There is a need in MDEV-25292 to have both C_ALTER_TABLE and
select_field_count in one call. Semantically creation mode and field
count are two different things. Making creation mode negative
constants and field count positive variable into one parameter seems
to be a lazy hack for not making the second parameter.
select_count does not make sense without alter_info->create_list, so
the natural way is to hold it in Alter_info too. select_count is now
stored in member select_field_count.
MDEV-20704 changed the rules of how (HA_BINARY_PACK_KEY |
HA_VAR_LENGTH_KEY) flags are added. Older FRMs before that fix had
these flags for DOUBLE index. After that fix when ALTER sees such old
FRM it thinks it cannot do instant alter because of failed
compare_keys_but_name(): it compares flags against tmp table created
by ALTER.
MDEV-20704 fix was actually not about DOUBLE type but about
FIELDFLAG_BLOB which affected DOUBLE. So there is no direct knowledge
that any other types were not affected.
The proposed fix under CHECK TABLE checks if FRM has
(HA_BINARY_PACK_KEY | HA_VAR_LENGTH_KEY) flags and was created prior
MDEV-20704 and if so issues "needs upgrade". When mysqlcheck and
mysql_upgrade see such status they issue ALTER TABLE FORCE and upgrade
the table to the version of server.
Handler for existing partition was already index-inited at the
beginning of copy_partitions().
In the case of REORGANIZE PARTITION we fill new partition by calling
its ha_write_row() (handler is storage engine of new partition). From
that we go through the below conditions:
if (this->inited == RND)
table->clone_handler_for_update();
handler *h= table->update_handler ? table->update_handler : table->file;
First, the above misses the meaning of this->inited check. Now it is
new partition and this handler is not inited. So, we assign
table->file which is ha_partition and is really not known to be inited
or not. It is supposed (this == table->file), otherwise we are
out of the logic for using update_handler. This patch adds DBUG_ASSERT
for that.
Second, we call check_duplicate_long_entries() for table->file and
that calls ha_partition::index_init() which calls index_init() for
each partition's handler. But the existing parititions' handlers was
already inited in copy_partitions() and we fail on assertion.
The fix implies that we don't need check_duplicate_long_entries()
per-partition as we've already done check_duplicate_long_entries() for
ha_partition. For REORGANIZE PARTITION that means existing row was
already checked at previous INSERT/UPDATE commands, so no need to
check it again (see NOTE in handler::ha_write_row()).
The fix also optimizes ha_update_row() so
check_duplicate_long_entries_update() is not called per-partition
considering it was already called for ha_partition. Besides,
per-partition duplicate check is not really usable.
Problem:
=======
This patch addresses two issues:
1. An incident event can be incorrectly reported for transactions
which are rolled back successfully. That is, an incident event
should only be generated for failed “non-transactional transactions”
(i.e., those which modify non-transactional tables) because they
cannot be rolled back.
2. When the mariadb slave (error) stops at receiving the incident
event there's no description of what led to it. Neither in the event
nor in the master's error log.
Solution:
========
Before reporting an incident event for a transaction, first validate
that it is “non-transactional” (i.e. cannot be safely rolled back).
To determine if a transaction is non-transactional,
lex->stmt_accessed_table(LEX::STMT_WRITES_NON_TRANS_TABLE)
is used because it is set previously in
THD::decide_logging_format().
Additionally, when an incident event is written, write an error
message to the server’s error log to indicate the underlying issue.
Reviewed by:
===========
Andrei Elkin <andrei.elkin@mariadb.com>
Also fixes
MDEV-27782 Wrong columns when using table level `CHARACTER SET utf8mb4 COLLATE DEFAULT`
MDEV-28644 Unexpected error on ALTER TABLE t1 CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET utf8mb3, DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8mb4
:: Syntax change ::
Keyword AUTO enables history partition auto-creation.
Examples:
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR AUTO;
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 MONTH
STARTS '2021-01-01 00:00:00' AUTO PARTITIONS 12;
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME LIMIT 1000 AUTO;
Or with explicit partitions:
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR AUTO
(PARTITION p0 HISTORY, PARTITION pn CURRENT);
To disable or enable auto-creation one can use ALTER TABLE by adding
or removing AUTO from partitioning specification:
CREATE TABLE t1 (x int) WITH SYSTEM VERSIONING
PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR AUTO;
# Disables auto-creation:
ALTER TABLE t1 PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR;
# Enables auto-creation:
ALTER TABLE t1 PARTITION BY SYSTEM_TIME INTERVAL 1 HOUR AUTO;
If the rest of partitioning specification is identical to CREATE TABLE
no repartitioning will be done (for details see MDEV-27328).
:: Description ::
Before executing history-generating DML command (see the list of commands below)
add N history partitions, so that N would be sufficient for potentially
generated history. N > 1 may be required when history partitions are switched
by INTERVAL and current_timestamp is N times further than the interval
boundary of the last history partition.
If the last history partition equals or exceeds LIMIT records then new history
partition is created and selected as the working partition. According to
MDEV-28411 partitions cannot be switched (or created) while the command is
running. Thus LIMIT does not carry strict limitation and the history partition
size must be planned as LIMIT value plus average number of history one DML
command can generate.
Auto-creation is implemented by synchronous fast_alter_partition_table() call
from the thread of the executed DML command before the command itself is run
(by the fallback and retry mechanism similar to Discovery feature,
see Open_table_context).
The name for newly added partitions are generated like default partition names
with extension of MDEV-22155 (which avoids name clashes by extending assignment
counter to next free-enough gap).
These DML commands can trigger auto-creation:
DELETE (including multitable DELETE, excluding DELETE HISTORY)
UPDATE (including multitable UPDATE)
REPLACE (including REPLACE .. SELECT)
INSERT .. ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE (including INSERT .. SELECT .. ODKU)
LOAD DATA .. REPLACE
:: Bug fixes ::
MDEV-23642 Locking timeout caused by auto-creation affects original DML
The reasons for this are:
- Do not disrupt main business process (the history is auxiliary service);
- Consequences are non-fatal (history is not lost, but comes into wrong
partition; fixed by partitioning rebuild);
- There is more freedom for application to fail in this case or not: it may
read warning info and find corresponding error number.
- While non-failing command is easy to handle by an application and fail it,
the opposite is hard to handle: there is no automatic actions to fix
failed command and retry, DBA intervention is required and until then
application is non-functioning.
MDEV-23639 Auto-create does not work under LOCK TABLES or inside triggers
Don't do tdc_remove_table() for OT_ADD_HISTORY_PARTITION because it is
not possible in locked tables mode.
LTM_LOCK_TABLES mode (and LTM_PRELOCKED_UNDER_LOCK_TABLES) works out
of the box as fast_alter_partition_table() can reopen tables via
locked_tables_list.
In LTM_PRELOCKED we reopen and relock table manually.
:: More fixes ::
* some_table_marked_for_reopen flag fix
some_table_marked_for_reopen affets only reopen of
m_locked_tables. I.e. Locked_tables_list::reopen_tables() reopens only
tables from m_locked_tables.
* Unused can_recover_from_failed_open() condition
Is recover_from_failed_open() can be really used after
open_and_process_routine()?
:: Reviewed by ::
Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
Analysis: There are 2 server variables- "old_mode" and "old". "old" is no
longer needed as "old_mode" has replaced it (however still used in some places
in the code). "old_mode" and "old" has same purpose- emulate behavior from
previous MariaDB versions. So they can be merged to avoid confusion.
Fix: Deprecate "old" variable and create another mode for @@old_mode to mimic
behavior of previous "old" variable. Create specific modes for specifix task
that --old sql variable was doing earlier and use the new modes instead.
We will remove the parameter innodb_disallow_writes because it is badly
designed and implemented. The parameter was never allowed at startup.
It was only internally used by Galera snapshot transfer.
If a user executed
SET GLOBAL innodb_disallow_writes=ON;
the server could hang even on subsequent read operations.
During Galera snapshot transfer, we will block writes
to implement an rsync friendly snapshot, as follows:
sst_flush_tables() will acquire a global lock by executing
FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK, which will block any writes
at the high level.
sst_disable_innodb_writes(), invoked via ha_disable_internal_writes(true),
will suspend or disable InnoDB background tasks or threads that could
initiate writes. As part of this, log_make_checkpoint() will be invoked
to ensure that anything in the InnoDB buf_pool.flush_list will be written
to the data files. This has the nice side effect that the Galera joiner
will avoid crash recovery.
The changes to sql/wsrep.cc and to the tests are based on a prototype
that was developed by Jan Lindström.
Reviewed by: Jan Lindström
Task 1:
If table is added to list using option TL_OPTION_SEQUENCE (done when we
have sequence functions) then then we are dealing with sequence instead
of table. So global table list will have sequence set to true. This is
used to check and give correct error message about unknown sequence
instead of table doesn't exist.
Commit 6c39eaeb1 made the crash recovery dependent on server_id.
The crash recovery could fail when restoring a new instance from
original crashed data directory USING A NEW SERVER ID.
The issue doesn't exist in previous major versions before 10.6.
Root cause is when generating the input XID to be searched in the hash,
server id is populated with the current server id.
So if the server id changed when recovering, the XID couldn't be found
in the hash due to server id doesn't match.
This fix is to use original server id when creating the input XID
object in function `xarecover_do_commit_or_rollback`.
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.
First, we do not add VERS_UPDATE_UNVERSIONED_FLAG for system field and
that fixes SHOW CREATE result.
Second, we have to call check_sys_fields() for any CREATE TABLE and
there correct type is checked for system fields.
Third, we update system_time like as_row structures for ALTER TABLE
and that makes check_sys_fields() happy for ALTER TABLE when we make
system fields hidden.
LIMIT history switching requires the number of history partitions to
be marked for read: from first to last non-empty plus one empty. The
least we can do is to fail with error message if the needed partition
was not marked for read. As this is handler interface we require new
handler error code to display user-friendly error message.
Switching by INTERVAL works out-of-the-box with
ER_ROW_DOES_NOT_MATCH_GIVEN_PARTITION_SET error.