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3 Commits
Author | SHA1 | Message | Date | |
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7a4fbb55b0 |
MDEV-25105 Remove innodb_checksum_algorithm values none,innodb,...
Historically, InnoDB supported a buggy page checksum algorithm that did not compute a checksum over the full page. Later, well before MySQL 4.1 introduced .ibd files and the innodb_file_per_table option, the algorithm was corrected and the first 4 bytes of each page were redefined to be a checksum. The original checksum was so slow that an option to disable page checksum was introduced for benchmarketing purposes. The Intel Nehalem microarchitecture introduced the SSE4.2 instruction set extension, which includes instructions for faster computation of CRC-32C. In MySQL 5.6 (and MariaDB 10.0), innodb_checksum_algorithm=crc32 was implemented to make of that. As that option was changed to be the default in MySQL 5.7, a bug was found on big-endian platforms and some work-around code was added to weaken that checksum further. MariaDB disables that work-around by default since MDEV-17958. Later, SIMD-accelerated CRC-32C has been implemented in MariaDB for POWER and ARM and also for IA-32/AMD64, making use of carry-less multiplication where available. Long story short, innodb_checksum_algorithm=crc32 is faster and more secure than the pre-MySQL 5.6 checksum, called innodb_checksum_algorithm=innodb. It should have removed any need to use innodb_checksum_algorithm=none. The setting innodb_checksum_algorithm=crc32 is the default in MySQL 5.7 and MariaDB Server 10.2, 10.3, 10.4. In MariaDB 10.5, MDEV-19534 made innodb_checksum_algorithm=full_crc32 the default. It is even faster and more secure. The default settings in MariaDB do allow old data files to be read, no matter if a worse checksum algorithm had been used. (Unfortunately, before innodb_checksum_algorithm=full_crc32, the data files did not identify which checksum algorithm is being used.) The non-default settings innodb_checksum_algorithm=strict_crc32 or innodb_checksum_algorithm=strict_full_crc32 would only allow CRC-32C checksums. The incompatibility with old data files is why they are not the default. The newest server not to support innodb_checksum_algorithm=crc32 were MySQL 5.5 and MariaDB 5.5. Both have reached their end of life. A valid reason for using innodb_checksum_algorithm=innodb could have been the ability to downgrade. If it is really needed, data files can be converted with an older version of the innochecksum utility. Because there is no good reason to allow data files to be written with insecure checksums, we will reject those option values: innodb_checksum_algorithm=none innodb_checksum_algorithm=innodb innodb_checksum_algorithm=strict_none innodb_checksum_algorithm=strict_innodb Furthermore, the following innochecksum options will be removed, because only strict crc32 will be supported: innochecksum --strict-check=crc32 innochecksum -C crc32 innochecksum --write=crc32 innochecksum -w crc32 If a user wishes to convert a data file to use a different checksum (so that it might be used with the no-longer-supported MySQL 5.5 or MariaDB 5.5, which do not support IMPORT TABLESPACE nor system tablespace format changes that were made in MariaDB 10.3), then the innochecksum tool from MariaDB 10.2, 10.3, 10.4, 10.5 or MySQL 5.7 can be used. Reviewed by: Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani |
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4cbfdeca84 |
MDEV-24109 InnoDB hangs with innodb_flush_sync=OFF
MDEV-23855 broke the handling of innodb_flush_sync=OFF. That parameter is supposed to limit the page write rate in case the log capacity is being exceeded and log checkpoints are needed. With this fix, the following should pass: ./mtr --mysqld=--loose-innodb-flush-sync=0 One of our best regression tests for page flushing is encryption.innochecksum. With innodb_page_size=16k and innodb_flush_sync=OFF it would likely hang without this fix. log_sys.last_checkpoint_lsn: Declare as Atomic_relaxed<lsn_t> so that we are allowed to read the value while not holding log_sys.mutex. buf_flush_wait_flushed(): Let the page cleaner perform the flushing also if innodb_flush_sync=OFF. After the page cleaner has completed, perform a checkpoint if it is needed, because buf_flush_sync_for_checkpoint() will not be run if innodb_flush_sync=OFF. buf_flush_ahead(): Simplify the condition. We do not really care whether buf_flush_page_cleaner() is running. buf_flush_page_cleaner(): Evaluate innodb_flush_sync at the low level. If innodb_flush_sync=OFF, rate-limit the batches to innodb_io_capacity_max pages per second. Reviewed by: Vladislav Vaintroub |
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c0f47a4a58 |
MDEV-12026: Implement innodb_checksum_algorithm=full_crc32
MariaDB data-at-rest encryption (innodb_encrypt_tables) had repurposed the same unused data field that was repurposed in MySQL 5.7 (and MariaDB 10.2) for the Split Sequence Number (SSN) field of SPATIAL INDEX. Because of this, MariaDB was unable to support encryption on SPATIAL INDEX pages. Furthermore, InnoDB page checksums skipped some bytes, and there are multiple variations and checksum algorithms. By default, InnoDB accepts all variations of all algorithms that ever existed. This unnecessarily weakens the page checksums. We hereby introduce two more innodb_checksum_algorithm variants (full_crc32, strict_full_crc32) that are special in a way: When either setting is active, newly created data files will carry a flag (fil_space_t::full_crc32()) that indicates that all pages of the file will use a full CRC-32C checksum over the entire page contents (excluding the bytes where the checksum is stored, at the very end of the page). Such files will always use that checksum, no matter what the parameter innodb_checksum_algorithm is assigned to. For old files, the old checksum algorithms will continue to be used. The value strict_full_crc32 will be equivalent to strict_crc32 and the value full_crc32 will be equivalent to crc32. ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables will only use the old format. These tables do not support new features, such as larger innodb_page_size or instant ADD/DROP COLUMN. They may be deprecated in the future. We do not want an unnecessary file format change for them. The new full_crc32() format also cleans up the MariaDB tablespace flags. We will reserve flags to store the page_compressed compression algorithm, and to store the compressed payload length, so that checksum can be computed over the compressed (and possibly encrypted) stream and can be validated without decrypting or decompressing the page. In the full_crc32 format, there no longer are separate before-encryption and after-encryption checksums for pages. The single checksum is computed on the page contents that is written to the file. We do not make the new algorithm the default for two reasons. First, MariaDB 10.4.2 was a beta release, and the default values of parameters should not change after beta. Second, we did not yet implement the full_crc32 format for page_compressed pages. This will be fixed in MDEV-18644. This is joint work with Marko Mäkelä. |