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3682 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
51c89849d1 Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2021-11-29 11:39:34 +02:00
d4cb177603 Merge 10.4 into 10.5 2021-11-29 11:16:20 +02:00
4da2273876 Merge 10.3 into 10.4 2021-11-29 10:59:22 +02:00
289721de9a Merge 10.2 into 10.3 2021-11-29 10:33:06 +02:00
e9f171b4fe MDEV-27098 Subquery using the ALL keyword on TIME columns produces a wrong result 2021-11-20 21:49:25 +04:00
7efcc2794d MDEV-27072 Subquery using the ALL keyword on date columns produces a wrong result 2021-11-20 16:11:08 +04:00
ef2dbb8dbc MDEV-23328 Server hang due to Galera lock conflict resolution
Mutex order violation when wsrep bf thread kills a conflicting trx,
the stack is

          wsrep_thd_LOCK()
          wsrep_kill_victim()
          lock_rec_other_has_conflicting()
          lock_clust_rec_read_check_and_lock()
          row_search_mvcc()
          ha_innobase::index_read()
          ha_innobase::rnd_pos()
          handler::ha_rnd_pos()
          handler::rnd_pos_by_record()
          handler::ha_rnd_pos_by_record()
          Rows_log_event::find_row()
          Update_rows_log_event::do_exec_row()
          Rows_log_event::do_apply_event()
          Log_event::apply_event()
          wsrep_apply_events()

and mutexes are taken in the order

          lock_sys->mutex -> victim_trx->mutex -> victim_thread->LOCK_thd_data

When a normal KILL statement is executed, the stack is

          innobase_kill_query()
          kill_handlerton()
          plugin_foreach_with_mask()
          ha_kill_query()
          THD::awake()
          kill_one_thread()

        and mutexes are

          victim_thread->LOCK_thd_data -> lock_sys->mutex -> victim_trx->mutex

This patch is the plan D variant for fixing potetial mutex locking
order exercised by BF aborting and KILL command execution.

In this approach, KILL command is replicated as TOI operation.
This guarantees total isolation for the KILL command execution
in the first node: there is no concurrent replication applying
and no concurrent DDL executing. Therefore there is no risk of
BF aborting to happen in parallel with KILL command execution
either. Potential mutex deadlocks between the different mutex
access paths with KILL command execution and BF aborting cannot
therefore happen.

TOI replication is used, in this approach,  purely as means
to provide isolated KILL command execution in the first node.
KILL command should not (and must not) be applied in secondary
nodes. In this patch, we make this sure by skipping KILL
execution in secondary nodes, in applying phase, where we
bail out if applier thread is trying to execute KILL command.
This is effective, but skipping the applying of KILL command
could happen much earlier as well.

This also fixed unprotected calls to wsrep_thd_abort
that will use wsrep_abort_transaction. This is fixed
by holding THD::LOCK_thd_data while we abort transaction.

Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
2021-10-29 20:40:35 +02:00
d5bc05798f MDEV-25114: Crash: WSREP: invalid state ROLLED_BACK (FATAL)
Revert "MDEV-23328 Server hang due to Galera lock conflict resolution"

This reverts commit eac8341df4.
2021-10-29 20:38:11 +02:00
157b3a637f MDEV-23328 Server hang due to Galera lock conflict resolution
Mutex order violation when wsrep bf thread kills a conflicting trx,
the stack is

          wsrep_thd_LOCK()
          wsrep_kill_victim()
          lock_rec_other_has_conflicting()
          lock_clust_rec_read_check_and_lock()
          row_search_mvcc()
          ha_innobase::index_read()
          ha_innobase::rnd_pos()
          handler::ha_rnd_pos()
          handler::rnd_pos_by_record()
          handler::ha_rnd_pos_by_record()
          Rows_log_event::find_row()
          Update_rows_log_event::do_exec_row()
          Rows_log_event::do_apply_event()
          Log_event::apply_event()
          wsrep_apply_events()

and mutexes are taken in the order

          lock_sys->mutex -> victim_trx->mutex -> victim_thread->LOCK_thd_data

When a normal KILL statement is executed, the stack is

          innobase_kill_query()
          kill_handlerton()
          plugin_foreach_with_mask()
          ha_kill_query()
          THD::awake()
          kill_one_thread()

        and mutexes are

          victim_thread->LOCK_thd_data -> lock_sys->mutex -> victim_trx->mutex

This patch is the plan D variant for fixing potetial mutex locking
order exercised by BF aborting and KILL command execution.

In this approach, KILL command is replicated as TOI operation.
This guarantees total isolation for the KILL command execution
in the first node: there is no concurrent replication applying
and no concurrent DDL executing. Therefore there is no risk of
BF aborting to happen in parallel with KILL command execution
either. Potential mutex deadlocks between the different mutex
access paths with KILL command execution and BF aborting cannot
therefore happen.

TOI replication is used, in this approach,  purely as means
to provide isolated KILL command execution in the first node.
KILL command should not (and must not) be applied in secondary
nodes. In this patch, we make this sure by skipping KILL
execution in secondary nodes, in applying phase, where we
bail out if applier thread is trying to execute KILL command.
This is effective, but skipping the applying of KILL command
could happen much earlier as well.

This also fixed unprotected calls to wsrep_thd_abort
that will use wsrep_abort_transaction. This is fixed
by holding THD::LOCK_thd_data while we abort transaction.

Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
2021-10-29 10:00:17 +03:00
5c230b21bf MDEV-23328 Server hang due to Galera lock conflict resolution
Mutex order violation when wsrep bf thread kills a conflicting trx,
the stack is

          wsrep_thd_LOCK()
          wsrep_kill_victim()
          lock_rec_other_has_conflicting()
          lock_clust_rec_read_check_and_lock()
          row_search_mvcc()
          ha_innobase::index_read()
          ha_innobase::rnd_pos()
          handler::ha_rnd_pos()
          handler::rnd_pos_by_record()
          handler::ha_rnd_pos_by_record()
          Rows_log_event::find_row()
          Update_rows_log_event::do_exec_row()
          Rows_log_event::do_apply_event()
          Log_event::apply_event()
          wsrep_apply_events()

and mutexes are taken in the order

          lock_sys->mutex -> victim_trx->mutex -> victim_thread->LOCK_thd_data

When a normal KILL statement is executed, the stack is

          innobase_kill_query()
          kill_handlerton()
          plugin_foreach_with_mask()
          ha_kill_query()
          THD::awake()
          kill_one_thread()

        and mutexes are

          victim_thread->LOCK_thd_data -> lock_sys->mutex -> victim_trx->mutex

This patch is the plan D variant for fixing potetial mutex locking
order exercised by BF aborting and KILL command execution.

In this approach, KILL command is replicated as TOI operation.
This guarantees total isolation for the KILL command execution
in the first node: there is no concurrent replication applying
and no concurrent DDL executing. Therefore there is no risk of
BF aborting to happen in parallel with KILL command execution
either. Potential mutex deadlocks between the different mutex
access paths with KILL command execution and BF aborting cannot
therefore happen.

TOI replication is used, in this approach,  purely as means
to provide isolated KILL command execution in the first node.
KILL command should not (and must not) be applied in secondary
nodes. In this patch, we make this sure by skipping KILL
execution in secondary nodes, in applying phase, where we
bail out if applier thread is trying to execute KILL command.
This is effective, but skipping the applying of KILL command
could happen much earlier as well.

This also fixed unprotected calls to wsrep_thd_abort
that will use wsrep_abort_transaction. This is fixed
by holding THD::LOCK_thd_data while we abort transaction.

Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
2021-10-29 09:52:52 +03:00
aa7ca987db MDEV-25114: Crash: WSREP: invalid state ROLLED_BACK (FATAL)
Revert "MDEV-23328 Server hang due to Galera lock conflict resolution"

This reverts commit eac8341df4.
2021-10-29 09:52:40 +03:00
db50ea3ad3 MDEV-23328 Server hang due to Galera lock conflict resolution
Mutex order violation when wsrep bf thread kills a conflicting trx,
the stack is

          wsrep_thd_LOCK()
          wsrep_kill_victim()
          lock_rec_other_has_conflicting()
          lock_clust_rec_read_check_and_lock()
          row_search_mvcc()
          ha_innobase::index_read()
          ha_innobase::rnd_pos()
          handler::ha_rnd_pos()
          handler::rnd_pos_by_record()
          handler::ha_rnd_pos_by_record()
          Rows_log_event::find_row()
          Update_rows_log_event::do_exec_row()
          Rows_log_event::do_apply_event()
          Log_event::apply_event()
          wsrep_apply_events()

and mutexes are taken in the order

          lock_sys->mutex -> victim_trx->mutex -> victim_thread->LOCK_thd_data

When a normal KILL statement is executed, the stack is

          innobase_kill_query()
          kill_handlerton()
          plugin_foreach_with_mask()
          ha_kill_query()
          THD::awake()
          kill_one_thread()

        and mutexes are

          victim_thread->LOCK_thd_data -> lock_sys->mutex -> victim_trx->mutex

This patch is the plan D variant for fixing potetial mutex locking
order exercised by BF aborting and KILL command execution.

In this approach, KILL command is replicated as TOI operation.
This guarantees total isolation for the KILL command execution
in the first node: there is no concurrent replication applying
and no concurrent DDL executing. Therefore there is no risk of
BF aborting to happen in parallel with KILL command execution
either. Potential mutex deadlocks between the different mutex
access paths with KILL command execution and BF aborting cannot
therefore happen.

TOI replication is used, in this approach,  purely as means
to provide isolated KILL command execution in the first node.
KILL command should not (and must not) be applied in secondary
nodes. In this patch, we make this sure by skipping KILL
execution in secondary nodes, in applying phase, where we
bail out if applier thread is trying to execute KILL command.
This is effective, but skipping the applying of KILL command
could happen much earlier as well.

This also fixed unprotected calls to wsrep_thd_abort
that will use wsrep_abort_transaction. This is fixed
by holding THD::LOCK_thd_data while we abort transaction.

Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
2021-10-29 07:57:18 +03:00
f59f5c4a10 Revert MDEV-25114
Revert 88a4be75a5 and
9d97f92feb, which had been
prematurely pushed by accident.
2021-09-24 16:21:20 +03:00
d95361107c Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2021-09-24 14:38:52 +03:00
88a4be75a5 MDEV-25114 Crash: WSREP: invalid state ROLLED_BACK (FATAL)
This patch is the plan D variant for fixing potetial mutex locking
order exercised by BF aborting and KILL command execution.

In this approach, KILL command is replicated as TOI operation.
This guarantees total isolation for the KILL command execution
in the first node: there is no concurrent replication applying
and no concurrent DDL executing. Therefore there is no risk of
BF aborting to happen in parallel with KILL command execution
either. Potential mutex deadlocks between the different mutex
access paths with KILL command execution and BF aborting cannot
therefore happen.

TOI replication is used, in this approach,  purely as means
to provide isolated KILL command execution in the first node.
KILL command should not (and must not) be applied in secondary
nodes. In this patch, we make this sure by skipping KILL
execution in secondary nodes, in applying phase, where we
bail out if applier thread is trying to execute KILL command.
This is effective, but skipping the applying of KILL command
could happen much earlier as well.

This patch also fixes mutex locking order and unprotected
THD member accesses on bf aborting case. We try to hold
THD::LOCK_thd_data during bf aborting. Only case where it
is not possible is at wsrep_abort_transaction before
call wsrep_innobase_kill_one_trx where we take InnoDB
mutexes first and then THD::LOCK_thd_data.

This will also fix possible race condition during
close_connection and while wsrep is disconnecting
connections.

Added wsrep_bf_kill_debug test case

Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
2021-09-24 09:47:31 +03:00
b4074069b2 MDEV-26657 : Initialize some fields in create_background_thd()
Avoid reading uninitialized memory by  thd_get_error_context_description().
Note, that THD::real_id can't be initialized at this stage, so it will be zeroed.
2021-09-21 19:14:07 +02:00
7730dd392b Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2021-09-06 10:31:32 +03:00
e38a05e20a Fix create_background_thd()
Allow the caller to have current_thd. Also do not store
PSI_CALL_get_thread() in the new THD, it is a thread local storage variable
that can become invalid any time, we do not control the lifetime of the
caller's thread.
2021-09-02 19:41:54 +02:00
c5fd9aa562 MDEV-25919: Lock tables before acquiring dict_sys.latch
In commit 1bd681c8b3 (MDEV-25506 part 3)
we introduced a "fake instant timeout" when a transaction would wait
for a table or record lock while holding dict_sys.latch. This prevented
a deadlock of the server but could cause bogus errors for operations
on the InnoDB persistent statistics tables.

A better fix is to ensure that whenever a transaction is being
executed in the InnoDB internal SQL parser (which will for now
require dict_sys.latch to be held), it will already have acquired
all locks that could be required for the execution. So, we will
acquire the following locks upfront, before acquiring dict_sys.latch:

(1) MDL on the affected user table (acquired by the SQL layer)
(2) If applicable (not for RENAME TABLE): InnoDB table lock
(3) If persistent statistics are going to be modified:
(3.a) MDL_SHARED on mysql.innodb_table_stats, mysql.innodb_index_stats
(3.b) exclusive table locks on the statistics tables
(4) Exclusive table locks on the InnoDB data dictionary tables
(not needed in ANALYZE TABLE and the like)

Note: Acquiring exclusive locks on the statistics tables may cause
more locking conflicts between concurrent DDL operations.
Notably, RENAME TABLE will lock the statistics tables
even if no persistent statistics are enabled for the table.

DROP DATABASE will only acquire locks on statistics tables if
persistent statistics are enabled for the tables on which the
SQL layer is invoking ha_innobase::delete_table().
For any "garbage collection" in innodb_drop_database(), a timeout
while acquiring locks on the statistics tables will result in any
statistics not being deleted for any tables that the SQL layer
did not know about.

If innodb_defragment=ON, information may be written to the statistics
tables even for tables for which InnoDB persistent statistics are
disabled. But, DROP TABLE will no longer attempt to delete that
information if persistent statistics are not enabled for the table.

This change should also fix the hangs related to InnoDB persistent
statistics and STATS_AUTO_RECALC (MDEV-15020) as well as
a bug that running ALTER TABLE on the statistics tables
concurrently with running ALTER TABLE on InnoDB tables could
cause trouble.

lock_rec_enqueue_waiting(), lock_table_enqueue_waiting():
Do not issue a fake instant timeout error when the transaction
is holding dict_sys.latch. Instead, assert that the dict_sys.latch
is never being held here.

lock_sys_tables(): A new function to acquire exclusive locks on all
dictionary tables, in case DROP TABLE or similar operation is
being executed. Locking non-hard-coded tables is optional to avoid
a crash in row_merge_drop_temp_indexes(). The SYS_VIRTUAL table was
introduced in MySQL 5.7 and MariaDB Server 10.2. Normally, we require
all these dictionary tables to exist before executing any DDL, but
the function row_merge_drop_temp_indexes() is an exception.
When upgrading from MariaDB Server 10.1 or MySQL 5.6 or earlier,
the table SYS_VIRTUAL would not exist at this point.

ha_innobase::commit_inplace_alter_table(): Invoke
log_write_up_to() while not holding dict_sys.latch.

dict_sys_t::remove(), dict_table_close(): No longer try to
drop index stubs that were left behind by aborted online ADD INDEX.
Such indexes should be dropped from the InnoDB data dictionary by
row_merge_drop_indexes() as part of the failed DDL operation.
Stubs for aborted indexes may only be left behind in the
data dictionary cache.

dict_stats_fetch_from_ps(): Use a normal read-only transaction.

ha_innobase::delete_table(), ha_innobase::truncate(), fts_lock_table():
While waiting for purge to stop using the table,
do not hold dict_sys.latch.

ha_innobase::delete_table(): Implement a work-around for the rollback
of ALTER TABLE...ADD PARTITION. MDL_EXCLUSIVE would not be held if
ALTER TABLE hits lock_wait_timeout while trying to upgrade the MDL
due to a conflicting LOCK TABLES, such as in the first ALTER TABLE
in the test case of Bug#53676 in parts.partition_special_innodb.
Therefore, we must explicitly stop purge, because it would not be
stopped by MDL.

dict_stats_func(), btr_defragment_chunk(): Allocate a THD so that
we can acquire MDL on the InnoDB persistent statistics tables.

mysqltest_embedded: Invoke ha_pre_shutdown() before free_used_memory()
in order to avoid ASAN heap-use-after-free related to acquire_thd().

trx_t::dict_operation_lock_mode: Changed the type to bool.

row_mysql_lock_data_dictionary(), row_mysql_unlock_data_dictionary():
Implemented as macros.

rollback_inplace_alter_table(): Apply an infinite timeout to lock waits.

innodb_thd_increment_pending_ops(): Wrapper for
thd_increment_pending_ops(). Never attempt async operation for
InnoDB background threads, such as the trx_t::commit() in
dict_stats_process_entry_from_recalc_pool().

lock_sys_t::cancel(trx_t*): Make dictionary transactions immune to KILL.

lock_wait(): Make dictionary transactions immune to KILL, and to
lock wait timeout when waiting for locks on dictionary tables.

parts.partition_special_innodb: Use lock_wait_timeout=0 to instantly
get ER_LOCK_WAIT_TIMEOUT.

main.mdl: Filter out MDL on InnoDB persistent statistics tables

Reviewed by: Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani
2021-08-31 13:54:44 +03:00
8a33d36dac Fix GCC 11.2.0 -Wmaybe-uninitialized
TABLE_LIST::calc_md5(): Remove an untruthful const qualifier.

thd_get_query_start_data(): Pass empty_clex_str instead of
an uninitialized LEX_CSTRING.
2021-08-23 09:00:37 +03:00
f3fcf5f45c Merge 10.5 to 10.6 2021-08-19 12:25:00 +03:00
4a25957274 Merge 10.4 into 10.5 2021-08-18 18:22:35 +03:00
f84e28c119 Merge 10.3 into 10.4 2021-08-18 16:51:52 +03:00
10db7fcfa6 MENT-977 log priv host / priv user.
Add server functions to provide necessary data.
2021-08-10 23:22:04 +04:00
6efb5e9f5e Merge branch '10.5' into 10.6 2021-08-02 10:11:41 +02:00
ae6bdc6769 Merge branch '10.4' into 10.5 2021-07-31 23:19:51 +02:00
7841a7eb09 Merge branch '10.3' into 10.4 2021-07-31 22:59:58 +02:00
2b84e1c966 MDEV-23080: desync and pause node on BACKUP STAGE BLOCK_DDL
make BACKUP STAGE behave as FTWRL, desyncing and pausing the node
to prevent BF threads (appliers) from interfering with blocking stages.
This is needed because BF threads don't respect BACKUP MDL locks.

Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
2021-07-27 08:11:41 +03:00
6190a02f35 Merge branch '10.2' into 10.3 2021-07-21 20:11:07 +02:00
f64a4f672a follow-up MDEV-18166: rename marking functions
Reformulate mark_columns_used_by_index* function family in a more laconic
way:

mark_columns_used_by_index -> mark_index_columns
mark_columns_used_by_index_for_read_no_reset -> mark_index_columns_for_read
mark_columns_used_by_index_no_reset -> mark_index_columns_no_reset
static mark_index_columns -> do_mark_index_columns
2021-07-12 22:00:40 +03:00
a00b51f639 MDEV-16708: Fixed the failed test main.set_statement 2021-06-17 19:30:24 +02:00
af33202af7 Added DDL_options_st *thd_ddl_options(const MYSQL_THD thd)
This is used by InnoDB to detect if CREATE...SELECT is used

Other things:
- Changed InnoDB to use thd_ddl_options()
- Removed lock checking code for create...select (Approved by Marko)
2021-06-14 17:03:19 +03:00
3d6eb7afcf MDEV-25602 get rid of __WIN__ in favor of standard _WIN32
This fixed the MySQL bug# 20338 about misuse of double underscore
prefix __WIN__, which was old MySQL's idea of identifying Windows
Replace it by _WIN32 standard symbol for targeting Windows OS
(both 32 and 64 bit)

Not that connect storage engine is not fixed in this patch (must be
fixed in "upstream" branch)
2021-06-06 13:21:03 +02:00
3dd91241cb MDEV-24985 Shutdown fails to abort current InnoDB lock waits
On shutdown, to kill remaining connections, do the same thing that
server does during KILL CONNECTION, i.e thd->awake().

The stripped-down KILL version, that was used prior to this patch
for shutdown, missed the engine specific part (ha_kill_query)
2021-06-02 09:04:00 +02:00
860e754349 Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2021-05-26 11:22:40 +03:00
675716e1cb MDEV-23886 Reusing CTE inside a function fails with table doesn't exist
In the code existed just before this patch binding of a table reference to
the specification of the corresponding CTE happens in the function
open_and_process_table(). If the table reference is not the first in the
query the specification is cloned in the same way as the specification of
a view is cloned for any reference of the view. This works fine for
standalone queries, but does not work for stored procedures / functions
for the following reason.
When the first call of a stored procedure/ function SP is processed the
body of SP is parsed. When a query of SP is parsed the info on each
encountered table reference is put into a TABLE_LIST object linked into
a global chain associated with the query. When parsing of the query is
finished the basic info on the table references from this chain except
table references to derived tables and information schema tables is put
in one hash table associated with SP. When parsing of the body of SP is
finished this hash table is used to construct TABLE_LIST objects for all
table references mentioned in SP and link them into the list of such
objects passed to a pre-locking process that calls open_and_process_table()
for each table from the list.
When a TABLE_LIST for a view is encountered the view is opened and its
specification is parsed. For any table reference occurred in
the specification a new TABLE_LIST object is created to be included into
the list for pre-locking. After all objects in the pre-locking have been
looked through the tables mentioned in the list are locked. Note that the
objects referenced CTEs are just skipped here as it is impossible to
resolve these references without any info on the context where they occur.
Now the statements from the body of SP are executed one by one that.
At the very beginning of the execution of a query the tables used in the
query are opened and open_and_process_table() now is called for each table
reference mentioned in the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the
query that was built when the query was parsed.
For each table reference first the reference is checked against CTEs
definitions in whose scope it occurred. If such definition is found the
reference is considered resolved and if this is not the first reference
to the found CTE the the specification of the CTE is re-parsed and the
result of the parsing is added to the parsing tree of the query as a
sub-tree. If this sub-tree contains table references to other tables they
are added to the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the query in
order the referenced tables to be opened. When the procedure that opens
the tables comes to the TABLE_LIST object created for a non-first
reference to a CTE it discovers that the referenced table instance is not
locked and reports an error.
Thus processing non-first table references to a CTE similar to how
references to view are processed does not work for queries used in stored
procedures / functions. And the main problem is that the current
pre-locking mechanism employed for stored procedures / functions does not
allow to save the context in which a CTE reference occur. It's not trivial
to save the info about the context where a CTE reference occurs while the
resolution of the table reference cannot be done without this context and
consequentially the specification for the table reference cannot be
determined.

This patch solves the above problem by moving resolution of all CTE
references at the parsing stage. More exactly references to CTEs occurred in
a query are resolved right after parsing of the query has finished. After
resolution any CTE reference it is marked as a reference to to derived
table. So it is excluded from the hash table created for pre-locking used
base tables and view when the first call of a stored procedure / function
is processed.
This solution required recursive calls of the parser. The function
THD::sql_parser() has been added specifically for recursive invocations of
the parser.

# Conflicts:
#	sql/sql_cte.cc
#	sql/sql_cte.h
#	sql/sql_lex.cc
#	sql/sql_lex.h
#	sql/sql_view.cc
#	sql/sql_yacc.yy
#	sql/sql_yacc_ora.yy
2021-05-25 21:48:54 -07:00
04de651725 MDEV-23886 Reusing CTE inside a function fails with table doesn't exist
In the code existed just before this patch binding of a table reference to
the specification of the corresponding CTE happens in the function
open_and_process_table(). If the table reference is not the first in the
query the specification is cloned in the same way as the specification of
a view is cloned for any reference of the view. This works fine for
standalone queries, but does not work for stored procedures / functions
for the following reason.
When the first call of a stored procedure/ function SP is processed the
body of SP is parsed. When a query of SP is parsed the info on each
encountered table reference is put into a TABLE_LIST object linked into
a global chain associated with the query. When parsing of the query is
finished the basic info on the table references from this chain except
table references to derived tables and information schema tables is put
in one hash table associated with SP. When parsing of the body of SP is
finished this hash table is used to construct TABLE_LIST objects for all
table references mentioned in SP and link them into the list of such
objects passed to a pre-locking process that calls open_and_process_table()
for each table from the list.
When a TABLE_LIST for a view is encountered the view is opened and its
specification is parsed. For any table reference occurred in
the specification a new TABLE_LIST object is created to be included into
the list for pre-locking. After all objects in the pre-locking have been
looked through the tables mentioned in the list are locked. Note that the
objects referenced CTEs are just skipped here as it is impossible to
resolve these references without any info on the context where they occur.
Now the statements from the body of SP are executed one by one that.
At the very beginning of the execution of a query the tables used in the
query are opened and open_and_process_table() now is called for each table
reference mentioned in the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the
query that was built when the query was parsed.
For each table reference first the reference is checked against CTEs
definitions in whose scope it occurred. If such definition is found the
reference is considered resolved and if this is not the first reference
to the found CTE the the specification of the CTE is re-parsed and the
result of the parsing is added to the parsing tree of the query as a
sub-tree. If this sub-tree contains table references to other tables they
are added to the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the query in
order the referenced tables to be opened. When the procedure that opens
the tables comes to the TABLE_LIST object created for a non-first
reference to a CTE it discovers that the referenced table instance is not
locked and reports an error.
Thus processing non-first table references to a CTE similar to how
references to view are processed does not work for queries used in stored
procedures / functions. And the main problem is that the current
pre-locking mechanism employed for stored procedures / functions does not
allow to save the context in which a CTE reference occur. It's not trivial
to save the info about the context where a CTE reference occurs while the
resolution of the table reference cannot be done without this context and
consequentially the specification for the table reference cannot be
determined.

This patch solves the above problem by moving resolution of all CTE
references at the parsing stage. More exactly references to CTEs occurred in
a query are resolved right after parsing of the query has finished. After
resolution any CTE reference it is marked as a reference to to derived
table. So it is excluded from the hash table created for pre-locking used
base tables and view when the first call of a stored procedure / function
is processed.
This solution required recursive calls of the parser. The function
THD::sql_parser() has been added specifically for recursive invocations of
the parser.
2021-05-25 00:43:03 -07:00
1864a8ea93 Merge 10.2 into 10.3 2021-05-24 09:38:49 +03:00
43c9fcefc0 MDEV-23886 Reusing CTE inside a function fails with table doesn't exist
In the code existed just before this patch binding of a table reference to
the specification of the corresponding CTE happens in the function
open_and_process_table(). If the table reference is not the first in the
query the specification is cloned in the same way as the specification of
a view is cloned for any reference of the view. This works fine for
standalone queries, but does not work for stored procedures / functions
for the following reason.
When the first call of a stored procedure/ function SP is processed the
body of SP is parsed. When a query of SP is parsed the info on each
encountered table reference is put into a TABLE_LIST object linked into
a global chain associated with the query. When parsing of the query is
finished the basic info on the table references from this chain except
table references to derived tables and information schema tables is put
in one hash table associated with SP. When parsing of the body of SP is
finished this hash table is used to construct TABLE_LIST objects for all
table references mentioned in SP and link them into the list of such
objects passed to a pre-locking process that calls open_and_process_table()
for each table from the list.
When a TABLE_LIST for a view is encountered the view is opened and its
specification is parsed. For any table reference occurred in
the specification a new TABLE_LIST object is created to be included into
the list for pre-locking. After all objects in the pre-locking have been
looked through the tables mentioned in the list are locked. Note that the
objects referenced CTEs are just skipped here as it is impossible to
resolve these references without any info on the context where they occur.
Now the statements from the body of SP are executed one by one that.
At the very beginning of the execution of a query the tables used in the
query are opened and open_and_process_table() now is called for each table
reference mentioned in the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the
query that was built when the query was parsed.
For each table reference first the reference is checked against CTEs
definitions in whose scope it occurred. If such definition is found the
reference is considered resolved and if this is not the first reference
to the found CTE the the specification of the CTE is re-parsed and the
result of the parsing is added to the parsing tree of the query as a
sub-tree. If this sub-tree contains table references to other tables they
are added to the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the query in
order the referenced tables to be opened. When the procedure that opens
the tables comes to the TABLE_LIST object created for a non-first
reference to a CTE it discovers that the referenced table instance is not
locked and reports an error.
Thus processing non-first table references to a CTE similar to how
references to view are processed does not work for queries used in stored
procedures / functions. And the main problem is that the current
pre-locking mechanism employed for stored procedures / functions does not
allow to save the context in which a CTE reference occur. It's not trivial
to save the info about the context where a CTE reference occurs while the
resolution of the table reference cannot be done without this context and
consequentially the specification for the table reference cannot be
determined.

This patch solves the above problem by moving resolution of all CTE
references at the parsing stage. More exactly references to CTEs occurred in
a query are resolved right after parsing of the query has finished. After
resolution any CTE reference it is marked as a reference to to derived
table. So it is excluded from the hash table created for pre-locking used
base tables and view when the first call of a stored procedure / function
is processed.
This solution required recursive calls of the parser. The function
THD::sql_parser() has been added specifically for recursive invocations of
the parser.
2021-05-21 16:00:35 -07:00
83e529eced MDEV-18465 Logging of DDL statements during backup
Many of the changes was needed to be able to collect and print engine
name and table version id's in the ddl log.
2021-05-19 22:54:13 +02:00
47010ccffa MDEV-23842 Atomic RENAME TABLE
- Major rewrite of ddl_log.cc and ddl_log.h
  - ddl_log.cc described in the beginning how the recovery works.
  - ddl_log.log has unique signature and is dynamic. It's easy to
    add more information to the header and other ddl blocks while still
    being able to execute old ddl entries.
  - IO_SIZE for ddl blocks is now dynamic. Can be changed without affecting
    recovery of old logs.
  - Code is more modular and is now usable outside of partition handling.
  - Renamed log file to dll_recovery.log and added option --log-ddl-recovery
    to allow one to specify the path & filename.
- Added ddl_log_entry_phase[], number of phases for each DDL action,
  which allowed me to greatly simply set_global_from_ddl_log_entry()
- Changed how strings are stored in log entries, which allows us to
  store much more information in a log entry.
- ddl log is now always created at start and deleted on normal shutdown.
  This simplices things notable.
- Added probes debug_crash_here() and debug_simulate_error() to simply
  crash testing and allow crash after a given number of times a probe
  is executed. See comments in debug_sync.cc and rename_table.test for
  how this can be used.
- Reverting failed table and view renames is done trough the ddl log.
  This ensures that the ddl log is tested also outside of recovery.
- Added helper function 'handler::needs_lower_case_filenames()'
- Extend binary log with Q_XID events. ddl log handling is using this
  to check if a ddl log entry was logged to the binary log (if yes,
  it will be deleted from the log during ddl_log_close_binlogged_events()
- If a DDL entry fails 3 time, disable it. This is to ensure that if
  we have a crash in ddl recovery code the server will not get stuck
  in a forever crash-restart-crash loop.

mysqltest.cc changes:
- --die will now replace $variables with their values
- $error will contain the error of the last failed statement

storage engine changes:
- maria_rename() was changed to be more robust against crashes during
  rename.
2021-05-19 22:54:12 +02:00
a206658b98 Change CHARSET_INFO character set and collaction names to LEX_CSTRING
This change removed 68 explict strlen() calls from the code.

The following renames was done to ensure we don't use the old names
when merging code from earlier releases, as using the new variables
for print function could result in crashes:
- charset->csname renamed to charset->cs_name
- charset->name renamed to charset->coll_name

Almost everything where mechanical changes except:
- Changed to use the new Protocol::store(LEX_CSTRING..) when possible
- Changed to use field->store(LEX_CSTRING*, CHARSET_INFO*) when possible
- Changed to use String->append(LEX_CSTRING&) when possible

Other things:
- There where compiler issues with ensuring that all character set names
  points to the same string: gcc doesn't allow one to use integer constants
  when defining global structures (constant char * pointers works fine).
  To get around this, I declared defines for each character set name
  length.
2021-05-19 22:54:07 +02:00
b6ff139aa3 Reduce usage of strlen()
Changes:
- To detect automatic strlen() I removed the methods in String that
  uses 'const char *' without a length:
  - String::append(const char*)
  - Binary_string(const char *str)
  - String(const char *str, CHARSET_INFO *cs)
  - append_for_single_quote(const char *)
  All usage of append(const char*) is changed to either use
  String::append(char), String::append(const char*, size_t length) or
  String::append(LEX_CSTRING)
- Added STRING_WITH_LEN() around constant string arguments to
  String::append()
- Added overflow argument to escape_string_for_mysql() and
  escape_quotes_for_mysql() instead of returning (size_t) -1 on overflow.
  This was needed as most usage of the above functions never tested the
  result for -1 and would have given wrong results or crashes in case
  of overflows.
- Added Item_func_or_sum::func_name_cstring(), which returns LEX_CSTRING.
  Changed all Item_func::func_name()'s to func_name_cstring()'s.
  The old Item_func_or_sum::func_name() is now an inline function that
  returns func_name_cstring().str.
- Changed Item::mode_name() and Item::func_name_ext() to return
  LEX_CSTRING.
- Changed for some functions the name argument from const char * to
  to const LEX_CSTRING &:
  - Item::Item_func_fix_attributes()
  - Item::check_type_...()
  - Type_std_attributes::agg_item_collations()
  - Type_std_attributes::agg_item_set_converter()
  - Type_std_attributes::agg_arg_charsets...()
  - Type_handler_hybrid_field_type::aggregate_for_result()
  - Type_handler_geometry::check_type_geom_or_binary()
  - Type_handler::Item_func_or_sum_illegal_param()
  - Predicant_to_list_comparator::add_value_skip_null()
  - Predicant_to_list_comparator::add_value()
  - cmp_item_row::prepare_comparators()
  - cmp_item_row::aggregate_row_elements_for_comparison()
  - Cursor_ref::print_func()
- Removes String_space() as it was only used in one cases and that
  could be simplified to not use String_space(), thanks to the fixed
  my_vsnprintf().
- Added some const LEX_CSTRING's for common strings:
  - NULL_clex_str, DATA_clex_str, INDEX_clex_str.
- Changed primary_key_name to a LEX_CSTRING
- Renamed String::set_quick() to String::set_buffer_if_not_allocated() to
  clarify what the function really does.
- Rename of protocol function:
  bool store(const char *from, CHARSET_INFO *cs) to
  bool store_string_or_null(const char *from, CHARSET_INFO *cs).
  This was done to both clarify the difference between this 'store' function
  and also to make it easier to find unoptimal usage of store() calls.
- Added Protocol::store(const LEX_CSTRING*, CHARSET_INFO*)
- Changed some 'const char*' arrays to instead be of type LEX_CSTRING.
- class Item_func_units now used LEX_CSTRING for name.

Other things:
- Fixed a bug in mysql.cc:construct_prompt() where a wrong escape character
  in the prompt would cause some part of the prompt to be duplicated.
- Fixed a lot of instances where the length of the argument to
  append is known or easily obtain but was not used.
- Removed some not needed 'virtual' definition for functions that was
  inherited from the parent. I added override to these.
- Fixed Ordered_key::print() to preallocate needed buffer. Old code could
  case memory overruns.
- Simplified some loops when adding char * to a String with delimiters.
2021-05-19 22:27:48 +02:00
6079b46d8d Split item->flags into base_flags and with_flags
This was done to simplify copying of with_* flags

Other things:
- Changed Flags to C++ enums, which enables gdb to print
  out bit values for the flags. This also enables compiler
  errors if one tries to manipulate a non existing bit in
  a variable.
- Added set_maybe_null() as a shortcut as setting the
  MAYBE_NULL flags was used in a LOT of places.
- Renamed PARAM flag to SP_VAR to ensure it's not confused with persistent
  statement parameters.
2021-05-19 22:27:28 +02:00
3105c9e7a5 Change bitfields in Item to an uint16
The reason for the change is that neither clang or gcc can do efficient
code when several bit fields are change at the same time or when copying
one or more bits between identical bit fields.
Updated bits explicitely with & and | is MUCH more efficient than what
current compilers can do.
2021-05-19 22:27:28 +02:00
da85ad7987 Optimize Sql_alloc
- Remove 'dummy_for_valgrind' overrun marker as this doesn't help much.
  The element also distorts the sizes of objects a bit, which makes it
  harder to calculate gain in object sizes when doing size optimizations.
- Replace usage of thd_get_current_thd() with _current_thd()
- Avoid one extra call indirection when using thd_get_current_thd(), which
  is used by Sql_alloc, by replacing it with _current_thd()
2021-05-19 22:27:27 +02:00
916b237b3f Merge 10.5 into 10.6 2021-05-07 15:00:27 +03:00
3f55c56951 Merge branch bb-10.4-release into bb-10.5-release 2021-05-05 23:57:11 +03:00
0775ca315e MDEV-23542 Server crashes in thd_clear_errors()
1) Checked presence of mysys_var.
2) Removed unneeded thd_clear_errors,
  its content added to THD::change_user.
2021-05-05 23:06:12 +03:00
509e4990af Merge branch bb-10.3-release into bb-10.4-release 2021-05-05 23:03:01 +03:00