This section is a list of the known issues in recent versions of MySQL.
For information about platform-specific issues, see the installation and porting instructions in Section 2.13, “Operating System-Specific Notes”, and Appendix E, Porting to Other Systems.
The following problems are known and fixing them is a high priority:
If you compare a NULL
value to a subquery
using ALL/ANY/SOME
and the subquery
returns an empty result, the comparison might evaluate to
the non-standard result of NULL
rather
than to TRUE
or FALSE
.
This will be fixed in MySQL 5.1.
Subquery optimization for IN
is not as
effective as for =
.
Even if you use lower_case_table_names=2
(which enables MySQL to remember the case used for databases
and table names), MySQL does not remember the case used for
database names for the function
DATABASE()
or within the various logs (on
case-insensitive systems).
Dropping a FOREIGN KEY
constraint doesn't
work in replication because the constraint may have another
name on the slave.
REPLACE
(and LOAD DATA
with the REPLACE
option) does not trigger
ON DELETE CASCADE
.
DISTINCT
with ORDER BY
doesn't work inside GROUP_CONCAT()
if you
don't use all and only those columns that are in the
DISTINCT
list.
If one user has a long-running transaction and another user
drops a table that is updated in the transaction, there is
small chance that the binary log may contain the
DROP TABLE
command before the table is
used in the transaction itself. We plan to fix this by
having the DROP TABLE
command wait until
the table is not being used in any transaction.
When inserting a big integer value (between 263 and 264–1) into a decimal or string column, it is inserted as a negative value because the number is evaluated in a signed integer context.
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
does not
block COMMIT
if the server is running
without binary logging, which may cause a problem (of
consistency between tables) when doing a full backup.
ANALYZE TABLE
on a BDB
table may in some cases make the table unusable until you
restart mysqld. If this happens, look for
errors of the following form in the MySQL error file:
001207 22:07:56 bdb: log_flush: LSN past current end-of-log
Don't execute ALTER TABLE
on a
BDB
table on which you are running
multiple-statement transactions until all those transactions
complete. (The transaction might be ignored.)
ANALYZE TABLE
, OPTIMIZE
TABLE
, and REPAIR TABLE
may
cause problems on tables for which you are using
INSERT DELAYED
.
Performing LOCK TABLE ...
and
FLUSH TABLES ...
doesn't guarantee that
there isn't a half-finished transaction in progress on the
table.
BDB
tables are relatively slow to open.
If you have many BDB
tables in a
database, it takes a long time to use the
mysql client on the database if you are
not using the -A
option or if you are
using rehash
. This is especially
noticeable when you have a large table cache.
Replication uses query-level logging: The master writes the executed queries to the binary log. This is a very fast, compact, and efficient logging method that works perfectly in most cases.
It is possible for the data on the master and slave to become different if a query is designed in such a way that the data modification is non-deterministic (generally not a recommended practice, even outside of replication).
For example:
CREATE ... SELECT
or INSERT
... SELECT
statements that insert zero or
NULL
values into an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column.
DELETE
if you are deleting rows from
a table that has foreign keys with ON DELETE
CASCADE
properties.
REPLACE ... SELECT
, INSERT
IGNORE ... SELECT
if you have duplicate key
values in the inserted data.
If and only if the preceding queries
have no ORDER BY
clause guaranteeing a
deterministic order.
For example, for INSERT ... SELECT
with
no ORDER BY
, the
SELECT
may return rows in a different
order (which results in a row having different ranks, hence
getting a different number in the
AUTO_INCREMENT
column), depending on the
choices made by the optimizers on the master and slave.
A query is optimized differently on the master and slave only if:
The table is stored using a different storage engine on
the master than on the slave. (It is possible to use
different storage engines on the master and slave. For
example, you can use InnoDB
on the
master, but MyISAM
on the slave if
the slave has less available disk space.)
MySQL buffer sizes (key_buffer_size
,
and so on) are different on the master and slave.
The master and slave run different MySQL versions, and the optimizer code differs between these versions.
This problem may also affect database restoration using mysqlbinlog|mysql.
The easiest way to avoid this problem is to add an
ORDER BY
clause to the aforementioned
non-deterministic queries to ensure that the rows are always
stored or modified in the same order.
In future MySQL versions, we will automatically add an
ORDER BY
clause when needed.
The following issues are known and will be fixed in due time:
Log filenames are based on the server hostname (if you don't
specify a filename with the startup option). You have to use
options such as
--log-bin=
if you change your hostname to something else. Another
option is to rename the old files to reflect your hostname
change (if these are binary logs, you need to edit the
binary log index file and fix the binlog names there as
well). See Section 5.2.1, “mysqld Command Options”.
old_host_name
-bin
mysqlbinlog does not delete temporary
files left after a LOAD DATA INFILE
command. See Section 8.10, “mysqlbinlog — Utility for Processing Binary Log Files”.
RENAME
doesn't work with
TEMPORARY
tables or tables used in a
MERGE
table.
Due to the way table format (.frm
)
files are stored, you cannot use character 255
(CHAR(255)
) in table names, column names,
or enumerations. This is scheduled to be fixed in version
5.1 when we implement new table definition format files.
When using SET CHARACTER SET
, you can't
use translated characters in database, table, and column
names.
You can't use ‘_
’ or
‘%
’ with
ESCAPE
in LIKE ...
ESCAPE
.
If you have a DECIMAL
column in which the
same number is stored in different formats (for example,
+01.00
, 1.00
,
01.00
), GROUP BY
may
regard each value as a different value.
You cannot build the server in another directory when using MIT-pthreads. Because this requires changes to MIT-pthreads, we are not likely to fix this. See Section 2.9.5, “MIT-pthreads Notes”.
BLOB
and TEXT
values
can't reliably be used in GROUP BY
,
ORDER BY
or DISTINCT
.
Only the first max_sort_length
bytes are
used when comparing BLOB
values in these
cases. The default value of
max_sort_length
is 1024 and can be
changed at server startup time or at runtime.
Numeric calculations are done with BIGINT
or DOUBLE
(both are normally 64 bits
long). Which precision you get depends on the function. The
general rule is that bit functions are performed with
BIGINT
precision, IF
and ELT()
with BIGINT
or DOUBLE
precision, and the rest with
DOUBLE
precision. You should try to avoid
using unsigned long long values if they resolve to be larger
than 63 bits (9223372036854775807) for anything other than
bit fields.
You can have up to 255 ENUM
and
SET
columns in one table.
In MIN()
, MAX()
, and
other aggregate functions, MySQL currently compares
ENUM
and SET
columns
by their string value rather than by the string's relative
position in the set.
mysqld_safe redirects all messages from
mysqld to the mysqld
log. One problem with this is that if you execute
mysqladmin refresh to close and reopen
the log, stdout
and
stderr
are still redirected to the old
log. If you use --log
extensively, you
should edit mysqld_safe to log to
instead of
host_name
.err
so that you can easily reclaim the space for the old log by
deleting it and executing mysqladmin
refresh.
host_name
.log
In an UPDATE
statement, columns are
updated from left to right. If you refer to an updated
column, you get the updated value instead of the original
value. For example, the following statement increments
KEY
by 2
,
not 1
:
mysql> UPDATE tbl_name
SET KEY=KEY+1,KEY=KEY+1;
You can refer to multiple temporary tables in the same query, but you cannot refer to any given temporary table more than once. For example, the following doesn't work:
mysql> SELECT * FROM temp_table, temp_table AS t2;
ERROR 1137: Can't reopen table: 'temp_table'
The optimizer may handle DISTINCT
differently when you are using “hidden” columns
in a join than when you are not. In a join, hidden columns
are counted as part of the result (even if they are not
shown), whereas in normal queries, hidden columns don't
participate in the DISTINCT
comparison.
We will probably change this in the future to never compare
the hidden columns when executing
DISTINCT
.
An example of this is:
SELECT DISTINCT mp3id FROM band_downloads WHERE userid = 9 ORDER BY id DESC;
and
SELECT DISTINCT band_downloads.mp3id FROM band_downloads,band_mp3 WHERE band_downloads.userid = 9 AND band_mp3.id = band_downloads.mp3id ORDER BY band_downloads.id DESC;
In the second case, using MySQL Server 3.23.x, you may get
two identical rows in the result set (because the values in
the hidden id
column may differ).
Note that this happens only for queries where that do not
have the ORDER BY
columns in the result.
If you execute a PROCEDURE
on a query
that returns an empty set, in some cases the
PROCEDURE
does not transform the columns.
Creation of a table of type MERGE
doesn't
check whether the underlying tables are compatible types.
If you use ALTER TABLE
to add a
UNIQUE
index to a table used in a
MERGE
table and then add a normal index
on the MERGE
table, the key order is
different for the tables if there was an old,
non-UNIQUE
key in the table. This is
because ALTER TABLE
puts
UNIQUE
indexes before normal indexes to
be able to detect duplicate keys as early as possible.