Check whether the master and purge thread are active after creating them. Do
not proceed until both threads have started. We do this by checking whether a
slot has been reserved by both the respective threads.
Add srv_thread_has_reserved_slot() returns slot no or ULINT_UNDEFINED.
rb://536 Approved by Jimmy
InnoDB does not attempt to handle lower_case_table_names == 2 when looking
up foreign table names and referenced table name. It turned that server
variable into a boolean and ignored the possibility of it being '2'.
The setting lower_case_table_names == 2 means that it should be stored and
displayed in mixed case as given, but compared internally in lower case.
Normally the server deals with this since it stores table names. But
InnoDB stores referential constraints for the server, so it needs to keep
track of both lower case and given names.
This solution creates two table name pointers for each foreign and referenced
table name. One to display the name, and one to look it up. Both pointers
point to the same allocated string unless this setting is 2. So the overhead
added is not too much.
Two functions are created in dict0mem.c to populate the ..._lookup versions
of these pointers. Both dict_mem_foreign_table_name_lookup_set() and
dict_mem_referenced_table_name_lookup_set() are called 5 times each.
Fix a race condition in srv_master_thread(). We need to acquire the kernel
mutex before calling srv_table_reserve_slot(). Add a mutex_own() assertion
in srv_table_reserve_slot().
Add new function os_cond_wait_timed(). Change the os_thread_sleep() calls
to timed conditional waits. Signal the background threads during the shutdown
phase so that we avoid waiting for the sleep to timeout thus saving some time.
rb://439 -- Approved by Jimmy Yang
Issue an error message to the error log when
trx->dict_operation_lock_mode == RW_X_LATCH in
srv_suspend_mysql_thread(). Transactions that modify InnoDB
data dictionary tables must be free of lock waits, because they
must be holding the data dictionary latch in exclusive mode.
The transactions must not be accessing any other tables other than
the data dictionary tables.
The handling of RW_X_LATCH was accidentally added in the InnoDB Plugin,
as a wrong fix of an assertion failure. (Fast index creation was accessing
both data dictionary tables and user tables in the same transaction.)
This patch was originally developed by Vladislav Vaintroub.
The main changes are:
* Use TryEnterCriticalSection in os_fast_mutex_trylock().
* Use lightweight condition variables on Vista or later Windows;
but fall back to events on older Windows, such as XP.
This patch also fixes the following bugs:
bug# 52102 InnoDB Plugin shows performance drop compared to InnoDB
on Windows
bug# 53204 os_fastmutex_trylock is implemented incorrectly on Windows
rb://363 approved by Inaam Rana
and innodb_file_format_max two system variables. And this also fixes
bug #53654 after 2nd shutdown innodb_file_format_check attains strange
values.
rb://366 approved by Marko
In order to allow thread schedulers to be dynamically loaded,
it is necessary to make the following changes to the server:
- Two new service interfaces
- Modifications to InnoDB to inform the thread scheduler of state changes.
- Changes to the VIO subsystem for checking if data is available on a socket.
- Elimination of remains of the old thread pool implementation.
The two new service interfaces introduces are:
my_thread_scheduler
A service interface to register a thread
scheduler.
thd_wait
A service interface to inform thread scheduler
that the thread is about to start waiting.
In addition, the patch adds code that:
- Add a call to thd_wait for table locks in mysys
thd_lock.c by introducing a set function that
can be used to set a callback to be used when
waiting on a lock and resuming from waiting.
- Calling the mysys set function from the server
to set the callbacks correctly.
This is a followup to the fix of
Bug#51920 Innodb connections in row lock wait ignore KILL until lock wait
timeout
in that fix (rb://279) the behavior was changed to honor when a trx is
interrupted during lock wait, but the returned error code was still
"lock wait timeout" when it should be "interrupted".
This change fixes the non-deterministically failing test binlog.binlog_killed,
that failed like this:
binlog.binlog_killed 'stmt' [ fail ]
Test ended at 2010-05-12 11:39:08
CURRENT_TEST: binlog.binlog_killed
mysqltest: At line 208: query 'reap' failed with wrong errno 1205: 'Lock wait timeout exceeded; try restarting transaction', instead of 0...
Approved by: Sunny Bains (rb://344)
in the code but they have nothing to do with the kernel mutex split code.
Some subsequent commits use the new functions. This patch has been tested
with: ./mtr --suite=innodb with UNIV_DEBUG and UNIV_SYNC_DEBUG enabled.
All tests were successful.
lock monitor thread, it may have locks that are granted to waited to
waiting transactions. These waiting transactions will need to be woken
up but their trx->lock_wait_timeout flag will be FALSE causing the old
code to break. What we need is a flag that covers the entire lock
release process not individual transactions. The fix is to move the
flag out of trx_t and into srv_sys_t.
-------------------------------------------------------------
revno: 2877
committer: Davi Arnaut <Davi.Arnaut@Sun.COM>
branch nick: 35164-6.0
timestamp: Wed 2008-10-15 19:53:18 -0300
message:
Bug#35164: Large number of invalid pthread_attr_setschedparam calls
Bug#37536: Thread scheduling causes performance degradation at low thread count
Bug#12702: Long queries take 100% of CPU and freeze other applications under Windows
The problem is that although having threads with different priorities
yields marginal improvements [1] in some platforms [2], relying on some
statically defined priorities (QUERY_PRIOR and WAIT_PRIOR) to play well
(or to work at all) with different scheduling practices and disciplines
is, at best, a shot in the dark as the meaning of priority values may
change depending on the scheduling policy set for the process.
Another problem is that increasing priorities can hurt other concurrent
(running on the same hardware) applications (such as AMP) by causing
starvation problems as MySQL threads will successively preempt lower
priority processes. This can be evidenced by Bug#12702.
The solution is to not change the threads priorities and rely on the
system scheduler to perform its job. This also enables a system admin
to increase or decrease the scheduling priority of the MySQL process,
if intended.
Furthermore, the internal wrappers and code for changing the priority
of threads is being removed as they are now unused and ancient.
1. Due to unintentional side effects. On Solaris this could artificially
help benchmarks as calling the priority changing syscall millions of
times is more beneficial than the actual setting of the priority.
2. Where it actually works. It has never worked on Linux as the default
scheduling policy SCHED_OTHER only accepts the static priority 0.
bzr branch mysql-5.1-performance-version mysql-trunk # Summit
cd mysql-trunk
bzr merge mysql-5.1-innodb_plugin # which is 5.1 + Innodb plugin
bzr rm innobase # remove the builtin
Next step: build, test fixes.
include/Makefile.am: use @PERL@ to call scripts/dheadgen.pl - don't rely on #! /usr/bin/perl
scripts/dheadgen.pl: use 2-arg open() for compatibility with older Perl versions
storage/innobase/srv/srv0srv.c: Don't use C++-style comments in C code