A simple "SET SESSION gtid_seq_no= DEFAULT" did not work, it would straight
up crash the server! Also, explicitly setting gtid_seq_no to 0 gave an error
in --gtid-strict-mode=1.
Setting to DEFAULT or 0 should disable any prior setting of
gtid_seq_no, so that the next transaction is allocated the next GTID
in sequence, as normal.
Reviewed-by: Monty <monty@mariadb.org>
Signed-off-by: Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>
The new statistics is enabled by adding the "engine", "innodb" or "full"
option to --log-slow-verbosity
Example output:
# Pages_accessed: 184 Pages_read: 95 Pages_updated: 0 Old_rows_read: 1
# Pages_read_time: 17.0204 Engine_time: 248.1297
Page_read_time is time doing physical reads inside a storage engine.
(Writes cannot be tracked as these are usually done in the background).
Engine_time is the time spent inside the storage engine for the full
duration of the read/write/update calls. It uses the same code as
'analyze statement' for calculating the time spent.
The engine statistics is done with a generic interface that should be
easy for any engine to use. It can also easily be extended to provide
even more statistics.
Currently only InnoDB has counters for Pages_% and Undo_% status.
Engine_time works for all engines.
Implementation details:
class ha_handler_stats holds all engine stats. This class is included
in handler and THD classes.
While a query is running, all statistics is updated in the handler. In
close_thread_tables() the statistics is added to the THD.
handler::handler_stats is a pointer to where statistics should be
collected. This is set to point to handler::active_handler_stats if
stats are requested. If not, it is set to 0.
handler_stats has also an element, 'active' that is 1 if stats are
requested. This is to allow engines to avoid doing any 'if's while
updating the statistics.
Cloned or partition tables have the pointer set to the base table if
status are requested.
There is a small performance impact when using --log-slow-verbosity=engine:
- All engine calls in 'select' will be timed.
- IO calls for InnoDB reads will be timed.
- Incrementation of counters are done on local variables and accesses
are inline, so these should have very little impact.
- Statistics has to be reset for each statement for the THD and each
used handler. This is only 40 bytes, which should be neglectable.
- For partition tables we have to loop over all partitions to update
the handler_status as part of table_init(). Can be optimized in the
future to only do this is log-slow-verbosity changes. For this to work
we have to update handler_status for all opened partitions and
also for all partitions opened in the future.
Other things:
- Added options 'engine' and 'full' to log-slow-verbosity.
- Some of the new files in the test suite comes from Percona server, which
has similar status information.
- buf_page_optimistic_get(): Do not increment any counter, since we are
only validating a pointer, not performing any buf_pool.page_hash lookup.
- Added THD argument to save_explain_data_intern().
- Switched arguments for save_explain_.*_data() to have
always THD first (generates better code as other functions also have THD
first).
Do not allow setting wsrep_sst_donor as NULL as it is
incorrect value. User can use value '' (default) that represents
same as NULL. Setting wsrep_cluster_address to NULL is
already handled correctly.
Signed-off-by: Julius Goryavsky <julius.goryavsky@mariadb.com>
The cause of the crash was that test was setting
aria_sort_buffer_size to MAX_LONG_LONG, which caused an overflow in
my_malloc() when trying to allocate the buffer + 8 bytes.
Fixed by reducing max size of sort_buffer for Aria and MyISAM
Other things:
- Added code in maria_repair_parallell() to not allocate a big sort buffer
for small files.
- Updated size of minumim sort buffer in Aria
Introduce @@optimizer_switch flag: hash_join_cardinality
When it is on, use EITS statistics to produce tighter bounds for
hash join output cardinality.
Amended by Monty.
Reviewed by: Monty <monty@mariadb.org>
Let us make innodb_buffer_pool_filename a read-only variable
so that a malicious user cannot cause an important file to be
deleted on InnoDB shutdown. An attempt to delete a directory
will fail because it is not a regular file, but what if the
variable pointed to (say) ibdata1, ib_logfile0 or some *.ibd file?
It does not seem to make much sense for this parameter to be
configurable in the first place, but we will not change that in order
to avoid breaking compatibility.
The patch is inspired from MySQL. Instead of using a single String to
hold the current active debug_sync signal, use a Hash_set to store
LEX_STRINGS. This patch ensures that a signal can not be lost, by being
overwritten by another thread via set DEBUG_SYNC = '... SIGNAL ...';
All signals are kepts "alive" until they are consumed by a wait event.
This requires updating test cases that assume the GLOBAL signal is never
consumed.
Follow-up work needed:
Port the additional syntax that allows one to set multiple signals
and also conditionally deactivate signals when waiting.
This commit changes backup execution (namely the block ddl phase),
so that node is not paused from cluster. Instead, the following
backup execution is declared as vulnerable for possible cluster
level conflicts, especially with DDL statement applying.
With this, the mariabackup execution may be aborted, if DDL
statements happen during backup execution. This abortable
backup execution is optional feature and may be
enabled/disabled by wsrep_mode: BF_ABORT_MARIABACKUP.
Note that old style node desync and pause, despite of
WSREP_MODE_BF_MARIABACKUP is needed if node is operating as
SST donor.
Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
this test loads sql_errlog plugin. then in a second connection
it triggers an error, this locks the plugin in that thd.
then the plugin is uninstalled in the default connection.
but that doesn't unload the plugin, as it's still locked. it'll
auto-unload after the foo connection is closed. without an explicit
disconnect it is closed after mysqltest exits and the post-test check
might still see sql_errlog not fully unoaded.
... on semisync slave
To provide semisync master crash-recovery the same server-id transactions
were made to accept for execution on the semisync slave when the strict gtid
mode (see MDEV-27760).
That however caused out-of-order error on a master's transaction
server of the circular setup.
The error was fair in the sense of the gtid strict mode rule as indeed
under the condition of the circular setup the replicated transaction
already exists in the local binlog.
This is fixed by the commit to ignore on the gtid strict mode semisync
slave those gtids that exist in the slave's binlog that effectively restores
the default same-server-id ignore policy.
At the same time the fixes complies with MDEV-21117 semisync slave recovery
to accept the same server-id transactions that do not exist in local binlog.
Arythmetic can overrun the uint type when possible group_concat_max_len
is multiplied to collation.mbmaxlen (can easily be like 4).
So use ulonglong there for calculations.
This is a backport of commit 4489a89c71
in order to remove the test innodb.redo_log_during_checkpoint
that would cause trouble in the DBUG subsystem invoked by
safe_mutex_lock() via log_checkpoint(). Before
commit 7cffb5f6e8
these mutexes were of different type.
The following options were introduced in
commit 2e814d4702 (mariadb-10.2.2)
and have little use:
innodb_disable_resize_buffer_pool_debug had no effect even in
MariaDB 10.2.2 or MySQL 5.7.9. It was introduced in
mysql/mysql-server@5c4094cf49
to work around a problem that was fixed in
mysql/mysql-server@2957ae4f99
(but the parameter was not removed).
innodb_page_cleaner_disabled_debug and innodb_master_thread_disabled_debug
are only used by the test innodb.redo_log_during_checkpoint
that will be removed as part of this commit.
innodb_dict_stats_disabled_debug is only used by that test,
and it is redundant because one could simply use
innodb_stats_persistent=OFF or the STATS_PERSISTENT=0 attribute
of the table in the test to achieve the same effect.
`m_status == DA_ERROR' failed on SELECT after setting tmp_disk_table_size.
Analysis: Mismatch in number of warnings between "194 warnings" vs
"64 rows in set" is because of max_error_count variable which has default
value of 64.
About the corrupted tables, the error that occurs because of insufficient
tmp_disk_table_size variable is not reported correctly and we continue to
execute the statement. But because the previous error (about table being
full)is not reported correctly, this error moves up the stack and is
wrongly reported as parsing error later on while parsing frm file of one
of the information schema table. This parsing error gives corrupted table
error.
As for the innodb error, it occurs even when tmp_disk_table_size is not
insufficient is default but the internal error handler takes care of it
and the error doesn't show. But when tmp_disk_table_size is insufficient,
the fatal error which wasn't reported correctly moves up the stack so
internal error handler is not called. So it shows errors.
Fix: Report the error correctly.
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
A few regression tests invoke heavy flushing of the buffer pool
and may trigger warnings that tablespaces could not be deleted
because of pending writes. Those warnings are to be expected
during the execution of such tests.
The warnings are also frequently seen with Valgrind or MemorySanitizer.
For those, the global suppression in have_innodb.inc does the trick.