This is a bugfix release for the current production release family. It replaces MySQL 5.0.33.
Functionality added or changed:
Incompatible Change: MySQL Cluster:
The LockPagesInMainMemory configuration
parameter has changed its type and possible values. For more
information, see
LockPagesInMainMemory
.
The values true and
false are no longer accepted for this
parameter. If you were using this parameter and had it set to
false in a previous release, you must
change it to 0. If you had this parameter
set to true, you should instead use
1 to obtain the same behavior as
previously, or 2 to take advantage of new
functionality introduced with this release, as described in
the section cited above.
Incompatible Change:
Previously, the DATE_FORMAT()
function returned a binary string. Now it returns a string with
a character set and collation given by
character_set_connection and
collation_connection so that it can return
month and weekday names containing non-ASCII characters.
(Bug#22646)
Important Change:
When using MERGE tables the definition of the
MERGE table and the MyISAM
tables are checked each time the tables are opened for access
(including any SELECT or
INSERT statement. Each table is compared for
column order, types, sizes and associated. If there is a
difference in any one of the tables then the statement will
fail.
Added the Uptime_since_flush_status status
variable, which indicates the number of seconds since the most
recent FLUSH STATUS statement. (From Jeremy
Cole)
(Bug#24822)
Added the SHOW PROFILES and SHOW
PROFILE statements to display statement profile data,
and the accompanying
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PROFILING table. Profiling
is controlled via the profiling and
profiling_history_size session variables. see
Section 12.5.5.25, “SHOW PROFILES and SHOW PROFILE
Syntax”, and
Section 24.17, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PROFILING Table”. (From Jeremy Cole)
The profiling feature is enabled via a new
--enable-profiling opion to
configure.
(Bug#24795)
The localhost anonymous user account created
during MySQL installation on Windows now has no global
privileges. Formerly this account had all global privileges. For
operations that require global privileges, the
root account can be used instead.
(Bug#24496)
The --skip-thread-priority option now is
enabled by default for binary Mac OS X distributions. Use of
thread priorities degrades performance on Mac OS X.
(Bug#18526)
This is the last version for which MySQL-Max RPM distributions are available. (This change was already made for non-RPM binary distributions in 5.0.27.)
The bundled yaSSL library was upgraded to version 1.5.8.
Added the --disable-grant-options option to
configure. If configure is
run with this option, the --bootstrap,
--skip-grant-tables, and
--init-file options for
mysqld are disabled and cannot be used. For
Windows, the configure.js script recognizes
the DISABLE_GRANT_OPTIONS flag, which has the
same effect.
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix:
Using an INFORMATION_SCHEMA table with
ORDER BY in a subquery could cause a server
crash.
We would like to thank Oren Isacson of Flowgate Security Consulting and Stefan Streichsbier of SEC Consult for informing us of this problem. (Bug#24630, Bug#26556, CVE-2007-1420)
Incompatible Change:
For ENUM columns that had enumeration values
containing commas, the commas were mapped to
0xff internally. However, this rendered the
commas indistinguishable from true 0xff
characters in the values. This no longer occurs. However, the
fix requires that you dump and reload any tables that have
ENUM columns containing any true
0xff values. Dump the tables using
mysqldump with the current server before
upgrading from a version of MySQL 5.0 older than 5.0.36 to
version 5.0.36 or newer.
(Bug#24660)
Partitioning: MySQL Cluster:
A query with an IN clause against an
NDB table employing explicit user-defined
partitioning did not always return all matching rows.
(Bug#25821)
MySQL Cluster:
It was not possible to create an NDB table
with a key on two VARCHAR columns where both
columns had a storage length in excess of 256.
(Bug#25746)
MySQL Cluster: Hosts in clusters with large numbers of nodes could experience excessive CPU usage while obtaining configuration data. (Bug#25711)
MySQL Cluster: In some circumstances, shutting down the cluster could cause connected mysqld processes to crash. (Bug#25668)
MySQL Cluster:
Memory allocations for TEXT columns were
calculated incorrectly, resulting in space being wasted and
other issues.
(Bug#25562)
MySQL Cluster: The failure of a master node during a node restart could lead to a resource leak, causing later node failures. (Bug#25554)
MySQL Cluster:
An UPDATE using an IN
clause on an NDB table on which there was a
trigger caused mysqld to crash.
(Bug#25522)
MySQL Cluster: A node shutdown occurred if the master failed during a commit. (Bug#25364)
MySQL Cluster:
Creating a non-unique index with the USING
HASH clause silently created an ordered index instead
of issuing a warning.
(Bug#24820)
MySQL Cluster:
The ndb_size.tmpl file (necessary for using
the ndb_size.pl script) was missing from
binary distributions.
(Bug#24191)
MySQL Cluster:
When a data node was shut down using the management client
STOP command, a connection event
(NDB_LE_Connected) was logged instead of a
disconnection event (NDB_LE_Disconnected).
(Bug#22773)
MySQL Cluster: The management server did not handle logging of node shutdown events correctly in certain cases. (Bug#22013)
MySQL Cluster:
SELECT statements with a
BLOB or TEXT column in the
selected column list and a WHERE condition
including a primary key lookup on a VARCHAR
primary key produced empty result sets.
(Bug#19956)
Cluster API:
Deletion of an Ndb_cluster_connection object
took a very long time.
(Bug#25487)
Cluster API:
Invoking the NdbTransaction::execute() method
using execution type Commit and abort option
AO_IgnoreError could lead to a crash of the
transaction coordinator (DBTC).
(Bug#25090)
Cluster API: A unique index lookup on a non-existent tuple could lead to a data node timeout (error 4012). (Bug#25059)
Cluster API:
libndbclient.so was not versioned.
(Bug#13522)
Using ORDER BY or GROUP BY
could yield different results when selecting from a view and
selecting from the underlying table.
(Bug#26209)
DISTINCT queries that were executed using a
loose scan for an InnoDB table that had been
emptied caused a server crash.
(Bug#26159)
A WHERE clause that used
BETWEEN for
DATETIME values could be treated differently
for a SELECT and a view defined as that
SELECT.
(Bug#26124)
Collation for LEFT JOIN comparisons could be
evaluated incorrectly, leading to improper query results.
(Bug#26017)
The WITH CHECK OPTION clause for views was
ignored for updates of multiple-table views when the updates
could not be performed on fly and the rows to update had to be
put into temporary tables first.
(Bug#25931)
LOAD DATA INFILE did not work with pipes.
(Bug#25807)
The SEC_TO_TIME() and
QUARTER() functions
sometimes did not handle NULL values
correctly.
(Bug#25643)
The InnoDB parser sometimes did not account
for null bytes, causing spurious failure of some queries.
(Bug#25596)
View definitions that used the ! operator
were treated as containing the NOT operator,
which has a different precedence and can produce different
results. .
(Bug#25580)
An error in the name resolution of nested JOIN ...
USING constructs was corrected.
(Bug#25575)
GROUP BY and DISTINCT did
not group NULL values for columns that have a
UNIQUE index. .
(Bug#25551)
The --with-readline option for
configure did not work for commercial source
packages, but no error message was printed to that effect. Now a
message is printed.
(Bug#25530)
mysql_stmt_fetch() did an
invalid memory deallocation when used with the embedded server.
(Bug#25492)
Referencing an ambiguous column alias in an expression in the
ORDER BY clause of a query caused the server
to crash.
(Bug#25427)
A yaSSL program named test was installed, causing conflicts with the test system utility. It is no longer installed. (Bug#25417)
For a UNIQUE index containing many
NULL values, the optimizer would prefer the
index for conditions over other more selective indexes. .
(Bug#25407)col IS
NULL
An AFTER UPDATE trigger on an
InnoDB table with a composite primary key
caused the server to crash.
(Bug#25398)
Passing a NULL value to a user-defined
function from within a stored procedure crashes the server.
(Bug#25382)
perror crashed on some platforms due to
failure to handle a NULL pointer.
(Bug#25344)
mysql.server stop timed out too quickly (35 seconds) waiting for the server to exit. Now it waits up to 15 minutes, to ensure that the server exits. (Bug#25341)
A query that contained an EXIST subquery with
a UNION over correlated and uncorrelated
SELECT queries could cause the server to
crash.
(Bug#25219)
mysql_kill() caused a server
crash when used on an SSL connection.
(Bug#25203)
yaSSL was sensitive to the presence of whitespace at the ends of lines in PEM-encoded certificates, causing a server crash. (Bug#25189)
A query with ORDER BY and GROUP
BY clauses where the ORDER BY
clause had more elements than the GROUP BY
clause caused a memory overrun leading to a crash of the server.
(Bug#25172)
Use of ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE defeated the
usual restriction against inserting into a join-based view
unless only one of the underlying tables is used.
(Bug#25123)
Using a view in combination with a USING
clause caused column aliases to be ignored.
(Bug#25106)
A multiple-table DELETE QUICK could sometimes
cause one of the affected tables to become corrupted.
(Bug#25048)
ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE KEYS acquired a global
lock, preventing concurrent execution of other statements that
use tables. .
(Bug#25044)
An assertion failed incorrectly for prepared statements that
contained a single-row uncorrelated subquery that was used as an
argument of the IS NULL
predicate.
(Bug#25027)
A return value of -1 from user-defined
handlers was not handled well and could result in conflicts with
server code.
(Bug#24987)
Accessing a fixed record format table with a crashed key definition results in server/myisamchk segmentation fault. (Bug#24855)
mysqld_multi and
mysqlaccess looked for option files in
/etc even if the
--sysconfdir option for
configure had been given to specify a
different directory.
(Bug#24780)
If there was insufficient memory available to mysqld, this could sometimes cause the server to hang during startup. (Bug#24751)
Optimizations that are legal only for subqueries without tables
and WHERE conditions were applied for any
subquery without tables.
(Bug#24670)
If an ORDER BY or GROUP BY
list included a constant expression being optimized away and, at
the same time, containing single-row subselects that returned
more that one row, no error was reported. If a query required
sorting by expressions containing single-row subselects that
returned more than one row, execution of the query could cause a
server crash.
(Bug#24653)
For ALTER TABLE, using ORDER BY
could cause a
server crash. Now the expressionORDER BY clause allows
only column names to be specified as sort criteria (which was
the only documented syntax, anyway).
(Bug#24562)
A workaround was implemented to avoid a race condition in the
NPTL pthread_exit() implementation.
(Bug#24507)
mysqltest crashed with a stack overflow. (Bug#24498)
Within stored routines or prepared statements, inconsistent
results occurred with multiple use of INSERT ... SELECT
... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE when the ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE clause erroneously tried to
assign a value to a column mentioned only in its
SELECT part.
(Bug#24491)
Expressions of the form (a, b) IN (SELECT a, MIN(b)
FROM t GROUP BY a) could produce incorrect results
when column a of table t
contained NULL values while column
b did not.
(Bug#24420)
If a prepared statement accessed a view, access to the tables listed in the query after that view was checked in the security context of the view. (Bug#24404)
Attempts to access a MyISAM table with a
corrupt column definition caused a server crash.
(Bug#24401)
When opening a corrupted .frm file during a
query, the server crashes.
(Bug#24358)
Some joins in which one of the joined tables was a view could return erroneous results or crash the server. (Bug#24345)
A view was not handled correctly if the
SELECT part contained “
\Z ”.
(Bug#24293)
A query using WHERE
could
cause the server to crash.
(Bug#24261)unsigned_column NOT IN
('negative_value')
When SET PASSWORD was written to the binary
log double quotes were included in the statement. If the slave
was running in with the server SQL mode set to
ANSI_QUOTES, then the event failed, which
halted the replication process.
(Bug#24158)
Expressions of the form (a, b) IN (SELECT c, d
...) could produce incorrect results if
a, b, or both were
NULL.
(Bug#24127)
A FETCH statement using a cursor on a table
which was not in the table cache could sometimes cause the
server to crash.
(Bug#24117)
Queries that evaluate NULL IN (SELECT ... UNION SELECT
...) could produce an incorrect result
(FALSE instead of NULL).
(Bug#24085)
Hebrew-to-Unicode conversion failed for some characters. Definitions for the following Hebrew characters (as specified by the ISO/IEC 8859-8:1999) were added: LEFT-TO-RIGHT MARK (LRM), RIGHT-TO-LEFT MARK (RLM) (Bug#24037)
Some UPDATE statements were slower than in
previous versions when the search key could not be converted to
a valid value for the type of the search column.
(Bug#24035)
ISNULL(DATE(NULL)) and
ISNULL(CAST(NULL AS
DATE)) erroneously returned false.
(Bug#23938)
Within a stored routine, accessing a declared routine variable
with PROCEDURE ANALYSE() caused a server
crash.
(Bug#23782)
When reading from the standard input on Windows, mysqlbinlog opened the input in text mode rather than binary mode and consequently misinterpreted some characters such as Control-Z. (Bug#23735)
A stored procedure, executed from a connection using a binary character set, and which wrote multibyte data, would write incorrectly escaped entries to the binary log. This caused syntax errors, and caused replication to fail. (Bug#23619, Bug#24492)
OPTIMIZE TABLE tried to sort R-tree indexes
such as spatial indexes, although this is not possible (see
Section 12.5.2.5, “OPTIMIZE TABLE Syntax”).
(Bug#23578)
For an InnoDB table with any ON
DELETE trigger, TRUNCATE TABLE
mapped to DELETE and activated triggers. Now
a fast truncation occurs and triggers are not activated. .
(Bug#23556)
The row count for MyISAM tables was not
updated properly, causing SHOW TABLE STATUS
to report incorrect values.
(Bug#23526)
User-defined variables could consume excess memory, leading to a
crash caused by the exhaustion of resources available to the
MEMORY storage engine, due to the fact that
this engine is used by MySQL for variable storage and
intermediate results of GROUP BY queries.
Where SET had been used, such a condition
could instead give rise to the misleading error message
You may only use constant expressions with
SET, rather than Out of memory (Needed
NNNNNN bytes).
(Bug#23443)
With ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY enables, the server
was too strict: Some expressions involving only aggregate values
were rejected as non-aggregate (for example,
MAX(a) –
MIN(a)).
(Bug#23417)
The arguments to the ENCODE()
and the DECODE() functions were
not printed correctly, causing problems in the output of
EXPLAIN EXTENDED and in view definitions.
(Bug#23409)
A table created with the ROW_FORMAT = FIXED
table option lost the option if an index was added or dropped
with CREATE INDEX or DROP
INDEX.
(Bug#23404)
A deadlock could occur, with the server hanging on
Closing tables, with a sufficient number of
concurrent INSERT DELAYED, FLUSH
TABLES, and ALTER TABLE operations.
(Bug#23312)
Some queries against INFORMATION_SCHEMA that
used subqueries failed. .
(Bug#23299)
readline detection did not work correctly on
NetBSD.
(Bug#23293)
If there was insufficient memory to store or update a blob
record in a MyISAM table then the table will
marked as crashed.
(Bug#23196)
LAST_INSERT_ID() was not reset
to 0 if INSERT ... SELECT inserted no rows.
(Bug#23170)
A compressed MyISAM table that became
corrupted could crash myisamchk and possibly
the MySQL Server.
(Bug#23139)
The number of setsockopt() calls performed
for reads and writes to the network socket was reduced to
decrease system call overhead.
(Bug#22943)
mysql_upgrade failed when called with a
basedir pathname containing spaces.
(Bug#22801)
SET lc_time_names = allowed only exact literal values, not expression
values.
(Bug#22647)value
Changes to the lc_time_names system variable
were not replicated.
(Bug#22645)
The STDDEV() function returned a
positive value for data sets consisting of a single value.
(Bug#22555)
Storing values specified as hexadecimal values 64 or more bits
long in BIT(64), BIGINT,
or BIGINT UNSIGNED columns did not raise any
warning or error if the value was out of range.
(Bug#22533)
SHOW COLUMNS reported some NOT
NULL columns as NULL.
(Bug#22377)
Type conversion errors during formation of index search conditions were not correctly checked, leading to incorrect query results. (Bug#22344)
Changing the value of MI_KEY_BLOCK_LENGTH in
myisam.h and recompiling MySQL resulted in
a myisamchk that saw existing
MyISAM tables as corrupt.
(Bug#22119)
A crash of the MySQL Server could occur when unpacking a
BLOB column from a row in a corrupted MyISAM
table. This could happen when trying to repair a table using
either REPAIR TABLE or
myisamchk; it could also happen when trying
to access such a “broken” row using statements like
SELECT if the table was not marked as
crashed.
(Bug#22053)
The code for generating USE statements for
binary logging of CREATE PROCEDURE statements
resulted in confusing output from mysqlbinlog
for DROP PROCEDURE statements.
(Bug#22043)
For the IF() and
COALESCE() function
and CASE
expressions, large unsigned integer values could be mishandled
and result in warnings.
(Bug#22026)
SSL connections could hang at connection shutdown. (Bug#21781, Bug#24148)
The FEDERATED storage engine did not support
the euckr character set.
(Bug#21556)
When updating a table that used a JOIN of the
table itself (for example, when building trees) and the table
was modified on one side of the expression, the table would
either be reported as crashed or the wrong rows in the table
would be updated.
(Bug#21310)
mysqld_error.h was not installed when only
the client libraries were built.
(Bug#21265)
InnoDB: During a restart of the MySQL Server
that followed the creation of a temporary table using the
InnoDB storage engine, MySQL failed to clean
up in such a way that InnoDB still attempted
to find the files associated with such tables.
(Bug#20867)
Inserting DEFAULT into a column with no
default value could result in garbage in the column. Now the
same result occurs as when inserting NULL
into a NOT NULL column.
(Bug#20691)
A stored routine containing semicolon in its body could not be reloaded from a dump of a binary log. (Bug#20396)
SELECT ... FOR UPDATE, SELECT ...
LOCK IN SHARE MODE, DELETE, and
UPDATE statements executed using a full table
scan were not releasing locks on rows that did not satisfy the
WHERE condition.
(Bug#20390)
On Windows, if the server was installed as a service, it did not auto-detect the location of the data directory. (Bug#20376)
The BUILD/check-cpu script did not recognize Celeron processors. (Bug#20061)
If a duplicate key value was present in the table,
INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE reported a
row count indicating that a record was updated, even when no
record actually changed due to the old and new values being the
same. Now it reports a row count of zero.
(Bug#19978)
For SET, SELECT, and
DO statements that invoked a stored function
from a database other than the default database, the function
invocation could fail to be replicated.
(Bug#19725)
ORDER BY values of the
DOUBLE or DECIMAL types
could change the result returned by a query.
(Bug#19690)
The readline library wrote to uninitialized
memory, causing mysql to crash.
(Bug#19474)
mysqltest incorrectly tried to retrieve result sets for some queries where no result set was available. (Bug#19410)
Use of already freed memory caused SSL connections to hang forever. (Bug#19209)
Some CASE statements inside stored routines
could lead to excessive resource usage or a crash of the server.
(Bug#19194, Bug#24854)
Instance Manager could crash during shutdown. (Bug#19044)
The server might fail to use an appropriate index for
DELETE when ORDER BY,
LIMIT, and a non-restricting
WHERE are present.
(Bug#17711)
No warning was issued for use of the DATA
DIRECTORY or INDEX DIRECTORY table
options on a platform that does not support them.
(Bug#17498)
The FEDERATED storage engine did not support
the utf8 character set.
(Bug#17044)
The optimizer removes expressions from GROUP
BY and DISTINCT clauses if they
happen to participate in
predicates of the
expression =
constantWHERE clause, the idea being that, if the
expression is equal to a constant, then it cannot take on
multiple values. However, for predicates where the expression
and the constant item are of different result types (for
example, when a string column is compared to 0), this is not
valid, and can lead to invalid results in such cases. The
optimizer now performs an additional check of the result types
of the expression and the constant; if their types differ, then
the expression is not removed from the GROUP
BY list.
(Bug#15881)
When a prepared statement failed during the prepare operation, the error code was not cleared when it was reused, even if the subsequent use was successful. (Bug#15518)
Dropping a user-defined function sometimes did not remove the
UDF entry from the mysql.proc table.
(Bug#15439)
Inserting a row into a table without specifying a value for a
BINARY(
column caused the column to be set to spaces, not zeroes.
(Bug#14171)N) NOT NULL
On Windows, the SLEEP() function
could sleep too long, especially after a change to the system
clock.
(Bug#14094, Bug#24686, Bug#17635)
mysqldump --order-by-primary failed if the primary key name was an identifier that required quoting. (Bug#13926)
To enable installation of MySQL RPMs on Linux systems running RHEL 4 (which includes SE-Linux) additional information was provided to specify some actions that are allowed to the MySQL binaries. (Bug#12676)
The presence of ORDER BY in a view definition
prevented the MERGE algorithm from being used
to resolve the view even if nothing else in the definition
required the TEMPTABLE algorithm.
(Bug#12122)
If a slave server closed its relay log (for example, due to an error during log rotation), the I/O thread did not recognize this and still tried to write to the log, causing a server crash. (Bug#10798)
The internal functions for table preparation, creation, and
alteration were not re-execution friendly, causing problems in
code that: repeatedly altered a table; repeatedly created and
dropped a table; opened and closed a cursor on a table, altered
the table, and then reopened the cursor; used ALTER
TABLE to change a table's current
AUTO_INCREMENT value; created indexes on
utf8 columns.
Re-execution of CREATE DATABASE,
CREATE TABLE, and ALTER
TABLE statements in stored routines or as prepared
statements also caused incorrect results or crashes.
(Bug#4968, Bug#6895, Bug#19182, Bug#19733, Bug#22060, Bug#24879)

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