In commit 1c55b845e0fe337e647ba230288ed13e966cb7c7 (MDEV-32932) the
test mariabackup.innodb_ddl_on_intermediate_table was introduced but
disabled.
xb_load_single_table_tablespace(): Properly handle missing FTS_ tables.
backup_file_op_fail(): Properly handle FILE_DELETE records.
Post-fix for MDEV-35144.
Cannot allocate options values on the statement arena, because
HA_CREATE_INFO is shallow-copied for every execution, so if the
option_list was initially empty, it will be reset for every execution
and any values allocated on the statement arena will be lost.
Cannot allocate option values on the execution arena, because
HA_CREATE_INFO is shallow-copied for every execution, so if the
option_list was initially NOT empty, any values appended to the
end will be preserved and if they're on the execution arena their
content will be destroyed.
Let's use thd->change_item_tree() to save and restore necessary pointers
for every execution.
followup for 3da565c41d87
When adding a column or index that uses plugin-defined
sysvar-based options with CREATE ... LIKE the server
was using the current value of the sysvar, not the default one.
Because parse_option_list() function was used both in create
and open and it tried to guess when it's create (need to use
current sysvar value and add a new name=value pair to the list)
or open (need to use default, without extending the list).
Let's move the list extending functionality into a separate
function and call it explicitly when needed. Operations that
add new objects (CREATE, ALTER ... ADD) will extend the list,
other operations (ALTER, CREATE ... LIKE, open) will not.
The problem was that when using clang + asan, we do not get a correct value
for the thread stack as some local variables are not allocated at the
normal stack.
It looks like that for example clang 18.1.3, when compiling with
-O2 -fsanitize=addressan it puts local variables and things allocated by
alloca() in other areas than on the stack.
The following code shows the issue
Thread 6 "mariadbd" hit Breakpoint 3, do_handle_one_connection
(connect=0x5080000027b8,
put_in_cache=<optimized out>) at sql/sql_connect.cc:1399
THD *thd;
1399 thd->thread_stack= (char*) &thd;
(gdb) p &thd
(THD **) 0x7fffedee7060
(gdb) p $sp
(void *) 0x7fffef4e7bc0
The address of thd is 24M away from the stack pointer
(gdb) info reg
...
rsp 0x7fffef4e7bc0 0x7fffef4e7bc0
...
r13 0x7fffedee7060 140737185214560
r13 is pointing to the address of the thd. Probably some kind of
"local stack" used by the sanitizer
I have verified this with gdb on a recursive call that calls alloca()
in a loop. In this case all objects was stored in a local heap,
not on the stack.
To solve this issue in a portable way, I have added two functions:
my_get_stack_pointer() returns the address of the current stack pointer.
The code is using asm instructions for intel 32/64 bit, powerpc,
arm 32/64 bit and sparc 32/64 bit.
Supported compilers are gcc, clang and MSVC.
For MSVC 64 bit we are using _AddressOfReturnAddress()
As a fallback for other compilers/arch we use the address of a local
variable.
my_get_stack_bounds() that will return the address of the base stack
and stack size using pthread_attr_getstack() or NtCurrentTed() with
fallback to using the address of a local variable and user provided
stack size.
Server changes are:
- Moving setting of thread_stack to THD::store_globals() using
my_get_stack_bounds().
- Removing setting of thd->thread_stack, except in functions that
allocates a lot on the stack before calling store_globals(). When
using estimates for stack start, we reduce stack_size with
MY_STACK_SAFE_MARGIN (8192) to take into account the stack used
before calling store_globals().
I also added a unittest, stack_allocation-t, to verify the new code.
Reviewed-by: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
work consistently on replication
Row-based replication does not execute CREATE .. SELECT but instead
CREATE TABLE. CREATE .. SELECT creates implict system fields on
unusual place: in-between declared fields and select fields. That was
done because select_field_pos logic requires select fields go last in
create_list.
So, CREATE .. SELECT on master and CREATE TABLE on slave create system
fields on different positions and replication gets field mismatch.
To fix this we've changed CREATE .. SELECT to create implicit system
fields on usual place in the end and updated select_field_pos for
handling this case.
Don't allow the referencing key column from NULL TO NOT NULL
when
1) Foreign key constraint type is ON UPDATE SET NULL
2) Foreign key constraint type is ON DELETE SET NULL
3) Foreign key constraint type is UPDATE CASCADE and referenced
column declared as NULL
Don't allow the referenced key column from NOT NULL to NULL
when foreign key constraint type is UPDATE CASCADE
and referencing key columns doesn't allow NULL values
get_foreign_key_info(): InnoDB sends the information about
nullability of the foreign key fields and referenced key fields.
fk_check_column_changes(): Enforce the above rules for COPY
algorithm
innobase_check_foreign_drop_col(): Checks whether the dropped
column exists in existing foreign key relation
innobase_check_foreign_low() : Enforce the above rules for
INPLACE algorithm
dict_foreign_t::check_fk_constraint_valid(): This is used
by CREATE TABLE statement to check nullability for foreign
key relation.
A CHAR column cannot be longer than 1024, because
Binlog_type_info_fixed_string::Binlog_type_info_fixed_string
replies on this fact - it cannot store binlog metadata for longer columns.
In case of the filename character set mbmaxlen is equal to 5,
so only 1024/5=204 characters can fit into the 1024 limit.
- In strict mode:
Disallowing creation of a CHAR column with octet length grater than 1024.
- In non-strict mode:
Automatically convert CHAR with octet length>1024 into VARCHAR.
- During copy algorithm, InnoDB should use bulk insert operation
for row by row insert operation. By doing this, copy algorithm
can effectively build indexes. This optimization is disabled
for temporary table, versioning table and table which has
foreign key relation.
Introduced the variable innodb_alter_copy_bulk to allow
the bulk insert operation for copy alter operation
inside InnoDB. This is enabled by default
ha_innobase::extra(): HA_EXTRA_END_ALTER_COPY mode tries to apply
the buffered bulk insert operation, updates the non-persistent
table stats.
row_merge_bulk_t::write_to_index(): Update stat_n_rows after
applying the bulk insert operation
row_ins_clust_index_entry_low(): In case of copy algorithm,
switch to bulk insert operation.
copy_data_error_ignore(): Handles the error while copying
the data from source to target file.
Caused by:
5d37cac7 MDEV-33348 ALTER TABLE lock waiting stages are indistinguishable.
In that commit, progress reporting was moved to
mysql_alter_table from copy_data_between_tables.
The temporary table case wasn't taken into the consideration,
where the execution of mysql_alter_table ends earlier than usual, by the
'end_temporary' label. There, thd_progress_end has been missing.
Fix:
Add missing thd_progress_end() call in mysql_alter_table.
This task is to ensure we have a clear definition and rules of how to
repair or optimize a table.
The rules are:
- REPAIR should be used with tables that are crashed and are
unreadable (hardware issues with not readable blocks, blocks with
'unexpected data' etc)
- OPTIMIZE table should be used to optimize the storage layout for the
table (recover space for delete rows and optimize the index
structure.
- ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE should be used to rebuild the .frm file
(the table definition) and the table (with the original table row
format). If the table is from and older MariaDB/MySQL release with a
different storage format, it will convert the data to the new
format. ALTER TABLE ... FORCE is used as part of mariadb-upgrade
Here follows some more background:
The 3 ways to repair a table are:
1) ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE" (not other options).
As an alias we allow: "ALTER TABLE table_name ENGINE=original_engine"
2) "REPAIR TABLE" (without FORCE)
3) "OPTIMIZE TABLE"
All of the above commands will optimize row space usage (which means that
space will be needed to hold a temporary copy of the table) and
re-generate all indexes. They will also try to replicate the original
table definition as exact as possible.
For ALTER TABLE and "REPAIR TABLE without FORCE", the following will hold:
If the table is from an older MariaDB version and data conversion is
needed (for example for old type HASH columns, MySQL JSON type or new
TIMESTAMP format) "ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE, algorithm=COPY" will be
used.
The differences between the algorithms are
1) Will use the fastest algorithm the engine supports to do a full repair
of the table (except if data conversions are is needed).
2) Will use the storage engine internal REPAIR facility (MyISAM, Aria).
If the engine does not support REPAIR then
"ALTER TABLE FORCE, ALGORITHM=COPY" will be used.
If there was data incompatibilities (which means that FORCE was used)
then there will be a warning after REPAIR that ALTER TABLE FORCE is
still needed.
The reason for this is that REPAIR may be able to go around data
errors (wrong incompatible data, crashed or unreadable sectors) that
ALTER TABLE cannot do.
3) Will use the storage engine internal OPTIMIZE. If engine does not
support optimize, then "ALTER TABLE FORCE" is used.
The above will ensure that ALTER TABLE FORCE is able to
correct almost any errors in the row or index data. In case of
corrupted blocks then REPAIR possible followed by ALTER TABLE is needed.
This is important as mariadb-upgrade executes ALTER TABLE table_name
FORCE for any table that must be re-created.
Bugs fixed with InnoDB tables when using ALTER TABLE FORCE:
- No error for INNODB_DEFAULT_ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT even if row length
would be too wide. (Independent of innodb_strict_mode).
- Tables using symlinks will be symlinked after any of the above commands
(Independent of the setting of --symbolic-links)
If one specifies an algorithm together with ALTER TABLE FORCE, things
will work as before (except if data conversion is required as then
the COPY algorithm is enforced).
ALTER TABLE .. OPTIMIZE ALL PARTITIONS will work as before.
Other things:
- FORCE argument added to REPAIR to allow one to first run internal
repair to fix damaged blocks and then follow it with ALTER TABLE.
- REPAIR will not update frm_version if ha_check_for_upgrade() finds
that table is still incompatible with current version. In this case the
REPAIR will end with an error.
- REPAIR for storage engines that does not have native repair, like InnoDB,
is now using ALTER TABLE FORCE.
- REPAIR csv-table USE_FRM now works.
- It did not work before as CSV tables had extension list in wrong
order.
- Default error messages length for %M increased from 128 to 256 to not
cut information from REPAIR.
- Documented HA_ADMIN_XX variables related to repair.
- Added HA_ADMIN_NEEDS_DATA_CONVERSION to signal that we have to
do data conversions when converting the table (and thus ALTER TABLE
copy algorithm is needed).
- Fixed typo in error message (caused test changes).
Remove alter_algorithm but keep the variable as no-op (with a warning).
The reasons for removing alter_algorithm are:
- alter_algorithm was introduced as a replacement for the
old_alter_table that was used to force the usage of the original
alter table algorithm (copy) in the cases where the new alter
algorithm did not work. The new option was added as a way to force
the usage of a specific algorithm when it should instead have made
it possible to disable algorithms that would not work for some
reason.
- alter_algorithm introduced some cases where ALTER TABLE would not
work without specifying the ALGORITHM=XXX option together with
ALTER TABLE.
- Having different values of alter_algorithm on master and slave could
cause slave to stop unexpectedly.
- ALTER TABLE FORCE, as used by mariadb-upgrade, would not always work
if alter_algorithm was set for the server.
- As part of the MDEV-33449 "improving repair of tables" it become
clear that alter- algorithm made it harder to provide a better and
more consistent ALTER TABLE FORCE and REPAIR TABLE and it would be
better to remove it.
Correct the second parameter for strxnmov to prevent potential buffer
overflows. The second parameter must be one less than the size of the
input buffer to avoid writing past the end of the buffer.
While the second parameter is usually correct, there are exceptions
that need fixing.
This commit addresses the issue within frm_file_exists() and other
affected places.
on disable_indexes(HA_KEY_SWITCH_NONUNIQ_SAVE) the engine does
not know that the long unique is logically unique, because on the
engine level it is not. And the engine disables it,
Change the disable_indexes/enable_indexes API. Instead of the enum
mode, send a key_map of indexes that should be enabled. This way the
server will decide what is unique, not the engine.
Assertion "from->s->online_alter_binlog == NULL" fails in
copy_data_between_tables, signalizing that a table share is being reused
(in another alter) after a lock upgrade to EXCLUSIVE fails.
Commit 3059f27 relaxed the lock to be upgraded to MDL_SHARED_NO_WRITE, leaving
it to happen later by a common path wait_while_table_is_used() call.
However the error handling there is not enough for online alter case, where we
require (for now) the table to be flushed, in order to clean up the memory
properly.
* Add another lock upgrade (to MDL_EXCLUSIVE) after the second replication stage
in copy_data_between_tables.
The error from this upgrade will be handled by the branch presented further in
the function.
MDEV-33450 Assertion fails in main.alter_table_online_debug
`TABLE_SHARE` that is being online-altered has a shared `s->online_alter_binlog`
member that all concurrent DMLs are writing to. Online alter thread deletes it
under the MDL_EXCLUSIVE. If upgrading the lock to MDL_EXCLUSIVE fails, table as
marked as `flushed` and it's freed automatically when its usage drops to zero.
In commit 3059f27 the lock upgrade was relaxed to MDL_SHARED_NO_WRITE to allow
concurrent SELECT threads during the final `online_alter_read_from_binlog()`
pass. An attempt to upgrade the lock to MDL_EXCLUSIVE was still happening, but
much later — after the code that marked the table `flushed`.
That is, if the upgrade failed, the table was left with a stale
`s->online_alter_binlog` triggering an assert in a future online alter.
To fix this, upgrade the lock to MDL_EXCLUSIVE earlier, after the final
`online_alter_read_from_binlog()`.
Fixing the problem that an operation involving a mix of
two or more GEOMETRY operands did not preserve their SRIDs.
Now SRIDs are preserved by hybrid functions, subqueries, TVCs, UNIONs, VIEWs.
Incompatible change:
An attempt to mix two different SRIDs now raises an error.
Details:
- Adding a new class Type_extra_attributes. It's a generic
container which can store very specific data type attributes.
For now it can store one uint32 and one const pointer attribute
(for GEOMETRY's SRID and for ENUM/SET TYPELIB respectively).
In the future it can grow as needed.
Type_extra_attributes will also be reused soon to store "const Type_zone*"
pointers for the TIMESTAMP's "WITH TIME ZONE 'tz'" attribute
(a timestamp data type with a fixed time zone independent from @@time_zone).
The time zone attribute will be stored in exactly the same way like
a TYPELIB pointer is stored by ENUM/SET.
- Removing Column_definition_attributes members "interval" and "srid".
Deriving Column_definition_attributes from the generic attribute container
Type_extra_attributes instead.
- Adding a new class Type_typelib_attributes, to store
the TYPELIB of the ENUM and SET data types. Deriving Field_enum from it.
Removing the member Field_enum::typelib.
- Adding a new class Type_geom_attributes, to store
the GEOMETRY related attributes. Deriving Field_geom from it.
Removing the member Field_geom::srid.
- Removing virtual methods:
Field::get_typelib()
Type_all_attributes::get_typelib() and
Type_all_attributes::set_typelib()
They were very specific to TYPELIB.
Adding more generic virtual methods instead:
* Field::type_extra_attributes() - to get extra attributes
* Type_all_attributes::type_extra_attributes() - to get extra attributes
* Type_all_attributes::type_extra_attributes_addr() - to set extra attributes
- Removing Item_type_holder::enum_set_typelib. Deriving Item_type_holder
from the generic attribute container Type_extra_attributes instead.
This makes it possible for UNION to preserve SRID
(in addition to preserving TYPELIB).
- Deriving Item_hybrid_func from Type_extra_attributes.
This makes it possible for hybrid functions (e.g. CASE, COALESCE,
LEAST, GREATEST etc) to preserve SRID.
- Deriving Item_singlerow_subselect from Type_extra_attributes and
overriding methods:
* Item_cache::type_extra_attributes()
* subselect_single_select_engine::fix_length_and_dec()
* Item_singlerow_subselect::type_extra_attributes()
* Item_singlerow_subselect::type_extra_attributes_addr()
This is needed to preserve SRID in subqueries and TVCs
- Cleanup: fixing the data type of members
* Binlog_type_info::m_enum_typelib
* Binlog_type_info::m_set_typelib
from "TYPELIB *" to "const TYPELIB *"
This patch also fixes:
MDEV-33050 Build-in schemas like oracle_schema are accent insensitive
MDEV-33084 LASTVAL(t1) and LASTVAL(T1) do not work well with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33085 Tables T1 and t1 do not work well with ENGINE=CSV and lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33086 SHOW OPEN TABLES IN DB1 -- is case insensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33088 Cannot create triggers in the database `MYSQL`
MDEV-33103 LOCK TABLE t1 AS t2 -- alias is not case sensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33109 DROP DATABASE MYSQL -- does not drop SP with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33110 HANDLER commands are case insensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33119 User is case insensitive in INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS
MDEV-33120 System log table names are case insensitive with lower-cast-table-names=0
- Removing the virtual function strnncoll() from MY_COLLATION_HANDLER
- Adding a wrapper function CHARSET_INFO::streq(), to compare
two strings for equality. For now it calls strnncoll() internally.
In the future it will turn into a virtual function.
- Adding new accent sensitive case insensitive collations:
- utf8mb4_general1400_as_ci
- utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci
They implement accent sensitive case insensitive comparison.
The weight of a character is equal to the code point of its
upper case variant. These collations use Unicode-14.0.0 casefolding data.
The result of
my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci.strcoll()
is very close to the former
my_charset_utf8mb3_general_ci.strcasecmp()
There is only a difference in a couple dozen rare characters, because:
- the switch from "tolower" to "toupper" comparison, to make
utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci closer to utf8mb3_general_ci
- the switch from Unicode-3.0.0 to Unicode-14.0.0
This difference should be tolarable. See the list of affected
characters in the MDEV description.
Note, utf8mb4_general1400_as_ci correctly handles non-BMP characters!
Unlike utf8mb4_general_ci, it does not treat all BMP characters
as equal.
- Adding classes representing names of the file based database objects:
Lex_ident_db
Lex_ident_table
Lex_ident_trigger
Their comparison collation depends on the underlying
file system case sensitivity and on --lower-case-table-names
and can be either my_charset_bin or my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci.
- Adding classes representing names of other database objects,
whose names have case insensitive comparison style,
using my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci:
Lex_ident_column
Lex_ident_sys_var
Lex_ident_user_var
Lex_ident_sp_var
Lex_ident_ps
Lex_ident_i_s_table
Lex_ident_window
Lex_ident_func
Lex_ident_partition
Lex_ident_with_element
Lex_ident_rpl_filter
Lex_ident_master_info
Lex_ident_host
Lex_ident_locale
Lex_ident_plugin
Lex_ident_engine
Lex_ident_server
Lex_ident_savepoint
Lex_ident_charset
engine_option_value::Name
- All the mentioned Lex_ident_xxx classes implement a method streq():
if (ident1.streq(ident2))
do_equal();
This method works as a wrapper for CHARSET_INFO::streq().
- Changing a lot of "LEX_CSTRING name" to "Lex_ident_xxx name"
in class members and in function/method parameters.
- Replacing all calls like
system_charset_info->coll->strcasecmp(ident1, ident2)
to
ident1.streq(ident2)
- Taking advantage of the c++11 user defined literal operator
for LEX_CSTRING (see m_strings.h) and Lex_ident_xxx (see lex_ident.h)
data types. Use example:
const Lex_ident_column primary_key_name= "PRIMARY"_Lex_ident_column;
is now a shorter version of:
const Lex_ident_column primary_key_name=
Lex_ident_column({STRING_WITH_LEN("PRIMARY")});