Also, default to innodb_purge_batch_size=1000,
replacing the old default value of processing 300 undo log pages
in a batch. Axel Schwenke found this value to help reduce purge lag
without having a significant impact on workload throughput.
In purge, we can simply acquire a shared latch on the undo log page
(to avoid a race condition like the one that was fixed in
commit b102872ad5) and retain a buffer-fix
after releasing the latch. The buffer-fix will prevent the undo log
page from being evicted from the buffer pool. Concurrent modification
is prevented by design. Only the purge_coordinator_task
(or its accomplice purge_truncation_task) may free the undo log pages,
after any purge_worker_task have completed execution. Hence, we do not
have to worry about any overwriting or reuse of the undo log records.
trx_undo_rec_copy(): Remove. The only remaining caller would have been
trx_undo_get_undo_rec_low(), which is where the logic was merged.
purge_sys_t::m_initialized: Replaces heap.
purge_sys_t::pages: A cache of buffer-fixed pages that have been
looked up from buf_pool.page_hash.
purge_sys_t::get_page(): Return a buffer-fixed undo page, using the
pages cache.
trx_purge_t::batch_cleanup(): Renamed from clone_end_view().
Clear the pages cache and clone the end_view at the end of a batch.
purge_sys_t::n_pages_handled(): Return pages.size(). This determines
if innodb_purge_batch_size was exceeded.
purge_sys_t::rseg_get_next_history_log(): Replaces
trx_purge_rseg_get_next_history_log().
purge_sys_t::choose_next_log(): Replaces trx_purge_choose_next_log()
and trx_purge_read_undo_rec().
purge_sys_t::get_next_rec(): Replaces trx_purge_get_next_rec()
and trx_undo_get_next_rec().
purge_sys_t::fetch_next_rec(): Replaces trx_purge_fetch_next_rec()
and some use of trx_undo_get_first_rec().
trx_purge_attach_undo_recs(): Do not allow purge_sys.n_pages_handled()
exceed the innodb_purge_batch_size or ¾ of the buffer pool, whichever
is smaller.
Reviewed by: Vladislav Lesin
Tested by: Matthias Leich and Axel Schwenke
Code status:
MariaDB: The open source relational database
MariaDB was designed as a drop-in replacement of MySQL(R) with more features, new storage engines, fewer bugs, and better performance.
MariaDB is brought to you by the MariaDB Foundation and the MariaDB Corporation. Please read the CREDITS file for details about the MariaDB Foundation, and who is developing MariaDB.
MariaDB is developed by many of the original developers of MySQL who now work for the MariaDB Corporation, the MariaDB Foundation and by many people in the community.
MySQL, which is the base of MariaDB, is a product and trademark of Oracle Corporation, Inc. For a list of developers and other contributors, see the Credits appendix. You can also run 'SHOW authors' to get a list of active contributors.
A description of the MariaDB project and a manual can be found at:
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb-vs-mysql-features/
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mariadb-versus-mysql-compatibility/
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/new-and-old-releases/
Help
More help is available from the Maria Discuss mailing list https://launchpad.net/~maria-discuss, MariaDB's Zulip instance, https://mariadb.zulipchat.com/
Live QA for beginner contributors
MariaDB has a dedicated time each week when we answer new contributor questions live on Zulip. From 8:00 to 10:00 UTC on Mondays, and 10:00 to 12:00 UTC on Thursdays, anyone can ask any questions they’d like, and a live developer will be available to assist.
New contributors can ask questions any time, but we will provide immediate feedback during that interval.
Licensing
NOTE:
MariaDB is specifically available only under version 2 of the GNU General Public License (GPLv2). (I.e. Without the "any later version" clause.) This is inherited from MySQL. Please see the README file in the MySQL distribution for more information.
License information can be found in the COPYING file. Third party license information can be found in the THIRDPARTY file.
Bug Reports
Bug and/or error reports regarding MariaDB should be submitted at: https://jira.mariadb.org
For reporting security vulnerabilities see: https://mariadb.org/about/security-policy/
The code for MariaDB, including all revision history, can be found at: https://github.com/MariaDB/server