock on the supremum record when
innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog=1
. This caused
an assertion failure when InnoDB
was built
with debugging enabled.
(Bug#23769)
returns
M
% 0NULL
, but (
evaluated to
false.
(Bug#23411)M
% 0) IS NULL
For not-yet-authenticated connections, the
Time
column in SHOW
PROCESSLIST
was a random value rather than
NULL
.
(Bug#23379)
MySQL failed to build on Linux/Alpha. (Bug#23256)
This regression was introduced by Bug#21250
If COMPRESS()
returned
NULL
, subsequent invocations of
COMPRESS()
within a result set
or within a trigger also returned NULL
.
(Bug#23254)
Insufficient memory (myisam_sort_buffer_size
)
could cause a server crash for several operations on
MyISAM
tables: repair table, create index by
sort, repair by sort, parallel repair, bulk insert.
(Bug#23175)
The column default value in the output from SHOW
COLUMNS
or SELECT FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
was truncated to 64
characters.
(Bug#23037)
mysql did not check for errors when fetching data during result set printing. (Bug#22913)
InnoDB
exhibited thread thrashing with more
than 50 concurrent connections under an update-intensive
workload.
(Bug#22868)
The return value from my_seek()
was ignored.
(Bug#22828)
The optimizer failed to use equality propagation for
BETWEEN
and
IN
predicates with string arguments.
(Bug#22753)
The Handler_rollback
status variable
sometimes was incremented when no rollback had taken place.
(Bug#22728)
The Host
column in SHOW
PROCESSLIST
output was blank when the server was
started with the --skip-grant-tables
option.
(Bug#22723)
If a table contains an AUTO_INCREMENT
column,
inserting into an insertable view on the table that does not
include the AUTO_INCREMENT
column should not
change the value of
LAST_INSERT_ID()
, because the
side effects of inserting default values into columns not part
of the view should not be visible. MySQL was incorrectly setting
LAST_INSERT_ID()
to zero.
(Bug#22584)
Instance Manager had a race condition involving mysqld PID file removal. (Bug#22379)
The optimizer used the ref
join type rather
than eq_ref
for a simple join on strings.
(Bug#22367)
Some queries that used MAX()
and
GROUP BY
could incorrectly return an empty
result.
(Bug#22342)
If an init_connect
SQL statement produced an
error, the connection was silently terminated with no error
message. Now the server writes a warning to the error log.
(Bug#22158)
Use of a DES-encrypted SSL certificate file caused a server crash. (Bug#21868)
Use of PREPARE
with a CREATE
PROCEDURE
statement that contained a syntax error
caused a server crash.
(Bug#21856)
Adding a day, month, or year interval to a
DATE
value produced a
DATE
, but adding a week interval produced a
DATETIME
value. Now all produce a
DATE
value.
(Bug#21811)
Use of a subquery that invoked a function in the column list of the outer query resulted in a memory leak. (Bug#21798)
Selecting from a MERGE
table could result in
a server crash if the underlying tables had fewer indexes than
the MERGE
table itself.
(Bug#21617, Bug#22937)
After FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
followed by
UNLOCK TABLES
, attempts to drop or alter a
stored routine failed with an error that the routine did not
exist, and attempts to execute the routine failed with a lock
conflict error.
(Bug#21414)
For multiple-table UPDATE
statements, storage
engines were not notified of duplicate-key errors.
(Bug#21381)
Within a prepared statement, SELECT (COUNT(*) =
1)
(or similar use of other aggregate functions) did
not return the correct result for statement re-execution.
(Bug#21354)
It was possible for a stored routine with a
non-latin1
name to cause a stack overrun.
(Bug#21311)
Creating a TEMPORARY
table with the same name
as an existing table that was locked by another client could
result in a lock conflict for DROP TEMPORARY
TABLE
because the server unnecessarily tried to
acquire a name lock.
(Bug#21096)
Incorrect results could be obtained from re-execution of a
parametrized prepared statement or a stored routine with a
SELECT
that uses LEFT JOIN
with a second table having only one row.
(Bug#21081)
Within a stored routine, a view definition cannot refer to routine parameters or local variables. However, an error did not occur until the routine was called. Now it occurs during parsing of the routine creation statement.
A side effect of this fix is that if you have already created
such routines, and error will occur if you execute
SHOW CREATE PROCEDURE
or SHOW
CREATE FUNCTION
. You should drop these routines
because they are erroneous.
In mysql, invoking connect
or \r
with very long
db_name
or
host_name
parameters caused buffer
overflow.
(Bug#20894)
SHOW VARIABLES
truncated the
Value
field to 256 characters.
(Bug#20862)
WITH ROLLUP
could group unequal values.
(Bug#20825)
Range searches on columns with an index prefix could miss records. (Bug#20732)
An UPDATE
that referred to a key column in
the WHERE
clause and activated a trigger that
modified the column resulted in a loop.
(Bug#20670)
LIKE
searches failed for indexed
utf8
character columns.
(Bug#20471)
With SQL_MODE=TRADITIONAL
, MySQL incorrectly
aborted on warnings within stored routines and triggers.
(Bug#20028)
mysqldump --xml produced invalid XML for
BLOB
data.
(Bug#19745)
Column names were not quoted properly for replicated views. (Bug#19736)
FLUSH INSTANCES
in Instance Manager triggered
an assertion failure.
(Bug#19368)
For a debug server, a reference to an undefined user variable in
a prepared statment executed with EXECUTE
caused an assertion failure.
(Bug#19356)
Within a trigger for a base table, selecting from a view on that base table failed. (Bug#19111)
The value of the warning_count
system
variable was not being calculated correctly (also affecting
SHOW COUNT(*) WARNINGS
).
(Bug#19024)
DELETE IGNORE
could hang for foreign key
parent deletes.
(Bug#18819)
InnoDB
used table locks (not row locks)
within stored functions.
(Bug#18077)
mysql would lose its connection to the server if its standard output was not writable. (Bug#17583)
mysql-test-run did not work correctly for RPM-based installations. (Bug#17194)
A client library crash was caused by executing a statement such
as SELECT * FROM t1 PROCEDURE ANALYSE()
using
a server side cursor on a table t1
that does
not have the same number of columns as the output from
PROCEDURE ANALYSE()
.
(Bug#17039)
The WITH CHECK OPTION
for a view failed to
prevent storing invalid column values for
UPDATE
statements.
(Bug#16813)
InnoDB
showed substandard performance with
multiple queries running concurrently.
(Bug#15815)
ALTER TABLE
was not able to rename a view.
(Bug#14959)
Statements such as DROP PROCEDURE
and
DROP VIEW
were written to the binary log too
late due to a race condition.
(Bug#14262)
A literal string in a GROUP BY
clause could
be interpreted as a column name.
(Bug#14019)
Instance Manager didn't close the client socket file when starting a new mysqld instance. mysqld inherited the socket, causing clients connected to Instance Manager to hang. (Bug#12751)
Entries in the slow query log could have an incorrect
Rows_examined
value.
(Bug#12240)
Lack of validation for input and output TIME
values resulted in several problems:
SEC_TO_TIME()
in some cases did
not clip large values to the TIME
range
appropriately; SEC_TO_TIME()
treated BIGINT UNSIGNED
values as signed;
only truncation warnings were produced when both truncation and
out-of-range TIME
values occurred.
(Bug#11655, Bug#20927)
A locking safety check in InnoDB
reported a
spurious error stored_select_lock_type is 0 inside
::start_stmt() for INSERT ...
SELECT
statements in
innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog
mode. The
safety check was removed.
(Bug#10746)
FROM_UNIXTIME()
did not accept
arguments up to POWER(2,31)-1
,
which it had previously.
(Bug#9191)
OPTIMIZE TABLE
with
myisam_repair_threads
> 1 could result in
MyISAM
table corruption.
(Bug#8283)
Transient errors in replication from master to slave may trigger
multiple Got fatal error 1236: 'binlog truncated in the
middle of event'
errors on the slave.
(Bug#4053)
This is the first MySQL Enterprise Server release, following the last Community Server release (5.0.27).
Functionality added or changed:
Binary MySQL distributions no longer include a mysqld-max server, except for RPM distributions. Instead, distributions contain a mysqld binary that includes the features previously included in the mysqld-max binary.
Bugs fixed: