Like sql_mode, we factor out of ON_CHECK function for export, to be
used in get_options() during server startup, for validation of
--redirect_url value.
Adding a global/session var `redirect_url' of string type. The initial
value is empty. Can be supplied in mysqld with --redirect-url or set
in --init-connect. A valid redirect_url should be of the format
{mysql,mariadb}://host[:port]
where <host> is an arbitrary string not containing colons, and <port>
is a number between 0 and 65535 inclusive.
The variable will be used by the server to notify clients that they
should connect to another server, specified by the value of the
variable, if not empty.
The notification is done by the inclusion of the variable in
session_track_system_variable.
Merge sys_var_charptr with sys_var_charptr_base, as well as merge
Sys_var_session_lexstring into Sys_var_lexstring. Also refactored
update methods of sys_var_charptr accordingly.
Because the class is more generic, session_update() calls
sys_var_charptr::session_update() which does not assume a buffer field
associated with THD, but instead call strdup/free, we get rid of
THD::default_master_connection_buff accordingly. This also makes THD
smaller by ~192 bytes, and there can be many thousands of concurrent
THDs.
Also, default to innodb_purge_batch_size=1000,
replacing the old default value of processing 300 undo log pages
in a batch. Axel Schwenke found this value to help reduce purge lag
without having a significant impact on workload throughput.
In purge, we can simply acquire a shared latch on the undo log page
(to avoid a race condition like the one that was fixed in
commit b102872ad5) and retain a buffer-fix
after releasing the latch. The buffer-fix will prevent the undo log
page from being evicted from the buffer pool. Concurrent modification
is prevented by design. Only the purge_coordinator_task
(or its accomplice purge_truncation_task) may free the undo log pages,
after any purge_worker_task have completed execution. Hence, we do not
have to worry about any overwriting or reuse of the undo log records.
trx_undo_rec_copy(): Remove. The only remaining caller would have been
trx_undo_get_undo_rec_low(), which is where the logic was merged.
purge_sys_t::m_initialized: Replaces heap.
purge_sys_t::pages: A cache of buffer-fixed pages that have been
looked up from buf_pool.page_hash.
purge_sys_t::get_page(): Return a buffer-fixed undo page, using the
pages cache.
trx_purge_t::batch_cleanup(): Renamed from clone_end_view().
Clear the pages cache and clone the end_view at the end of a batch.
purge_sys_t::n_pages_handled(): Return pages.size(). This determines
if innodb_purge_batch_size was exceeded.
purge_sys_t::rseg_get_next_history_log(): Replaces
trx_purge_rseg_get_next_history_log().
purge_sys_t::choose_next_log(): Replaces trx_purge_choose_next_log()
and trx_purge_read_undo_rec().
purge_sys_t::get_next_rec(): Replaces trx_purge_get_next_rec()
and trx_undo_get_next_rec().
purge_sys_t::fetch_next_rec(): Replaces trx_purge_fetch_next_rec()
and some use of trx_undo_get_first_rec().
trx_purge_attach_undo_recs(): Do not allow purge_sys.n_pages_handled()
exceed the innodb_purge_batch_size or ¾ of the buffer pool, whichever
is smaller.
Reviewed by: Vladislav Lesin
Tested by: Matthias Leich and Axel Schwenke
The motivation of introducing the parameter
innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency in
mysql/mysql-server@28bbd66ea5 and
mysql/mysql-server@8fc2120fed
seems to have been to avoid stalls due to freeing undo log pages
or truncating undo log tablespaces. In MariaDB Server,
innodb_undo_log_truncate=ON should be a much lighter operation
than in MySQL, because it will not involve any log checkpoint.
Another source of performance stalls should be
trx_purge_truncate_rseg_history(), which is shrinking the history list
by freeing the undo log pages whose undo records have been purged.
To alleviate that, we will introduce a purge_truncation_task that will
offload this from the purge_coordinator_task. In that way, the next
innodb_purge_batch_size pages may be parsed and purged while the pages
from the previous batch are being freed and the history list being shrunk.
The processing of innodb_undo_log_truncate=ON will still remain the
responsibility of the purge_coordinator_task.
purge_coordinator_state::count: Remove. We will ignore
innodb_purge_rseg_truncate_frequency, and act as if it had been
set to 1 (the maximum shrinking frequency).
purge_coordinator_state::do_purge(): Invoke an asynchronous task
purge_truncation_callback() to free the undo log pages.
purge_sys_t::iterator::free_history(): Free those undo log pages
that have been processed. This used to be a part of
trx_purge_truncate_history().
purge_sys_t::clone_end_view(): Take a new value of purge_sys.head
as a parameter, so that it will be updated while holding exclusive
purge_sys.latch. This is needed for race-free access to the field
in purge_truncation_callback().
Reviewed by: Vladislav Lesin
(Variant#3: Allow cross-charset comparisons, use a special
CHARSET_INFO to create lookup keys. Review input addressed.)
Equalities that compare utf8mb{3,4}_general_ci strings, like:
WHERE ... utf8mb3_key_col=utf8mb4_value (MB3-4-CMP)
can now be used to construct ref[const] access and also participate
in multiple-equalities.
This means that utf8mb3_key_col can be used for key-lookups when
compared with an utf8mb4 constant, field or expression using '=' or
'<=>' comparison operators.
This is controlled by optimizer_switch='cset_narrowing=on', which is
OFF by default.
IMPLEMENTATION
Item value comparison in (MB3-4-CMP) is done using utf8mb4_general_ci.
This is valid as any utf8mb3 value is also an utf8mb4 value.
When making index lookup value for utf8mb3_key_col, we do "Charset
Narrowing": characters that are in the Basic Multilingual Plane (=BMP) are
copied as-is, as they can be represented in utf8mb3. Characters that are
outside the BMP cannot be represented in utf8mb3 and are replaced
with U+FFFD, the "Replacement Character".
In utf8mb4_general_ci, the Replacement Character compares as equal to any
character that's not in BMP. Because of this, the constructed lookup value
will find all index records that would be considered equal by the original
condition (MB3-4-CMP).
Approved-by: Monty <monty@mariadb.org>
The MDEV-29693 conflict resolution is from Monty, as well as is
a bug fix where ANALYZE TABLE wrongly built histograms for
single-column PRIMARY KEY.
Also includes a fix for safe_malloc error reporting.
Other things:
- Copied main.log_slow from 10.4 to avoid mtr issue
Disabled test:
- spider/bugfix.mdev_27239 because we started to get
+Error 1429 Unable to connect to foreign data source: localhost
-Error 1158 Got an error reading communication packets
- main.delayed
- Bug#54332 Deadlock with two connections doing LOCK TABLE+INSERT DELAYED
This part is disabled for now as it fails randomly with different
warnings/errors (no corruption).
This allows a user to to change the default value of MAX_SEL_ARGS (16000)
in the rare case where they neeed more generated SEL_ARGS (as part of
the range optimizer)
Raise notes if indexes cannot be used:
- in case of data type or collation mismatch (diferent error messages).
- in case if a table field was replaced to something else
(e.g. Item_func_conv_charset) during a condition rewrite.
Added option to write warnings and notes to the slow query log for
slow queries.
New variables added/changed:
- note_verbosity, with is a set of the following options:
basic - All old notes
unusable_keys - Print warnings about keys that cannot be used
for select, delete or update.
explain - Print unusable_keys warnings for EXPLAIN querys.
The default is 'basic,explain'. This means that for old installations
the only notable new behavior is that one will get notes about
unusable keys when one does an EXPLAIN for a query. One can turn all
of all notes by either setting note_verbosity to "" or setting sql_notes=0.
- log_slow_verbosity has a new option 'warnings'. If this is set
then warnings and notes generated are printed in the slow query log
(up to log_slow_max_warnings times per statement).
- log_slow_max_warnings - Max number of warnings written to
slow query log.
Other things:
- One can now use =ALL for any 'set' variable to set all options at once.
For example using "note_verbosity=ALL" in a config file or
"SET @@note_verbosity=ALL' in SQL.
- mysqldump will in the future use @@note_verbosity=""' instead of
@sql_notes=0 to disable notes.
- Added "enum class Data_type_compatibility" and changing the return type
of all Field::can_optimize*() methods from "bool" to this new data type.
Reviewer & Co-author: Alexander Barkov <bar@mariadb.com>
- The code that prints out the notes comes mainly from Alexander
remove old deprecation helpers that were not used anywhere.
create new deprecation helpers and enforce their usage
this also removes inconsistencies in reporting deprecation:
sometimes it was ER_WARN_DEPRECATED_SYNTAX (1287),
sometimes ER_WARN_DEPRECATED_SYNTAX_NO_REPLACEMENT (1681),
sometimes a warning, sometimes a note.
it should always be
* ER_WARN_DEPRECATED_SYNTAX
* a warning (because it's something actionable, not purely informational)
In particular:
* @@debug
deprecated since 5.5.37
* sr_YU locale
deprecated since 10.0.11
* "engine_condition_pushdown" in the @@optimizer_switch
deprecated since 10.1.1
* @@date_format, @@datetime_format, @@time_format, @@max_tmp_tables
deprecated since 10.1.2
* @@wsrep_causal_reads
deprecated since 10.1.3
* "parser" in mroonga table comment
deprecated since 10.2.11
(Review input addressed)
(Added handling of UPDATE/DELETE and partitioning w/o index)
If the properties of the used collation allow, do the following
equivalent rewrites:
1. UPPER(key_col)=expr -> key_col=expr
expr=UPPER(key_col) -> expr=key_col
(also rewrite both sides of the equality at the same time)
2. UPPER(key_col) IN (constant-list) -> key_col IN (constant-list)
- Mark utf8mb{3,4}_general_ci as collations that allow this.
- Add optimizer_switch='sargable_casefold=ON' to control this.
(ON by default in this patch)
- Cover the rewrite in Optimizer Trace, rewrite name is
"sargable_casefold_removal".
AES_ENCRYPT(str, key, [, iv [, mode ]])
AES_DECRYPT(str, key, [, iv [, mode ]])
mode is aes-{128,192,256}-{ecb,cbc,ctr} e.g. "aes-128-cbc".
and a @@block_encryption_mode variable for the default value of mode
change in behavior: AES_ENCRYPT(str, key) can no longer
be used in persistent virtual columns (and alike)
A simple "SET SESSION gtid_seq_no= DEFAULT" did not work, it would straight
up crash the server! Also, explicitly setting gtid_seq_no to 0 gave an error
in --gtid-strict-mode=1.
Setting to DEFAULT or 0 should disable any prior setting of
gtid_seq_no, so that the next transaction is allocated the next GTID
in sequence, as normal.
Reviewed-by: Monty <monty@mariadb.org>
Signed-off-by: Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>