Fix some random test failures following MDEV-32168 push.
Don't blindly set $rpl_only_running_threads in many places. Instead explicit
stop only the IO or SQL thread, as appropriate. Setting it interfered with
rpl_end.inc in some cases. Rather than clearing it afterwards, better to
not set it at all when it is not needed, removing ambiguity in the test
about the state of the replication threads.
Don't fail the test if include/stop_slave_io.inc finds an error in the IO
thread after stop. Such errors can be simply because slave stop happened in
the middle of the IO thread's initial communication with the master.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>
This commit makes replicas crash-safe by default by changing the
Using_Gtid value to be Slave_Pos on a fresh slave start and after
RESET SLAVE is issued. If the primary server does not support GTIDs
(i.e., version < 10), the replica will fall back to Using_Gtid=No on
slave start and after RESET SLAVE.
The following additional informational messages/warnings are added:
1. When Using_Gtid is automatically changed. That is, if RESET
SLAVE reverts Using_Gtid back to Slave_Pos, or Using_Gtid is
inferred to No from a CHANGE MASTER TO given with log coordinates
without MASTER_USE_GTID.
2. If options are ignored in CHANGE MASTER TO. If CHANGE MASTER TO
is given with log coordinates, yet also specifies
MASTER_USE_GTID=Slave_Pos, a warning message is given that the log
coordinate options are ignored.
Additionally, an MTR macro has been added for RESET SLAVE,
reset_slave.inc, which provides modes/options for resetting a slave
in log coordinate or gtid modes. When in log coordinates mode, the
macro will execute CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_USE_GTID=No after the
RESET SLAVE command. When in GTID mode, an extra parameter,
reset_slave_keep_gtid_state, can be set to reset or preserve the
value of gtid_slave_pos.
Reviewed By:
===========
Andrei Elkin <andrei.elkin@mariadb.com>
mysql-test/suite/innodb/t/group_commit_crash.test:
remove autoincrement to avoid rbr being used for insert ... select
mysql-test/suite/innodb/t/group_commit_crash_no_optimize_thread.test:
remove autoincrement to avoid rbr being used for insert ... select
mysys/my_addr_resolve.c:
a pointer to a buffer is returned to the caller -> the buffer cannot be on the stack
mysys/stacktrace.c:
my_vsnprintf() is ok here, in 5.5
If an error message contains '\' backslash it is displayed correctly
through show-slave-status or
query_get_value(SHOW SLAVE STATUS, Last_IO_Error, 1);. But when
SELECT REPLACE(...) is applied backslash is escaped resulting in a
different test output.
Disabled backslash escape on show_slave_status.inc and replaced '\' for
'/' using replace_regex function in order to achieve the same test
output when different path separators are used.
A follow-up patch corrects max sizes of printed strings and changes llstr() to %lld.
Credits go to Davi who provided a great feedback.
sql/share/errmsg-utf8.txt:
Max size for the whole message is 512 so a part of - like '%-.512s' should be less,
reduction to 320 is safe and with good chances won't cut off a part of a rather log
message in Last_IO_Error = 'Got fatal error 1236 ...'
sql/sql_repl.cc:
llstr() is replaced by %lld.
The server crashes when receiving a COM_BINLOG_DUMP command with a position of 0 or
larger than the file size.
The execution proceeds to an error block having the last read replication coordinates
pointer be NULL and its dereferencing crashed the server.
Fixed with making "public" previously used only for heartbeat coordinates.
mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_start_stop_slave.test:
regression test for bug#3593869-64035 is added.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_cant_read_event_incident.result:
results updated (error mess format is changed).
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_log_pos.result:
results updated (error mess format is changed).
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_manual_change_index_file.result:
results updated (error mess format is changed).
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_packet.result:
results updated (error mess format is changed).
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_stm_start_stop_slave.result:
results updated (error mess format is changed).
mysql-test/suite/rpl/t/rpl_stm_start_stop_slave.test:
Slave is stopped by bug#3593869-64035 tests so
-let $rpl_only_running_threads= 1 is set prior to rpl_end.
sql/share/errmsg-utf8.txt:
Increasing the max length of explanatory message to 512.
sql/sql_repl.cc:
Making `coord' to carry the last read from binlog event coordinates
regardless of heartbeat.
Renaming, small cleanup and simplifying the code after if (coord) becomes unnecessary.
Adding yet another 3rd pair of coordinates - the starting replication -
into error text.
Currently, rpl_semi_sync is failing in PB due to the warning message:
"Slave SQL: slave SQL thread is being stopped in the middle of "
"applying of a group having updated a non-transaction table; "
"waiting for the group completion ..."
The problem started happening after the fix for BUG#11762407 what was
automatically suppressing some warning messages.
To fix the current issue, we suppress the aforementioned warning message
and exploit the opportunity to make the sentence clearer.
The root of the problem is that to interrupt a slave SQL thread
wait, the STOP SLAVE implementation uses thd->awake(THD::NOT_KILLED).
This appears as a spurious wakeup (e.g. from a sleep on a
condition variable) to the code that the slave SQL thread is
executing at the time of the STOP. If the code is not written
to be spurious-wakeup safe, unexpected behavior can occur. For
the reported case, this problem led to an infinite loop around
the interruptible_wait() function in item_func.cc (SLEEP()
function implementation). The loop was not being properly
restarted and, consequently, would not come to an end. Since the
SLEEP function sleeps on a timed event in order to be killable
and to perform periodic checks until the requested time has
elapsed, the spurious wake up was causing the requested sleep
time to be reset every two seconds.
The solution is to calculate the requested absolute time only
once and to ensure that the thread only sleeps until this
time is elapsed. In case of a spurious wake up, the sleep is
restarted using the previously calculated absolute time. This
restores the behavior present in previous releases. If a slave
thread is executing a SLEEP function, a STOP SLAVE statement
will wait until the time requested in the sleep function
has elapsed.
mysql-test/extra/rpl_tests/rpl_start_stop_slave.test:
Add test case for Bug#56096.
mysql-test/suite/rpl/r/rpl_stm_start_stop_slave.result:
Add test case result for Bug#56096.
sql/item_func.cc:
Reorganize interruptible_wait into a class so that the absolute
time can be preserved across calls to the wait function. This
allows the sleep to be properly restarted in the presence of
spurious wake ups, including those generated by a STOP SLAVE.
Conflicts:
- mysql-test/r/mysqld--help-win.result
- sql/sys_vars.cc
Original revsion (in next-mr-bugfixing):
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2971 [merge]
revision-id: alfranio.correia@sun.com-20100121210527-rbuheu5rnsmcakh1
committer: Alfranio Correia <alfranio.correia@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-next-mr-bugfixing
timestamp: Thu 2010-01-21 21:05:27 +0000
message:
BUG#46364 MyISAM transbuffer problems (NTM problem)
It is well-known that due to concurrency issues, a slave can become
inconsistent when a transaction contains updates to both transaction and
non-transactional tables.
In a nutshell, the current code-base tries to preserve causality among the
statements by writing non-transactional statements to the txn-cache which
is flushed upon commit. However, modifications done to non-transactional
tables on behalf of a transaction become immediately visible to other
connections but may not immediately get into the binary log and therefore
consistency may be broken.
In general, it is impossible to automatically detect causality/dependency
among statements by just analyzing the statements sent to the server. This
happen because dependency may be hidden in the application code and it is
necessary to know a priori all the statements processed in the context of
a transaction such as in a procedure. Moreover, even for the few cases that
we could automatically address in the server, the computation effort
required could make the approach infeasible.
So, in this patch we introduce the option
- "--binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates" that can be used to bypass
the current behavior in order to write directly to binary log statements
that change non-transactional tables.
Besides, it is used to enable the WL#2687 which is disabled by default.
------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2970.1.1
revision-id: alfranio.correia@sun.com-20100121131034-183r4qdyld7an5a0
parent: alik@sun.com-20100121083914-r9rz2myto3tkdya0
committer: Alfranio Correia <alfranio.correia@sun.com>
branch nick: mysql-next-mr-bugfixing
timestamp: Thu 2010-01-21 13:10:34 +0000
message:
BUG#46364 MyISAM transbuffer problems (NTM problem)
It is well-known that due to concurrency issues, a slave can become
inconsistent when a transaction contains updates to both transaction and
non-transactional tables.
In a nutshell, the current code-base tries to preserve causality among the
statements by writing non-transactional statements to the txn-cache which
is flushed upon commit. However, modifications done to non-transactional
tables on behalf of a transaction become immediately visible to other
connections but may not immediately get into the binary log and therefore
consistency may be broken.
In general, it is impossible to automatically detect causality/dependency
among statements by just analyzing the statements sent to the server. This
happen because dependency may be hidden in the application code and it is
necessary to know a priori all the statements processed in the context of
a transaction such as in a procedure. Moreover, even for the few cases that
we could automatically address in the server, the computation effort
required could make the approach infeasible.
So, in this patch we introduce the option
- "--binlog-direct-non-transactional-updates" that can be used to bypass
the current behavior in order to write directly to binary log statements
that change non-transactional tables.
Besides, it is used to enable the WL#2687 which is disabled by default.
Non-transactional updates that take place inside a transaction present problems
for logging because they are visible to other clients before the transaction
is committed, and they are not rolled back even if the transaction is rolled
back. It is not always possible to log correctly in statement format when both
transactional and non-transactional tables are used in the same transaction.
In the current patch, we ensure that such scenario is completely safe under the
ROW and MIXED modes.