is_bulk_op())' failed after ALTER TABLE of versioned table
Missed error code resulted in my_ok() at higher frame which failed on
assertion for m_status in state of error.
ER_DUP_ENTRY on partitioned table
Now as c1492f3d07 (MDEV-36115) restores m_last_part table->file
points to partition p0 while the error happens in p1, so error index
does not match ib_table in innobase_get_mysql_key_number_for_index().
This case is handled by separate code block in
innobase_get_mysql_key_number_for_index() which was wrong on using
secondary index for dict_index_is_auto_gen_clust() and it was not
covered by the tests.
in row_update_for_mysql
932ec586 (MDEV-23644) in TABLE::delete_row() added ha_delete_row() for
the case of HA_ERR_FOREIGN_DUPLICATE_KEY. The problem is
ha_update_row() called beforewards may change m_last_part which is
required for ha_delete_row() to delete from correct partition.
The fix reverts m_last_part in case ha_partition::update_row() fails.
MDEV-34171 denied removing indirect routines/tables after
recover_from_failed_open() for auto-create partition case. Now we are
going further and keep them for any failed table reopen.
MDEV-34171 did not handle correctly open_and_process_routine() after
that skip of sp_remove_not_own_routines(). Now it is fixed by
sroutine_to_open correct usage.
Heap tables are allocated blocks to store rows according to
my_default_record_cache (mapped to the server global variable
read_buffer_size).
This causes performance issues when the record length is big
(> 1000 bytes) and the my_default_record_cache is small.
Changed to instead split the default heap allocation to 1/16 of the
allowed space and not use my_default_record_cache anymore when creating
the heap. The allocation is also aligned to be just under a power of 2.
For some test that I have been running, which was using record length=633,
the speed of the query doubled thanks to this change.
Other things:
- Fixed calculation of max_records passed to hp_create() to take
into account padding between records.
- Updated calculation of memory needed by heap tables. Before we
did not take into account internal structures needed to access rows.
- Changed block sized for memory_table from 1 to 16384 to get less
fragmentation. This also avoids a problem where we need 1K
to manage index and row storage which was not counted for before.
- Moved heap memory usage to a separate test for 32 bit.
- Allocate all data blocks in heap in powers of 2. Change reported
memory usage for heap to reflect this.
Reviewed-by: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
Updated tests: cases with bugs or which cannot be run
with the cursor-protocol were excluded with
"--disable_cursor_protocol"/"--enable_cursor_protocol"
Fix for v.10.5
Delayed_insert has its own THD (initialized at mysql_insert()) and
hence its own LEX. Delayed_insert initalizes a very few parameters for
LEX and 'duplicates' is not in this list. Now we copy this missing
parameter from parser LEX (as well as sql_command).
When INSERT does auto-create for t1 all its handler instances are
closed by alter_close_table(). At this time down the stack
maria_close() clears share->state_history. Later when we unlock the
tables Aria transaction manager accesses old share instance (the one
before t1 was closed) and tries to reset its state_history.
The problem is maria_close() didn't remove table from transaction's
list (used_tables). The fix does _ma_remove_table_from_trnman() which
is triggered by HA_EXTRA_PREPARE_FOR_RENAME.
prep_alter_part_table upon re-partitioning by system time
memcmp() tries to compare beyond the last member of interval because
sizeof(Vers_part_info::interval) is 80. It is sizeof of variable,
sizeof of type is 76.
Now we compare interval_t struct C++ way.
The assertion was to make sure we don't do vers_set_hist_part() for
SELECT (or any non-DML). But actually we must do it if SELECT calls
some function that does DML. Patch moves the assertion to non-routines
only.
differently react to SQL_MODE => unusable SHOW CREATE
Use abort_on_warning dependent on strict mode over create new table
like it is done for copy data and inplace alter.
This patch adds for "--ps-protocol" second execution
of queries "SELECT".
Also in this patch it is added ability to disable/enable
(--disable_ps2_protocol/--enable_ps2_protocol) second
execution for "--ps-prototocol" in testcases.
For commands
(1) alter table t1 add partition (partition p2);
(2) alter table t1 add partition (partition px history);
It printed the same error message:
Wrong partitioning type, expected type: `SYSTEM_TIME`
For (1) it is not clear from the syntax that we are trying to add
HASH partition. For (2) it is not clear that the table partitioning is
different than SYSTEM_TIME. Now it prints what type we are trying to
add to what type of partitioning.
Fixed warning unused function rename_field_in_list() for compilation
without partitioning.
* clarify the help text for --system-versioning-insert-history
* move the vers_write=false check from Item_field::fix_fields()
next to other vers field checks in find_field_in_table()
* move row_start validation from handler::write_row() next to
vers_update_fields()
* make secure_timestamp check to happen in one place only,
extract it into a function is_set_timestamp_vorbidden().
* overwriting vers fields is an error, just like setting @@timestamp
* don't run vers_insert_history() for every row
To prevent ASAN heap-use-after-poison in the MDEV-16549 part of
./mtr --repeat=6 main.derived
the initialization of Name_resolution_context was cleaned up.
:: Syntax change ::
Keyword AUTO enables history partition auto-creation.
Examples:
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR AUTO;
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 MONTH
STARTS '2021-01-01 00:00:00' AUTO PARTITIONS 12;
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME LIMIT 1000 AUTO;
Or with explicit partitions:
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR AUTO
(PARTITION p0 HISTORY, PARTITION pn CURRENT);
To disable or enable auto-creation one can use ALTER TABLE by adding
or removing AUTO from partitioning specification:
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR AUTO;
# Disables auto-creation:
ALTER TABLE t1 PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR;
# Enables auto-creation:
ALTER TABLE t1 PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR AUTO;
If the rest of partitioning specification is identical to CREATE TABLE
no repartitioning will be done (for details see MDEV-27328).
:: Description ::
Before executing history-generating DML command (see the list of commands below)
add N history partitions, so that N would be sufficient for potentially
generated history. N > 1 may be required when history partitions are switched
by INTERVAL and current_timestamp is N times further than the interval
boundary of the last history partition.
If the last history partition equals or exceeds LIMIT records then new history
partition is created and selected as the working partition. According to
MDEV-28411 partitions cannot be switched (or created) while the command is
running. Thus LIMIT does not carry strict limitation and the history partition
size must be planned as LIMIT value plus average number of history one DML
command can generate.
Auto-creation is implemented by synchronous fast_alter_partition_table() call
from the thread of the executed DML command before the command itself is run
(by the fallback and retry mechanism similar to Discovery feature,
see Open_table_context).
The name for newly added partitions are generated like default partition names
with extension of MDEV-22155 (which avoids name clashes by extending assignment
counter to next free-enough gap).
These DML commands can trigger auto-creation:
DELETE (including multitable DELETE, excluding DELETE HISTORY)
UPDATE (including multitable UPDATE)
REPLACE (including REPLACE .. SELECT)
INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE (including INSERT .. SELECT .. ODKU)
LOAD DATA .. REPLACE
:: Bug fixes ::
MDEV-23642 Locking timeout caused by auto-creation affects original DML
The reasons for this are:
- Do not disrupt main business process (the history is auxiliary service);
- Consequences are non-fatal (history is not lost, but comes into wrong
partition; fixed by partitioning rebuild);
- There is more freedom for application to fail in this case or not: it may
read warning info and find corresponding error number.
- While non-failing command is easy to handle by an application and fail it,
the opposite is hard to handle: there is no automatic actions to fix
failed command and retry, DBA intervention is required and until then
application is non-functioning.
MDEV-23639 Auto-create does not work under LOCK TABLES or inside triggers
Don't do tdc_remove_table() for OT_ADD_HISTORY_PARTITION because it is
not possible in locked tables mode.
LTM_LOCK_TABLES mode (and LTM_PRELOCKED_UNDER_LOCK_TABLES) works out
of the box as fast_alter_partition_table() can reopen tables via
locked_tables_list.
In LTM_PRELOCKED we reopen and relock table manually.
:: More fixes ::
* some_table_marked_for_reopen flag fix
some_table_marked_for_reopen affets only reopen of
m_locked_tables. I.e. Locked_tables_list::reopen_tables() reopens only
tables from m_locked_tables.
* Unused can_recover_from_failed_open() condition
Is recover_from_failed_open() can be really used after
open_and_process_routine()?
:: Reviewed by ::
Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
When we need to add/remove or change LIMIT, INTERVAL, AUTO we have to
recreate partitioning from scratch (via data copy). Such operations
should be done fast. To remove options like LIMIT or INTERVAL one
should write:
alter table t1 partition by system_time;
The command checks whether it is new or existing SYSTEM_TIME
partitioning. And in the case of new it behaves as CREATE would do:
adds default number of partitions (2). If SYSTEM_TIME partitioning
already existed it just changes its options: removes unspecified ones
and adds/changes those specified explicitly. In case when partitions
list was supplied it behaves as usual: does full repartitioning.
Examples:
create or replace table t1 (x int) with system versioning
partition by system_time limit 100 partitions 4;
# Change LIMIT
alter table t1 partition by system_time limit 33;
# Remove LIMIT
alter table t1 partition by system_time;
# This does full repartitioning
alter table t1 partition by system_time limit 33 partitions 4;
# This does data copy as pruning will require records in correct partitions
alter table t1 partition by system_time interval 1 hour
starts '2000-01-01 00:00:00';
# But this works fast, LIMIT will apply to DML commands
alter table t1 partition by system_time limit 33;
To sum up, ALTER for SYSTEM_TIME partitioning does full repartitioning
when:
- INTERVAL was added or changed;
- partition list or partition number was specified;
Otherwise it does fast alter table.
Cleaned up dead condition in set_up_default_partitions().
Reviewed by:
Oleksandr Byelkin <sanja@mariadb.com>
Nikita Malyavin <nikitamalyavin@gmail.com>