We're starting to see a mix between uses of zend_bool and bool.
Replace all usages with the standard bool type everywhere.
Of course, zend_bool is retained as an alias.
debug_zval_dump() currently prints refcount 1 for interned strings
and arrays, which does not really reflect the truth. These values
are not refcounted, so the refcount is misleading. Instead print
an "interned" tag.
Closes GH-6598.
Historically, the _ex variants separated the zval first, if a
conversion was necessary. This distinction no longer makes sense
since PHP 7.
The only difference that was still left is that _ex checked whether
the type is the same first, but the usage of these macros did not
actually distinguish on whether such an inlined check is valuable
or not in a given context.
Also drop the unused convert_to_explicit_type macros.
* mysqli_commit $flags default value is 0, not -1.
* A number of functions cannot actually return null.
* mysqli_poll parameter names were incorrect, as this function
has a different signature from select.
* fetch functions apart from fetch_all can return false on failure.
There doesn't seem to be any compelling reason to implement this
in mysqlnd rather than mysqli. It's just a loop over fetch_into.
This makes the function available under libmysqlclient as well,
and thus fixes bug #79372.
This fixes two related issues:
1. When a PS with cursor is used in store_result/get_result,
perform a COM_FETCH with maximum number of rows rather than
silently switching to an unbuffered result set (in the case of
store_result) or erroring (in the case of get_result).
In the future, we might want to make get_result unbuffered for
PS with cursors, as using cursors with buffered result sets
doesn't really make sense. Unlike store_result, get_result
isn't very explicit about what kind of result set is desired.
2. If the client did not request a cursor, but the server reports
that a cursor exists, ignore this and treat the PS as if it
has no cursor (i.e. to not use COM_FETCH). It appears to be a
server side bug that a cursor used inside an SP will be reported
to the client, even though the client cannot use the cursor.
Fixes bug #64638, bug #72862, bug #77935.
Closes GH-6518.
This is a larger overhaul of the mysqlnd result set infrastructure:
* Drop support for two different types of buffered results sets
("c" and "zval"). Possibly these made sense at some earlier
time, but now (with minor adjustments) one option is strictly
worse than the other. Buffered result sets already buffer the
full row packets, from which zvals can be decoded. The "zval"
style additionally also buffered the decoded zvals. As result
sets, even buffered ones, are generally only traversed once,
this just ends up wasting memory. Now, a potentially useful
variation here would be to buffer the decoded zvals instead of
the row packets, but that's not what the code was doing.
* To make it really strictly better, pre-allocate the zval row
buffer and reuse it for all rows. Previously the "c" style always
allocated a new buffer for each row.
* The fetch_row API now provides a populated zval[]. The task of
populating an array is deferred to fetch_row_into, which also
avoids duplicating this code in multiple places. The fetch_row_c
API is also implemented on top of fetch_row now, rather than
duplicating large parts of the code.
* The row fetching code for prepared statements and normal result
sets has been mostly merged. These already used the same
infrastructure, but prepared statements used separate row
fetching functions that were nearly the same as the normal ones.
This requires passing the stmt into the result set, rather than
just a flag. The only part that remains separate is reading of
unbuffered results in the presence of PS cursors.
Retain the field, but always populate it with zero. This was
already the case for PS without length updating.
max_length has nothing lost in the field metadata -- it is a
property of the specific result set, and requires scanning the
whole result set to compute. PHP itself never uses max_length
with mysqlnd, it is only exposed in the raw mysqli API.
Keeping it for just that purpose is not worthwhile given the costs
involved. People who actually need this for some reason can easily
calculate it themselves, while making it obvious that the
calculation requires a full result set scan.
In MariaDB-10.4.3 EXPIRE passwords where supported for
MariaDB. This only behaves like MySQL when the system
variable disconnect_on_expired_passwords=1.
MariaDB if there was no password it could not be considered
expired. So the test is adjusted to use actual passwords.
(MariaDB commit a94b20a8e0d9e64eeaabdaaa7a3e03fcdb8a686e)
The error codes produced my MariaDB are different
however still conforming to the SQL specification.
Closes GH-6480.
MariaDB extended the default decimal field to 39 characters
instead of MySQL's 31 characters.
This small change allows the test to pass on MySQL and MariaDB.
Closes GH-6484.
MySQL removed RENAME DATABASE in 18300001c1dbbfddf9a0adcbaeea68956102bdd0
(Sept 2007, 5.1.23). As this briefest existance is very insignificant lets remove it.
It also breaks when testing against MariaDB.
As the alternate path in this test covers all supported MySQL and MariaDB
versions and a signifant portion of unsupported versions lets keep it simple.
Closes GH-6459.
Reindent ext/mysqli tests on PHP-7.4, so they match with the
indentation on PHP-8.0. Otherwise merging test changes across
branches is very unpleasant.
By simply dropping the additional checks, in line with the general
guideline of trusting the output of config scripts (this should
be migrated to pkg-config though).
Also drop the code for manually adding -z if mysql_config does not
-- that's not our problem.
We cannot simply switch to use_result here, because the fetch_row
methods in get_result mode and in use_result/store_result mode
are different: In one case it accepts a statement, in the other
a return value zval. Thus, doing a switch to use_result results
in a segfault when trying to fetch a row.
Actually supporting get_result with cursors would require adding
cursor support in mysqlnd_result, not just mysqlnd_ps. That would
be a significant amount of effort and, given the age of the issue,
does not appear to be particularly likely to happen soon.
As such, we simply generate an error when using get_result()
with cursors, which is much better than causing a segfault.
Instead, parameter binding needs to be used.
Report errors autocommit, commit, rollback and mysqli_stmt_attr_set.
Additionally, copy the error from conn to stmt when preparing fails,
so these errors are also handled by mysqli_stmt_prepare.
Closes GH-6157.
Make sure deadlock errors are properly propagated and reports in
a number of places in mysqli and PDO MySQL.
This also fixes a memory and a segfault that can occur under these
conditions.
As we went with $statement rather than $stmts in other places,
let's also use it in mysqli. The discrepancy with mysqli_stmt
is a bit unfortunate, but we can't be consistent with *both*.
Closes GH-6330.