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This is a bugfix release for the current production release family. It replaces MySQL 5.0.51b.
Functionality added or changed:
Security Enhancement:
To enable stricter control over the location from which
user-defined functions can be loaded, the
plugin_dir system variable has been
backported from MySQL 5.1. If the value is non-empty,
user-defined function object files can be loaded only from the
directory named by this variable. If the value is empty, the
behavior that is used before 5.0.67 applies: The UDF object
files must be located in a directory that is searched by your
system's dynamic linker.
(Bug#37428)
Important Change: Incompatible Change:
The FEDERATED storage engine is now disabled
by default in the .cnf files shipped with
MySQL distributions (my-huge.cnf,
my-medium.cnf, and so forth). This affects
server behavior only if you install one of these files.
(Bug#37069)
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 backward compatibility. See
The Ndb_logevent_type Type, for more information about
NDB_LE_MemoryUsage.
(Bug#30271)
Important Change:
Some changes were made to CHECK TABLE ... FOR
UPGRADE and REPAIR
TABLE with respect to detection and handling of tables
with incompatible .frm files (files created
with a different version of the MySQL server). These changes
also affect mysqlcheck because that program
uses CHECK TABLE and
REPAIR table, and thus also
mysql_upgrade because that program invokes
mysqlcheck.
If your table was created by a different version of the
MySQL server than the one you are currently running,
CHECK TABLE ... FOR UPGRADE indicates
that the table has an .frm file with an
incompatible version. In this case, the result set returned
by CHECK TABLE contains a
line with a Msg_type value of
error and a Msg_text
value of Table upgrade required. Please do "REPAIR
TABLE `
tbl_name`" to fix
it!
REPAIR TABLE without
USE_FRM upgrades the
.frm file to the current version.
If you use REPAIR TABLE ...USE_FRM and
your table was created by a different version of the MySQL
server than the one you are currently running,
REPAIR TABLE will not attempt
to repair the table. In this case, the result set returned
by REPAIR TABLE contains a
line with a Msg_type value of
error and a Msg_text
value of Failed repairing incompatible .FRM
file.
Previously, use of REPAIR TABLE
...USE_FRM with a table created by a different
version of the MySQL server risked the loss of all rows in
the table.
mysql_upgrade now has a
--tmpdir option to enable the location of
temporary files to be specified.
(Bug#36469)
mysql-test-run.pl now supports
--client-bindir and
--client-libdir options for specifying the
directory where client binaries and libraries are located.
(Bug#34995)
The ndbd and ndb_mgmd man pages have been reclassified from volume 1 to volume 8. (Bug#34642)
For binary .tar.gz packages,
mysqld and other binaries now are compiled
with debugging symbols included to enable easier use with a
debugger. If you do not need debugging symbols and are short on
disk space, you can use strip to remove the
symbols from the binaries.
(Bug#33252)
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)
mysqltest now has mkdir
and rmdir commands for creating and removing
directories.
(Bug#31004)
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 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 of 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 13.2.12.3, “Adaptive Hash Indexes”.
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:
Important Change: Security Fix:
It was possible to circumvent privileges through the creation of
MyISAM tables employing the DATA
DIRECTORY and INDEX DIRECTORY
options to overwrite existing table files in the MySQL data
directory. Use of the MySQL data directory in DATA
DIRECTORY and INDEX DIRECTORY
pathname is now disallowed.
(Bug#32167, CVE-2008-2079)
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.
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)
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:
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.
This fix results in the following behavior:
There is a check against mixing group and non-group columns
only when
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY is enabled.
This check is done both for the select list and for the
HAVING clause if there is one.
This behavior differs from previous versions as follows:
Previously, the HAVING clause was not
checked when ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY was
enabled; now it is checked.
Previously, the select list was checked even when
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY was not enabled; now
it is checked only when
ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY is enabled.
Incompatible Change: The MySQL 5.0.50 patch for this bug was reverted because it changed the behavior of a General Availability MySQL release. (Bug#30234)
See also Bug#27525
Incompatible Change:
Several type-preserving functions and operators returned an
incorrect result type that does not match their argument types:
COALESCE(),
IF(),
IFNULL(),
LEAST(),
GREATEST(),
CASE. These now aggregate using the
precise SQL types of their arguments rather than the internal
type. In addition, the result type of the
STR_TO_DATE() function is now
DATETIME by default.
(Bug#27216)
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.
The fix for this problem had a side effect such that on Unix,
MySQL programs looked for options in
~/my.cnf rather than the standard location
of ~/.my.cnf. That problem was addressed as
Bug#38180.
(Bug#20748)
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)
Important Change:
It was possible to use FRAC_SECOND as a
synonym for MICROSECOND with
DATE_ADD(),
DATE_SUB(), and
INTERVAL; now, using
FRAC_SECOND with anything other than
TIMESTAMPADD() or
TIMESTAMPDIFF() produces a syntax
error.
It is now possible (and preferable) to use
MICROSECOND with
TIMESTAMPADD() and
TIMESTAMPDIFF(), and
FRAC_SECOND is now deprecated.
(Bug#33834)
Important Change:
The server no longer issues warnings for truncation of excess
spaces for values inserted into
CHAR columns. This reverts a
change in the previous release that caused warnings to be
issued.
(Bug#30059)
Replication: Important Note: Network timeouts between the master and the slave could result in corruption of the relay log. This fix rectifies a long-standing replication issue when using unreliable networks, including replication over wide area networks such as the Internet. If you experience reliability issues and see many You have an error in your SQL syntax errors on replication slaves, we strongly recommend that you upgrade to a MySQL version which includes this fix. (Bug#26489)
MySQL Cluster:
When configured with NDB support, MySQL
failed to compile using gcc 4.3 on 64bit
FreeBSD systems.
(Bug#34169)
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:
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:
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:
Primary keys on variable-length columns (such as
VARCHAR) did not work correctly.
(Bug#31635)
MySQL Cluster: Transaction atomicity was sometimes not preserved between reads and inserts under high loads. (Bug#31477)
MySQL Cluster:
Numerous NDBCLUSTER test failures occurred in
builds compiled using icc on IA64 platforms.
(Bug#31239)
MySQL Cluster: Transaction timeouts were not handled well in some circumstances, leading to excessive number of transactions being aborted unnecessarily. (Bug#30379)
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: 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:
It was possible in config.ini to define
cluster nodes having node IDs greater than the maximum allowed
value.
(Bug#28298)
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)
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: Some kinds of internal errors, such as Out of memory errors, could cause the server to crash when replicating statements with user variables.
certain internal errors. (Bug#37150)
Replication:
CREATE PROCEDURE and CREATE
FUNCTION statements containing extended comments were
not written to the binary log correctly, causing parse errors on
the slave.
(Bug#36570)
See also Bug#32575
Replication:
INSERT_ID was not written to the binary log
for inserts into BLACKHOLE tables.
(Bug#35178)
Replication: The character sets and collations used for constant identifiers in stored procedures were not replicated correctly. (Bug#34289)
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:
An extraneous
ROLLBACK
statement was written to the binary log by a connection that did
not use any transactional tables.
(Bug#33329)
Replication:
When a stored routine or trigger, running on a master that used
MySQL 5.0 or MySQL 5.1.11 or earlier, performed an insert on an
AUTO_INCREMENT column, the
INSERT_ID value was not replicated correctly
to a slave running MySQL 5.1.12 or later (including any MySQL
6.0 release).
(Bug#33029)
See also Bug#19630
Replication:
CREATE VIEW statements containing
extended comments were not written to the binary log correctly,
causing parse errors on the slave. Now, all comments are
stripped from such statements before being written to the binary
log.
(Bug#32575)
See also Bug#36570
Replication:
SQL statements containing comments using --
syntax were not replayable by mysqlbinlog,
even though such statements replicated correctly.
(Bug#32205)
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:
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)
Replication:
STOP SLAVE did not stop
connection attempts properly. If the IO slave thread was
attempting to connect, STOP SLAVE
waited for the attempt to finish, sometimes for a long period of
time, rather than stopping the slave immediately.
(Bug#31024)
See also Bug#30932
Replication:
Issuing a DROP VIEW statement
caused replication to fail if the view did not actually exist.
(Bug#30998)
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:
Replication of LOAD
DATA INFILE could fail when
read_buffer_size was larger than
max_allowed_packet.
(Bug#30435)
Replication:
Setting server_id did not update its value
for the current session.
(Bug#28908)
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:
MASTER_POS_WAIT() did not return
NULL when the server was not a slave.
(Bug#26622)
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.
In addition, when an INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY
UPDATE statement encountered a duplicate key
constraint, but the UPDATE did
not actually change any data, the statement was not logged. As a
result of this fix, such statements are now treated the same for
logging purposes as other UPDATE
statements, and so are written to the binary log.
(Bug#23333)
See also Bug#12713
Replication:
The inspecific error message Wrong parameters to
function register_slave resulted when
START SLAVE failed to register on
the master due to excess length of any the slave server options
--report-host, --report-user,
or --report-password. An error message specific
to each of these options is now returned in such cases. The new
error messages are:
Failed to register slave: too long 'report-host'
Failed to register slave: too long 'report-user'
Failed to register slave; too long 'report-password'
See also Bug#19328
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)
Replication:
START SLAVE UNTIL
MASTER_LOG_POS=
issued on a slave that was using
position--log-slave-updates and that was involved in
circular replication would cause the slave to run and stop one
event later than that specified by the value of
position.
(Bug#13861)
Replication:
PURGE BINARY LOGS TO and PURGE
BINARY LOGS BEFORE did not handle missing binary log
files correctly or in the same way. Now for both of these
statements, if any files listed in the
.index file are missing from the
filesystem, the statement fails with an error.
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)
The fix for Bug#20748 caused a problem such that on Unix, MySQL
programs looked for options in ~/my.cnf
rather than the standard location of
~/.my.cnf.
(Bug#38180)
The fix for Bug#33812 had the side effect of causing the mysql client not to be able to read some dump files produced with mysqldump. To address this, that fix was reverted. (Bug#38158)
Some binary distributions had a duplicate “-64bit” suffix in the filename. (Bug#37623)
On Windows 64-bit systems, temporary variables of
long types were used to store
ulong values, causing key cache
initialization to receive distorted parameters. The effect was
that setting key_buffer_size to values of 2GB
or more caused memory exhaustion to due allocation of too much
memory.
(Bug#36705)
Multiple-table UPDATE statements
that used a temporary table could fail to update all qualifying
rows or fail with a spurious duplicate-key error.
(Bug#36676)
A REGEXP match could return
incorrect rows when the previous row matched the expression and
used CONCAT() with an empty
string.
(Bug#36488)
mysqltest ignored the value of
--tmpdir in one place.
(Bug#36465)
The mysql client failed to recognize comment
lines consisting of -- followed by a newline.
(Bug#36244)
Conversion of a FLOAT ZEROFILL value to
string could cause a server crash if the value was
NULL.
(Bug#36139)
On Windows, the installer attempted to use JScript to determine whether the target data directory already existed. On Windows Vista x64, this resulted in an error because the installer was attempting to run the JScript in a 32-bit engine, which wasn't registered on Vista. The installer no longer uses JScript but instead relies on a native WiX command. (Bug#36103)
An error in calculation of the precision of zero-length items
(such as NULL) caused a server crash for
queries that employed temporary tables.
(Bug#36023)
For EXPLAIN EXTENDED, execution of an
uncorrelated IN subquery caused a crash if
the subquery required a temporary table for its execution.
(Bug#36011)
The server crashed inside NOT IN subqueries
with an impossible WHERE or
HAVING clause, such as NOT IN
(SELECT ... FROM t1, t2, ... WHERE 0).
(Bug#36005)
Grouping or ordering of long values in unindexed
BLOB or
TEXT columns with the
gbk or big5 character set
crashed the server.
(Bug#35993)
SET GLOBAL debug='' resulted in a Valgrind
warning in DbugParse(), which was reading
beyond the end of the control string.
(Bug#35986)
An empty bit-string literal (b'') caused a
server crash. Now the value is parsed as an empty bit value
(which is treated as an empty string in string context or 0 in
numeric context).
(Bug#35658)
mysqlbinlog left temporary files on the disk after shutdown, leading to the pollution of the temporary directory, which eventually caused mysqlbinlog to fail. This caused problems in testing and other situations where mysqlbinlog might be invoked many times in a relatively short period of time. (Bug#35543)
There was a memory leak when connecting to a
FEDERATED table using a connection string
that had a host value of localhost or omitted
the host and a port value of 0 or omitted the
port.
(Bug#35509)
The code for detecting a byte order mark (BOM) caused mysql to crash for empty input. (Bug#35480)
Using LOAD DATA
INFILE with a view could crash the server.
(Bug#35469)
The combination of
GROUP_CONCAT(),
DISTINCT, and LEFT JOIN
could crash the server when the right table is empty.
(Bug#35298)
When a view containing a reference to DUAL
was created, the reference was removed when the definition was
stored, causing some queries against the view to fail with
invalid SQL syntax errors.
(Bug#35193)
Debugging symbols were missing for some executables in Windows binary distributions. (Bug#35104)
A query that performed a ref_or_null join
where the second table used a key having one or columns that
could be NULL and had a column value that was
NULL caused the server to crash.
(Bug#34945)
This regression was introduced by Bug#12144
Some binaries produced stack corruption messages due to being built with versions of bison older than 2.1. Builds are now created using bison 2.3. (Bug#34926)
mysqldump failed to return an error code when
using the --master-data option without binary
logging being enabled on the server.
(Bug#34909)
Under some circumstances, the value of
mysql_insert_id() following a
SELECT ... INSERT statement could return an
incorrect value. This could happen when the last SELECT
... INSERT did not involve an
AUTO_INCREMENT column, but the value of
mysql_insert_id() was changed by
some previous statements.
(Bug#34889)
Table and database names were mixed up in some places of the subquery transformation procedure. This could affect debugging trace output and further extensions of that procedure. (Bug#34830)
A malformed URL used for a FEDERATED
table's CONNECTION option value in a
CREATE TABLE statement was not
handled correctly and could crash the server.
(Bug#34788)
Queries such as SELECT ROW(1, 2) IN (SELECT t1.a, 2)
FROM t1 GROUP BY t1.a (combining row constructors and
subqueries in the FROM clause) could lead to
assertion failure or unexpected error messages.
(Bug#34763)
Using NAME_CONST() with a negative number and
an aggregate function caused MySQL to crash. This could also
have a negative impact on replication.
(Bug#34749)
A memory-handling error associated with use of
GROUP_CONCAT() in subqueries
could result in a server crash.
(Bug#34747)
For an indexed integer column
col_name and a value
N that is one greater than the
maximum value allowed for the data type of
col_name, conditions of the form
WHERE failed to return rows
where the value of col_name <
Ncol_name is
.
(Bug#34731)N - 1
Executing a TRUNCATE statement on
a table having both a foreign key reference and a
DELETE trigger crashed the
server.
(Bug#34643)
Some subqueries using an expression that included an aggregate function could fail or in some cases lead to a crash of the server. (Bug#34620)
A server crash could occur if
INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables built in memory
were swapped out to disk during query execution.
(Bug#34529)
CAST(AVG( produced incorrect results for
non-arg) AS
DECIMAL)DECIMAL arguments.
(Bug#34512)
mysql_explain_log concatenated multiple-line
statements, causing malformed results for statements that
contained SQL comments beginning with --.
(Bug#34339)
Executing an ALTER VIEW statement
on a table crashed the server.
(Bug#34337)
Several additional configuration scripts in the
BUILD directory now are included in source
distributions. These may be useful for users who wish to build
MySQL from source. (See
Section 2.16.3, “Installing from the Development Source Tree”, for information about
what they do.)
(Bug#34291)
Under some conditions, a SET GLOBAL
innodb_commit_concurrency or SET GLOBAL
innodb_autoextend_increment statement could fail.
(Bug#34223)
mysqldump attempts to set the
character_set_results system variable after
connecting to the server. This failed for pre-4.1 servers that
have no such variable, but mysqldump did not
account for this and 1) failed to dump database contents; 2)
failed to produce any error message alerting the user to the
problem.
(Bug#34192)
mysql_install_db failed if the server was
running with an SQL mode of TRADITIONAL. This
program now resets the SQL mode internally to avoid this
problem.
(Bug#34159)
For a FEDERATED table with an index on a
nullable column, accessing the table could crash a server,
return an incorrect result set, or return ERROR 1030
(HY000): Got error 1430 from storage engine.
(Bug#33946)
Passing anything other than a integer to a
LIMIT clause in a prepared statement would
fail. (This limitation was introduced to avoid replication
problems; for example, replicating the statement with a string
argument would cause a parse failure in the slave). Now,
arguments to the LIMIT clause are converted
to integer values, and these converted values are used when
logging the statement.
(Bug#33851)
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)
A query using WHERE
(column1=', where
string1' AND
column2=constant1) OR
(column1='string2' AND
column2=constant2)col1 used a binary collation and
string1 matched
string2 except for case, failed to
match any records even when matches were found by a query using
the equivalent clause WHERE
column2=.
(Bug#33833)constant1 OR
column2=constant2
The mysql client incorrectly parsed statements containing the word “delimiter” in mid-statement.
The fix for this bug had the side effect of causing the problem reported in Bug#38158, so it was reverted in MySQL 5.0.67. (Bug#33812)
Large unsigned integers were improperly handled for prepared statements, resulting in truncation or conversion to negative numbers. (Bug#33798)
Reuse of prepared statements could cause a memory leak in the embedded server. (Bug#33796)
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)
Some queries using a combination of IN,
CONCAT(), and an implicit type
conversion could return an incorrect result.
(Bug#33764)
In some cases a query that produced a result set when using
ORDER BY ASC did not return any results when
this was changed to ORDER BY DESC.
(Bug#33758)
Disabling concurrent inserts caused some cacheable queries not to be saved in the query cache. (Bug#33756)
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)
make_binary_distribution passed the
--print-libgcc-file option to the C compiler,
but this does not work with the ICC compiler.
(Bug#33536)
Certain combinations of views, subselects with outer references and stored routines or triggers could cause the server to crash. (Bug#33389)
SET GLOBAL myisam_max_sort_file_size=DEFAULT
set myisam_max_sort_file_size to an incorrect
value.
(Bug#33382)
See also Bug#31177
SLEEP(0) failed to return on
64-bit Mac OS X due to a bug in
pthread_cond_timedwait().
(Bug#33304)
CREATE TABLE ... SELECT created tables that
for date columns used the obsolete Field_date
type instead of Field_newdate.
(Bug#33256)
Granting the UPDATE privilege on
one column of a view caused the server to crash.
(Bug#33201)
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)
When MySQL was built with OpenSSL, the SSL library was not properly initialized with information of which endpoint it was (server or client), causing connection failures. (Bug#33050)
Under some circumstances a combination of aggregate functions
and GROUP BY in a
SELECT query over a view could
lead to incorrect calculation of the result type of the
aggregate function. This in turn could lead to incorrect
results, or to crashes on debug builds of the server.
(Bug#33049)
For DISTINCT queries, 4.0 and 4.1 stopped
reading joined tables as soon as the first matching row was
found. However, this optimization was lost in MySQL 5.0, which
instead read all matching rows. This fix for this regression may
result in a major improvement in performance for
DISTINCT queries in cases where many rows
match.
(Bug#32942)
The server was built even when configure was
run with the --without-server option.
(Bug#32898)
See also Bug#23973
Repeated creation and deletion of views within prepared statements could eventually crash the server. (Bug#32890)
See also Bug#34587
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)
An ORDER BY query using IS
NULL in the WHERE clause did not
return correct results.
(Bug#32815)
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)
Incorrect assertions could cause a server crash for
DELETE triggers for transactional
tables.
(Bug#32790)
Use of the cp932 character set with
CAST() in an ORDER
BY clause could cause a server crash.
(Bug#32726)
Inserting strings with a common prefix into a table that used
the ucs2 character set corrupted the table.
(Bug#32705)
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_columnBIT 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)
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)
Queries using LIKE on tables having indexed
CHAR columns using either of the
eucjpms or ujis character
sets did not return correct results.
(Bug#32510)
The rules for valid column names were being applied differently for base tables and views. (Bug#32496)
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)
Executing a prepared statement associated with a materialized cursor sent to the client a metadata packet with incorrect table and database names. The problem occurred because the server sent the name of the temporary table used by the cursor instead of the table name of the original table.
The same problem occured when selecting from a view, in which case the name of the table name was sent, rather than the name of the view. (Bug#32265)
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)
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)
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 adaptive hash latches could be held
too long, resulting in a server crash. This fix may also provide
significant performance improvements on systems on which many
queries using filesorts with temporary tables are being
performed.
(Bug#32149)
InnoDB does not support
SPATIAL indexes, but could crash when asked
to handle one. Now an error is returned.
(Bug#32125)
The server crashed on optimizations involving a join of
INT and
MEDIUMINT columns and a system
variable in the WHERE clause.
(Bug#32103)
SHOW STATUS caused a server crash
if InnoDB had not been initialized.
(Bug#32083)
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)
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)
HOUR(),
MINUTE(), and
SECOND() could return non-zero
values for DATE arguments.
(Bug#31990)
A column with malformed multi-byte characters could cause the full-text parser to go into an infinite loop. (Bug#31950)
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)
Queries testing numeric constants containing leading zeroes
against ZEROFILL columns were not evaluated
correctly.
(Bug#31887)
In debug builds, testing the result of an IN
subquery against NULL caused an assertion
failure.
(Bug#31884)
mysql-test-run.pl sometimes set up test scenarios in which the same port number was passed to multiple servers, causing one of them to be unable to start. (Bug#31880)
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)
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)
If an error occurred during file creation, the server sometimes did not remove the file, resulting in an unused file in the filesystem. (Bug#31781)
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 a filesort in
find_all_keys(), the error was returned
without the necessary handler uninitialization, causing an
assertion failure.
(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)
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)
The server returned the error message Out of memory; restart server and try again when the actual problem was that the sort buffer was too small. Now an appropriate error message is returned in such cases. (Bug#31590)
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)
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)
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)
For an almost-full MyISAM table, an insert
that failed could leave the table in a corrupt state.
(Bug#31305)
myisamchk --unpack could corrupt a table that when unpacked has static (fixed-length) row format. (Bug#31277)
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)
When sorting privilege table rows, the server treated escaped
wildcard characters (\% and
\_) the same as unescaped wildcard characters
(% and _), resulting in
incorrect row ordering.
(Bug#31194)
Server variables could not be set to their current values on Linux platforms. (Bug#31177)
See also Bug#6958
WIth small values of myisam_sort_buffer_size,
REPAIR TABLE for
MyISAM tables could cause a server crash.
(Bug#31174)
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)
Data in BLOB or
GEOMETRY columns could be cropped when
performing a UNION query.
(Bug#31158)
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)
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)
GROUP BY NULL WITH ROLLUP could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#31095)
See also Bug#32558
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)
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)
Many nested subqueries in a single query could led to excessive memory consumption and possibly a crash of the server. (Bug#31048)
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
On Windows, SHOW PROCESSLIST
could display process entries with a State
value of *** DEAD ***.
(Bug#30960)
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)
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)
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)
The optimizer incorrectly optimized conditions out of the
WHERE clause in some queries involving
subqueries and indexed columns.
(Bug#30788)
If an alias was used to refer to the value returned by a stored function within a subselect, the outer select recognized the alias but failed to retrieve the value assigned to it in the subselect. (Bug#30787)
Improper calculation of CASE
expression results could lead to value truncation.
(Bug#30782)
On Windows, the pthread_mutex_trylock()
implementation was incorrect. One symptom was that invalidating
the query cache could cause a server crash.
(Bug#30768)
A multiple-table UPDATE involving
transactional and non-transactional tables caused an assertion
failure.
(Bug#30763)
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)
mysql-test-run.pl could not run
mysqld with root
privileges.
(Bug#30630)
Binary logging for a stored procedure differed depending on whether or not execution occurred in a prepared statement. (Bug#30604)
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

