In any test that uses wait_all_purged.inc, ensure that InnoDB tables
will be created without persistent statistics.
This is a follow-up to commit cd04673a17
after a similar failure was observed in the innodb_zip.blob test.
This imports and adapts a number of MySQL 5.7 test cases that are
applicable to MariaDB.
Some tests for old bug fixes are not that relevant because the code
has been refactored since then (especially starting with
MariaDB Server 10.6), and the tests would not reproduce the
original bug if the fix was reverted.
In the test innodb_fts.opt, there are many duplicate MATCH ranks, which
would make the results nondeterministic. The test was stabilized by
changing some LIMIT clauses or by adding sorted_result in those cases
where the purpose of a test was to show that no sorting took place
in the server.
In the test innodb_fts.phrase, MySQL 5.7 would generate FTS_DOC_ID that
are 1 larger than in MariaDB. In innodb_fts.index_table the difference is 2.
This is because in MariaDB, fts_get_next_doc_id() post-increments
cache->next_doc_id, while MySQL 5.7 pre-increments it.
Reviewed by: Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani
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
This essentially reverts commit 4e89ec6692
and only disables InnoDB persistent statistics for tests where it is
desirable. By design, InnoDB persistent statistics will not be updated
except by ANALYZE TABLE or by STATS_AUTO_RECALC.
The internal transactions that update persistent InnoDB statistics
in background tasks (with innodb_stats_auto_recalc=ON) may cause
nondeterministic query plans or interfere with some tests that deal
with other InnoDB internals, such as the purge of transaction history.
Let us introduce the parameter innodb_read_only_compressed
that is ON by default, making any ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables
read-only.
I developed the ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED format based on
Heikki Tuuri's rough design between 2005 and 2008. It might
have been a good idea back then, but no proper benchmarks were
ever run to validate the design or the implementation.
The format has been more or less obsolete for years.
It limits innodb_page_size to 16384 bytes (the default),
and instant ALTER TABLE is not supported.
This is the first step towards deprecating and removing
write support for ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables.
Basic idea of the patch: disallow creating tables which allow to create
rows which are too big to insert. In other words, if user created a table user
should never see an errors like 'can not insert row as it is too big for current
page size'.
SET innodb_strict_mode=OFF; will allow to create very long tables and only a
warning will be issued.
dict_table_t::get_overflow_field_local_len(): this function lets know a maximum
local field len for overflow fields for every file and row format.
innobase_check_column_length(): improve name to too_big_key_part_length()
and reuse in a different part of code.
create_table_info_t::prepare_create_table(): add check for maximum allowed
key part length to keep ALGORITHM=COPY behavior similar to ALGORITHM=INPLACE
behavior. Affected test is innodb.strict_mode
Rename dict_index_too_big_for_tree() to
dict_index_t::rec_potentially_too_big(): copy overflow-related size computation
from dtuple_convert_big_rec(). A lot of tests was changed because of that.
I wonder whether users will complain about it?
Test innodb.max_record_size tests dict_index_t::rec_potentially_too_big()
for different row formats and page sizes.
Write only one encryption key to the checkpoint page.
Use 4 bytes of nonce. Encrypt more of each redo log block,
only skipping the 4-byte field LOG_BLOCK_HDR_NO which the
initialization vector is derived from.
Issue notes, not warning messages for rewriting the redo log files.
recv_recovery_from_checkpoint_finish(): Do not generate any redo log,
because we must avoid that before rewriting the redo log files, or
otherwise a crash during a redo log rewrite (removing or adding
encryption) may end up making the database unrecoverable.
Instead, do these tasks in innobase_start_or_create_for_mysql().
Issue a firm "Missing MLOG_CHECKPOINT" error message. Remove some
unreachable code and duplicated error messages for log corruption.
LOG_HEADER_FORMAT_ENCRYPTED: A flag for identifying an encrypted redo
log format.
log_group_t::is_encrypted(), log_t::is_encrypted(): Determine
if the redo log is in encrypted format.
recv_find_max_checkpoint(): Interpret LOG_HEADER_FORMAT_ENCRYPTED.
srv_prepare_to_delete_redo_log_files(): Display NOTE messages about
adding or removing encryption. Do not issue warnings for redo log
resizing any more.
innobase_start_or_create_for_mysql(): Rebuild the redo logs also when
the encryption changes.
innodb_log_checksums_func_update(): Always use the CRC-32C checksum
if innodb_encrypt_log. If needed, issue a warning
that innodb_encrypt_log implies innodb_log_checksums.
log_group_write_buf(): Compute the checksum on the encrypted
block contents, so that transmission errors or incomplete blocks can be
detected without decrypting.
Rewrite most of the redo log encryption code. Only remember one
encryption key at a time (but remember up to 5 when upgrading from the
MariaDB 10.1 format.)
innodb_file_format=Barracuda is the default in MariaDB 10.2.
Do not set it, because the option will be removed in MariaDB 10.3.
Also, do not set innodb_file_per_table=1 because it is the default.
Note that MDEV-11828 should fix the test innodb.innodb-64k
already in 10.1.
Analysis: Lengths which are not UNIV_SQL_NULL, but bigger than the following
number indicate that a field contains a reference to an externally
stored part of the field in the tablespace. The length field then
contains the sum of the following flag and the locally stored len.
This was incorrectly set to
define UNIV_EXTERN_STORAGE_FIELD (UNIV_SQL_NULL - UNIV_PAGE_SIZE_MAX)
When it should be
define UNIV_EXTERN_STORAGE_FIELD (UNIV_SQL_NULL - UNIV_PAGE_SIZE_DEF)
Additionally, we need to disable support for > 16K page size for
row compressed tables because a compressed page directory entry
reserves 14 bits for the start offset and 2 bits for flags.
This limits the uncompressed page size to 16k. To support
larger pages page directory entry needs to be larger.
This patch allows up to 64K pages for tables with DYNAMIC, COMPACT
and REDUNDANT row types. Tables with COMPRESSED row type allows
still only <= 16K page size. Note that single row size must be
still <= 16K and max key length is not affected.