This is a backport of the following fix from MySQL 5.7.23.
Some code refactoring has been omitted, and the test case has
been adapted to MariaDB.
commit 7a689acaa65e9d602575f7aa53fe36a64a07460f
Author: Krzysztof Kapuścik <krzysztof.kapuscik@oracle.com>
Date: Tue Mar 13 12:34:03 2018 +0100
Bug#27082268 Invalid FTS sync synchronization
The fix closes two issues:
Bug #27082268 - INNODB: FAILING ASSERTION: SYM_NODE->TABLE != NULL DURING FTS SYNC
Bug #27095935 - DEADLOCK BETWEEN FTS_DROP_INDEX AND FTS_OPTIMIZE_SYNC_TABLE
Both issues were related to a FTS cache sync being done during
operations that perfomed DDL actions on internal FTS tables
(ALTER TABLE, TRUNCATE). In some cases the FTS tables and/or
internal cache structures could get removed while still being
used to perform FTS synchronization leading to crashes. In other
the sync operations could not get finishes as it was waiting for
dict lock which was taken by thread waiting for the background
sync to be finished.
The changes done includes:
- Stopping background operations during ALTER TABLE and TRUNCATE.
- Removal of unused code in FTS.
- Cleanup of FTS sync related code to make it more readable and
easier to maintain.
RB#18262
We did not merge Percona XtraDB 5.6.40-84.0 yet.
The changes in it are mostly cosmetic, except for
2 bug fixes from Oracle MySQL 5.6.40, which could
be security bugs.
This was achieved by taking the applicable parts
of an earlier InnoDB commit to XtraDB:
git diff 15ec8c2f28f08517ecbffb959d756b4bdd53ab45{~,} storage/innobase|
sed -e s+/innobase/+/xtradb/+|patch -p1
ha_innobase::commit_inplace_alter_table(): Defer the freeing of ctx->trx
until after the operation has been successfully committed. In this way,
rollback on a partitioned table will be possible.
rollback_inplace_alter_table(): Handle ctx->new_table == NULL when
ctx->trx != NULL.
While the test case crashes a MariaDB 10.2 debug build only,
let us apply the fix to the earliest applicable MariaDB series (10.0)
to avoid any data corruption on a table-rebuilding ALTER TABLE
using ALGORITHM=INPLACE.
innobase_create_key_defs(): Use altered_table->s->primary_key
when a new primary key is being created.
InnoDB limited the maximum number of bytes per character to 4.
But, the filename character set that was introduced in MySQL 5.1
uses up to 5 bytes per character.
To allow InnoDB tables to be created with wider characters, let
us split the mbminmaxlen fields into mbminlen, mbmaxlen, and increase
the limit to 7 bytes per character. This will increase the payload size
of dtype_t and dict_col_t by one bit. The storage size will be unchanged
(54 bits and 77 bits will use the same number of bytes as the
previous sizes 53 and 76 bits).
Reverted incorrect changes done on MDEV-7367 and MDEV-9469. Fixes properly
also related bugs:
MDEV-13668: InnoDB unnecessarily rebuilds table when renaming a column and adding index
MDEV-9469: 'Incorrect key file' on ALTER TABLE
MDEV-9548: Alter table (renaming and adding index) fails with "Incorrect key file for table"
MDEV-10535: ALTER TABLE causes standalone/wsrep cluster crash
MDEV-13640: ALTER TABLE CHANGE and ADD INDEX on auto_increment column fails with "Incorrect key file for table..."
Root cause for all these bugs is the fact that MariaDB .frm file
can contain virtual columns but InnoDB dictionary does not and
previous fixes were incorrect or unnecessarily forced table
rebuilt. In index creation key_part->fieldnr can be bigger than
number of columns in InnoDB data dictionary. We need to skip not
stored fields when calculating correct column number for InnoDB
data dictionary.
dict_table_get_col_name_for_mysql
Remove
innobase_match_index_columns
Revert incorrect change done on MDEV-7367
innobase_need_rebuild
Remove unnecessary rebuild force when column is renamed.
innobase_create_index_field_def
Calculate InnoDB column number correctly and remove
unnecessary column name set.
innobase_create_index_def, innobase_create_key_defs
Remove unneeded fields parameter. Revert unneeded memset.
prepare_inplace_alter_table_dict
Remove unneeded col_names parameter
index_field_t
Remove unneeded col_name member.
row_merge_create_index
Remove unneeded col_names parameter and resolution.
Effected tests:
innodb-alter-table : Add test case for MDEV-13668
innodb-alter : Remove MDEV-13668, MDEV-9469 FIXMEs
and restore original tests
innodb-wl5980-alter : Remove MDEV-13668, MDEV-9469 FIXMEs
and restore original tests
This fixes warnings that were emitted when running InnoDB test
suites on a debug server that was compiled with GCC 7.1.0 using
the flags -O3 -fsanitize=undefined.
thd_requested_durability(): XtraDB can call this with trx->mysql_thd=NULL.
Remove the function in InnoDB, because it is not used there.
calc_row_difference(): Do not call memcmp(o_ptr, NULL, 0).
innobase_index_name_is_reserved(): This can be called with
key_info=NULL, num_of_keys=0.
innobase_dropping_foreign(), innobase_check_foreigns_low(),
innobase_check_foreigns(): This can be called with
drop_fk=NULL, n_drop_fk=0.
rec_convert_dtuple_to_rec_comp(): Do not invoke memcpy(end, NULL, 0).
Memory was leaked when ALTER TABLE is attempted on a table
that contains corrupted indexes.
The memory leak was reported by AddressSanitizer for the test
innodb.innodb_corrupt_bit. The leak was introduced into
MariaDB Server 10.0.26, 10.1.15, 10.2.1 by the following:
commit c081c978a2
Merge: 1d21b22155a482e76e65
Author: Sergei Golubchik <serg@mariadb.org>
Date: Tue Jun 21 14:11:02 2016 +0200
Merge branch '5.5' into bb-10.0
MariaDB Server 10.0.28 and 10.1.19 merged code from Percona XtraDB
that introduced support for compressed columns. Much but not all
of this code was disabled by placing #ifdef HAVE_PERCONA_COMPRESSED_COLUMNS
around it.
Among the unused but not disabled code is code to access
some new system tables related to compressed columns.
The creation of these system tables SYS_ZIP_DICT and SYS_ZIP_DICT_COLS
would cause a crash in --innodb-read-only mode when upgrading
from an earlier version to 10.0.28 or 10.1.19.
Let us remove all the dead code related to compressed columns.
Users who already upgraded to 10.0.28 and 10.1.19 will have the two
above mentioned empty tables in their InnoDB system tablespace.
Subsequent versions of MariaDB Server will completely ignore those tables.
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.
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.