Fixed a bug : if you updated a row so that the 8000 byte
            maximum length (without BLOB and
            TEXT) was exceeded, InnoDB simply removed
            the record from the clustered index. In a similar insert,
            InnoDB would leak reserved file space extents, which would
            only be freed at the next mysqld startup.
          
            Fixed a bug : if you used big BLOB
            values, and your log files were relatively small, InnoDB
            could in a big BLOB operation temporarily
            write over the log produced after the latest checkpoint. If
            InnoDB would crash at that moment, then the crash recovery
            would fail, because InnoDB would not be able to scan the log
            even up to the latest checkpoint. Starting from this
            version, InnoDB tries to ensure the latest checkpoint is
            young enough. If that is not possible, InnoDB prints a
            warning to the .err log of MySQL and
            advises you to make the log files bigger.
          
            Fixed a bug : setting
            innodb_fast_shutdown=0 had no effect.
          
            Fixed a bug introduced in 4.0.13: if a CREATE
            TABLE ended in a comment, that could cause a
            memory overrun.
          
            Fixed a bug : If InnoDB printed Operating system
            error number .. in a file operation to the
            .err log in Windows, the error number
            explanation was wrong. Workaround: look at section 13.2 of
            http://www.innodb.com/ibman.php about Windows error numbers.
          
            Fixed a bug : If you created a column prefix
            PRIMARY KEY like in t(a
            CHAR(200), PRIMARY KEY (a(10))) on a fixed-length
            CHAR column, InnoDB would crash even in a
            simple SELECT. CCHECK
            TABLE would report the table as corrupt, also in
            the case where the created key was not
            PRIMARY.
          
This is a translation of the MySQL Reference Manual that can be found at dev.mysql.com. The original Reference Manual is in English, and this translation is not necessarily as up to date as the English version.

