- During column reorder table rebuild, rollback of insert fails.
Reason is that InnoDB tries to fetch the column position from
new clustered index and it exceeds default column value tuple fields.
So InnoDB should use the table column position while searching for
defaults column value.
This is a backport of the following commits:
commit b4165985c97a4133e19dd99b459dea27f87fbb1b
commit 69e88de0fe6dc5312f5d6e7a179a5ab73d60dc43
commit 40f4525f43aba5d579cf55bae2df504001cd04f4
commit 656f66def27b7a2cf42a28f873f1eeef0416aa71
Now that MDEV-14717 made RENAME TABLE crash-safe within InnoDB,
it should be safe to drop the #sql- tables within InnoDB during
crash recovery. These tables can be one of two things:
(1) #sql-ib related to deferred DROP TABLE (follow-up to MDEV-13407)
or to table-rebuilding ALTER TABLE...ALGORITHM=INPLACE
(since MDEV-14378, only related to the intermediate copy of a table),
(2) #sql- related to the intermediate copy of a table during
ALTER TABLE...ALGORITHM=COPY
We will not drop tables whose name starts with #sql2, because
the server can be killed during an ALGORITHM=COPY operation at
a point where the original table was renamed to #sql2 but the
finished intermediate copy was not yet renamed from #sql-
to the original table name.
If an old version of MariaDB Server before 10.2.13 (MDEV-11415)
was killed while ALTER TABLE...ALGORITHM=COPY was in progress,
after recovery there could be undo log records for some records that were
inserted into an intermediate copy of the table. Due to these undo log
records, InnoDB would resurrect locks at recovery, and the intermediate
table would be locked while we are trying to drop it. This would cause
a call to row_rename_table_for_mysql(), either from
row_mysql_drop_garbage_tables() or from the rollback of a RENAME
operation that was part of the ALTER TABLE.
row_rename_table_for_mysql(): Do not attempt to parse FOREIGN KEY
constraints when renaming from #sql-something to #sql-something-else,
because it does not make any sense.
row_drop_table_for_mysql(): When deferring DROP TABLE due to locks,
do not rename the table if its name already starts with the #sql-
prefix, which is what row_mysql_drop_garbage_tables() uses.
Previously, the too strict prefix #sql-ib was used, and some
tables were renamed unnecessarily.
This is a backport of commit 88aff5f471d3d9ae8ecc2f909bcf5bd0ddd6aa7c.
The InnoDB background DROP TABLE queue is something that we should
really remove, but are unable to until we remove dict_operation_lock
so that DDL and DML operations can be combined in a single transaction.
Because the queue is not persistent, it is not crash-safe. We should
in some way ensure that the deferred-dropped tables will be dropped
after server restart.
The existence of two separate transactions complicates the error handling
of CREATE TABLE...SELECT. We should really not break locks in DROP TABLE.
Our solution to these problems is to rename the table to a temporary
name, and to drop such-named tables on InnoDB startup. Also, the
queue will use table IDs instead of names from now on.
check-testcase.test: Ignore #sql-ib*.ibd files, because tables may enter
the background DROP TABLE queue shortly before the test finishes.
innodb.drop_table_background: Test CREATE...SELECT and the creation of
tables whose file name starts with #sql-ib.
innodb.alter_crash: Adjust the recovery, now that the #sql-ib tables
will be dropped on InnoDB startup.
row_mysql_drop_garbage_tables(): New function, to drop all #sql-ib tables
on InnoDB startup.
row_drop_table_for_mysql_in_background(): Remove an unnecessary and
misplaced call to log_buffer_flush_to_disk(). (The call should have been
after the transaction commit. We do not care about flushing the redo log
here, because the table would be dropped again at server startup.)
Remove the entry from the list after the table no longer exists.
If server shutdown has been initiated, empty the list without actually
dropping any tables. They will be dropped again on startup.
row_drop_table_for_mysql(): Do not call lock_remove_all_on_table().
Instead, if locks exist, defer the DROP TABLE until they do not exist.
If the table name does not start with #sql-ib, rename it to that prefix
before adding it to the background DROP TABLE queue.
This is a backport of commit 07e9ff1fe18999e1acd640ee3b2169c3f506fb35.
Allow DROP TABLE `#mysql50##sql-...._.` to drop tables that were
being rebuilt by ALGORITHM=INPLACE
NOTE: If the server is killed after the table-rebuilding ALGORITHM=INPLACE
commits inside InnoDB but before the .frm file has been replaced, then
the recovery will involve something else than DROP TABLE.
NOTE: If the server is killed in a true inplace ALTER TABLE commits
inside InnoDB but before the .frm file has been replaced, then we
are really out of luck. To properly handle that situation, we would
need a transactional mysql.ddl_fixup table that directs recovery to
rename or remove files.
prepare_inplace_alter_table_dict(): Use the altered_table->s->table_name
for generating the new_table_name.
table_name_t::part_suffix: The start of the partition name suffix.
table_name_t::dbend(): Return the end of the schema name.
table_name_t::dblen(): Return the length of the schema name, in bytes.
table_name_t::basename(): Return the name without the schema name.
table_name_t::part(): Return the partition name, or NULL if none.
row_drop_table_for_mysql(): Assert for #sql, not #sql-ib.