This is a bugfix release, fixing recently discovered bugs in the previous MySQL Cluster NDB 6.2 release.
Obtaining MySQL Cluster NDB 6.2. You can download the latest MySQL Cluster NDB 6.2 source code and binaries for supported platforms from http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/select.php?id=14.
This release incorporates all bugfixes and changes made in previous MySQL Cluster NDB 6.2 releases, as well as all bugfixes and feature changes which were added in mainline MySQL 5.1 through MySQL 5.1.23 (see Section C.1.29, “Changes in MySQL 5.1.23 (29 January 2008)”).
Please refer to our bug database at http://bugs.mysql.com/ for more details about the individual bugs fixed in this version.
Functionality added or changed:
Beginning with this version, MySQL Cluster NDB
6.3.x releases once again include the
InnoDB storage engine. In order to enable
InnoDB, you must configure the build using
--with-innodb.
Bugs fixed:
Upgrades of a cluster using while a
DataMemory setting in excess of 16 GB caused
data nodes to fail.
(Bug#34378)
Performing many SQL statements on
NDB tables while in
autocommit mode caused a memory
leak in mysqld.
(Bug#34275)
In certain rare circumstances, a race condition could occur between an aborted insert and a delete leading a data node crash. (Bug#34260)
Multi-table updates using ordered indexes during handling of node failures could cause other data nodes to fail. (Bug#34216)
When configured with NDB support,
MySQL failed to compile using gcc 4.3 on
64bit FreeBSD systems.
(Bug#34169)
The failure of a DDL statement could sometimes lead to node failures when attempting to execute subsequent DDL statements. (Bug#34160)
Extremely long SELECT statements
(where the text of the statement was in excess of 50000
characters) against NDB tables
returned empty results.
(Bug#34107)
Statements executing multiple inserts performed poorly on
NDB tables having
AUTO_INCREMENT columns.
(Bug#33534)
The ndb_waiter utility polled ndb_mgmd excessively when obtaining the status of cluster data nodes. (Bug#32025)
See also Bug#32023.
Transaction atomicity was sometimes not preserved between reads and inserts under high loads. (Bug#31477)
Having tables with a great many columns could cause Cluster backups to fail. (Bug#30172)
Cluster Replication: Disk Data:
Statements violating unique keys on Disk Data tables (such as
attempting to insert NULL into a NOT
NULL column) could cause data nodes to fail. When the
statement was executed from the binlog, this could also result
in failure of the slave cluster.
(Bug#34118)
Disk Data: Updating in-memory columns of one or more rows of Disk Data table, followed by deletion of these rows and re-insertion of them, caused data node failures. (Bug#33619)
Cluster Replication:
Setting
--replicate-ignore-db=mysql
caused the mysql.ndb_apply_status table not
to be replicated, breaking Cluster Replication.
(Bug#28170)

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