| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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mistake in retrospect
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comaptibility
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configs, fix an issue with singleton discovery and start work on singleton delivery
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continues. We need to examine any logger statements that contain 'stack:' as a result of reporting this issue and find and fix the original problem - which is that set_pconfig is being called without a valid $uid. I'm worried that since we will now continue on without throwing a PHP error that nobody will ever notice or find the problem that is causing this.
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Built on top of xconfig.
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Fixed wrong Doxygen syntax and add some of the available FIXME to
Doxygen documentation.
Updated Doxygen configuration to add also all capital letter tags.
Adding some more Doxygen documentation.
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There were 11 main types of changes:
- UPDATE's and DELETE's sometimes had LIMIT 1 at the end of them. This is not only non-compliant but
it would certainly not do what whoever wrote it thought it would. It is likely this mistake was just
copied from Friendica. All of these instances, the LIMIT 1 was simply removed.
- Bitwise operations (and even some non-zero int checks) erroneously rely on MySQL implicit
integer-boolean conversion in the WHERE clauses. This is non-compliant (and bad programming practice
to boot). Proper explicit boolean conversions were added. New queries should use proper conventions.
- MySQL has a different operator for bitwise XOR than postgres. Rather than add yet another dba_
func, I converted them to "& ~" ("AND NOT") when turning off, and "|" ("OR") when turning on. There
were no true toggles (XOR). New queries should refrain from using XOR when not necessary.
- There are several fields which the schema has marked as NOT NULL, but the inserts don't specify
them. The reason this works is because mysql totally ignores the constraint and adds an empty text
default automatically. Again, non-compliant, obviously. In these cases a default of empty text was
added.
- Several statements rely on a non-standard MySQL feature
(http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/group-by-handling.html). These queries can all be rewritten
to be standards compliant. Interestingly enough, the newly rewritten standards compliant queries run
a zillion times faster, even on MySQL.
- A couple of function/operator name translations were needed (RAND/RANDOM, GROUP_CONCAT/STRING_AGG,
UTC_NOW, REGEXP/~, ^/#) -- assist functions added in the dba_
- INTERVALs: postgres requires quotes around the value, mysql requires that there are not quotes
around the value -- assist functions added in the dba_
- NULL_DATE's -- Postgres does not allow the invalid date '0000-00-00 00:00:00' (there is no such
thing as year 0 or month 0 or day 0). We use '0001-01-01 00:00:00' for postgres. Conversions are
handled in Zot/item packets automagically by quoting all dates with dbescdate().
- char(##) specifications in the schema creates fields with blank spaces that aren't trimmed in the
code. MySQL apparently treats char(##) as varchar(##), again, non-compliant. Since postgres works
better with text fields anyway, this ball of bugs was simply side-stepped by using 'text' datatype
for all text fields in the postgres schema. varchar was used in a couple of places where it actually
seemed appropriate (size constraint), but without rigorously vetting that all of the PHP code
actually validates data, new bugs might come out from under the rug.
- postgres doesn't store nul bytes and a few other non-printables in text fields, even when quoted.
bytea fields were used when storing binary data (photo.data, attach.data). A new dbescbin() function
was added to handle this transparently.
- postgres does not support LIMIT #,# syntax. All databases support LIMIT # OFFSET # syntax.
Statements were updated to be standard.
These changes require corresponding changes in the coding standards. Please review those before
adding any code going forward.
Still on my TODO list:
- remove quotes from non-reserved identifiers and make reserved identifiers use dba func for quoting
- Rewrite search queries for better results (both MySQL and Postgres)
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if we need it - we're getting literally hundreds of thousands of these.
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I hope my guesses are not completely wrong, anyway please take look
not that I tell complete bullshit.
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failed emails) interferes with install. So what else can we do about f*cked databases which open successfully but don't actually read/write data? It would of course be nice if we didn't have to deal with them, but apparently we do. For now we're not doing anything until I can figure out how to take the site offline when it happens without affecting install.
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part of the normal import_xchan sequence - otherwise we get two for every change. Create it normally if we are called with a profile_update message and don't go through the whole import_xchan thing.
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DB lookups - still need to update the xconfig but want to give the others a good workout as it has been one of those days.
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updates
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optmisations
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Conflicts:
include/config.php
update.php
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changed config.php to use REPLACE instead of INSERT,
this removes one db hit.
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permissions, this will make a nasty commit)
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