ALTER TABLE IMPORT doesn't properly handle instant alter metadata.
This patch makes IMPORT read, parse and apply instant alter metadata at the
very beginning of operation. So, cases when source table has some metadata
and destination table doesn't have it now works fine.
DISCARD already removes instant metadata so importing normal table into
instant table worked fine before this patch.
decrypt_decompress(): decrypts and decompresses page if needed
handle_instant_metadata(): this should be the first thing to read source
table. Basically, it applies instant metadata to a destination
dict_table_t object. This is the first thing to read FSP flags so
all possible checks of it were moved to this function.
PageConverter::update_index_page(): it doesn't now read instant metadata.
This logic were moved into handle_instant_metadata()
row_import::match_flags(): this is a first part row_import::match_schema().
As a separate function it's used by handle_instant_metadata().
fil_space_t::is_full_crc32_compressed(): added convenient function
ha_innobase::discard_or_import_tablespace(): do not reload table definition
to read instant metadata because handle_instant_metadata() does it better.
The reverted code was originally added in
4e7ee166a9
ANONYMOUS_VAR: this is a handy thing to use along with make_scope_exit()
full_crc32_import.test shows different results, because no
dict_table_close() and dict_table_open_on_id() happens.
Thus, SHOW CREATE TABLE shows a little bit older table definition.
InnoDB tablespace identifiers and page numbers are 32-bit numbers.
Let us use a 32-bit type for them in innochecksum.
The changes in commit 1918bdf32c
broke the build on 32-bit Windows.
Thanks to Vicențiu Ciorbaru for an initial version of this fixup.
Let us simply refuse an upgrade from earlier versions if the
upgrade procedure was not followed. This simplifies the purge,
commit, and rollback of transactions.
Before upgrading to MariaDB 10.3 or later, a clean shutdown
of the server (with innodb_fast_shutdown=1 or 0) is necessary,
to ensure that any incomplete transactions are rolled back.
The undo log format was changed in MDEV-12288. There is only
one persistent undo log for each transaction.
* be strict in CREATE TABLE, just like in ALTER TABLE, because
CREATE TABLE, just like ALTER TABLE, can be rolled back for any engine
* but don't auto-convert warnings into errors for engine warnings
(handler::create) - this matches ALTER TABLE behavior
* and not when creating a default record, these errors are handled
specially (and replaced with ER_INVALID_DEFAULT)
* always issue a Note when a non-unique key is truncated, because it's
not a Warning that can be converted to an Error. Before this commit
it was a Note for blobs and a Warning for all other data types.
In main.index_merge_myisam we remove the test that was added in
commit a2d24def8c because
it duplicates the test case that was added in
commit 5af12e4635.
Remove CREATE/DROP database.
Remove some unnecessary suppressions, replacements, and
SQL statements.
Populate tables via have_sequence.inc to avoid the creation of
explicit InnoDB record locks in INSERT...SELECT. This will remove
some gaps in AUTO_INCREMENT values.
We should not need anywhere near 32 bits of entropy, so we might
just limit ourselves to a 32-bit random number generator.
Also, it might be cheaper to use exclusive-or, bit shifting and
conditional jumps, instead of multiplication and addition.
We use relaxed atomic operations on the global random number generator
state in order in an attempt to silence any warnings about race conditions.
There is an obvious race condition between the load and store in
ut_rnd_gen(), but we do not think that it matters much that the
state of the random number generator could 'stutter'.
This change seems makes the 'uncompress_ops' nondeterministic
in innodb_zip.cmp_per_index after the restart. It looks like
there is an inherent race condition in the test, because the
table could be opened for InnoDB statistics recalculation
already before innodb_cmp_per_index_enabled was set. We might
end up having uncompress_ops anywhere between 0 and 9, or perhaps
even more. Let us remove that part of the test.
In the test innodb.instant_alter,4k we would be flagging an error
for too large row size. That error was previously only being reported
if the table was being rebuilt. Thus, this merge is fixing a small
omission in MDEV-11369 (instant ADD COLUMN).
Move row size check to early CREATE/ALTER TABLE phase. Stop checking
on table open.
dict_index_add_to_cache(): remove parameter 'strict', stop checking row size
dict_index_t::record_size_info_t: this is a result of row size check operation
create_table_info_t::row_size_is_acceptable(): performs row size check.
Issues error or warning. Writes first overflow field to InnoDB log.
create_table_info_t::create_table(): add row size check
dict_index_t::record_size_info(): this is a refactored version
of dict_index_t::rec_potentially_too_big(). New version doesn't change global
state of a program but return all interesting info. And it's callers who
decide how to handle row size overflow.
dict_index_t::rec_potentially_too_big(): removed
This allows one to run the test suite even if any of the following
options are changed:
- character-set-server
- collation-server
- join-cache-level
- log-basename
- max-allowed-packet
- optimizer-switch
- query-cache-size and query-cache-type
- skip-name-resolve
- table-definition-cache
- table-open-cache
- Some innodb options
etc
Changes:
- Don't print out the value of system variables as one can't depend on
them to being constants.
- Don't set global variables to 'default' as the default may not
be the same as the test was started with if there was an additional
option file. Instead save original value and reset it at end of test.
- Test that depends on the latin1 character set should include
default_charset.inc or set the character set to latin1
- Test that depends on the original optimizer switch, should include
default_optimizer_switch.inc
- Test that depends on the value of a specific system variable should
set it in the test (like optimizer_use_condition_selectivity)
- Split subselect3.test into subselect3.test and subselect3.inc to
make it easier to set and reset system variables.
- Added .opt files for test that required specfic options that could
be changed by external configuration files.
- Fixed result files in rockdsb & tokudb that had not been updated for
a while.
Also, move part of the test back to innodb.innodb_mysql
and another part to a new test innodb.purge.
Last but not least, merge the tests innodb_zip.4k and innodb_zip.8k
to innodb_zip.page_size.
MariaDB data-at-rest encryption (innodb_encrypt_tables)
had repurposed the same unused data field that was repurposed
in MySQL 5.7 (and MariaDB 10.2) for the Split Sequence Number (SSN)
field of SPATIAL INDEX. Because of this, MariaDB was unable to
support encryption on SPATIAL INDEX pages.
Furthermore, InnoDB page checksums skipped some bytes, and there
are multiple variations and checksum algorithms. By default,
InnoDB accepts all variations of all algorithms that ever existed.
This unnecessarily weakens the page checksums.
We hereby introduce two more innodb_checksum_algorithm variants
(full_crc32, strict_full_crc32) that are special in a way:
When either setting is active, newly created data files will
carry a flag (fil_space_t::full_crc32()) that indicates that
all pages of the file will use a full CRC-32C checksum over the
entire page contents (excluding the bytes where the checksum
is stored, at the very end of the page). Such files will always
use that checksum, no matter what the parameter
innodb_checksum_algorithm is assigned to.
For old files, the old checksum algorithms will continue to be
used. The value strict_full_crc32 will be equivalent to strict_crc32
and the value full_crc32 will be equivalent to crc32.
ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables will only use the old format.
These tables do not support new features, such as larger
innodb_page_size or instant ADD/DROP COLUMN. They may be
deprecated in the future. We do not want an unnecessary
file format change for them.
The new full_crc32() format also cleans up the MariaDB tablespace
flags. We will reserve flags to store the page_compressed
compression algorithm, and to store the compressed payload length,
so that checksum can be computed over the compressed (and
possibly encrypted) stream and can be validated without
decrypting or decompressing the page.
In the full_crc32 format, there no longer are separate before-encryption
and after-encryption checksums for pages. The single checksum is
computed on the page contents that is written to the file.
We do not make the new algorithm the default for two reasons.
First, MariaDB 10.4.2 was a beta release, and the default values
of parameters should not change after beta. Second, we did not
yet implement the full_crc32 format for page_compressed pages.
This will be fixed in MDEV-18644.
This is joint work with Marko Mäkelä.
The parameters innodb_file_format and innodb_large_prefix were overridden
in the Debian-distributed configuration files, because the default values
of these parameters between MariaDB 5.5 and MariaDB 10.2
did not make any sense.
To allow a more seamless upgrade from MariaDB 10.1 to later versions,
let InnoDB recognize the parameters innodb_file_format and
innodb_large_prefix and issue deprecation warnings for them if they
are specified. A deprecation period of only one major release
(one year between the MariaDB 10.2 and 10.3 releases) is insufficient
for these widely used parameters.
The setting innodb_safe_truncate=ON reduces compatibility with older
versions of MariaDB and backup tools in two ways.
First, we will be writing TRX_UNDO_RENAME_TABLE records, which older
versions do not know about. These records could be misinterpreted if
a DDL transaction was recovered and would be rolled back.
Such rollback is only possible if the server was killed while
an incomplete DDL transaction was persisted. On transaction completion,
the insert_undo log pages would only be repurposed for new undo log
allocations, and their contents would not matter. So, older versions
will not have a problem with innodb_safe_truncate=ON if the server was
shut down cleanly.
Second, to prevent such recovery failure, innodb_safe_truncate=ON will
cause a modification of the redo log format identifier, which will
prevent older versions from starting up after a crash. MariaDB Server
versions older than 10.2.13 will refuse to start up altogether, even
after clean shutdown.
A server restart with innodb_safe_truncate=OFF will restore compatibility
with older server and backup versions.
Rename the 10.2-specific configuration option innodb_unsafe_truncate
to innodb_safe_truncate, and invert its value.
The default (for now) is innodb_safe_truncate=OFF, to avoid
disrupting users with an undo and redo log format change within
a Generally Available (GA) release series.
While MariaDB Server 10.2 is not really guaranteed to be compatible
with Percona XtraBackup 2.4 (for example, the MySQL 5.7 undo log format
change that could be present in XtraBackup, but was reverted from
MariaDB in MDEV-12289), we do not want to disrupt users who have
deployed xtrabackup and MariaDB Server 10.2 in their environments.
With this change, MariaDB 10.2 will continue to use the backup-unsafe
TRUNCATE TABLE code, so that neither the undo log nor the redo log
formats will change in an incompatible way.
Undo tablespace truncation will keep using the redo log only. Recovery
or backup with old code will fail to shrink the undo tablespace files,
but the contents will be recovered just fine.
In the MariaDB Server 10.2 series only, we introduce the configuration
parameter innodb_unsafe_truncate and make it ON by default. To allow
MariaDB Backup (mariabackup) to work properly with TRUNCATE TABLE
operations, use loose_innodb_unsafe_truncate=OFF.
MariaDB Server 10.3.10 and later releases will always use the
backup-safe TRUNCATE TABLE, and this parameter will not be
added there.
recv_recovery_rollback_active(): Skip row_mysql_drop_garbage_tables()
unless innodb_unsafe_truncate=OFF. It is too unsafe to drop orphan
tables if RENAME operations are not transactional within InnoDB.
LOG_HEADER_FORMAT_10_3: Replaces LOG_HEADER_FORMAT_CURRENT.
log_init(), log_group_file_header_flush(),
srv_prepare_to_delete_redo_log_files(),
innobase_start_or_create_for_mysql(): Choose the redo log format
and subformat based on the value of innodb_unsafe_truncate.