This is needed to make it easy for users to automatically ignore long
char and varchars when using ANALYZE TABLE PERSISTENT.
These fields can cause problems as they will consume
'CHARACTERS * MAX_CHARACTER_LENGTH * 2 * number_of_rows' space on disk
during analyze, which can easily be much bigger than the analyzed table.
This commit adds a new user variable, analyze_max_length, default value 4G.
Any field that is bigger than this in bytes, will be ignored by
ANALYZE TABLE PERSISTENT unless it is specified in FOR COLUMNS().
While doing this patch, I noticed that we do not skip GEOMETRY columns from
ANALYZE TABLE, like we do with BLOB. This should be fixed when merging
to the 'main' branch. At the same time we should add a resonable default
value for analyze_max_length, probably 1024, like we have for
max_sort_length.
Although the `my_thread_id` type is 64 bits, binlog format specs
limits it to 32 bits in practice. (See also: MDEV-35706)
The writable SQL variable `pseudo_thread_id` didn’t realize this though
and had a range of `ULONGLONG_MAX` (at least `UINT64_MAX` in C/C++).
It consequentially accepted larger values silently, but only the lower
32 bits of whom gets binlogged; this could lead to inconsistency.
Reviewed-by: Brandon Nesterenko <brandon.nesterenko@mariadb.com>
This commit updates default memory allocations size used with MEM_ROOT
objects to minimize the number of calls to malloc().
Changes:
- Updated MEM_ROOT block sizes in sql_const.h
- Updated MALLOC_OVERHEAD to also take into account the extra memory
allocated by my_malloc()
- Updated init_alloc_root() to only take MALLOC_OVERHEAD into account as
buffer size, not MALLOC_OVERHEAD + sizeof(USED_MEM).
- Reset mem_root->first_block_usage if and only if first block was used.
- Increase MEM_ROOT buffers sized used by my_load_defaults, plugin_init,
Create_tmp_table, allocate_table_share, TABLE and TABLE_SHARE.
This decreases number of malloc calls during queries.
- Use a small buffer for THD->main_mem_root in THD::THD. This avoids
multiple malloc() call for new connections.
I tried the above changes on a complex select query with 12 tables.
The following shows the number of extra allocations that where used
to increase the size of the MEM_ROOT buffers.
Original code:
- Connection to MariaDB: 9 allocations
- First query run: 146 allocations
- Second query run: 24 allocations
Max memory allocated for thd when using with heap table: 61,262,408
Max memory allocated for thd when using Aria tmp table: 419,464
After changes:
Connection to MariaDB: 0 allocations
- First run: 25 allocations
- Second run: 7 allocations
Max memory allocated for thd when using with heap table: 61,347,424
Max memory allocated for thd when using Aria table: 529,168
The new code uses slightly more memory, but avoids memory fragmentation
and is slightly faster thanks to much fewer calls to malloc().
Reviewed-by: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
Heap tables are allocated blocks to store rows according to
my_default_record_cache (mapped to the server global variable
read_buffer_size).
This causes performance issues when the record length is big
(> 1000 bytes) and the my_default_record_cache is small.
Changed to instead split the default heap allocation to 1/16 of the
allowed space and not use my_default_record_cache anymore when creating
the heap. The allocation is also aligned to be just under a power of 2.
For some test that I have been running, which was using record length=633,
the speed of the query doubled thanks to this change.
Other things:
- Fixed calculation of max_records passed to hp_create() to take
into account padding between records.
- Updated calculation of memory needed by heap tables. Before we
did not take into account internal structures needed to access rows.
- Changed block sized for memory_table from 1 to 16384 to get less
fragmentation. This also avoids a problem where we need 1K
to manage index and row storage which was not counted for before.
- Moved heap memory usage to a separate test for 32 bit.
- Allocate all data blocks in heap in powers of 2. Change reported
memory usage for heap to reflect this.
Reviewed-by: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
Implement variable legacy_xa_rollback_at_disconnect to support
backwards compatibility for applications that rely on the pre-10.5
behavior for connection disconnect, which is to rollback the
transaction (in violation of the XA specification).
Signed-off-by: Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>
When calculate_cond_selectivity_for_table() takes into account multi-
column selectivities from range access, it tries to take-into account
that selectivity for some columns may have been already taken into account.
For example, for range access on IDX1 using {kp1, kp2}, the selectivity
of restrictions on "kp2" might have already been taken into account
to some extent.
So, the code tries to "discount" that using rec_per_key[] estimates.
This seems to be wrong and unreliable: the "discounting" may produce a
rselectivity_multiplier number that hints that the overall selectivity
of range access on IDX1 was greater than 1.
Do a conservative fix: if we arrive at conclusion that selectivity of
range access on condition in IDX1 >1.0, clip it down to 1.
(Variant 4, with @@optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs, reuse in two
places, and conditions are replaced with equivalent simpler forms in two more)
In best_access_path(), ReuseRangeEstimateForRef-3, the check
for whether
"all used key_part_i used key_part_i=const"
was incorrect: it may produced a "NO" answer for cases when we
had:
key_part1= const // some key parts are usable
key_part2= value_not_in_join_prefix //present but unusable
key_part3= non_const_value // unusable due to gap in key parts.
This caused the optimizer to fail to apply ReuseRangeEstimateForRef
heuristics. The consequence is poor query plan choice when the index
in question has very skewed data distribution.
The fix is enabled if its @@optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs flag
is set.
(Variant 2b: call greedy_search() twice, correct handling for limited
search_depth)
Modify the join optimizer to specifically try to produce join orders that
can short-cut their execution for ORDER BY..LIMIT clause.
The optimization is controlled by @@optimizer_join_limit_pref_ratio.
Default value 0 means don't construct short-cutting join orders.
Other value means construct short-cutting join order, and prefer it only
if it promises speedup of more than #value times.
In Optimizer Trace, look for these names:
* join_limit_shortcut_is_applicable
* join_limit_shortcut_plan_search
* join_limit_shortcut_choice
(With trivial fixes by sergey@mariadb.com)
Added option fix_innodb_cardinality to optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs
Using fix_innodb_cardinality disables the 'divide by 2' of rec_per_key_int
in InnoDB that in effect doubles the Cardinality for secondary keys.
This has the biggest effect for indexes where a few rows has the same key
value. Using this may also cause table scans for very small tables (which
in some cases may be better than an index scan).
The user visible effect is that 'SHOW INDEX FROM table_name' will for
InnoDB show the true Cardinality (and not 2x the real value). It will
also allow the optimizer to chose a better index in some cases as the
division by 2 could have a bad effect for tables with 2-5 identical values
per key.
A few notes about using fix_innodb_cardinality:
- It has direct affect for SHOW INDEX FROM table_name. SHOW INDEX
will also update the statistics in table share.
- The effect of fix_innodb_cardinality for query plans or EXPLAIN
is only visible after first open of the table. This is why one must
do a flush tables or use SHOW INDEX for the option to take effect.
- Using fix_innodb_cardinality can thus affect all user in their query
plans if they are using the same tables.
Because of this, it is strongly recommended that one uses
optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs=fix_innodb_cardinality mainly
in configuration files to not cause issues for other users.
The feedback plugin server_uid variable and the calculate_server_uid()
function is moved from feedback/utils.cc to sql/mysqld.cc
server_uid is added as a global variable (shown in 'show variables') and
is written to the error log on server startup together with server version
and server commit id.
We have an issue if a user have the following in a configuration file:
log_slow_filter="" # Log everything to slow query log
log_queries_not_using_indexes=ON
This set log_slow_filter to 'not_using_index' which disables
slow_query_logging of most queries.
In effect, on should never use log_slow_filter="" in config files but
instead use log_slow_filter=ALL.
Fixed by changing log_slow_filter="" that comes either from a
configuration file or from the command line, when starting to the server,
to log_slow_filter=ALL.
A warning will be printed when this happens.
Other things:
- One can now use =ALL for any 'set' variable to set all options at once.
(backported from 10.6)
In MariaDB up to 10.11, the test_if_cheaper_ordering() code (that tries
to optimizer how GROUP BY is executed) assumes that if a table scan is used
then if there is any index usable by GROUP BY it will be used.
The reason MySQL 10.4 provides a better plan is because of two differences:
- Plans using 'ref' has a cost of 1/10 of what it should be (as a
protection against table scans). This is why 'ref' is used in 10.4
and not in 10.5.
- When 'ref' is used, then GROUP BY will not use an index for GROUP BY.
In MariaDB 10.5 the chosen plan is a table scan (as it calculated to be
faster) but as 'ref' is not used, the test_if_cheaper_ordering()
optimizer phase decides (as ref is not usd) to use an index for GROUP BY,
which has bad performance.
Description of fix:
- All new code is protected by the "optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs"
variable, which is now a bit map, and is only executed if the option
"disable_forced_index_in_group_by" set.
- Corrects GROUP BY handling in test_if_cheaper_ordering() by making
the choise of using and index with GROUP BY cost based instead of rule
based.
- Adds TIME_FOR_COMPARE to all costs, when using group by, to make
read_time, index_scan_time and range_cost comparable.
Other things:
- Made optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs a bit map (compatible with old
code).
Notes:
Current code ignores costs for the algorithm used when doing GROUP
BY on the first table:
- Create an in-memory temporary table for handling group by and doing a
filesort of the result file
We can probably in 10.6 continue to ignore this cost.
This patch should NOT be merged to 11.0 series (not needed in 11.0).
optimizer-adjust_secondary_key_costs is added to provide 2 small
adjustments to the 10.x optimizer cost model. This can be used in the
case where the optimizer wrongly uses a secondary key instead of a
clustered primary key.
The reason behind this change is that MariaDB 10.x does not take into
account that for engines like InnoDB, that scanning a primary key can be
up to 7x faster than scanning a secondary key + read the row data trough
the primary key.
The different values for optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs are:
optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs=0
- No changes to current model
optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs=1
- Ensure that the cost of of secondary indexes has a cost of at
least 5x times the cost of a clustered primary key (if one exists).
This disables part of the worst_seek optimization described below.
optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs=2
- Disable "worst_seek optimization" and adjust filter cost slightly
(add cost of 1 if filter is used).
The idea behind 'worst_seek optimization' is that we limit the
cost for all non clustered ref access to the least of:
- best-rows-by-range (or all rows in no range found) / 10
- scan-time-table (roughly number of file blocks to scan table) * 3
In addition we also do not try to use rowid_filter if number of rows
estimated for 'ref' access is less than the worst_seek limitation.
The idea is that worst_seek is trying to take into account that if
we do a lot of accesses through a key, this is likely to be cached.
However it only does this for secondary keys, and not for clustered
keys or index only reads.
The effect of the worst_seek are:
- In some cases 'ref' will have a much lower cost than range or using
a clustered key.
- Some possible rowid filters for secondary keys will be ignored.
When implementing optimizer_adjust_secondary_key_costs=2, I noticed
that there is a slightly different costs for how ref+filter and
range+filter are calculated. This caused a lot of range and
range+filter to change to ref+filter, which is not good as
range+filter provides the optimizer a better estimate of how many
accepted rows there will be in the result set.
Adding a extra small cost (1 seek) when using filter mitigated the
above problems in almost all cases.
This patch should not be applied to MariaDB 11.0 as worst_seeks is
removed in 11.0 and the cost calculation for clustered keys, secondary
keys, index scan and filter is more exact.
Test case changes for --optimizer-adjust_secondary_key_costs=1
(Fix secondary key costs to be 5x of primary key):
- stat_tables_innodb:
- Complex change (probably ok as number of rows are really small)
- ref over 1 row changed to range over 10 rows with join buffer
- ref over 5 rows changed to eq_ref
- secondary ref over 1 row changed to ref of primary key over 4 rows
- Change of key to use longer key with index pushdown (a little
bit worse but not significant).
- Change to use secondary (1 row) -> primary (4 rows)
- rowid_filter_innodb:
- index_merge (2 rows) & ref (1) -> all (23 rows) -> primary eq_ref.
Test case changes for --optimizer-adjust_secondary_key_costs=2
(remove of worst_seeks & adjust filter cost):
- stat_tables_innodb:
- Join order change (probably ok as number of rows are really small)
- ref (5 rows) & ref(1 row) changed to range (10 rows & join buffer)
& eq_ref.
- selectivity_innodb:
- ref -> ref|filter (ok)
- rowid_filter_innodb:
- ref -> ref|filter (ok)
- range|filter (64 rows) changed to ref|filter (128 rows).
ok as ref|filter outputs wrong number of rows in explain.
- range, range_mrr_icp:
-ref (500 rows -> ALL (1000 rows) (ok)
- select_pkeycache, select, select_jcl6:
- ref|filter (2 rows) -> ref (2 rows) (ok)
- selectivity:
- ref -> ref_filter (ok)
- range:
- Change of 'filtered' but no stat or plan change (ok)
- selectivity:
- ref -> ref+filter (ok)
- Change of filtered but no plan change (ok)
- join_nested_jcl6:
- range -> ref|filter (ok as only 2 rows)
- subselect3, subselect3_jcl6:
- ref_or_null (4 rows) -> ALL (10 rows) (ok)
- Index_subquery (4 rows) -> ALL (10 rows) (ok)
- partition_mrr_myisam, partition_mrr_aria and partition_mrr_innodb:
- Uses ALL instead of REF for a key value that is the same for > 50%
of rows. (good)
order_by_innodb:
- range (200 rows) -> ref (20 rows)+filesort (ok)
- subselect_sj2_mat:
- One test changed. One ALL removed and replaced with eq_ref. Likely
to be better.
- join_cache:
- Changed ref over 60% of the rows to use hash join (ok)
- opt_tvc:
- Changed to use eq_ref instead of ref with plan change (probably ok)
- opt_trace:
- No worst/max seeks clipping (good).
- Almost double range_scan_time and index_scan_time (ok).
- rowid_filter:
- ref -> ref|filtered (ok)
- range|filter (77 rows) changed to ref|filter (151 rows). Proably
ok as ref|filter outputs wrong number of rows in explain.
Reviewer: Sergei Petrunia <sergey@mariadb.com>
(Variant#3: Allow cross-charset comparisons, use a special
CHARSET_INFO to create lookup keys. Review input addressed.)
Equalities that compare utf8mb{3,4}_general_ci strings, like:
WHERE ... utf8mb3_key_col=utf8mb4_value (MB3-4-CMP)
can now be used to construct ref[const] access and also participate
in multiple-equalities.
This means that utf8mb3_key_col can be used for key-lookups when
compared with an utf8mb4 constant, field or expression using '=' or
'<=>' comparison operators.
This is controlled by optimizer_switch='cset_narrowing=on', which is
OFF by default.
IMPLEMENTATION
Item value comparison in (MB3-4-CMP) is done using utf8mb4_general_ci.
This is valid as any utf8mb3 value is also an utf8mb4 value.
When making index lookup value for utf8mb3_key_col, we do "Charset
Narrowing": characters that are in the Basic Multilingual Plane (=BMP) are
copied as-is, as they can be represented in utf8mb3. Characters that are
outside the BMP cannot be represented in utf8mb3 and are replaced
with U+FFFD, the "Replacement Character".
In utf8mb4_general_ci, the Replacement Character compares as equal to any
character that's not in BMP. Because of this, the constructed lookup value
will find all index records that would be considered equal by the original
condition (MB3-4-CMP).
Approved-by: Monty <monty@mariadb.org>
This allows a user to to change the default value of MAX_SEL_ARGS (16000)
in the rare case where they neeed more generated SEL_ARGS (as part of
the range optimizer)
Raise notes if indexes cannot be used:
- in case of data type or collation mismatch (diferent error messages).
- in case if a table field was replaced to something else
(e.g. Item_func_conv_charset) during a condition rewrite.
Added option to write warnings and notes to the slow query log for
slow queries.
New variables added/changed:
- note_verbosity, with is a set of the following options:
basic - All old notes
unusable_keys - Print warnings about keys that cannot be used
for select, delete or update.
explain - Print unusable_keys warnings for EXPLAIN querys.
The default is 'basic,explain'. This means that for old installations
the only notable new behavior is that one will get notes about
unusable keys when one does an EXPLAIN for a query. One can turn all
of all notes by either setting note_verbosity to "" or setting sql_notes=0.
- log_slow_verbosity has a new option 'warnings'. If this is set
then warnings and notes generated are printed in the slow query log
(up to log_slow_max_warnings times per statement).
- log_slow_max_warnings - Max number of warnings written to
slow query log.
Other things:
- One can now use =ALL for any 'set' variable to set all options at once.
For example using "note_verbosity=ALL" in a config file or
"SET @@note_verbosity=ALL' in SQL.
- mysqldump will in the future use @@note_verbosity=""' instead of
@sql_notes=0 to disable notes.
- Added "enum class Data_type_compatibility" and changing the return type
of all Field::can_optimize*() methods from "bool" to this new data type.
Reviewer & Co-author: Alexander Barkov <bar@mariadb.com>
- The code that prints out the notes comes mainly from Alexander
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).
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>
This patch changes the main name of 3 byte character set from utf8 to
utf8mb3. New old_mode UTF8_IS_UTF8MB3 is added and set TRUE by default,
so that utf8 would mean utf8mb3. If not set, utf8 would mean utf8mb4.
The easiest way to compile and test the server with UBSAN is to run:
./BUILD/compile-pentium64-ubsan
and then run mysql-test-run.
After this commit, one should be able to run this without any UBSAN
warnings. There is still a few compiler warnings that should be fixed
at some point, but these do not expose any real bugs.
The 'special' cases where we disable, suppress or circumvent UBSAN are:
- ref10 source (as here we intentionally do some shifts that UBSAN
complains about.
- x86 version of optimized int#korr() methods. UBSAN do not like unaligned
memory access of integers. Fixed by using byte_order_generic.h when
compiling with UBSAN
- We use smaller thread stack with ASAN and UBSAN, which forced me to
disable a few tests that prints the thread stack size.
- Verifying class types does not work for shared libraries. I added
suppression in mysql-test-run.pl for this case.
- Added '#ifdef WITH_UBSAN' when using integer arithmetic where it is
safe to have overflows (two cases, in item_func.cc).
Things fixed:
- Don't left shift signed values
(byte_order_generic.h, mysqltest.c, item_sum.cc and many more)
- Don't assign not non existing values to enum variables.
- Ensure that bool and enum values are properly initialized in
constructors. This was needed as UBSAN checks that these types has
correct values when one copies an object.
(gcalc_tools.h, ha_partition.cc, item_sum.cc, partition_element.h ...)
- Ensure we do not called handler functions on unallocated objects or
deleted objects.
(events.cc, sql_acl.cc).
- Fixed bugs in Item_sp::Item_sp() where we did not call constructor
on Query_arena object.
- Fixed several cast of objects to an incompatible class!
(Item.cc, Item_buff.cc, item_timefunc.cc, opt_subselect.cc, sql_acl.cc,
sql_select.cc ...)
- Ensure we do not do integer arithmetic that causes over or underflows.
This includes also ++ and -- of integers.
(Item_func.cc, Item_strfunc.cc, item_timefunc.cc, sql_base.cc ...)
- Added JSON_VALUE_UNITIALIZED to json_value_types and ensure that
value_type is initialized to this instead of to -1, which is not a valid
enum value for json_value_types.
- Ensure we do not call memcpy() when second argument could be null.
- Fixed that Item_func_str::make_empty_result() creates an empty string
instead of a null string (safer as it ensures we do not do arithmetic
on null strings).
Other things:
- Changed struct st_position to an OBJECT and added an initialization
function to it to ensure that we do not copy or use uninitialized
members. The change to a class was also motived that we used "struct
st_position" and POSITION randomly trough the code which was
confusing.
- Notably big rewrite in sql_acl.cc to avoid using deleted objects.
- Changed in sql_partition to use '^' instead of '-'. This is safe as
the operator is either 0 or 0x8000000000000000ULL.
- Added check for select_nr < INT_MAX in JOIN::build_explain() to
avoid bug when get_select() could return NULL.
- Reordered elements in POSITION for better alignment.
- Changed sql_test.cc::print_plan() to use pointers instead of objects.
- Fixed bug in find_set() where could could execute '1 << -1'.
- Added variable have_sanitizer, used by mtr. (This variable was before
only in 10.5 and up). It can now have one of two values:
ASAN or UBSAN.
- Moved ~Archive_share() from ha_archive.cc to ha_archive.h and marked
it virtual. This was an effort to get UBSAN to work with loaded storage
engines. I kept the change as the new place is better.
- Added in CONNECT engine COLBLK::SetName(), to get around a wrong cast
in tabutil.cpp.
- Added HAVE_REPLICATION around usage of rgi_slave, to get embedded
server to compile with UBSAN. (Patch from Marko).
- Added #ifdef for powerpc64 to avoid a bug in old gcc versions related
to integer arithmetic.
Changes that should not be needed but had to be done to suppress warnings
from UBSAN:
- Added static_cast<<uint16_t>> around shift to get rid of a LOT of
compiler warnings when using UBSAN.
- Had to change some '/' of 2 base integers to shift to get rid of
some compile time warnings.
Reviewed by:
- Json changes: Alexey Botchkov
- Charset changes in ctype-uca.c: Alexander Barkov
- InnoDB changes & Embedded server: Marko Mäkelä
- sql_acl.cc changes: Vicențiu Ciorbaru
- build_explain() changes: Sergey Petrunia
The test case was setting aria_sort_buffer_size to MAX_ULONGLONG-1
which was not handled gracefully by my_malloc() or safemalloc().
Fixed by ensuring that the malloc functions returns 0 if the size
is too big.
I also added some protection to Aria repair:
- Limit sort_buffer_size to 16G (after that a bigger sort buffer will
not help that much anyway)
- Limit sort_buffer_size also according to sort file size. This will
help by not allocating less memory if someone sets the buffer size too
high.
(Variant #5, full patch, for 10.5)
Do not produce SEL_ARG graphs that would yield huge numbers of ranges.
Introduce a concept of SEL_ARG graph's "weight". If we are about to
produce a graph whose "weight" exceeds the limit, remove the parts
of SEL_ARG graph that represent the biggest key parts. Do so until
the graph's is within the limit.
Includes
- debug code to verify SEL_ARG graph weight
- A user-visible @@optimizer_max_sel_arg_weight to control the optimization
- Logging the optimization into the optimizer trace.