dict_find_max_space_id(): Return SELECT MAX(SPACE) FROM SYS_TABLES.
dict_check_tablespaces_and_store_max_id(): In the normal case
(no encryption plugin has been loaded and the change buffer is empty),
invoke dict_find_max_space_id() and do not open any .ibd files.
If a std::set<uint32_t> has been specified, open the files whose
tablespace ID is mentioned. Else, open all data files that are identified
by SYS_TABLES records.
fil_ibd_open(): Remove a call to os_file_get_last_error() that can
report a misleading error, such as EINVAL inside my_realpath() that is
not an actual error. This could be invoked when a data file is found
but the FSP_SPACE_FLAGS are incorrect, such as is the case for
table test.td in
./mtr --mysqld=--innodb-buffer-pool-dump-at-shutdown=0 innodb.table_flags
buf_load(): If any tablespaces could not be found, invoke
dict_check_tablespaces_and_store_max_id() on the missing tablespaces.
dict_load_tablespace(): Try to load the tablespace unless it was found
to be futile. This fixes failures related to FTS_*.ibd files for
FULLTEXT INDEX.
btr_cur_t::search_leaf(): Prevent a crash when the tablespace
does not exist. This was caught by the test innodb_fts.fts_concurrent_insert
when the change to dict_load_tablespaces() was not present.
We modify a few tests to ensure that tables will not be loaded at startup.
For some fault injection tests this means that the corrupted tables
will not be loaded, because dict_load_tablespace() would perform stricter
checks than dict_check_tablespaces_and_store_max_id().
Tested by: Matthias Leich
Reviewed by: Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani
Starting with commit baf276e6d4a44fe7cdf3b435c0153da0a42af2b6 (MDEV-19229)
the parameter innodb_undo_tablespaces can be increased from its
previous default value 0 while allowing an upgrade from old databases.
We will change the default setting to innodb_undo_tablespaces=3
so that the space occupied by possible bursts of undo log records
can be reclaimed after SET GLOBAL innodb_undo_log_truncate=ON.
We will not enable innodb_undo_log_truncate by default, because it
causes some observable performance degradation.
Special thanks to Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani for diagnosing
and fixing a number of bugs related to this new default setting.
Tested by: Matthias Leich, Axel Schwenke, Vladislav Vaintroub
(with both values of innodb_undo_log_truncate)
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.
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.