# When the relay log gets rotated while the I/O thread # is reading a transaction, the transaction spans on two or more # relay logs. If STOP SLAVE occurs while the SQL thread is # executing a part of the transaction in the non-first relay logs, # we test if START SLAVE will resume in the beginning of the # transaction (i.e., step back to the first relay log) # The slave is started with max_binlog_size=16384 bytes, # to force many rotations (approximately 30 rotations) source include/have_innodb.inc; source include/master-slave.inc; connection slave; stop slave; connection master; --disable_warnings create table t1 (a int) engine=innodb; --enable_warnings let $1=8000; disable_query_log; begin; while ($1) { # eval means expand $ expressions eval insert into t1 values( $1 ); dec $1; } commit; # This will generate a 500kB master's binlog, # which corresponds to 30 slave's relay logs. enable_query_log; save_master_pos; connection slave; reset slave; start slave; # We wait 1 sec for the SQL thread to be somewhere in # the middle of the transaction, hopefully not in # the first relay log, and hopefully before the COMMIT. # Usually it stops when the SQL thread is around the 15th relay log. # We cannot use MASTER_POS_WAIT() as master's position # increases only when the slave executes the COMMIT. # Note that except when using Valgrind, 1 second is enough for the I/O slave # thread to fetch the whole master's binlog. sleep 1; stop slave; # We suppose the SQL thread stopped before COMMIT. # If so the transaction was rolled back # and the table is now empty. # Now restart start slave; # And see if the table contains '8000' # which proves that the transaction restarted at # the right place. # We must wait for the transaction to commit before # reading, MASTER_POS_WAIT() will do it for sure # (the only statement with position>=3000 is COMMIT). select master_pos_wait('master-bin.001',3000)>=0; select max(a) from t1; --replace_column 1 # 8 # 9 # 23 # 33 # --replace_result $MASTER_MYPORT MASTER_MYPORT show slave status; connection master; # The following DROP is a very important cleaning task: # imagine the next test is run with --skip-innodb: it will do # DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1; but this will delete the frm and leave # some data in the InnoDB datafile (because at that time mysqld # does not know about InnoDB : --skip-innodb). So if later in the # test suite a test wants to create an InnoDB table called t1, it # will fail with # InnoDB: Error: table t1 already exists in InnoDB internal # InnoDB: data dictionary. Have you deleted the .frm file etc drop table t1; # wait until this drop is executed on slave save_master_pos; connection slave; sync_with_master; # End of 4.1 tests