The main problem was lack of proper QueryArena handling in
`period_setup_conds`. Since mysql_prepare_update/mysql_prepare_delete
are called during `PREPARE` statement, period conditions, should be
allocated on statement query arena.
Another problem is incorrect statement state handling in
period_setup_conds, which led to unexpected mysql_update termination.
* mysql_update: move period_setup_conds() to mysql_prepare_update to
store conditions in statement's mem_root
* mtr: add period suite to default list, since --ps-protocol is now
fixed
Fixes bugs:
MDEV-18853 Assertion `0' failed in Protocol::end_statement upon DELETE .. FOR PORTION via prepared statement
MDEV-18852 Server crashes in reinit_stmt_before_use upon UPDATE .. FOR PORTION via prepared statement
Idea is that many users do not install galera library and do not want
to unnecessary run galera and wsrep suites. Furthermore, failures on
these suites disturb development as buildbot shows red failing column
and causes unnecessary work for those who do not care galera tests.
There will be other way to run these suites on buildbot.
The patches features an optional shutdown behavior to hold on until
after all connected slaves have been sent the last binlogged event.
The connected slave is one whose START SLAVE has been acknowledged and
that was not stopped since that though it could be technically
reconnecting in background.
The solution therefore disallows killing the dump thread until is has
found EOF of the latest binlog file. It is up to the shutdown
requester (DBA) to set up a sufficiently large shutdown timeout value
for shudown to wait patiently until lagging behind slaves have been
synchronized. On the other hand if a specific slave needs exclusion
from synchronization the DBA would have to stop it manually which
would terminate its dump thread.
`mysqladmin shutdown' is extended with a `--wait_for_all_slaves' option
which translates to `SHUTDOW WAIT FOR ALL SLAVES' sql query
to enable the feature on the client side.
The patch also performs a small refactoring of the server shutdown
around close_connections() to introduce kill thread phases which
are two as of current.
--gdb now accepts an argument, it will be passed to gdb as a command.
multiple commands can be separated by a (non-standard and not escapable)
delimiter - semicolon (;).
Old usage with a bare --gdb continues to work too, of course.
Cherry-picked c47c0ca50c4 5441bbd3b1f 339b9055791
If a mtr test runs multiple servers and only some of them get
restarted on whatever reason with new command-line parameters,
then subsequent mtr test may fail, because no cleanup is performed.
Replication and Galera test suites are affected.
In the mtr script, there is a server_need_restart function
that decides whether we need to start a new mysqld process before
the new (next) test. If the mysqld parameters were changed in the
previous test - not necessarily the parameters of the primary mysqld
server, maybe even the secondary server parameters - this function
decides to start a new mysqld process. But since it does not remove
the old (changed) parameters, the new process starts with the
parameters changed by the *previous* test.
To correct this error, we must delete the modified process
parameters after checking that they have been changed during
the previous test.
This patch also simplifies and makes more stable the
galera_drop_database test, during debugging of which this
problem was detected.
https://jira.mariadb.org/browse/MDEV-17421
If a mtr test case has started two mysqld processes (replication tests),
then kills the first one and kills the second one before starting the
first (so at some point there are two mysqlds down), then the ./mtr
waiting process bricks and forgets to monitor the "expect" file of the
first mysqld, so it never gets started again, even when its contents is
changed to "restart".
A victim of this deficiency is at least galera.galera_gcache_recover.
The fix is to keep a list of all mysqlds we should wait to start, not
just one (the last one killed).
Make all system tables in mysql directory of type
engine=Aria
Privilege tables are using transactional=1
Statistical tables are using transactional=0, to allow them
to be quickly updated with low overhead.
Help tables are also using transactional=0 as these are only
updated at init time.
Other changes:
- Aria store engine is now a required engine
- Update comment for Aria tables to reflect their new usage
- Fixed that _ma_reset_trn_for_table() removes unlocked table
from transaction table list. This was needed to allow one
to lock and unlock system tables separately from other
tables, for example when reading a procedure from mysql.proc
- Don't give a warning when using transactional=1 for engines
that is using transactions. This is both logical and also
to avoid warnings/errors when doing an alter of a privilege
table to InnoDB.
- Don't abort on warnings from ALTER TABLE for changes that
would be accepted by CREATE TABLE.
- New created Aria transactional tables are marked as not movable
(as they include create_rename_lsn).
- bootstrap.test was changed to kill orignal server, as one
can't anymore have two servers started at same time on same
data directory and data files.
- Disable maria.small_blocksize as one can't anymore change
aria block size after system tables are created.
- Speed up creation of help tables by using lock tables.
- wsrep_sst_resync now also copies Aria redo logs.
New version of PAM plugin (v2.0) added along with the old v1.0.
There the pam module is isolated in the auth_pam_tool application so
cannot crash the server.
Analyze core independently of max-save-datadir and max-save-core setting.
Increment $num_saved_cores only if core was actually saved.
"Move any core files from e.g. mysqltest" independently of
max-save-datadir setting. Note: it may overwrite core from mysqld, which
might not be desired (it did work this way even before).