This is a new Beta development release, fixing recently discovered bugs.
This Beta release, as any other pre-production release, should not be installed on production level systems or systems with critical data. It is good practice to back up your data before installing any new version of software. Although MySQL has worked very hard to ensure a high level of quality, protect your data by making a backup as you would for any software beta release. Please refer to our bug database at http://bugs.mysql.com/ for more details about the individual bugs fixed in this version.
This section documents all changes and bug fixes that have been applied since the last official MySQL release. 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.
Functionality added or changed:
Incompatible Change: MySQL Cluster:
The internal specifications for columns in
NDB tables has changed to allow compatibility
with future MySQL Cluster releases that are expected to
implement online adding and dropping of columns. This change is
not backward compatible with earlier versions of MySQL Cluster.
See the related note in Section 20.5.2, “MySQL Cluster 5.1 and MySQL Cluster NDB 6.x Upgrade and Downgrade Compatibility”, for important information prior to upgrading a MySQL Cluster to MySQL 5.1.18 or later from MySQL 5.1.17 or earlier.
See also Bug#28205
Cluster Replication: Incompatible Change:
The definition of the mysql.ndb_apply_status
table has changed such that an online upgrade is not possible
from MySQL 5.1.17 or earlier for a replication slave cluster;
you must shut down all SQL nodes as part of the upgrade
procedure. See
Section 20.5.2, “MySQL Cluster 5.1 and MySQL Cluster NDB 6.x Upgrade and Downgrade
Compatibility”
before upgrading for details.
For more information about the changes to
mysql.ndb_apply_status see
Section 20.11.4, “Cluster Replication Schema and Tables”.
Incompatible Change:
Prior to this release, when DATE values were
compared with DATETIME values, the time
portion of the DATETIME value was ignored, or
the comparison could be performed as a string compare. 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 as shown in this
example: SELECT .
(Bug#28929)date_col =
CAST(NOW() AS DATE) FROM
table;
Incompatible Change:
The INFORMATION_SCHEMA.EVENTS and
mysql.event tables have been changed to
facilitate replication of events. When upgrading to MySQL
5.1.18, you must run mysql_upgrade prior to
working with events. Until you have done so, any statement
relating to the Event Scheduler or these tables (including
SHOW EVENTS) will fail with the errors
Expected field status at position 12 to have type
enum ('ENABLED','SLAVESIDE_DISABLED','DISABLED'), found
enum('ENABLED','DISABLED') and Table
mysql.event is damaged. Can not open.
These changes were made as part of fixes for the following bugs:
The effects of scheduled events were not replicated (that is, binary logging of scheduled events did not work).
Effects of scheduled events on a replication master were both replicated and executed on the slave, causing double execution of events.
CREATE FUNCTION statements and their
effects were not replicated correctly.
For more information, see Section 19.3.1.5, “Replication of Invoked Features”. (Bug#17857, Bug#16421, Bug#20384, Bug#17671)
Important Change: When upgrading to MySQL 5.1.18 or later from a previous MySQL version and scheduled events have been used, the upgrade utilities do not accomodate changes in event-related system tables. As a workaround, you can dump events before the upgrade, then restore them from the dump afterwards. This issue was fixed in MySQL 5.1.20.
See also Bug#28521
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 20.9.3, “ndb_restore — Restore a Cluster Backup”. (Bug#26899, Bug#26900)
MySQL Cluster: The following changes were made in the ndb_size.pl utility:
When ndb_size.pl calculates a value for a given configuration parameter that is less than the default value, it now suggests the default value instead.
The dependency on HTML::Template was
removed, with the result that the file
ndb_size.tmpl is no longer needed or
included.
Cluster Replication: Some circular replication setups are now supported for MySQL Cluster. See Section 20.11.3, “Known Issues in MySQL Cluster Replication”, for detailed information. (Bug#17095, Bug#25688)
Cluster API:
The MGM API now supports explicit setting of network timeouts
using the ndb_mgm_set_timeout() function. A
utility function
ndb_mgm_number_of_mgmd_in_connect_string() is
also implemented to facilitate calculation of timeouts based on
the number of management servers in the cluster.
For more information, see ndb_mgm_set_timeout(),
and ndb_mgm_number_of_mgmd_in_connect_string().
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)
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)
Several additional data types are supported for columns in
INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables:
DATE, TIME,
BLOB, FLOAT, and all
integer types.
(Bug#27047)
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)
Added a MASTER_SSL_VERIFY_SERVER_CERT option
for the CHANGE MASTER statement, and a
Master_SSL_Verify_Server_Cert output column
to the SHOW SLAVE STATUS statement. The
option value also is written to the
master.info file.
(Bug#19991)
The innodb_log_archive system variable has
been removed. The impact of this change should be low because
the variable was unused, anyway.
Added the
--auto-generate-sql-add-auto-increment,
--auto-generate-sql-execute-number,
--auto-generate-sql-guid-primary,
--auto-generate-sql-secondary-indexes,
--auto-generate-sql-unique-query-number,
--auto-generate-sql-unique-write-number,
--post-query,, and
--pre-query, options for
mysqlslap. Removed the
--lock-directory, --slave, and
--use-threads options.
Added --write-binlog option for
mysqlcheck. This option is enabled by
default, but can be given as
--skip-write-binlog to cause ANALYZE
TABLE, OPTIMIZE TABLE, and
REPAIR TABLE statements generated by
mysqlcheck not to be written to the binary
log. (Bug#26262)
New command-line options: To alleviate ambiguities in variable
names, all variables related to plugins can be specified using a
plugin part in the name. For example, every
time where we used to have innodb in the
command-line options, you can now write
plugin-innodb:
--skip-plugin-innodb --plugin-innodb-buffer-pool-size=#
Furthermore, this is the preferred syntax. It helps to avoid
ambiguities when a plugin, say, wait, has an
option called timeout.
--wait-timeout will still set a system
variable, but --plugin-wait-timeout will set
the plugin variable. Also, there is a new command-line option
--plugin-load to install or load plugins at
initialization time without using the
mysql.plugin table.
The plugin interface and its handling of system variables was
changed. Command-line options such as
--skip-innodb now cause an error if
InnoDB is not built-in or plugin-loaded. You
should use --loose-skip-innodb if you do not
want any error even if InnoDB is not
available. The --loose prefix modifier should
be used for all command-line options where you are uncertain
whether the plugin exists and when you want the operation to
proceed even if the option is necessarily ignored due to the
absence of the plugin. (For a desecription of how
--loose works, see
Section 4.2.3.1, “Using Options on the Command Line”.)
Storage engine plugins may now be uninstalled at run time.
However, a plugin is not actually uninstalled until after its
reference count drops to zero. The
default_storage_engine system variable
consumes a reference count, so uninstalling will not complete
until said reference is removed.
The mysql_create_system_tables script was removed because mysql_install_db no longer uses it in MySQL 5.1.
Renamed the old_mode system variable to
old.
Bugs fixed:
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)
Security Fix:
A user with only the ALTER privilege on a
partitioned table could obtain information about the table that
should require the SELECT privilege.
(Bug#23675, CVE-2007-2693)
MySQL Cluster: The cluster waited 30 seconds instead of 30 milliseconds before reading table statistics. (Bug#28093)
MySQL Cluster: Under certain rare circumstances, ndbd could get caught in an infinite loop when one transaction took a read lock and then a second transaction attempted to obtain a write lock on the same tuple in the lock queue. (Bug#28073)
MySQL Cluster: Under some circumstances, a node restart could fail to update the Global Checkpoint Index (GCI). (Bug#28023)
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:
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:
An INSERT followed by a delete
DELETE on the same NDB
table caused a memory leak.
(Bug#27756)
This regression was introduced by Bug#20612
MySQL Cluster:
It was not possible to add a unique index to an
NDB table while in single user mode.
(Bug#27710)
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:
Using more than 16GB for DataMemory caused
problems with variable-size columns.
(Bug#27512)
MySQL Cluster: A data node failing while another data node was restarting could leave the cluster in an inconsistent state. In certain rare cases, this could lead to a race condition and the eventual forced shutdown of the cluster. (Bug#27466)
MySQL Cluster:
When using the MemReportFrequency
configuration parameter to generate periodic reports of memory
usage in the cluster log, DataMemory usage
was not always reported for all data nodes.
(Bug#27444)
MySQL Cluster:
(Replication): An UPDATE on the master became
a DELETE on slaves.
(Bug#27378)
MySQL Cluster:
When trying to create an NDB table after the
server was started with --ndbcluster but
without --ndb-connectstring,
mysqld produced a memory allocation error.
(Bug#27359)
MySQL Cluster: Performing a delete followed by an insert during a local checkpoint could cause a Rowid already allocated error. (Bug#27205)
MySQL Cluster:
In an NDB table having a
TIMESTAMP column using DEFAULT
CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, that column would assume a random
value when another column in the same row was updated.
(Bug#27127)
MySQL Cluster: Error messages displayed when running in single user mode were inconsistent. (Bug#27021)
MySQL Cluster:
On Solaris, the value of an NDB table column
declared as BIT(33) was always displayed as
0.
(Bug#26986)
MySQL Cluster:
Performing ALTER TABLE ... ENGINE=MERGE on an
NDB table caused mysqld to
crash.
(Bug#26898)
MySQL Cluster:
The NDBCLUSTER table handler did not set bits
in null bytes correctly.
(Bug#26591)
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:
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:
START BACKUP NOWAIT caused a spurious
Out of backup record error in the
management client (START BACKUP and
START BACKUP WAIT STARTED performed
normally).
(Bug#25446)
MySQL Cluster:
Adding of indexes online failed for NDB
tables having BLOB or TEXT
columns.
(Bug#25431)
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 ndb_resize.pl utility did not calculate memory usage for indexes correctly. (Bug#24229)
MySQL Cluster: While a data node was stopped, dropping a table then creating an index on a different table caused that node to fail during restart. This was due to the re-use of the dropped table's internal ID for the index without verifying that the index now referred to a different database object. (Bug#21755)
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: Out-of-memory errors were not reported. Now they are written to the error log. (Bug#26844)
Cluster Replication: Disk Data: An issue with replication of Disk Data tables could in some cases lead to node failure. (Bug#28161)
Disk Data: Changes to a Disk Data table made as part of a transaction could not be seen by the client performing the changes until the transaction had been committed. (Bug#27757)
Disk Data: When in single user mode, it was possible to create log file groups and tablespaces from any SQL node connected to the cluster. (Bug#27712)
Disk Data:
CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
created an
in-memory disk_data_tableNDB table.
(Bug#25875)
Disk Data: When restarting a data node following the creation of a large number of Disk Data objects (approximately 200 such objects), the cluster could not assign a node ID to the restarting node. (Bug#25741)
Disk Data: Creating an excessive number of Disk Data tables (1000 or more) could cause data nodes to fail. (Bug#24951)
Disk Data:
Changing a column specification or issuing a
TRUNCATE statement on a Disk Data table
caused the table to become an in-memory table.
This fix supersedes an incomplete fix that was made for this issue in MySQL 5.1.15. (Bug#24667, Bug#25296)
Disk Data:
Setting the value of the UNDO BUFFER SIZE to
64K or less in a CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
statement led to failure of cluster data nodes.
(Bug#24560)
Disk Data: Creating an excessive number of data files for a single tablespace caused data nodes to crash. (Bug#24521)
Disk Data:
It was possible to drop the last remaining datafile in a
tablespace using ALTER TABLESPACE, even when
there was still an empty table using the tablespace.
The datafile could be not dropped if the table still contained any rows, so this bug involved no loss of data.
Cluster Replication: Some queries that updated multiple tables were not backed up correctly. (Bug#27748)
Cluster Replication: It was possible for API nodes to begin interacting with the cluster subscription manager before they were fully connected to the cluster. (Bug#27728)
Cluster Replication: Under very high loads, checkpoints could be read or written with checkpoint indexes out of order. (Bug#27651)
Cluster Replication:
Trying to replicate a large number of frequent updates with a
relatively small relay log
(max-relay-log-size set to 1M or less) could
cause the slave to crash.
(Bug#27529)
Cluster Replication:
Setting SQL_LOG_BIN to zero did not disable
binary logging.
This issue affected only the NDB storage
engine.
(Bug#27076)
Cluster Replication: An SQL node acting as a replication master server could be a single point of failure; that is, if it failed, the replication slave had no way of knowing this, which could result in a mismatch of data between the master and the slave. (Bug#21494)
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()
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)
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)
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)
Some equi-joins containing a WHERE clause
that included a NOT IN subquery caused a
server crash.
(Bug#27870)
An error message suggested the use of mysql_fix_privilege_tables after an upgrade, but the recommended program is now mysql_upgrade. (Bug#27818)
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)
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)
The LEAST() and
GREATEST() functions
compared DATE and DATETIME
values as strings, which in some cases could lead to an
incorrect result.
(Bug#27759)
A memory leak in the event scheduler was uncovered by Valgrind. (Bug#27733)
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)
mysqldump could not connect using SSL. (Bug#27669)
SELECT DISTINCT could return incorrect
results if the select list contained duplicated columns.
(Bug#27659)
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)
When MySQL logged slow query information to a
CSV table, it used an incorrect formula to
calculate the query_time and
lock_time values.
(Bug#27638)
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
With NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO SQL mode enabled,
LOAD DATA operations could assign incorrect
AUTO_INCREMENT values.
(Bug#27586)
Group relay log rotation updated only the log position and not the name, causing the slave to stop. (Bug#27583)
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)
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)
Evaluation of an IN() predicate containing a
decimal-valued argument caused a server crash.
(Bug#27513, Bug#27362, CVE-2007-2583)
A race condition between DROP TABLE and
SHOW TABLE STATUS could cause the latter to
display incorrect information.
(Bug#27499)
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)
Nested aggregate functions could be improperly evaluated. (Bug#27363)
A stored function invocation in the WHERE
clause was treated as a constant.
(Bug#27354)
For the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
SESSION_STATUS and
GLOBAL_STATUS tables, some status values were
incorrectly converted to the data type of the
VARIABLE_VALUE column.
(Bug#27327)
Failure to allocate memory associated with
transaction_prealloc_size could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#27322)
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)
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)
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)
mysqlbinlog produced different output with
the -R option than without it.
(Bug#27171)
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)
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE failed for a table
partitioned by KEY on a primary key
VARCHAR column.
(Bug#27123)
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 or
ENUM definitions were not detected. Now they
result in a warning; if strict SQL mode is enabled, an error
occurs instead.
(Bug#27069)
For FEDERATED tables, SHOW CREATE
TABLE could fail when the table name was longer than
the connection name.
(Bug#27036)
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)
make_win_bin_dist neglected to copy some
required MyISAM table files.
(Bug#26922)
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)
mysqldump would not dump a view for which the
DEFINER no longer exists.
(Bug#26817)
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)
If the name of a table given to myisamchk -rq
was a packed table and the name included the
.MYI extension,
myisamchk incorrectly created a file with a
.MYI.MYI extension.
(Bug#26782)
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)
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)
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)
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"
A possible buffer overflow in SHOW PROCEDURE
CODE was removed.
(Bug#26303)
The FEDERATED engine did not allow the local
and remote tables to have different names.
(Bug#26257)
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)
mysqlbinlog --base64-output produced invalid SQL. (Bug#26194)
For DELETE FROM (with no
tbl_name ORDER BY
col_nameWHERE or LIMIT clause),
the server did not check whether
col_name was a valid column in the
table.
(Bug#26186)
Executing an INSERT ... SELECT ... FROM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.GLOBAL_STATUS statement from within
an event caused a server crash.
(Bug#26174)
mysqldump could not dump log tables. (Bug#26121)
On Windows, trying to use backslash (\)
characters in paths for DATA DIRECTORY and
INDEX DIRECTORY when creating partitioned
tables caused MySQL to crash.
(You must use / characters when specifying
paths for these options, regardless of platform. See
Section 21.1, “Overview of Partitioning in MySQL”, for an
example using absolute paths for DATA
DIRECTORY and INDEX DIRECTORY when
creating a partitioned table on Windows.)
(Bug#26074, Bug#25141)
mysqldump crashed for
MERGE tables if the
--complete-insert (-c) option
was given.
(Bug#25993)
Index hints (USE INDEX, IGNORE
INDEX, FORCE INDEX) cannot be used
with FULLTEXT indexes, but were not being
ignored.
(Bug#25951)
Setting a column to NOT NULL with an
ON DELETE SET NULL clause foreign key crashes
the server.
(Bug#25927)
Corrupted MyISAM tables that have different
definitions in the .frm and
.MYI tables might cause a server crash.
(Bug#25908)
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)
In certain situations, MATCH ... AGAINST
returned false hits for NULL values produced
by LEFT JOIN when no full-text index was
available.
(Bug#25729)
Concurrent CREATE SERVER and ALTER
SERVER statements could cause a deadlock.
(Bug#25721)
CREATE SERVER, DROP
SERVER, and ALTER SERVER did not
require any privileges. Now these statements require the
SUPER privilege.
(Bug#25671)
On Windows, connection handlers did not properly decrement the server's thread count when exiting. (Bug#25621)
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)
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)
During a call to
mysql_change_user(),
when authentication fails or the database to change to is
unknown, a subsequent call to any function that does network
communication leads to packets out of order. This problem was
introduced in MySQL 5.1.14.
(Bug#25371)
Difficult repair or optimization operations could cause an assertion failure, resulting in a server crash. (Bug#25289)
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)
Duplicate entries were not assessed correctly in a
MEMORY table with a BTREE
primary key on a utf8 ENUM
column.
(Bug#24985)
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)
Selecting the result of AVG()
within a UNION could produce incorrect
values.
(Bug#24791)
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)
The NO_DIR_IN_CREATE server SQL mode was not
enforced for partitioned tables.
(Bug#24633)
MBRDisjoint(), MBRequal(),
MBRIntersects(),
MBROverlaps(),
MBRTouches(), and
MBRWithin() were inadvertently omitted from
recent versions of MySQL (5.1.14 to 5.1.17).
(Bug#24588)
Access via my_pread() or
my_pwrite() to table files larger than 2GB
could fail on some systems.
(Bug#24566)
MBROverlaps() returned incorrect values in
some cases.
(Bug#24563)
A problem in handling of aggregate functions in subqueries caused predicates containing aggregate functions to be ignored during query execution. (Bug#24484)
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)
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)
Some views could not be created even when the user had the requisite privileges. (Bug#24040)
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)
Using CAST() to convert
DATETIME values to numeric values did not
work.
(Bug#23656)
A damaged or missing mysql.event table caused
SHOW VARIABLES to fail.
(Bug#23631)
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)
The AUTO_INCREMENT value would not be
correctly reported for InnoDB tables when
using SHOW CREATE TABLE statement or
mysqldump command.
(Bug#23313)
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)
If a rotate event occured in the middle of a non-transaction
group, the group position would be updated by the rotate event
indicating an illegal group start position that was effectively
inside a group. This can happen if, for example, a rotate occurs
between an Intvar event and the associated
Query event, or between the table map events
and the rows events when using row-based replication.
(Bug#23171)
Implicit conversion of 9912101 to
DATE did not match
CAST(9912101 AS DATE).
(Bug#23093)
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)
SOUNDEX() returned an invalid
string for international characters in multi-byte character
sets.
(Bug#22638)
Row-based replication of MyISAM to
non-MyISAM tables did not work correctly for
BIT columns. This has been corrected, but the
fix introduces an incompatibility into the binary log format.
(The incompatibility is corrected by the fix for Bug#27779.)
(Bug#22583)
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)
COUNT(
sometimes generated a spurious truncation warning.
(Bug#21976)decimal_expr)
yaSSL crashed on pre-Pentium Intel CPUs. (Bug#21765)
A slave that used --master-ssl-cipher could not
connect to the master.
(Bug#21611)
Database and table names have a maximum length of 64 characters (even if they contain multi-byte characters), but were truncated to 64 bytes.
This improves on a previous fix made for this bug in MySQL 5.1.12.
InnoDB: The first read statement, if served
from the query cache, was not consistent with the READ
COMMITTED isolation level.
(Bug#21409)
On Windows, if the server was installed as a service, it did not auto-detect the location of the data directory. (Bug#20376)
Changing a utf8 column in an
InnoDB table to a shorter length did not
shorten the data values.
(Bug#20095)
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)
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)

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