Release Notes for MariaDB Enterprise Server 10.2.30-5
This page is part of MariaDB's Documentation.
The parent of this page is: Release Notes for MariaDB Enterprise Server 10.2
Topics on this page:
Overview
This fifth release of MariaDB Enterprise Server 10.2 is a maintenance release, including a variety of fixes.
MariaDB Enterprise Server 10.2.30-5 was released on 2020-01-06.
Notable Changes
InnoDB no longer sends unnecessary warnings to the error log about maximum row size for DDL statements when innodb_
strict_ and log_mode=OFF warnings<=2 (MDEV-20832)Redundant writes to the InnoDB redo log have been removed. (MDEV-21024)
The default for the plugin load option plugin-maturity is now
stable
(MENT-240)MariaDB Enterprise Audit and the MariaDB Audit plugin trace now add the user who initiated statements with the
DELAYED
option. In previous versions a system user was added. (MENT-237)
Issues Fixed
Can result in a hang or crash
Primary (master) could crash when it executes RESET MASTER and a replica (slave) reconnects having reset its connection status with the primary (e.g.,
CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_USE_GTID = slave_pos
). (MENT-19376)
Can result in unexpected behavior
Client received error
SEC_E_INVALID_TOKEN
when SSL is used and connecting to MariaDB Enterprise Server running on Microsoft Windows. (MDEV-13492)The restore of Aria tables was not always possible if MariaDB Backup was using the parameters --prepare
--incremental
(MDEV-18310)An incomplete result set was returned when sort_
buffer_ was too small. (MDEV-21044)size
Interface Changes
None.
Platforms
In alignment to the enterprise lifecycle, MariaDB Enterprise Server 10.2.30-5 is provided for:
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6
CentOS 8
CentOS 7
CentOS 6
Ubuntu 18.04
Ubuntu 16.04
Debian 10
Debian 9
Debian 8
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12
Microsoft Windows
Some components of MariaDB Enterprise Server might not support all platforms. For additional information, see "MariaDB Corporation Engineering Policies".
Note
CentOS 6, Debian 8, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 are no longer supported as per the MariaDB Engineering Policy. Older releases are available from the MariaDB Downloads page. Instructions for installation are included as a README
file within the download.