Zardosht,
I think we found out the problem. In ha_partition.cc, in the function ha_partition::handle_ordered_index_scan, this code was added: case partition_index_last: /* MyISAM engine can fail if we call index_last() when indexes disabled that happens if the table is empty. Here we use file->stats.records instead of file->records() because file->records() is supposed to return an EXACT count, and it can be possibly slow. We don't need an exact number, an approximate one- from the last ::info() call - is sufficient. */ if (file->stats.records == 0) { error= HA_ERR_END_OF_FILE; break;
We always thought that stats.records was meant to be an estimate, and that an estimate of 0 was ok even if the table was non-empty. We were reporting that stats.records was 0 even though the table was non-empty. Is this assumption wrong?
The assumption is not generally wrong, however there are two kinds of storage engines in this respect. The first kind promises to provide exact count of rows, MyISAM is an example. The second kind doesn't promise exact counts, for instance InnoDB. The optimizer checks this, and if it can rely on the exact count, then it optimizes count(*) whenever possible (for count(*) queries without GROUP BY). The relevant code is in opt_sum.cc. The function opt_sum_query performs this test: ... if (!(tl->table->file->ha_table_flags() & HA_STATS_RECORDS_IS_EXACT) || tl->schema_table) ... The question is what is your engine's implementation of your_handler_class::ha_table_flags()? If you "lie" to the optimizer that the count is exact, but then treat is an approximate value, you'll get the above wrong result for sure. If this is not the problem, then please post a reproducible example. Timour
-Zardosht
On Wed, Dec 8, 2010 at 2:42 PM, Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org> wrote:
Zardosht Kasheff<zardosht@gmail.com> writes:
We have been working on testing our storage engine, TokuDB, against MariaDB 5.2.3, and we have encountered a problem with partitioning that does not exist on MySQL 5.1, MySQL 5.5, and MariaDB 5.1.50. This problem also does not exist with any other storage engine that we have tried. It ONLY exists with TokuDB and MariaDB 5.2.
Here is what the test is doing:
1. Create a table with some partitions 2. update the table 3. run select max(f_int1) 4. run select * 5. run select max(f_int1) again.
The problem is that the query results for 3 are incorrect, even though the query results for 4 and 5 are correct. MySQL 5.1, MySQL 5.5, and MariaDB 5.1 produce the correct results for 3.
What makes this even stranger is that the query results for 4 and 5 are always correct.
It's hard to say without any code. Can you post link to launchpad tree or source tarball with which to reproduce?
From the information given, I would suggest to run the test with --valgrind, in case the problem is some uninitialised memory being referenced; sometimes Valgrind can help catch this.
- Kristian.
_______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~maria-developers Post to : maria-developers@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~maria-developers More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp