Updating the debian/control file will automatically update the dependencies
in all CI environments that directly read the debian/control file, such
as Salsa-CI and buildbot.mariadb.org to some degree.
(https://github.com/MariaDB/mariadb.org-tools/issues/43)
On Debian/Ubuntu releases that don't have liburing-dev available,
automatically downgrade to libaio-dev (just like libcurl4->3 is done).
This ensures the debian/control file is always up-to-date and works for
latest Debian and Ubuntu releases, while the backwards compatibility mods
are maintained in autobake-deb.sh separately, and can be dropped from there
once support for certain platforms end.
Debian/Ubuntu availability visible at:
- https://packages.debian.org/search?searchon=names&keywords=liburing-dev
- https://packages.ubuntu.com/search?searchon=names&keywords=liburing-dev
Also modify debian/rules to force a build without libaio. Use YES instead
of ON to make the flag more logical (=turning libaio check "off").
Stop running Salsa-CI for Debian Stretch-backports, as it does not have
liburing-dev available nor is the old-old Debian stable a relevant platform
for MariaDB 10.6 to test against anymore. Since the Stretch-backports build
can no longer be made, neither can the MySQL 5.7 on Bionic upgrade test be
run, as it depended on the Stretch binary.
This commit does not modify the .travis.yml file, as Travis-CI does not
have new enough Ubuntu releases available yet. Also Travis-CI.org is
practically dead now as build times have been shrunk to near zero.
The scope of this change is also Debian/Ubuntu only. No RPM or Windows or
Mac changes are included in this commit.
This commit does not update the external libmariadb or ColumnStore
CI pipelines, as those are maintained in different repositories.
liburing is a new optional dependency (WITH_URING=auto|yes|no)
that replaces libaio when it is available.
aio_uring: class which wraps io_uring stuff
aio_uring::bind()/unbind(): optional optimization
aio_uring::submit_io(): mutex prevents data race. liburing calls are
thread-unsafe. But if you look into it's implementation you'll see
atomic operations. They're used for synchronization between kernel and
user-space only. That's why our own synchronization is still needed.
For systemd, we add LimitMEMLOCK=524288 (ulimit -l 524288)
because the io_uring_setup system call that is invoked
by io_uring_queue_init() requests locked memory. The value
was found empirically; with 262144, we would occasionally
fail to enable io_uring when using the maximum values of
innodb_read_io_threads=64 and innodb_write_io_threads=64.
aio_uring::thread_routine(): Tolerate -EINTR return from
io_uring_wait_cqe(), because it may occur on shutdown
on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla).
This was mostly implemented by Eugene Kosov. Systemd integration
and improved startup/shutdown error handling by Marko Mäkelä.
Introduced by 85828b8f22
This is running 2 git processes in parallel, which, if unlucky can cause
either of them to fail with "File already exists" error.
cmake has caught up and since version 3.18 it started supporting
CPACK_RPM_POST_TRANS_SCRIPT_FILE, something we've supported for
two years and cmake 2.8.11. Both implementation add %posttrans tag
and rpmbuild gets confused.
Disable our implementation for cmake 3.18+