The minimum statistics level now is rocksdb::StatsLevel::kDisableAll.
The default remains rocksdb::StatsLevel::kExceptHistogramOrTimers
which is now 1 (it used to be 0).
consistently issue a
Note 1618 DATA DIRECTORY option ignored
Note 1618 INDEX DIRECTORY option ignored
in archive/csv/innodb/rocksdb whenever an option is ignored.
Note that csv doesn't say "INDEX DIRECTORY option ignored"
because it does not create index files at all anywhere.
Other engines don't say "INDEX DIRECTORY option ignored"
if the table has no indexes.
additionally InnoDB doesn't say that if INDEX DIRECTORY is
the same as DATA DIRECTORY, because in that case indexes are
technically stored in INDEX DIRECTORY.
collateral fix: use strmake to zero-terminate the string
* rpl.rpl_system_versioning_partitions updated for MDEV-32188
* innodb.row_size_error_log_warnings_3 changed error for MDEV-33658
(checks are done in a different order)
Last time, commit b9f579317 (MDEV-9101) has updated HA_ERR_LAST, breaking the
rocksdb error codes. According to the commit history, this happens each time a
new HA error is added.
This patch fixes the range to start from '500', hopefully resolving the problem
for the close future.
In addition, fix incorrect error codes enumeration.
the information about index algorithm was stored in two
places inconsistently split between both.
BTREE index could have key->algorithm == HA_KEY_ALG_BTREE, if the user
explicitly specified USING BTREE or HA_KEY_ALG_UNDEF, if not.
RTREE index had key->algorithm == HA_KEY_ALG_RTREE
and always had key->flags & HA_SPATIAL
FULLTEXT index had key->algorithm == HA_KEY_ALG_FULLTEXT
and always had key->flags & HA_FULLTEXT
HASH index had key->algorithm == HA_KEY_ALG_HASH or HA_KEY_ALG_UNDEF
long unique index always had key->algorithm == HA_KEY_ALG_LONG_HASH
In this commit:
All indexes except BTREE and HASH always have key->algorithm
set, HA_SPATIAL and HA_FULLTEXT flags are not used anymore (except
for storage to keep frms backward compatible).
As a side effect ALTER TABLE now detects FULLTEXT index renames correctly
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
Columns added to TABLE_STATISTICS
- ROWS_INSERTED, ROWS_DELETED, ROWS_UPDATED, KEY_READ_HITS and
KEY_READ_MISSES.
Columns added to CLIENT_STATISTICS and USER_STATISTICS:
- KEY_READ_HITS and KEY_READ_MISSES.
User visible changes (except new columns):
- CLIENT_STATISTICS and USER_STATISTICS has columns KEY_READ_HITS and
KEY_READ_MISSES added after column ROWS_UPDATED before SELECT_COMMANDS.
Other changes:
- Do not collect table statistics for system tables like index_stats
table_stats, performance_schema, information_schema etc as the user
has no control of these and the generate noice in the statistics.
- All row variables that are part of user_stats are moved to
'struct rows_stats' to make it easy to clear all of them at once.
- ha_read_key_misses added to STATUS_VAR
Notes:
- userstat.result has a change of numbers of rows for handler_read_key.
This is because use-stat-tables is now disabled for the test.
- FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS now resets most global_status_vars.
At this stage, this is mainly to be used for testing.
- FLUSH SESSION STATUS added as an alias for FLUSH STATUS.
- FLUSH STATUS does not require any privilege (before required RELOAD).
- FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS requires RELOAD privilege.
- All global status reset moved to FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS.
- Replication semisync status variables are now reset by
FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS.
- In test cases, the only changes are:
- Replace FLUSH STATUS with FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS
- Replace FLUSH STATUS with FLUSH STATUS; FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS.
This was only done in a few tests where the test was using SHOW STATUS
for both local and global variables.
- Uptime_since_flush_status is now always provided, independent if
ENABLED_PROFILING is enabled when compiling MariaDB.
- @@global.Uptime_since_flush_status is reset on FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS
and @@session.Uptime_since_flush_status is reset on FLUSH SESSION STATUS.
- When connected, @@session.Uptime_since_flush_status is set to 0.
This task is to ensure we have a clear definition and rules of how to
repair or optimize a table.
The rules are:
- REPAIR should be used with tables that are crashed and are
unreadable (hardware issues with not readable blocks, blocks with
'unexpected data' etc)
- OPTIMIZE table should be used to optimize the storage layout for the
table (recover space for delete rows and optimize the index
structure.
- ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE should be used to rebuild the .frm file
(the table definition) and the table (with the original table row
format). If the table is from and older MariaDB/MySQL release with a
different storage format, it will convert the data to the new
format. ALTER TABLE ... FORCE is used as part of mariadb-upgrade
Here follows some more background:
The 3 ways to repair a table are:
1) ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE" (not other options).
As an alias we allow: "ALTER TABLE table_name ENGINE=original_engine"
2) "REPAIR TABLE" (without FORCE)
3) "OPTIMIZE TABLE"
All of the above commands will optimize row space usage (which means that
space will be needed to hold a temporary copy of the table) and
re-generate all indexes. They will also try to replicate the original
table definition as exact as possible.
For ALTER TABLE and "REPAIR TABLE without FORCE", the following will hold:
If the table is from an older MariaDB version and data conversion is
needed (for example for old type HASH columns, MySQL JSON type or new
TIMESTAMP format) "ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE, algorithm=COPY" will be
used.
The differences between the algorithms are
1) Will use the fastest algorithm the engine supports to do a full repair
of the table (except if data conversions are is needed).
2) Will use the storage engine internal REPAIR facility (MyISAM, Aria).
If the engine does not support REPAIR then
"ALTER TABLE FORCE, ALGORITHM=COPY" will be used.
If there was data incompatibilities (which means that FORCE was used)
then there will be a warning after REPAIR that ALTER TABLE FORCE is
still needed.
The reason for this is that REPAIR may be able to go around data
errors (wrong incompatible data, crashed or unreadable sectors) that
ALTER TABLE cannot do.
3) Will use the storage engine internal OPTIMIZE. If engine does not
support optimize, then "ALTER TABLE FORCE" is used.
The above will ensure that ALTER TABLE FORCE is able to
correct almost any errors in the row or index data. In case of
corrupted blocks then REPAIR possible followed by ALTER TABLE is needed.
This is important as mariadb-upgrade executes ALTER TABLE table_name
FORCE for any table that must be re-created.
Bugs fixed with InnoDB tables when using ALTER TABLE FORCE:
- No error for INNODB_DEFAULT_ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT even if row length
would be too wide. (Independent of innodb_strict_mode).
- Tables using symlinks will be symlinked after any of the above commands
(Independent of the setting of --symbolic-links)
If one specifies an algorithm together with ALTER TABLE FORCE, things
will work as before (except if data conversion is required as then
the COPY algorithm is enforced).
ALTER TABLE .. OPTIMIZE ALL PARTITIONS will work as before.
Other things:
- FORCE argument added to REPAIR to allow one to first run internal
repair to fix damaged blocks and then follow it with ALTER TABLE.
- REPAIR will not update frm_version if ha_check_for_upgrade() finds
that table is still incompatible with current version. In this case the
REPAIR will end with an error.
- REPAIR for storage engines that does not have native repair, like InnoDB,
is now using ALTER TABLE FORCE.
- REPAIR csv-table USE_FRM now works.
- It did not work before as CSV tables had extension list in wrong
order.
- Default error messages length for %M increased from 128 to 256 to not
cut information from REPAIR.
- Documented HA_ADMIN_XX variables related to repair.
- Added HA_ADMIN_NEEDS_DATA_CONVERSION to signal that we have to
do data conversions when converting the table (and thus ALTER TABLE
copy algorithm is needed).
- Fixed typo in error message (caused test changes).
Currently there are mechanism to mark a system variable as
deprecated, but they are only used to print warning messages
when a deprecated variable is set.
Leverage the existing mechanisms in order to make the
deprecation information available at the --help output of mysqld by:
* Moving the deprecation information (i.e `deprecation_substitute`
attribute) from the `sys_var` class into the `my_option` struct.
As every `sys_var` contains its own `my_option` struct, the access
to the deprecation information remains available to `sys_var`
objects. `my_getotp` functions, which works directly with
`my_option` structs, gain access to this information while building
the --help output.
* For plugin variables, leverages the `PLUGIN_VAR_DEPRECATED` flag
and set the `deprecation_substitute` attribute accordingly when
building the `my_option` objects.
* Change the `option_cmp` function to use the `deprecation_substitute`
attribute instead of the name when sorting the options. This way
deprecated options and the substitutes will be grouped together.
All new code of the whole pull request, including one or several files
that are either new files or modified ones, are contributed under the
BSD-new license. I am contributing on behalf of my employer
Amazon Web Services, Inc.