The follwing statements
SELECT GET_LOCK('lock1',10);
SELECT IS_FREE_LOCK('lock1');
SELECT IS_USED_LOCK('lock1');
SELECT RELEASE_LOCK('lock1');
are now classified as QUERY_TYPE_READ|QUERY_TYPE_WRITE. That will
make cooperative locking work if these functions are used inside
non-read-only transactions and outside transanctions.
If there are several 'users' lines in a rule file, for a particular
user, the rules each matching line will be checked independently
until a rule match is found.
That is, the rules of each 'users' line are treated in an OR-fashion
with respect to each other.
The list of users that is used for authentication shoudl only consist of
users that do not use an explicit authentication plugin. This way
authentication fails before any connections to the backend servers are
done.
If a user has an empty service name, use "mysql" as default.
Authentication data was only updated inside get_pam_user_services() if no service
was found. It was possible that the PAM service changed but the old service
would be used for authenticating, causing a false negative.
Now, the auth data is updated outside the function if authentication fails for
any reason. The new service data is compared to the old and if equal, password
check is not attempted again. This gives a false negative only if user password
has changed after the previous attempt.
Also, fixed some comments.
Length-encoded strings should be consumed with the correct
functions. Doing pointer arithmetic with the same pointer as a parameter
appears to fail only on CentOS 6 whereas on newer systems it performs as
expected.
Now that the connector resides in the same repository, it can be built as
a library for the tests. Installing the development package is one option
but it would unnecessarily complicate the build process.
As the function documentation states, the expected value must be read
again after a call to atomic_cas_ptr. This is due to the fact that if the
values are not the same, the __atomic builtin version will store the
current value into the expected value.
The new value given to the atomic_cas_ptr function was the address of the
new value, not the new value itself. The behavior of the atomic_cas_ptr is
what caused the test to pass on systeems that implement the __atomic
builtins. On older systems that do not implement it, the expected value
was never modified which caused the test to hang.