Import the MySQL 5.6 addition from innodb.create-index to a new debug-only
test, innodb.create-index-debug. The existing test innodb.create-index
also runs on a debug server.
FIXME: MDEV-13668 InnoDB unnecessarily rebuilds table
FIXME: MDEV-13671 InnoDB should use case-insensitive column name comparisons
like the rest of the server
FIXME: MDEV-13640 / Properly fix MDEV-9469 'Incorrect key file' on ALTER TABLE
FIXME: investigate result difference in innodb.innodb-alter-autoinc
and ensure that MariaDB does the right thing with auto_increment_increment
and auto_increment_offset, for both ALGORITHM=INPLACE and ALGORITHM=COPY
(Oracle MySQL behaviour differs between those two).
When MySQL 5.0.3 introduced InnoDB support for two-phase commit,
it also introduced the questionable logic to roll back XA PREPARE
transactions on startup when innodb_force_recovery is 1 or 2.
Remove this logic in order to avoid unwanted side effects when
innodb_force_recovery is being set for other reasons. That is,
XA PREPARE transactions will always remain in that state until
InnoDB receives an explicit XA ROLLBACK or XA COMMIT request
from the upper layer.
At the time the logic was introduced in MySQL 5.0.3, there already
was a startup parameter that is the preferred way of achieving
the behaviour: --tc-heuristic-recover=ROLLBACK.
log_calc_max_ages(): Use the requested size in the check, instead of
the detected redo log size. The redo log will be resized at startup
if it differs from what has been requested.
Add a test case for corrupting SYS_TABLES.TYPE,
and for ROW_FORMAT=REDUNDANT, the unused field SYS_TABLES.MIX_LEN
that must be ignored (InnoDB before MySQL 5.5 wrote uninitialized
garbage to this column).
MariaDB 10.0 appears to validate the SYS_TABLES.TYPE properly.
This is a test-only change.
in innodb_read_only mode.
The reason for the hang is that there was no notification received about
completed read io. File handles are bound to completion_port, and there
were no background "write" threads that would be waiting on completion_port,
only 2 "read" threads waiting on read_completion_port were active.
The fix is to use a single IO completion port for all IOs, if
innodb_read_only is set.
When a slow shutdown is performed soon after spawning some work for
background threads that can create or commit transactions, it is possible
that new transactions are started or committed after the purge has finished.
This is violating the specification of innodb_fast_shutdown=0, namely that
the purge must be completed. (None of the history of the recent transactions
would be purged.)
Also, it is possible that the purge threads would exit in slow shutdown
while there exist active transactions, such as recovered incomplete
transactions that are being rolled back. Thus, the slow shutdown could
fail to purge some undo log that becomes purgeable after the transaction
commit or rollback.
srv_undo_sources: A flag that indicates if undo log can be generated
or the persistent, whether by background threads or by user SQL.
Even when this flag is clear, active transactions that already exist
in the system may be committed or rolled back.
innodb_shutdown(): Renamed from innobase_shutdown_for_mysql().
Do not return an error code; the operation never fails.
Clear the srv_undo_sources flag, and also ensure that the background
DROP TABLE queue is empty.
srv_purge_should_exit(): Do not allow the purge to exit if
srv_undo_sources are active or the background DROP TABLE queue is not
empty, or in slow shutdown, if any active transactions exist
(and are being rolled back).
srv_purge_coordinator_thread(): Remove some previous workarounds
for this bug.
innobase_start_or_create_for_mysql(): Set buf_page_cleaner_is_active
and srv_dict_stats_thread_active directly. Set srv_undo_sources before
starting the purge subsystem, to prevent immediate shutdown of the purge.
Create dict_stats_thread and fts_optimize_thread immediately
after setting srv_undo_sources, so that shutdown can use this flag to
determine if these subsystems were started.
dict_stats_shutdown(): Shut down dict_stats_thread. Backported from 10.2.
srv_shutdown_table_bg_threads(): Remove (unused).
innodb_page_size_small: A new set of combinations, for
innodb_page_size up to 16k. In MariaDB 10.0, this does not
make a difference, but in 10.1 and later, innodb_page_size
would cover 32k and 64k, for which ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED
is not available.
Enable these combinations in a few InnoDB tests.
InnoDB shutdown assumes that once the server has entered
SRV_SHUTDOWN_FLUSH_PHASE, no change to persistent data is allowed.
It was possible for the master thread to wake up while shutdown
is executing in SRV_SHUTDOWN_FLUSH_PHASE or
even in SRV_SHUTDOWN_LAST_PHASE.
We do not yet know if further crashes at shutdown are possible.
Also, we do not know if all the observed crashes could be explained
by the race conditions that we are now fixing.
srv_shutdown_print_master_pending(): Remove a redundant ut_time() call.
srv_shutdown(): Renamed from srv_master_do_shutdown_tasks().
srv_master_thread(): Do not resume after shutdown has been initiated.
In MariaDB Server before 10.2, InnoDB will not be shut down properly
if startup fails. So, Valgrind failures are to be expected.
Disable the test under Valgrind. In 10.2, it should pass with Valgrind.
This is a reduced version of an originally much larger patch.
We will keep the definition of the ulint, lint data types unchanged,
and we will not be replacing fprintf() calls with ib_logf().
On Windows, use the standard format strings instead of nonstandard
extensions.
This patch fixes some errors in format strings.
Most notably, an IMPORT TABLESPACE error message in InnoDB was
displaying the number of columns instead of the mismatching flags.
The test was unnecessarily depending on InnoDB purge, which can
sometimes fail to proceed.
Let us rewrite the test to use BEGIN;INSERT;ROLLBACK to cause the
immediate removal of the desired records.
Also, implement MDEV-11027 a little differently from 5.5:
recv_sys_t::report(ib_time_t): Determine whether progress should
be reported.
recv_apply_hashed_log_recs(): Rename the parameter to last_batch.
Remove the debug parameter innodb_force_recovery_crash that was
introduced into MySQL 5.6 by me in WL#6494 which allowed InnoDB
to resize the redo log on startup.
Let innodb.log_file_size actually start up the server, but ensure
that the InnoDB storage engine refuses to start up in each of the
scenarios.
If InnoDB is started in innodb_read_only mode such that
recovered incomplete transactions exist at startup
(but the redo logs are clean), an assertion will fail at shutdown,
because there would exist some non-prepared transactions.
logs_empty_and_mark_files_at_shutdown(): Do not wait for incomplete
transactions to finish if innodb_read_only or innodb_force_recovery>=3.
Wait for purge to finish in only one place.
trx_sys_close(): Relax the assertion that would fail first.
trx_free_prepared(): Also free recovered TRX_STATE_ACTIVE transactions
if innodb_read_only or innodb_force_recovery>=3.
As noted in MDEV-8841, any test that kills the server must issue
FLUSH TABLES, so that tables of crash-unsafe storage engines will
not be corrupted. Consistently issue this statement after any
call mtr.add_suppression() calls.
Also, do not invoke shutdown_server directly, but use helpers instead.
Do not kill the server after call mtr.add_suppression(), because
the procedure modifies a crash-unsafe table, and we do not want to
corrupt that table.
recv_scan_log_recs(): Remember if redo log apply is needed,
even if starting up in innodb_read_only mode.
recv_recovery_from_checkpoint_start_func(): Refuse
innodb_read_only startup if redo log apply is needed.
be consistent and don't include the table name into the error message,
no other CREATE TABLE error does it.
(the crash happened, because thd->lex->query_tables was NULL)
When checking is any of the renamed columns part of the
columns for new indexes we accessed NULL pointer if checked
column used on index was added on same statement. Additionally,
we tried to check too many indexes, added_index_count
is enough here.
FROM I_S
Issue:
------
There is a difference in the field type created when the
following DDLs are used:
1) CREATE TABLE t0 AS SELECT NULL;
2) CREATE TABLE t0 AS SELECT GREATEST(NULL,NULL);
The first statement creates field of type Field_string and
the second one creates a field of type Field_null.
This creates a problem when the query mentioned in this bug
is used. Since the null_ptr is calculated differently for
Field_null.
Solution:
---------
When there is a function returning null in the select list
as mentioned above, the field should be of type
Field_string.
This was fixed in 5.6+ as part of Bug#14021323. This is a
backport to mysql-5.5.
An incorrect comment in innodb_bug54044.test has been
corrected in all versions.
commit ef92aaf9ec
Author: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
Date: Wed Jun 22 22:37:28 2016 +0300
MDEV-10083: Orphan ibd file when playing with foreign keys
Analysis: row_drop_table_for_mysql did not allow dropping
referenced table even in case when actual creating of the
referenced table was not successfull if foreign_key_checks=1.
Fix: Allow dropping referenced table even if foreign_key_checks=1
if actual table create returned error.
Analysis: row_drop_table_for_mysql did not allow dropping
referenced table even in case when actual creating of the
referenced table was not successfull if foreign_key_checks=1.
Fix: Allow dropping referenced table even if foreign_key_checks=1
if actual table create returned error.
Use direct persistent index corruption set on InnoDB dictionary
for this test. Do not allow creating new indexes if one of the
existing indexes is already marked as corrupted.
Problem was that in-place online alter table was used on a table
that had mismatch between MySQL frm file and InnoDB data dictionary.
Fixed so that traditional "Copy" method is used if the MySQL frm
and InnoDB data dictionary is not consistent.