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: It is no longer possible to partition the log tables. (Bug#27816)
Incompatible Change: 
        mysqld_safe now supports error logging to
        syslog on systems that support the
        logger command. The new
        --syslog and
        --skip-syslog
        options can be used instead of the
        --log-error option to
        control logging behavior, as described in
        Section 4.3.2, “mysqld_safe — MySQL Server Startup Script”. The default is to use
        syslog, which differs from the previous
        default behavior of writing an error log file.
      
        Currently, logging to
        syslog may fail to operate correctly in some
        cases; if so, use
        --skip-syslog
        or --log-error.
        To maintain the older behavior if you were using no
        error-logging option, use
        --skip-syslog.
        If you were using
        --log-error, continue to use
        it.
      
        Note: In 5.1.21, the default is changed to
        --skip-syslog,
        which is compatible with releases prior to 5.1.20.
       (Bug#4858)
Important Change: MySQL Cluster: 
        The TimeBetweenWatchdogCheckInitial
        configuration parameter was added to allow setting of a separate
        watchdog timeout for memory allocation during startup of the
        data nodes. See Section 17.3.2.6, “Defining MySQL Cluster Data Nodes”,
        for more information.
       (Bug#28899)
MySQL Cluster: The cluster management client now stores command history between sessions. (Bug#29073)
MySQL Cluster: 
        auto_increment_increment and
        auto_increment_offset are now
        supported for NDB tables.
       (Bug#26342)
MySQL Cluster: The server source tree now includes scripts to simplify building MySQL with SCI support. For more information about SCI interconnects and these build scripts, see Section 17.3.5.1, “Configuring MySQL Cluster to use SCI Sockets”. (Bug#25470)
MySQL Cluster: 
        A new configuration parameter ODirect causes
        NDB to attempt using
        O_DIRECT writes for LCP, backups, and redo
        logs, often lowering CPU usage.
      
Replication: 
        The sql_mode,
        foreign_key_checks,
        unique_checks, character
        set/collations, and
        sql_auto_is_null session
        variables are written to the binary log and honored during
        replication. See Section 5.2.4, “The Binary Log”.
      
        If a MERGE table cannot be opened or used
        because of a problem with an underlying table,
        CHECK TABLE now displays
        information about which table caused the problem.
       (Bug#26976)
        User variables and stored procedure variables are now supported
        for use in XPath expressions employed as arguments to the
        ExtractValue() and
        UpdateXML() functions.
      
This means that:
XPath can now be used to load data from XML files using virtually any format, and so able to import data from most third party software which either has XML export functionality, or uses XML natively as a storage format.
Various complex conditions can be put on rows and columns, so one can filter for desired rows (or skip unwanted rows) when loading XML.
              Various types of preprocessing using SQL functions are now
              possible when loading XML. For example, you can
              concatenate two XML tag or attribute values into a single
              column value using
              CONCAT(), or remove some
              parts of the data using
              REPLACE().
            
See Section 11.10, “XML Functions”, for more information. (Bug#26518)
        Binary distributions for some platforms did not include shared
        libraries; now shared libraries are shipped for all platforms
        except AIX 5.2 64-bit. Exception: The
        library for the libmysqld embedded server is
        not shared except on Windows.
       (Bug#16520, Bug#26767, Bug#13450)
        Added a new
        PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH SQL
        mode. By default, trailing spaces are trimmed from
        CHAR column values on retrieval.
        If PAD_CHAR_TO_FULL_LENGTH is
        enabled, trimming does not occur and retrieved
        CHAR values are padded to their
        full length. This mode does not apply to
        VARCHAR columns, for which
        trailing spaces are retained on retrieval.
      
XPath can now be used to load data from XML files using virtually any format, and so able to import data from most third party software which either has XML export functionality, or uses XML natively as a storage format.
Various complex conditions can be put on rows and columns, so one can filter for desired rows (or skip unwanted rows) when loading XML.
        Various types of preprocessing using SQL functions are now
        possible when loading XML. For example, you can concatenate two
        XML tag or attribute values into a single column value using
        CONCAT(), or remove some parts of
        the data using REPLACE().
      
Bugs fixed:
Security Fix: A malformed password packet in the connection protocol could cause the server to crash. Thanks for Dormando for reporting this bug, and for providing details and a proof of concept. (Bug#28984, CVE-2007-3780)
Security Fix: 
        CREATE TABLE LIKE did not require any
        privileges on the source table. Now it requires the
        SELECT privilege.
      
        In addition, CREATE TABLE LIKE was not
        isolated from alteration by other connections, which resulted in
        various errors and incorrect binary log order when trying to
        execute concurrently a CREATE TABLE LIKE
        statement and either DDL statements on the source table or DML
        or DDL statements on the target table.
       (Bug#23667, Bug#25578, CVE-2007-3781)
Incompatible Change: 
        Some error codes had error numbers in MySQL 5.1 different from
        the numbers in MySQL 5.0. In MySQL 5.1, error numbers have been
        changed to match the MySQL 5.0 values: Error codes with value of
        1458 or higher have changed in MySQL 5.1 now. Client
        applications designed to work with MySQL 5.1 with hard-coded
        error code values (for example, in statements such as
        if (mysql_errno(mysql) == 1463) { ... }) need
        to be updated in the source code. All clients designed to work
        with MySQL 5.1 that test error codes (for example, in statements
        such as if (mysql_errno(mysql) == ER_VIEW_RECURSIVE) {
        ... }) should be recompiled. Existing 5.0 clients
        should now work, without changes or recompilation, against
        servers for MySQL 5.1.20 or higher.
       (Bug#29245)
Incompatible Change: 
        The names of stored functions referenced by views were not
        properly displayed by SHOW CREATE
        VIEW.
      
The fix corrects a problem introduced by Bug#23491. There is an incompatibility when upgrading from versions affected by that bug fix (MySQL 5.0.40 through 5.0.43, MySQL 5.1.18 through 5.1.19): If you use mysqldump before upgrading from an affected version and reload the data after upgrading to a higher version, you must drop and recreate your views. (Bug#28605)
Incompatible Change: 
        When mysqldump was run with the
        --delete-master-logs option,
        binary log files were deleted before it was known that the dump
        had succeeded, not after. (The method for removing log files
        used RESET MASTER prior to the
        dump. This also reset the binary log sequence numbering to
        .000001.) Now mysqldump
        flushes the logs (which creates a new binary log number with the
        next sequence number), performs the dump, and then uses
        PURGE BINARY LOGS to remove the
        log files older than the new one. This also preserves log
        numbering because the new log with the next number is generated
        and only the preceding logs are removed. However, this may
        affect applications if they rely on the log numbering sequence
        being reset.
       (Bug#24733)
Incompatible Change: 
        The use of an ORDER BY or
        DISTINCT clause with a query containing a
        call to the GROUP_CONCAT()
        function caused results from previous queries to be redisplayed
        in the current result. The fix for this includes replacing a
        BLOB value used internally for
        sorting with a VARCHAR. This
        means that for long results (more than 65,535 bytes), it is
        possible for truncation to occur; if so, an appropriate warning
        is issued.
       (Bug#23856, Bug#28273)
MySQL Cluster: Replication: (Replication): A replicated unique key allowed duplicate key inserts on the slave. (Bug#27044)
MySQL Cluster: 
        Memory corruption could occur due to a problem in the
        DBTUP kernel block.
       (Bug#29229)
MySQL Cluster: 
        A query having a large IN(...) or
        NOT IN(...) list in the
        WHERE condition on an
        NDB table could cause
        mysqld to crash.
       (Bug#29185)
MySQL Cluster: 
        In the event that two data nodes in the same node group and
        participating in a GCP crashed before they had written their
        respective P0.sysfile files,
        QMGR could refuse to start, issuing an
        invalid Insufficient nodes for restart
        error instead.
       (Bug#29167)
MySQL Cluster: 
        Attempting to restore a NULL row to a
        VARBINARY column caused
        ndb_restore to fail.
       (Bug#29103)
MySQL Cluster: ndb_error_reporter now preserves timestamps on files. (Bug#29074)
MySQL Cluster: 
        It is now possible to set the maximum size of the allocation
        unit for table memory using the MaxAllocate
        configuration parameter.
       (Bug#29044)
MySQL Cluster: 
        When shutting down mysqld, the
        NDB binlog process was not shut
        down before log cleanup began.
       (Bug#28949)
MySQL Cluster: ndb_mgm could hang when connecting to a nonexistent host. (Bug#28847)
MySQL Cluster: A regression in the heartbeat monitoring code could lead to node failure under high load. This issue affected MySQL 5.1.19 and MySQL Cluster NDB 6.1.10 only. (Bug#28783)
MySQL Cluster: A corrupt schema file could cause a File already open error. (Bug#28770)
MySQL Cluster: Having large amounts of memory locked caused swapping to disk. (Bug#28751)
MySQL Cluster: 
        Setting InitialNoOpenFiles equal to
        MaxNoOfOpenFiles caused an error. This was
        due to the fact that the actual value of
        MaxNoOfOpenFiles as used by the cluster was
        offset by 1 from the value set in
        config.ini.
       (Bug#28749)
MySQL Cluster: LCP files were not removed following an initial system restart. (Bug#28726)
MySQL Cluster: 
        UPDATE IGNORE statements involving the
        primary keys of multiple tables could result in data corruption.
       (Bug#28719)
MySQL Cluster: 
        A race condition could result when nonmaster nodes (in addition
        to the master node) tried to update active status due to a local
        checkpoint (that is, between NODE_FAILREP and
        COPY_GCIREQ events). Now only the master
        updates the active status.
       (Bug#28717)
MySQL Cluster: A fast global checkpoint under high load with high usage of the redo buffer caused data nodes to fail. (Bug#28653)
MySQL Cluster: 
        The management client's response to START BACKUP
        WAIT COMPLETED did not include the backup ID.
       (Bug#27640)
Cluster Replication: Replication: 
        When replicating MyISAM or
        InnoDB tables to a MySQL Cluster, it was not
        possible to determine exactly what had been applied following a
        shutdown of the slave cluster or mysqld
        process.
       (Bug#26783)
Replication: 
        DROP USER statements that named
        multiple users, only some of which could be dropped, were
        replicated incorrectly.
       (Bug#29030)
Replication: Using events in replication could cause the slave to crash. (Bug#28953)
Replication: 
        It was possible to set SQL_SLAVE_SKIP_COUNTER
        such that the slave would jump into the middle of an event
        group.
       (Bug#28618)
See also Bug#12691.
Replication: 
        The result of executing of a prepared statement created with
        PREPARE s FROM "SELECT 1 LIMIT ?" was not
        replicated correctly.
       (Bug#28464)
Replication: Recreating a view that already exists on the master would cause a replicating slave to terminate replication with a 'different error message on slave and master' error. (Bug#28244)
Replication: Binary logging of prepared statements could produce syntactically incorrect queries in the binary log, replacing some parameters with variable names rather than variable values. This could lead to incorrect results on replication slaves. (Bug#26842, Bug#12826)
Replication: 
        Connections from one mysqld server to another
        failed on Mac OS X, affecting replication and
        FEDERATED tables.
       (Bug#26664)
See also Bug#29083.
Replication: When using transactions and replication, shutting down the master in the middle of a transaction would cause all slaves to stop replicating. (Bug#22725)
Replication: 
        Using CREATE TABLE LIKE ... would raise an
        assertion when replicated to a slave.
       (Bug#18950)
Disk Data: 
        When loading data into a cluster following a version upgrade,
        the data nodes could forcibly shut down due to page and buffer
        management failures (that is, ndbrequire
        failures in PGMAN).
       (Bug#28525)
Disk Data: 
        Repeated INSERT and
        DELETE operations on a Disk Data
        table having one or more large
        VARCHAR columns could cause data
        nodes to fail.
       (Bug#20612)
Cluster API: 
        The timeout set using the MGM API
        ndb_mgm_set_timeout() function was
        incorrectly interpreted as seconds rather than as milliseconds.
       (Bug#29063)
Cluster API: 
        An invalid error code could be set on transaction objects by
        BLOB handling code.
       (Bug#28724)
        The TRUNCATE TABLE statement was
        handled differently by the server when row-based logging was in
        effect, even though the binlogging format in effect does not
        effect the fact that TRUNCATE
        TABLE is always logged as a statement.
       (Bug#29130)
        If one of the queries in a UNION
        used the SQL_CACHE option and another query
        in the UNION contained a
        nondeterministic function, the result was still cached. For
        example, this query was incorrectly cached:
SELECT NOW() FROM t1 UNION SELECT SQL_CACHE 1 FROM t1;
Long path names for internal temporary tables could cause stack overflows. (Bug#29015)
        Using an INTEGER column from a
        table to ROUND() a number
        produced different results than using a constant with the same
        value as the INTEGER column.
       (Bug#28980)
        If a program binds a given number of parameters to a prepared
        statement handle and then somehow changes
        stmt->param_count to a different number,
        mysql_stmt_execute() could crash
        the client or server.
       (Bug#28934)
Queries using UDFs or stored functions were cached. (Bug#28921)
        INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE could under
        some circumstances silently update rows when it should not have.
       (Bug#28904)
        Queries that used UUID() were
        incorrectly allowed into the query cache. (This should not
        happen because UUID() is
        nondeterministic.)
       (Bug#28897)
        Using a VIEW created with a nonexisting
        DEFINER could lead to incorrect results under
        some circumstances.
       (Bug#28895)
        For InnoDB tables that use the
        utf8 character set, incorrect results could
        occur for DML statements such as
        DELETE or
        UPDATE that use an index on
        character-based columns.
       (Bug#28878)
See also Bug#29449, Bug#30485, Bug#31395.
This regression was introduced by Bug#13195.
        Non-utf8 characters could get mangled when
        stored in CSV tables.
       (Bug#28862)
        On Windows, USE_TLS was not defined for
        mysqlclient.lib.
       (Bug#28860)
        In MySQL 5.1.15, a new error code
        ER_DUP_ENTRY_WITH_KEY_NAME
        (1582) was introduced to replace
        ER_DUP_ENTRY (1062) so that the
        key name could be provided instead of the key number. This was
        unnecessary, so ER_DUP_ENTRY is
        used again and the key name is printed. The incompatibility
        introduced in 5.1.15 no longer applies.
       (Bug#28842)
        A subquery with ORDER BY and LIMIT
        1 could cause a server crash.
       (Bug#28811)
        Running SHOW TABLE STATUS while
        performing a high number of inserts on partitioned tables with a
        great many partitions could cause the server to crash.
       (Bug#28806)
        Using BETWEEN with nonindexed date
        columns and short formats of the date string could return
        incorrect results.
       (Bug#28778)
        Selecting GEOMETRY columns in a
        UNION caused a server crash.
       (Bug#28763)
        When constructing the path to the original
        .frm file, ALTER ..
        RENAME was unnecessarily (and incorrectly) lowercasing
        the entire path when not on a case-insensitive file system,
        causing the statement to fail.
       (Bug#28754)
        The binlog_format system
        variable value was empty if the server was started with binary
        logging disabled. Now it is set to MIXED.
       (Bug#28752)
        Searches on indexed and nonindexed
        ENUM columns could return
        different results for empty strings.
       (Bug#28729)
        Executing EXPLAIN
        EXTENDED on a query using a derived table over a
        grouping subselect could lead to a server crash. This occurred
        only when materialization of the derived tables required
        creation of an auxiliary temporary table, an example being when
        a grouping operation was carried out with usage of a temporary
        table.
       (Bug#28728)
        The result of evaluation for a view's CHECK
        OPTION option over an updated record and records of
        merged tables was arbitrary and dependant on the order of
        records in the merged tables during the execution of the
        SELECT statement.
       (Bug#28716)
The “manager thread” of the LinuxThreads implementation was unintentionally started before mysqld had dropped privileges (to run as an unprivileged user). This caused signaling between threads in mysqld to fail when the privileges were finally dropped. (Bug#28690)
        Setting an interval of EVERY 0 SECOND for a
        scheduled event caused the server to crash.
       (Bug#28666)
        For debug builds, ALTER TABLE
        could trigger an assertion failure due to occurrence of a
        deadlock when committing changes.
       (Bug#28652)
        Attempting to create an index on a
        BIT column failed after modifying
        the column.
       (Bug#28631)
        Conversion of U+00A5 YEN SIGN and U+203E OVERLINE from
        ucs2 to ujis produced
        incorrect results.
       (Bug#28600)
        Killing from one connection a long-running EXPLAIN
        QUERY started from another connection caused
        mysqld to crash.
       (Bug#28598)
        SHOW GLOBAL
        VARIABLES repeated some variable names.
       (Bug#28580)
        When one thread attempts to lock two (or more) tables and
        another thread executes a statement that aborts these locks
        (such as REPAIR TABLE,
        OPTIMIZE TABLE, or
        CHECK TABLE), the thread might
        get a table object with an incorrect lock type in the table
        cache. The result is table corruption or a server crash.
       (Bug#28574)
        Outer join queries with ON conditions over
        constant outer tables did not return
        NULL-complemented rows when conditions were
        evaluated to FALSE.
       (Bug#28571)
        An update on a multiple-table view with the CHECK
        OPTION clause and a subquery in the
        WHERE condition could cause an assertion
        failure.
       (Bug#28561)
        Calling the UpdateXML() function
        using invalid XPath syntax caused memory corruption possibly
        leading to a crash of the server.
       (Bug#28558)
        PURGE MASTER LOGS BEFORE
        ( caused a server
        crash. Subqueries are forbidden in the subquery)BEFORE
        clause now.
       (Bug#28553)
mysqldump calculated the required memory for a hex-blob string incorrectly causing a buffer overrun. This in turn caused mysqldump to crash silently and produce incomplete output. (Bug#28522)
When upgrading from MySQL 5.1.17 to 5.1.18, mysql_upgrade and mysql_fix_privilege_tables did not upgrade the system tables relating to the Event Scheduler correctly. (Bug#28521)
        Passing a DECIMAL value as a
        parameter of a statement prepared with
        PREPARE resulted in an error.
       (Bug#28509)
        mysql_affected_rows() could
        return an incorrect result for
        INSERT ...
        ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE if the
        CLIENT_FOUND_ROWS flag was set.
       (Bug#28505)
A query that grouped by the result of an expression returned a different result when the expression was assigned to a user variable. (Bug#28494)
        Subselects returning LONG values in MySQL
        versions later than 5.0.24a returned LONGLONG
        prior to this. The previous behavior was restored.
       (Bug#28492)
This regression was introduced by Bug#19714.
        Performing ALTER TABLE ... ADD PARTITION or
        ALTER TABLE DROP PARTITION could result in
        inconsistent data, or cause the server to crash, if done
        concurrently with other accesses to the table.
       (Bug#28477, Bug#28488)
        Forcing the use of an index on a
        SELECT query when the index had
        been disabled would raise an error without running the query.
        The query now executes, with a warning generated noting that the
        use of a disabled index has been ignored.
       (Bug#28476)
        The query SELECT '2007-01-01' + INTERVAL
         caused
        mysqld to fail.
       (Bug#28450)column_name DAY FROM
        table_name
        A server crash could happen under rare conditions such that a
        temporary table outgrew heap memory reserved for it and the
        remaining disk space was not big enough to store the table as a
        MyISAM table.
       (Bug#28449)
        Using ALTER TABLE to move columns
        resulted only in the columns being renamed. The table contents
        were not changed.
       (Bug#28427)
        The test case for mysqldump failed with
        bin-log disabled.
       (Bug#28372)
        Attempting to LOAD_FILE from an empty floppy
        drive under Windows, caused the server to hang. For example, if
        you opened a connection to the server and then issued the
        command SELECT LOAD_FILE('a:test');, with no
        floppy in the drive, the server was inaccessible until the modal
        pop-up dialog box was dismissed.
       (Bug#28366)
mysqltest used a too-large stack size on PPC/Debian Linux, causing thread-creation failure for tests that use many threads. (Bug#28333)
        When using a MEMORY table on Mac OS X,
        dropping a table and than creating a table with the same name
        could cause the information of the deleted table to remain
        accessible, leading to index errors.
       (Bug#28309)
        The IS_UPDATABLE column in the
        INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS table was
        not always set correctly.
       (Bug#28266)
        For CAST() of a
        NULL value with type
        DECIMAL, the return value was
        incorrectly initialized, producing a runtime error for binaries
        built using Visual C++ 2005.
       (Bug#28250)
        When the query cache was fully used, issuing RENAME
        DATABASE or RENAME SCHEMA could
        cause the server to hang, with 100% CPU usage.
       (Bug#28211)
        The Bytes_received and
        Bytes_sent status variables
        could hold only 32-bit values (not 64-bit values) on some
        platforms.
       (Bug#28149)
Some valid identifiers were not parsed correctly. (Bug#28127)
        Storing a large number into a
        FLOAT or
        DOUBLE column with a fixed length
        could result in incorrect truncation of the number if the
        column's length was greater than 31.
       (Bug#28121)
        Sending debugging information from a dump of the Event Scheduler
        to COM_DEBUG could cause the server to crash.
       (Bug#28075)
        The PARTITION_COMMENT column of the
        INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARTITIONS table
        had the wrong default value.
       (Bug#28007)
        DECIMAL values beginning with
        nine 9 digits could be incorrectly rounded.
       (Bug#27984)
        For attempts to open a nonexistent table, the server should
        report ER_NO_SUCH_TABLE but
        sometimes reported
        ER_TABLE_NOT_LOCKED.
       (Bug#27907)
        Following an invalid call to
        UpdateXML(), calling the function
        again (even if valid) crashed the server.
       (Bug#27898)
A stored program that uses a variable name containing multibyte characters could fail to execute. (Bug#27876)
        The server made strong assumptions about the structure of the
        general_log and
        slow_log log tables: It supported only the
        table structure defined in the mysql database
        creation scripts. The server also allowed limited
        ALTER TABLE operations on the log
        tables, but adding an AUTO_INCREMENT column
        did not properly initialize the column, and subsequent inserts
        into the table could fail to generate correct sequence numbers.
        Now an ALTER TABLE statement that
        adds an AUTO_INCREMENT column populates the
        column correctly. In addition, when the server writes a log
        table row, it will set columns not present in the original table
        structure to their default values.
       (Bug#27857)
        ON conditions from JOIN
        expressions were ignored when checking the CHECK
        OPTION clause while updating a multiple-table view
        that included such a clause.
       (Bug#27827)
        On some systems, udf_example.c returned an
        incorrect result length. Also on some systems,
        mysql-test-run.pl could not find the shared
        object built from udf_example.c.
       (Bug#27741)
The modification of a table by a partially completed multi-column update was not recorded in the binlog, rather than being marked by an event and a corresponding error code. (Bug#27716)
        SHOW ENGINES and queries on
        INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ENGINES did not
        use the same values for representing the same storage engine
        states.
       (Bug#27684)
        HASH indexes on
        VARCHAR columns with binary
        collations did not ignore trailing spaces from strings before
        comparisons. This could result in duplicate records being
        successfully inserted into a MEMORY table
        with unique key constraints. A consequence was that internal
        MEMORY tables used for GROUP
        BY calculation contained duplicate rows that resulted
        in duplicate-key errors when converting those temporary tables
        to MyISAM, and that error was incorrectly
        reported as a table is full error.
       (Bug#27643)
An error occurred trying to connect to mysqld-debug.exe. (Bug#27597)
        A stack overrun could occur when storing
        DATETIME values using repeated
        prepared statements.
       (Bug#27592)
If a stored function or trigger was killed, it aborted but no error was thrown, allowing the calling statement to continue without noticing the problem. This could lead to incorrect results. (Bug#27563)
        When ALTER TABLE was used to add
        a new DATE column with no
        explicit default value, '0000-00-00' was used
        as the default even if the SQL mode included the
        NO_ZERO_DATE mode to prohibit
        that value. A similar problem occurred for
        DATETIME columns.
       (Bug#27507)
        ALTER TABLE ... ENABLE KEYS could cause
        mysqld to crash when executed on a table
        containing on a MyISAM table containing
        billions of rows.
       (Bug#27029)
        Binary content 0x00 in a
        BLOB column sometimes became
        0x5C 0x00 following a dump and reload, which
        could cause problems with data using multi-byte character sets
        such as GBK (Chinese). This was due to a
        problem with SELECT INTO OUTFILE whereby
        LOAD DATA later incorrectly
        interpreted 0x5C as the second byte of a
        multi-byte sequence rather than as the
        SOLIDUS (“\”) character, used by
        MySQL as the escape character.
       (Bug#26711)
        The server crashed when attempting to open a table having a
        #mysql50# prefix in the database or table
        name. The server now will not open such tables. (This prefix is
        reserved by mysql_upgrade for accessing 5.0
        tables that have names not yet encoded for 5.1.)
       (Bug#26402)
        A FLUSH TABLES WITH READ
        LOCK statement followed by a
        FLUSH LOGS
        statement caused a deadlock if the general log or the slow query
        log was enabled.
       (Bug#26380)
        The query SELECT /*2*/ user, host, db, info FROM
        INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PROCESSLIST WHERE (command!='Daemon' ||
        user='event_scheduler') AND (info IS NULL OR info NOT LIKE
        '%processlist%') ORDER BY INFO yielded inconsistent
        results.
       (Bug#26338)
        For a given user variable @v, the statements
        SELECT @v and CREATE TABLE ... AS
        SELECT @v did not return the same data type.
       (Bug#26277)
        Statements within triggers ignored the value of the
        low_priority_updates system
        variable.
       (Bug#26162)
See also Bug#29963.
        The embedded server library displayed error messages at startup
        if the mysql.plugin table was not present.
        This no longer occurs.
       (Bug#25800)
        On Windows, an application that called
        mysql_thread_init() but forgot
        to call mysql_thread_end() would
        get this error: Error in
        my_thread_global_end().
       (Bug#25621)
        Embedded /* ... */ comments were handled
        incorrectly within the definitions of stored programs and views,
        resulting in malformed definitions (the trailing
        */ was stripped). This also affected binary
        log contents.
       (Bug#25411, Bug#26302)
        Due to a race condition, executing
        FLUSH
        PRIVILEGES in one thread could cause brief table
        unavailability in other threads.
       (Bug#24988)
        In SHOW SLAVE STATUS output,
        Last_Errno and Last_Error
        were not set after master_retry_count errors
        had occurred. To provide additional information, the statement
        now displays four additional columns:
      
            Last_IO_Errno: The number of the last
            error that caused the I/O thread to stop
          
            Last_IO_Error: A description of the last
            error that caused the I/O thread to stop
          
            Last_SQL_Errno: The number of the last
            error that caused the SQL thread to stop
          
            Last_SQL_Error: A description of the last
            error that caused the SQL thread to stop
          
        Also, Last_Errno and
        Last_Error now are aliases for
        Last_SQL_Errno and
        Last_SQL_Error.
       (Bug#24954)
        A too-long shared-memory-base-name value
        could cause a buffer overflow and crash the server or clients.
       (Bug#24924)
When mysqld was run as a Windows service, shared memory objects were not created in the global namespace and could not be used by clients to connect. (Bug#24731)
        On some Linux distributions where LinuxThreads and NPTL
        glibc versions both are available, statically
        built binaries can crash because the linker defaults to
        LinuxThreads when linking statically, but calls to external
        libraries (such as libnss) are resolved to
        NPTL versions. This cannot be worked around in the code, so
        instead if a crash occurs on such a binary/OS combination, print
        an error message that provides advice about how to fix the
        problem.
       (Bug#24611)
        A number of SHOW statements
        caused mysqld to crash on recent versions of
        Solaris. This issue is believed to be present only in MySQL
        5.1.12 and later.
       (Bug#23810)
        The server deducted some bytes from the
        key_cache_block_size option
        value and reduced it to the next lower 512 byte boundary. The
        resulting block size was not a power of two. Setting the
        key_cache_block_size system
        variable to a value that is not a power of two resulted in
        MyISAM table corruption.
       (Bug#23068, Bug#28478, Bug#25853)
        Conversion errors could occur when constructing the condition
        for an IN predicate. The predicate was
        treated as if the affected column contains
        NULL, but if the IN
        predicate is inside NOT, incorrect results
        could be returned.
       (Bug#22855)
        Linux binaries were unable to dump core after executing a
        setuid() call.
       (Bug#21723)
Stack overflow caused server crashes. (Bug#21476)
        The server was ignoring the return value of the
        parse() function for full-text parser
        plugins.
       (Bug#18839)
Granting access privileges to an individual table where the database or table name contained an underscore would fail. (Bug#18660)
        The -lmtmalloc library was removed from the
        output of mysql_config on Solaris, as it
        caused problems when building DBD::mysql (and
        possibly other applications) on that platform that tried to use
        dlopen() to access the client library.
       (Bug#18322)
The check-cpu script failed to detect AMD64 Turion processors correctly. (Bug#17707)
        When using mysqlbinlog with
        --read-from-remote-server to load the data
        direct from a remote MySQL server would cause a core dump when
        dumping certain binary log events.
       (Bug#17654)
        Trying to shut down the server following a failed
        LOAD DATA
        INFILE caused mysqld to crash.
       (Bug#17233)
The omission of leading zeros in dates could lead to erroneous results when these were compared with the output of certain date and time functions. (Bug#16377)
Using up-arrow for command-line recall in mysql could cause a segmentation fault. (Bug#10218)
        The result for CAST() when
        casting a value to UNSIGNED was limited to
        the maximum signed BIGINT value
        (9223372036854775808), rather than the maximum unsigned value
        (18446744073709551615).
       (Bug#8663)
        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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