instead use only one (trx) IO_CACHE and truncate it if the
statement is rolled back.
don't use binlog_cache_mngr to accumulate the data,
use binlog_cache_data instead.
(binlog_cache_data owns one IO_CACHE, binlog_cache_mngr owns
two binlog_cache_data's, trx and stmt).
* Log rows in online_alter_binlog.
* Table online data is replicated within dedicated binlog file
* Cached data is written on commit.
* Versioning is fully supported.
* Works both wit and without binlog enabled.
* For now savepoints setup is forbidden while ONLINE ALTER goes on.
Extra support is required. We can simply log the SAVEPOINT query events
and replicate them together with row events. But it's not implemented
for now.
* Cache flipping:
We want to care for the possible bottleneck in the online alter binlog
reading/writing in advance.
IO_CACHE does not provide anything better that sequential access,
besides, only a single write is mutex-protected, which is not suitable,
since we should write a transaction atomically.
To solve this, a special layer on top Event_log is implemented.
There are two IO_CACHE files underneath: one for reading, and one for
writing.
Once the read cache is empty, an exclusive lock is acquired (we can wait
for a currently active transaction finish writing), and flip() is emitted,
i.e. the write cache is reopened for read, and the read cache is emptied,
and reopened for writing.
This reminds a buffer flip that happens in accelerated graphics
(DirectX/OpenGL/etc).
Cache_flip_event_log is considered non-blocking for a single reader and a
single writer in this sense, with the only lock held by reader during flip.
An alternative approach by implementing a fair concurrent circular buffer
is described in MDEV-24676.
* Cache managers:
We have two cache sinks: statement and transactional.
It is important that the changes are first cached per-statement and
per-transaction.
If a statement fails, then only statement data is rolled back. The
transaction moves along, however.
Turns out, there's no guarantee that TABLE well persist in
thd->open_tables to the transaction commit moment.
If an error occurs, tables from statement are purged.
Therefore, we can't store te caches in TABLE. Ideally, it should be
handlerton, but we cut the corner and store it in THD in a list.
Event_log is supposed to be a basic logging class that can write events in
a single file.
MYSQL_BIN_LOG in comparison will have:
* rotation support
* index files
* purging
* gtid and transactional information handling.
* is dedicated for a general-purpose binlog
* Eliminate most usages of THD::use_trans_table. Only 3 left, and they are
at quite high levels, and really essential.
* Eliminate is_transactional argument when possible. Lots of places are
left though, because of some WSREP error handling in
MYSQL_BIN_LOG::set_write_error.
* Remove junk binlog functions from THD
* binlog_prepare_pending_rows_event is moved to log.cc inside MYSQL_BIN_LOG
and is not anymore template. Instead it accepls event factory with a type
code, and a callback to a constructing function in it.
Revert the old work-around for buggy fdatasync() on Linux ext3. This bug was
fixed in Linux > 10 years ago back to kernel version at least 3.0.
Reviewed-by: Marko Mäkelä <marko.makela@mariadb.com>
Signed-off-by: Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>
The new statistics is enabled by adding the "engine", "innodb" or "full"
option to --log-slow-verbosity
Example output:
# Pages_accessed: 184 Pages_read: 95 Pages_updated: 0 Old_rows_read: 1
# Pages_read_time: 17.0204 Engine_time: 248.1297
Page_read_time is time doing physical reads inside a storage engine.
(Writes cannot be tracked as these are usually done in the background).
Engine_time is the time spent inside the storage engine for the full
duration of the read/write/update calls. It uses the same code as
'analyze statement' for calculating the time spent.
The engine statistics is done with a generic interface that should be
easy for any engine to use. It can also easily be extended to provide
even more statistics.
Currently only InnoDB has counters for Pages_% and Undo_% status.
Engine_time works for all engines.
Implementation details:
class ha_handler_stats holds all engine stats. This class is included
in handler and THD classes.
While a query is running, all statistics is updated in the handler. In
close_thread_tables() the statistics is added to the THD.
handler::handler_stats is a pointer to where statistics should be
collected. This is set to point to handler::active_handler_stats if
stats are requested. If not, it is set to 0.
handler_stats has also an element, 'active' that is 1 if stats are
requested. This is to allow engines to avoid doing any 'if's while
updating the statistics.
Cloned or partition tables have the pointer set to the base table if
status are requested.
There is a small performance impact when using --log-slow-verbosity=engine:
- All engine calls in 'select' will be timed.
- IO calls for InnoDB reads will be timed.
- Incrementation of counters are done on local variables and accesses
are inline, so these should have very little impact.
- Statistics has to be reset for each statement for the THD and each
used handler. This is only 40 bytes, which should be neglectable.
- For partition tables we have to loop over all partitions to update
the handler_status as part of table_init(). Can be optimized in the
future to only do this is log-slow-verbosity changes. For this to work
we have to update handler_status for all opened partitions and
also for all partitions opened in the future.
Other things:
- Added options 'engine' and 'full' to log-slow-verbosity.
- Some of the new files in the test suite comes from Percona server, which
has similar status information.
- buf_page_optimistic_get(): Do not increment any counter, since we are
only validating a pointer, not performing any buf_pool.page_hash lookup.
- Added THD argument to save_explain_data_intern().
- Switched arguments for save_explain_.*_data() to have
always THD first (generates better code as other functions also have THD
first).
This patch ensures that all direct and indirect calls to
encryption_crypt provide a `dlen` value correctly initialized to the
destination buffer length, allowing encryption plugins to verify
available space. It also adds assertions to verify related invariants.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Gross <tmgross@umich.edu>
This patch ensures that all direct and indirect calls to
encryption_crypt provide a `dlen` value correctly initialized to the
destination buffer length, allowing encryption plugins to verify
available space. It also adds assertions to verify related invariants.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Gross <tmgross@umich.edu>
sql/log.cc:11101:56: runtime error: downcast of address 0x7f9dc801e9c8 which does not point to an object of type 'Gtid_list_log_event'
sql/sql_repl.cc:1429:12: runtime error: member call on address 0x7f1ca401ea48 which does not point to an object of type 'Gtid_list_log_event'
Problem:
========
A master can segfault if it can't set up decryption for its binary
log during a binlog dump with Using_Gtid=Slave_Pos. If slave
connects using GTID mode, the master will call into
log.cc::get_gtid_list_event(), which iterate through binlog events
looking for a Gtid_list_log_event. On an encrypted binlog that the
master cannot decrypt, the first event will be a
START_ENCRYPTION_EVENT which will call into the following decryption branch
if (fdle->start_decryption((Start_encryption_log_event*) ev))
errormsg= ‘Could not set up decryption for binlog.’;
The event iteration however, does not stop in spite of this error.
The master will try to read the next event, but segfault while
trying to decrypt it because decryption failed to initialize.
Solution:
========
Break the event iteration if decryption cannot be set up.
Reviewed By:
============
Andrei Elkin <andrei.elkin@mariadb.com>
This patch is the result of running
run-clang-tidy -fix -header-filter=.* -checks='-*,modernize-use-equals-default' .
Code style changes have been done on top. The result of this change
leads to the following improvements:
1. Binary size reduction.
* For a -DBUILD_CONFIG=mysql_release build, the binary size is reduced by
~400kb.
* A raw -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release reduces the binary size by ~1.4kb.
2. Compiler can better understand the intent of the code, thus it leads
to more optimization possibilities. Additionally it enabled detecting
unused variables that had an empty default constructor but not marked
so explicitly.
Particular change required following this patch in sql/opt_range.cc
result_keys, an unused template class Bitmap now correctly issues
unused variable warnings.
Setting Bitmap template class constructor to default allows the compiler
to identify that there are no side-effects when instantiating the class.
Previously the compiler could not issue the warning as it assumed Bitmap
class (being a template) would not be performing a NO-OP for its default
constructor. This prevented the "unused variable warning".
The user XA commit execution branch was caught not have been covered
with MDEV-21953 fixes.
The XA involved deadlock is resolved now to apply the former fixes
pattern.
Along the fixes the following changes have been implemented.
- MDL lock attribute correction
- dissociation of the externally completed XA from the current
thread's xid_state in the error branches
- cleanup_context() preseves the prepared XA
- wait_for_prior_commit() is relocated to satisfy both
the binlog ON (log-slave-updates and skip-log-bin)
and OFF slave execution branches.