let's always disconnect a user connection before dropping the said user.
MariaDB is traditionally very tolerant to active connections
of the dropped user, which isn't the case for most other databases.
Let's avoid unintentionally spreading incompatible behavior
and disconnect before drop.
Except in cases when the test specifically tests such a behavior.
Remove one of the major sources of race condiitons in mariadb-test.
Normally, mariadb_close() sends COM_QUIT to the server and immediately
disconnects. In mariadb-test it means the test can switch to another
connection and sends queries to the server before the server even
started parsing the COM_QUIT packet and these queries can see the
connection as fully active, as it didn't reach dispatch_command yet.
This is a major source of instability in tests and many - but not all,
still less than a half - tests employ workarounds. The correct one
is a pair count_sessions.inc/wait_until_count_sessions.inc.
Also very popular was wait_until_disconnected.inc, which was completely
useless, because it verifies that the connection is closed, and after
disconnect it always is, it didn't verify whether the server processed
COM_QUIT. Sadly the placebo was as widely used as the real thing.
Let's fix this by making mariadb-test `disconnect` command _to wait_ for
the server to confirm. This makes almost all workarounds redundant.
In some cases count_sessions.inc/wait_until_count_sessions.inc is still
needed, though, as only `disconnect` command is changed:
* after external tools, like `exec $MYSQL`
* after failed `connect` command
* replication, after `STOP SLAVE`
* Federated/CONNECT/SPIDER/etc after `DROP TABLE`
and also in some XA tests, because an XA transaction is dissociated from
the THD very late, after the server has closed the client connection.
Collateral cleanups: fix comments, remove some redundant statements:
* DROP IF EXISTS if nothing is known to exist
* DROP table/view before DROP DATABASE
* REVOKE privileges before DROP USER
etc
* 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)
Sometimes, thread/innodb/thread_pool_thread may display
processlist_state='buffer pool load' instead of NULL
when the test is executed soon enough after server startup.
Let us suppress that information to avoid spurious failures.
page_encrypt_thread_key: The key for fil_crypt_thread().
All other InnoDB threads should already have been registered for
performance_schema ever since
commit a2f510fccf
get_all_tables() skipped tables if the user has no privileges on
the schema itself and no granted privilege on any tables in the schema.
that is, it was skipping performance_schema tables (privileges
on them aren't explicitly granted, but internally hard-coded)
To fix:
* extend ACL_internal_table_access::check() method with
`bool any_combination_will_do`
* fix all perfschema privilege checks to take it into account.
* don't reuse table_acl_check object for all tables, initialize it
for every table otherwise GRANT_INTERNAL_INFO will leak
* remove incorrect privilege check from get_all_tables()
The test with memory restrictions randomly works or fails in buildbot
depending on server configurations. On my machine the original test
worked.
As the test was there to just check if the server crashes when run with
small memory configurations, I disabled testing if the query would fail
or not. The test still has its original purpose.
Discussed with: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
This is a workaround patch to make buildbot green.
Renaming databases from db1/DB2 to m33020_db1/m33020_DB1
to make them unique. So the garbage left by other tests
does not show up any more.
The real problem will be fixed under terms of:
MDEV-35282 Performance schema does not clear package routines
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
This commit adds 3 new status variables to 'show all slaves status':
- Master_last_event_time ; timestamp of the last event read from the
master by the IO thread.
- Slave_last_event_time ; Master timestamp of the last event committed
on the slave.
- Master_Slave_time_diff: The difference of the above two timestamps.
All the above variables are NULL until the slave has started and the
slave has read one query event from the master that changes data.
- Added information_schema.slave_status, which allows us to remove:
- show_master_info(), show_master_info_get_fields(),
send_show_master_info_data(), show_all_master_info()
- class Sql_cmd_show_slave_status.
- Protocol::store(I_List<i_string_pair>* str_list) as it is not
used anymore.
- Changed old SHOW SLAVE STATUS and SHOW ALL SLAVES STATUS to
use the SELECT code path, as all other SHOW ... STATUS commands.
Other things:
- Xid_log_time is set to time of commit to allow slave that reads the
binary log to calculate Master_last_event_time and
Slave_last_event_time.
This is needed as there is not 'exec_time' for row events.
- Fixed that Load_log_event calculates exec_time identically to
Query_event.
- Updated RESET SLAVE to reset Master/Slave_last_event_time
- Updated SQL thread's update on first transaction read-in to
only update Slave_last_event_time on group events.
- Fixed possible (unlikely) bugs in sql_show.cc ...old_format() functions
if allocation of 'field' would fail.
Reviewed By:
Brandon Nesterenko <brandon.nesterenko@mariadb.com>
Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>
- 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.
On Windows systems, occurrences of ERROR_SHARING_VIOLATION due to
conflicting share modes between processes accessing the same file can
result in CreateFile failures.
mysys' my_open() already incorporates a workaround by implementing
wait/retry logic on Windows.
But this does not help if files are opened using shell redirection like
mysqltest traditionally did it, i.e via
--echo exec "some text" > output_file
In such cases, it is cmd.exe, that opens the output_file, and it
won't do any sharing-violation retries.
This commit addresses the issue by introducing a new built-in command,
'write_line', in mysqltest. This new command serves as a brief alternative
to 'write_file', with a single line output, that also resolves variables
like "exec" would.
Internally, this command will use my_open(), and therefore retry-on-error
logic.
Hopefully this will eliminate the very sporadic "can't open file because
it is used by another process" error on CI.
Under terms of MDEV 27490 we'll add support for non-BMP identifiers
and upgrade casefolding information to Unicode version 14.0.0.
In Unicode-14.0.0 conversion to lower and upper cases can increase octet length
of the string, so conversion won't be possible in-place any more.
This patch removes virtual functions performing in-place casefolding:
- my_charset_handler_st::casedn_str()
- my_charset_handler_st::caseup_str()
and fixes the code to use the non-inplace functions instead:
- my_charset_handler_st::casedn()
- my_charset_handler_st::caseup()
binlog_space_limit is a variable in Percona server used to limit the total
size of all binary logs.
This implementation is based on code from Percona server 5.7.
In MariaDB we decided to call the variable max-binlog-total-size to be
similar to max-binlog-size. This makes it easier to find in the output
from 'mariadbd --help --verbose'). MariaDB will also support
binlog_space_limit for compatibility with Percona.
Some internal notes to explain implementation notes:
- When running MariaDB does not delete binary logs that are either
used by slaves or have active xid that are not yet committed.
Some implementation notes:
- max-binlog-total-size is by default 0 (no limit).
- max-binlog-total-size can be changed without server restart.
- Binlog file sizes are checked on startup, or if
max-binlog-total-size is set to a value > 0, not for every log write.
The total size of all binary logs is cached and dynamically updated
when updating the binary log on binary log rotation.
- max-binlog-total-size is checked against existing log files during
serverstart, binlog rotation, FLUSH LOGS, when writing to binary log
or when max-binlog-total-size changes value.
- Option --slave-connections-needed-for-purge with 1 as default added.
This allows one to ensure that we do not delete binary logs if there
is less than 'slave-connections-needed-for-purge' connected.
Without this option max-binlog-total-size would potentially delete
binlogs needed by slaves on server startup or when a slave disconnects
as there are then no connected slaves to protect active binlogs.
- PURGE BINARY LOGS TO ... will be executed as if
slave-connectitons-needed-for-purge would be zero. In other words
it will do the purge even if there is no slaves connected. If there
are connected slaves working on the logs, these will be protected.
- If binary log is on and max-binlog-total_size <> 0 then the status
variable 'Binlog_disk_use' shows the current size of all old binary
logs + the state of the current one.
- Removed test of strcmp(log_file_name, log_info.log_file_name) in
purge_logs_before_date() as this is tested in can_purge_logs()
- To avoid expensive calls of log_in_use() we cache the result for the
last log that is in use by a slave. Future calls to can_purge_logs()
for this binary log will be quickly detected and false will be returned
until a slave starts working on a new log.
- Note that after a binary log rotation caused by max_binlog_size,
the last log will not be purged directly as it is still in use
internally. The next binary log write will purge binlogs if needed.
Reviewer:Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>