Functionality added or changed:
MySQL-shared-compat-advanced-gpl-5.1.31-0.*.rpm
and
MySQL-shared-compat-advanced-5.1.31-0.*.rpm
packages are now available. These client library compatibility
packages are like the MySQL-shared-compat
package, but are for the “MySQL Enterprise Server
–dash; Advanced Edition” products. Install these
packages rather than the normal
MySQL-shared-compat package if you want to
included shared client libraries for older MySQL versions.
(Bug#41838)
A new status variable,
Queries, indicates the number
of statements executed by the server. This includes statements
executed within stored programs, unlike the
Questions variable which
includes only statements sent to the server by clients.
(Bug#41131)
Performance of SELECT * retrievals from
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS was
improved slightly.
(Bug#38918)
Previously, index hints did not work for
FULLTEXT searches. Now they work as follows:
For natural language mode searches, index hints are silently
ignored. For example, IGNORE INDEX(i) is
ignored with no warning and the index is still used.
For boolean mode searches, index hints with FOR ORDER
BY or FOR GROUP BY are silently
ignored. Index hints with FOR JOIN or no
FOR modifier are honored. In contrast to how
hints apply for non-FULLTEXT searches, the
hint is used for all phases of query execution (finding rows and
retrieval, grouping, and ordering). This is true even if the
hint is given for a non-FULLTEXT index.
(Bug#38842)
Bugs fixed:
Performance:
For an InnoDB table,
DROP TABLE or
ALTER TABLE ...
DISCARD TABLESPACE could take a long time or cause a
server crash.
(Bug#39939)
Important Change: Replication:
If a trigger was defined on an
InnoDB table and this trigger
updated a nontransactional table, changes performed on the
InnoDB table were replicated and
were visible on the slave before they were committed on the
master, and were not rolled back on the slave after a successful
rollback of those changes on the master.
As a result of the fix for this issue, the semantics of mixing
nontransactional and transactional tables in a transaction in
the first statement of a transaction have changed. Previously,
if the first statement in a transaction contained
nontransactional changes, the statement was written directly to
the binary log. Now, any statement appearing after a
BEGIN (or
immediately following a COMMIT if
autocommit = 0) is always
considered part of the transaction and cached. This means that
nontransactional changes do not propagate to the slave until the
transaction is committed and thus written to the binary log.
See Section 16.4.1.28, “Replication and Transactions”, for more information about this change in behavior. (Bug#40116)
Important Change: The MSI installer packages for Windows are now digitally signed with a certificate, allowing installation on Windows where only certified packages are allowed by group policy or configuration.
As part of this change, and to comply with the certified installer requirements, the Setup.exe versions of the MySQL installer have been discontinued. You must have Windows Installer support in your Windows installation to use the MSI install package. This is a standard component on Windows XP SP2 and higher. For earlier versions, you can download the Microsoft Installer support from Microsoft.com. (Bug#36409)
Partitioning: Replication:
Changing the transaction isolation level while replicating
partitioned InnoDB tables could cause
statement-based logging to fail.
(Bug#39084)
Partitioning:
A comparison with an invalid DATE value in a
query against a partitioned table could lead to a crash of the
MySQL server.
Invalid DATE and
DATETIME values referenced in the
WHERE clause of a query on a partitioned
table are treated as NULL. See
Section 18.4, “Partition Pruning”, for more information.
Partitioning: A query on a user-partitioned table caused MySQL to crash, where the query had the following characteristics:
The query's WHERE clause referenced
an indexed column that was also in the partitioning key.
The query's WHERE clause included a
value found in the partition.
The query's WHERE clause used the
< or <>
operators to compare with the indexed column's value
with a constant.
The query used an ORDER BY clause, and
the same indexed column was used in the ORDER
BY clause.
The ORDER BY clause used an explcit or
implicit ASC sort priority.
Two examples of such a query are given here, where
a represents an indexed column used in the
table's partitioning key:
SELECT * FROMtableWHERE a <constantORDER BY a;
SELECT * FROMtableWHERE a <>constantORDER BY a;
This bug was introduced in MySQL 5.1.29. (Bug#40954)
This regression was introduced by Bug#30573, Bug#33257, Bug#33555.
Partitioning:
With READ COMMITTED
transaction isolation level, InnoDB
uses a semi-consistent read that releases nonmatching rows after
MySQL has evaluated the WHERE clause.
However, this was not happening if the table used partitions.
(Bug#40595)
Partitioning: A query that timed out when run against a partitioned table failed silently, without providing any warnings or errors, rather than returning Lock wait timeout exceeded. (Bug#40515)
Partitioning:
ALTER TABLE ... REORGANIZE PARTITION could
crash the server when the number of partitions was not changed.
(Bug#40389)
See also Bug#41945.
Partitioning:
For a partitioned table having an
AUTO_INCREMENT column: If the first statement
following a start of the server or a FLUSH
TABLES statement was an UPDATE
statement, the AUTO_INCREMENT column was not
incremented correctly.
(Bug#40176)
Partitioning:
The server attempted to execute the statements ALTER
TABLE ... ANALYZE PARTITION, ALTER TABLE ...
CHECK PARTITION, ALTER TABLE ... OPTIMIZE
PARTITION, and ALTER TABLE ... REORGANIZE
PARTITION on tables that were not partitioned.
(Bug#39434)
See also Bug#20129.
Partitioning:
The value of the CREATE_COLUMNS column in
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES was not
partitioned for partitioned tables.
(Bug#38909)
Partitioning:
When executing an ORDER BY query on a
partitioned InnoDB table using an index that
was not in the partition expression, the results were sorted on
a per-partition basis rather than for the table as a whole.
(Bug#37721)
Partitioning:
Dropping or creating an index on a partitioned table managed by
the InnoDB Plugin locked the table.
(Bug#37453)
Partitioning: Partitioned table checking sometimes returned a warning with an error code of 0, making proper response to errors impossible. The fix also renders the error message subject to translation in non-English deployments. (Bug#36768)
Partitioning:
SHOW TABLE STATUS could show a nonzero value
for the Mean record length of a partitioned
InnoDB table, even if the table
contained no rows.
(Bug#36312)
Partitioning:
When SHOW CREATE TABLE was used on a
partitioned table, all of the table's
PARTITION and SUBPARTITION
clauses were output on a single line, making it difficult to
read or parse.
(Bug#14326)
Replication:
Per-table AUTO_INCREMENT option values were
not replicated correctly for InnoDB
tables.
(Bug#41986)
Replication:
Some log_event types did not skip the
post-header when reading.
(Bug#41961)
Replication:
Attempting to read a binary log containing an
Incident_log_event having an invalid incident
number could cause the debug server to crash.
(Bug#40482)
Replication: When using row-based replication, an update of a primary key that was rolled back on the master due to a duplicate key error was not rolled back on the slave. (Bug#40221)
Replication: When rotating relay log files, the slave deletes relay log files and then edits the relay log index file. Formerly, if the slave shut down unexpectedly between these two events, the relay log index file could then reference relay logs that no longer existed. Depending on the circumstances, this could when restarting the slave cause either a race condition or the failure of replication. (Bug#38826, Bug#39325)
Replication:
With row-based replication, UPDATE and
DELETE statements using
LIMIT and a table's primary key could
produce different results on the master and slave.
(Bug#38230)
resolve_stack_dump was unable to resolve the stack trace format produced by mysqld in MySQL 5.1 and up (see Section 22.5.1.5, “Using a Stack Trace”). (Bug#41612)
In example option files provided in MySQL distributions, the
thread_stack value was
increased from 64K to 128K.
(Bug#41577)
The optimizer could ignore an error and rollback request during a filesort, causing an assertion failure. (Bug#41543)
DATE_FORMAT() could cause a
server crash for year-zero dates.
(Bug#41470)
SET PASSWORD caused a server
crash if the account name was given as
CURRENT_USER().
(Bug#41456)
When a repair operation was carried out on a
CSV table, the debug server
crashed.
(Bug#41441)
When substituting system constant functions with a constant
result, the server was not expecting NULL
function return values and could crash.
(Bug#41437)
Queries such as SELECT ... CASE AVG(...) WHEN
... that used aggregate functions in a
CASE expression crashed the server.
(Bug#41363)
INSERT INTO .. SELECT
... FROM and
CREATE TABLE ...
SELECT ... FROM a TEMPORARY table could inadvertently
change the locking type of the temporary table from a write lock
to a read lock, causing statement failure.
(Bug#41348)
The
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SCHEMA_PRIVILEGES
table was limited to 7680 rows.
(Bug#41079)
In debug builds, obsolete debug code could be used to crash the server. (Bug#41041)
Some queries that used a “range checked for each record” scan could return incorrect results. (Bug#40974)
See also Bug#44810.
Certain SELECT queries could fail
with a Duplicate entry error.
(Bug#40953)
For debug servers, OPTIMIZE TABLE
on a compressed table caused a server crash.
(Bug#40949)
Accessing user variables within triggers could cause a server crash. (Bug#40770)
IF(..., CAST( as
an argument to an aggregate function could cause an assertion
failure.
(Bug#40761)longtext_val AS
UNSIGNED), signed_val)
For single-table UPDATE
statements, an assertion failure resulted from a runtime error
in a stored function (such as a recursive function call or an
attempt to update the same table as in the
UPDATE statement).
(Bug#40745)
TRUNCATE TABLE for an
InnoDB table did not flush cached queries for
the table.
(Bug#40386)
Prepared statements allowed invalid dates to be inserted when
the ALLOW_INVALID_DATES SQL
mode was not enabled.
(Bug#40365)
mc.exe is no longer needed to compile MySQL on Windows. This makes it possible to build MySQL from source using Visual Studio Express 2008. (Bug#40280)
The ':' character was incorrectly disallowed
in table names.
(Bug#40104)
Support for the revision field in
.frm files has been removed. This addresses
the downgrading problem introduced by the fix for Bug#17823.
(Bug#40021)
Retrieval speed from the following
INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables was improved by
shortening the VARIABLE_VALUE column to 1024
characters:
GLOBAL_VARIABLES,
SESSION_VARIABLES,
GLOBAL_STATUS,
and
SESSION_STATUS.
As a result of this change, any variable value longer than 1024
characters will be truncated with a warning. This affects only
the init_connect system
variable.
(Bug#39955)
If the operating system is configured to return leap seconds
from OS time calls or if the MySQL server uses a time zone
definition that has leap seconds, functions such as
NOW() could return a value having
a time part that ends with :59:60 or
:59:61. If such values are inserted into a
table, they would be dumped as is by
mysqldump but considered invalid when
reloaded, leading to backup/restore problems.
Now leap second values are returned with a time part that ends
with :59:59. This means that a function such
as NOW() can return the same
value for two or three consecutive seconds during the leap
second. It remains true that literal temporal values having a
time part that ends with :59:60 or
:59:61 are considered invalid.
For additional details about leap-second handling, see Section 9.6.2, “Time Zone Leap Second Support”. (Bug#39920)
The server could crash during a sort-order optimization of a dependent subquery. (Bug#39844)
For a server started with the
--temp-pool option on Windows,
temporary file creation could fail. This option now is ignored
except on Linux systems, which was its original intended scope.
(Bug#39750)
ALTER TABLE on a table with
FULLTEXT index that used a pluggable
FULLTEXT parser could cause debug servers to
crash.
(Bug#39746)
With the ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
SQL mode enabled, the check for nonaggregated columns in queries
with aggregate functions, but without a GROUP
BY clause was treating all the parts of the query as
if they were in the select list. This is fixed by ignoring the
nonaggregated columns in the WHERE clause.
(Bug#39656)
The server crashed if an integer field in a CSV file did not have delimiting quotes. (Bug#39616)
Creating a table with a comment of 62 characters or longer caused a server crash. (Bug#39591)
The do_abi_check program run during the build
process depends on mysql_version.h but that
file was not created first, resulting in build failure.
(Bug#39571)
CHECK TABLE failed for
MyISAM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables.
(Bug#39541)
On 64-bit Windows systems, the server accepted
key_buffer_size values larger
than 4GB, but allocated less. (For example, specifying a value
of 5GB resulted in 1GB being allocated.)
(Bug#39494)
InnoDB could hang trying to open an adaptive
hash index.
(Bug#39483)
Following ALTER
TABLE ... DISCARD TABLESPACE for an
InnoDB table, an attempt to determine the
free space for the table before the ALTER
TABLE operation had completely finished could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#39438)
Use of the PACK_KEYS or
MAX_ROWS table option in
ALTER TABLE should have triggered
table reconstruction but did not.
(Bug#39372)
The server returned a column type of
VARBINARY rather than
DATE as the result from the
COALESCE(),
IFNULL(),
IF(),
GREATEST(), or
LEAST() functions or
CASE expression if the result was
obtained using filesort in an anonymous
temporary table during the query execution.
(Bug#39283)
A server built using yaSSL for SSL support would crash if configured to use an RSA key and a client sent a cipher list containing a non-RSA key as acceptable. (Bug#39178)
When built with Valgrind, the server failed to access tables
created with the DATA DIRECTORY or
INDEX DIRECTORY table option.
(Bug#39102)
With binary logging enabled CREATE
VIEW was subject to possible buffer overwrite and a
server crash.
(Bug#39040)
The fast mutex implementation was subject to excessive lock contention. (Bug#38941)
Use of InnoDB monitoring
(SHOW ENGINE INNODB
STATUS or one of the
InnoDB Monitor tables) could cause
a server crash due to invalid access to a shared variable in a
concurrent environment.
(Bug#38883)
InnoDB could fail to generate
AUTO_INCREMENT values after an
UPDATE statement for the table.
(Bug#38839)
If delayed insert failed to upgrade the lock, it did not free
the temporary memory storage used to keep newly constructed
BLOB values in memory, resulting
in a memory leak.
(Bug#38693)
On Windows, a five-second delay occurred at shutdown of applications that used the embedded server. (Bug#38522)
On Solaris, a scheduling policy applied to the main server process could be unintentionally overwritten in client-servicing threads. (Bug#38477)
Building MySQL on FreeBSD would result in a failure during the gen_lex_hash phase of the build. (Bug#38364)
On Windows, the embedded server would crash in
mysql_library_init() if the
language file was missing.
(Bug#38293)
A mix of TRUNCATE TABLE with
LOCK TABLES and
UNLOCK
TABLES for an InnoDB could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#38231)
The ExtractValue() function did not work
correctly with XML documents containing a
DOCTYPE declaration.
(Bug#38227)
Queries with a HAVING clause could return a
spurious row.
(Bug#38072)
The Event Scheduler no longer logs “started in thread” or “executed” successfully messages to the error log. (Bug#38066)
Use of spatial data types in prepared statements could cause memory leaks or server crashes. (Bug#37956, Bug#37671)
An error in a debugging check caused crashes in debug servers. (Bug#37936)
A SELECT with a NULL NOT
IN condition containing a complex subquery from the
same table as in the outer select caused an assertion failure.
(Bug#37894)
The presence of a /* ... */ comment preceding
a query could cause InnoDB to use unnecessary
gap locks.
(Bug#37885)
Use of an uninitialized constant in
EXPLAIN evaluation caused an
assertion failure.
(Bug#37870)
When using ALTER TABLE on an
InnoDB table, the
AUTO_INCREMENT value could be changed to an
incorrect value.
(Bug#37788)
Primary keys were treated as part of a covering index even if only a prefix of a key column was used. (Bug#37742)
Renaming an ARCHIVE table to the
same name with different lettercase and then selecting from it
could cause a server crash.
(Bug#37719)
The MONTHNAME() and
DAYNAME() functions returned a
binary string, so that using
LOWER() or
UPPER() had no effect. Now
MONTHNAME() and
DAYNAME() return a value in
character_set_connection
character set.
(Bug#37575)
TIMEDIFF() was erroneously
treated as always returning a positive result. Also,
CAST() of
TIME values to
DECIMAL dropped the sign of
negative values.
(Bug#37553)
See also Bug#42525.
SHOW PROCESSLIST displayed
“copy to tmp table” when no such copy was
occurring.
(Bug#37550)
mysqlcheck used
SHOW FULL
TABLES to get the list of tables in a database. For
some problems, such as an empty .frm file
for a table, this would fail and mysqlcheck
then would neglect to check other tables in the database.
(Bug#37527)
Updating a view with a subquery in the CHECK
option could cause an assertion failure.
(Bug#37460)
Statements that displayed the value of system variables (for
example, SHOW VARIABLES) expect
variable values to be encoded in
character_set_system. However,
variables set from the command line such as
basedir or
datadir were encoded using
character_set_filesystem and
not converted correctly.
(Bug#37339)
CREATE INDEX could crash with
InnoDB plugin 1.0.1.
(Bug#37284)
Certain boolean-mode FULLTEXT searches that
used the truncation operator did not return matching records and
calculated relevance incorrectly.
(Bug#37245)
On a 32-bit server built without big tables support, the offset
argument in a LIMIT clause might be truncated
due to a 64-bit to 32-bit cast.
(Bug#37075)
For an InnoDB table with a FOREIGN
KEY constraint, TRUNCATE
TABLE may be performed using row by row deletion. If
an error occurred during this deletion, the table would be only
partially emptied. Now if an error occurs, the truncation
operation is rolled back and the table is left unchanged.
(Bug#37016)
The code for the ut_usectime() function in
InnoDB did not handle errors from the
gettimeofday() system call. Now it retries
gettimeofday() several times and updates
the value of the
Innodb_row_lock_time_max
status variable only if ut_usectime() was
successful.
(Bug#36819)
Use of CONVERT() with
GROUP BY to convert numeric values to
CHAR could return truncated
results.
(Bug#36772)
The mysql client, when built with Visual Studio 2005, did not display Japanese characters. (Bug#36279)
CREATE INDEX for
InnoDB tables could under very rare
circumstances cause the server to crash..
(Bug#36169)
A read past the end of the string could occur while parsing the
value of the
--innodb-data-file-path option.
(Bug#36149)
Setting the
slave_compressed_protocol
system variable to DEFAULT failed in the
embedded server.
(Bug#35999)
For upgrades to MySQL 5.1 or higher,
mysql_upgrade did not re-encode database or
table names that contained nonalphanumeric characters. (They
would still appear after the upgrade with the
#mysql50# prefix described in
Section 8.2.3, “Mapping of Identifiers to File Names”.) To correct this problem,
it was necessary to run mysqlcheck --all-databases
--check-upgrade --fix-db-names --fix-table-names
manually. mysql_upgrade now runs that command
automatically after performing the initial upgrade.
(Bug#35934)
SHOW CREATE TABLE did not display
a printable value for the default value of
BIT columns.
(Bug#35796)
The columns that store character set and collation names in
several INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables were
lengthened because they were not long enough to store some
possible values: SCHEMATA,
TABLES,
COLUMNS,
CHARACTER_SETS,
COLLATIONS, and
COLLATION_CHARACTER_SET_APPLICABILITY.
(Bug#35789)
The max_length metadata value was calculated
incorrectly for the FORMAT()
function, which could cause incorrect result set metadata to be
sent to clients.
(Bug#35558)
InnoDB was not updating the
Handler_delete or
Handler_update status
variables.
(Bug#35537)
InnoDB could fail to generate
AUTO_INCREMENT values if rows previously had
been inserted containing literal values for the
AUTO_INCREMENT column.
(Bug#35498, Bug#36411, Bug#39830)
The CREATE_OPTIONS column for
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES did not
display the KEY_BLOCK_SIZE option.
(Bug#35275)
Selecting from an INFORMATION_SCHEMA table
into an incorrectly defined MERGE
table caused an assertion failure.
(Bug#35068)
perror on Windows did not know about Win32 system error codes. (Bug#34825)
EXPLAIN
EXTENDED evaluation of aggregate functions that
required a temporary table caused a server crash.
(Bug#34773)
SHOW GLOBAL
STATUS shows values that aggregate the session status
values for all threads. This did not work correctly for the
embedded server.
(Bug#34517)
mysqldumpslow did not aggregate times. (Bug#34129)
mysql_config did not output
-ldl (or equivalent) when needed for
--libmysqld-libs, so its
output could be insufficient to build applications that use the
embedded server.
(Bug#34025)
The mysql client incorrectly parsed statements containing the word “delimiter” in mid-statement.
This fix is different from the one applied for this bug in MySQL 5.1.26. (Bug#33812)
See also Bug#38158.
For a stored procedure containing a SELECT * ... RIGHT
JOIN query, execution failed for the second call.
(Bug#33811)
Previously, use of index hints with views (which do not have indexes) produced the error ERROR 1221 (HY000): Incorrect usage of USE/IGNORE INDEX and VIEW. Now this produces ERROR 1176 (HY000): Key '...' doesn't exist in table '...', the same error as for base tables without an appropriate index. (Bug#33461)
Three conditions were discovered that could cause an upgrade
from MySQL 5.0 to 5.1 to fail: 1) Triggers associated with a
table that had a #mysql50# prefix in the name
could cause assertion failure. 2)
ALTER DATABASE
... UPGRADE DATA DIRECTORY NAME failed for databases
that had a #mysql50# prefix if there were
triggers in the database. 3) mysqlcheck
--fix-table-name didn't use UTF8 as the default
character set, resulting in parsing errors for tables with
nonlatin symbols in their names and trigger definitions.
(Bug#33094, Bug#41385)
Execution of a prepared statement that referred to a system variable caused a server crash. (Bug#32124)
Some division operations produced a result with incorrect precision. (Bug#31616)
Queries executed using join buffering of
BIT columns could produce
incorrect results.
(Bug#31399)
ALTER TABLE CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET did not
convert TINYTEXT or
MEDIUMTEXT columns to a longer
text type if necessary when converting the column to a different
character set.
(Bug#31291)
Server variables could not be set to their current values on Linux platforms. (Bug#31177)
See also Bug#6958.
For installation on Solaris using pkgadd
packages, the mysql_install_db script was
generated in the scripts directory, but the
temporary files used during the process were left there and not
deleted.
(Bug#31052)
Static storage engines and plugins that were disabled and
dynamic plugins that were installed but disabled were not listed
in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA appropriate
PLUGINS or
ENGINES table.
(Bug#29263)
Some SHOW statements and
retrievals from the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
TRIGGERS and
EVENTS tables used a temporary
table and incremented the
Created_tmp_disk_tables status
variable, due to the way that TEXT columns
are handled. The TRIGGERS.SQL_MODE,
TRIGGERS.DEFINER, and
EVENTS.SQL_MODE columns now are
VARCHAR to avoid this problem.
(Bug#29153)
For several read only system variables that were viewable with
SHOW VARIABLES, attempting to
view them with SELECT
@@ or set their
values with var_nameSET resulted in an
unknown system variable error. Now they can
be viewed with SELECT
@@ and attempting
to set their values results in a message indicating that they
are read only.
(Bug#28234)var_name
On Windows, Visual Studio does not take into account some x86
hardware limitations, which led to incorrect results converting
large DOUBLE values to unsigned
BIGINT values.
(Bug#27483)
SSL support was not included in some “generic” RPM packages. (Bug#26760)
The Questions status variable
is intended as a count of statements sent by clients to the
server, but was also counting statements executed within stored
routines.
(Bug#24289)
Setting the session value of the
max_allowed_packet or
net_buffer_length system
variable was allowed but had no effect. The session value of
these variables is now read only.
(Bug#22891)
See also Bug#32223.
A race condition between the mysqld.exe server and the Windows service manager could lead to inability to stop the server from the service manager. (Bug#20430)
On Windows, moving an InnoDB
.ibd file and then symlinking to it in the
database directory using a .sym file caused
a server crash.
(Bug#11894)

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