fil_extend_space_to_desired_size(): Use a proper type cast when
computing start_offset for the posix_fallocate() call on 32-bit systems
(where sizeof(ulint) < sizeof(os_offset_t)). This could affect 32-bit
systems when extending files that are at least 4 MiB long.
This bug existed in MariaDB 10.0 before MDEV-11520. In MariaDB 10.1
it had been fixed in MDEV-11556.
a large memory buffer on Windows
fil_extend_space_to_desired_size(), os_file_set_size(): Use calloc()
for memory allocation, and handle failures. Properly check the return
status of posix_fallocate(), and pass the correct arguments to
posix_fallocate().
On Windows, instead of extending the file by at most 1 megabyte at a time,
write a zero-filled page at the end of the file.
According to the Microsoft blog post
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20110922-00/?p=9573
this will physically extend the file by writing zero bytes.
(InnoDB never uses DeviceIoControl() to set the file sparse.)
I tested that the file extension works properly with a multi-file
system tablespace, both with --innodb-use-fallocate and
--skip-innodb-use-fallocate (the default):
./mtr \
--mysqld=--innodb-use-fallocate \
--mysqld=--innodb-autoextend-increment=1 \
--mysqld=--innodb-data-file-path='ibdata1:5M;ibdata2:5M:autoextend' \
--parallel=auto --force --retry=0 --suite=innodb &
ls -lsh mysql-test/var/*/mysqld.1/data/ibdata2
(several samples while running the test)
Before the MDEV-11520 fixes, fil_extend_space_to_desired_size()
in MariaDB Server 5.5 incorrectly passed the desired file size as the
third argument to posix_fallocate(), even though the length of the
extension should have been passed. This looks like a regression
that was introduced in the 5.5 version of MDEV-5746.
Remove the unused variable desired_size.
Also, correct the expression for the posix_fallocate() start_offset,
and actually test that it works with a multi-file system tablespace.
Before MDEV-11520, the expression was wrong in both innodb_plugin and
xtradb, in different ways.
The start_offset formula was tested with the following:
./mtr --big-test --mysqld=--innodb-use-fallocate \
--mysqld=--innodb-data-file-path='ibdata1:5M;ibdata2:5M:autoextend' \
--parallel=auto --force --retry=0 --suite=innodb &
ls -lsh mysql-test/var/*/mysqld.1/data/ibdata2
a large memory buffer on Windows
fil_extend_space_to_desired_size(), os_file_set_size(): Use calloc()
for memory allocation, and handle failures. Properly check the return
status of posix_fallocate().
On Windows, instead of extending the file by at most 1 megabyte at a time,
write a zero-filled page at the end of the file.
According to the Microsoft blog post
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20110922-00/?p=9573
this will physically extend the file by writing zero bytes.
(InnoDB never uses DeviceIoControl() to set the file sparse.)
For innodb_plugin, port the XtraDB fix for MySQL Bug#56433
(introducing fil_system->file_extend_mutex). The bug was
fixed differently in MySQL 5.6 (and MariaDB Server 10.0).
The function trx_purge_stop() was calling os_event_reset(purge_sys->event)
before calling rw_lock_x_lock(&purge_sys->latch). The os_event_set()
call in srv_purge_coordinator_suspend() is protected by that X-latch.
It would seem a good idea to consistently protect both os_event_set()
and os_event_reset() calls with a common mutex or rw-lock in those
cases where os_event_set() and os_event_reset() are used
like condition variables, tied to changes of shared state.
For each os_event_t, we try to document the mutex or rw-lock that is
being used. For some events, frequent calls to os_event_set() seem to
try to avoid hangs. Some events are never waited for infinitely, only
timed waits, and os_event_set() is used for early termination of these
waits.
os_aio_simulated_put_read_threads_to_sleep(): Define as a null macro
on other systems than Windows. TODO: remove this altogether and disable
innodb_use_native_aio on Windows.
os_aio_segment_wait_events[]: Initialize only if innodb_use_native_aio=0.
recv_writer_thread(): Do not assign recv_writer_thread_active=true
in order to avoid a race condition with
recv_recovery_from_checkpoint_finish().
recv_init_crash_recovery(): Assign recv_writer_thread_active=true
before creating recv_writer_thread.
Remove the debug parameter innodb_force_recovery_crash that was
introduced into MySQL 5.6 by me in WL#6494 which allowed InnoDB
to resize the redo log on startup.
Let innodb.log_file_size actually start up the server, but ensure
that the InnoDB storage engine refuses to start up in each of the
scenarios.
If InnoDB is started in innodb_read_only mode such that
recovered incomplete transactions exist at startup
(but the redo logs are clean), an assertion will fail at shutdown,
because there would exist some non-prepared transactions.
logs_empty_and_mark_files_at_shutdown(): Do not wait for incomplete
transactions to finish if innodb_read_only or innodb_force_recovery>=3.
Wait for purge to finish in only one place.
trx_sys_close(): Relax the assertion that would fail first.
trx_free_prepared(): Also free recovered TRX_STATE_ACTIVE transactions
if innodb_read_only or innodb_force_recovery>=3.
srv_release_threads(): Actually wait for the threads to resume
from suspension. On CentOS 5 and possibly other platforms,
os_event_set() may be lost.
srv_resume_thread(): A counterpart of srv_suspend_thread().
Optionally wait for the event to be set, optionally with a timeout,
and then release the thread from suspension.
srv_free_slot(): Unconditionally suspend the thread. It is always
in resumed state when this function is entered.
srv_active_wake_master_thread_low(): Only call os_event_set().
srv_purge_coordinator_suspend(): Use srv_resume_thread() instead
of the complicated logic.
crashes server
This bug is the result of merging the Oracle MySQL follow-up fix
BUG#22963169 MYSQL CRASHES ON CREATE FULLTEXT INDEX
without merging the base bug fix:
Bug#79475 Insert a token of 84 4-bytes chars into fts index causes
server crash.
Unlike the above mentioned fixes in MySQL, our fix will not change
the storage format of fulltext indexes in InnoDB or XtraDB
when a character encoding with mbmaxlen=2 or mbmaxlen=3
and the length of a word is between 128 and 84*mbmaxlen bytes.
The Oracle fix would allocate 2 length bytes for these cases.
Compatibility with other MySQL and MariaDB releases is ensured by
persisting the used maximum length in the SYS_COLUMNS table in the
InnoDB data dictionary.
This fix also removes some unnecessary strcmp() calls when checking
for the legacy default collation my_charset_latin1
(my_charset_latin1.name=="latin1_swedish_ci").
fts_create_one_index_table(): Store the actual length in bytes.
This metadata will be written to the SYS_COLUMNS table.
fts_zip_initialize(): Initialize only the first byte of the buffer.
Actually the code should not even care about this first byte, because
the length is set as 0.
FTX_MAX_WORD_LEN: Define as HA_FT_MAXCHARLEN * 4 aka 336 bytes,
not as 254 bytes.
row_merge_create_fts_sort_index(): Set the actual maximum length of the
column in bytes, similar to fts_create_one_index_table().
row_merge_fts_doc_tokenize(): Remove the redundant parameter word_dtype.
Use the actual maximum length of the column. Calculate the extra_size
in the same way as row_merge_buf_encode() does.
InnoDB would refuse to start up if there is a mismatch on
the size of the system tablespace files. However, before this
check is conducted, the system tablespace may already have been
heavily modified.
InnoDB should perform the size check as early as possible.
recv_recovery_from_checkpoint_finish():
Move the recv_apply_hashed_log_recs() call to
innobase_start_or_create_for_mysql().
innobase_start_or_create_for_mysql(): Test the mutex functionality
before doing anything else. Use a compile_time_assert() for a
sizeof() constraint. Check the size of the system tablespace as
early as possible.
recv_scan_log_recs(): Remember if redo log apply is needed,
even if starting up in innodb_read_only mode.
recv_recovery_from_checkpoint_start_func(): Refuse
innodb_read_only startup if redo log apply is needed.
buf_flush_init_flush_rbt() was called too early in MariaDB server 10.0,
10.1, MySQL 5.5 and MySQL 5.6. The memory leak has been fixed in
the XtraDB storage engine and in MySQL 5.7.
As a result, when the server is started to initialize new data files,
the buf_pool->flush_rbt will be created unnecessarily and then leaked.
This memory leak was noticed in MariaDB server 10.1 when running the
test encryption.innodb_first_page.
* Update mysqld_safe script to remove duplicated parameter --crash-script
* Make --core-file-size accept underscores as well as dashes correctly.
* Add mysqld_safe_helper to Debian and Ubuntu files.
* Update innodb minor version to 35
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
Essentially revert MDEV-6759, which addressed a double free of memory
by removing the freeing altogether, introducing the memory leaks.
No double free was observed when running the test suite -DWITH_ASAN.
Replace some mem_heap_free(foreign->heap) with dict_foreign_free(foreign)
so that the calls can be located and instrumented more easily when needed.
This is not a fix, this is instrumentation to find out is MySQL frm dictionary
and InnoDB data dictionary really out-of-sync when this assertion is fired,
or is there some other reason (bug).
Prevent GCC from moving a mach_read_from_4() before we have checked that
we have 4 bytes to read. The pointer may only point to a 1, 2 or 3
bytes in which case the code should not read 4 bytes. This is a
workaround to a GCC bug:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=77673
Patch submitted by: Laurynas Biveinis <laurynas.biveinis@gmail.com>
RB: 14135
Reviewed by: Pawel Olchawa <pawel.olchawa@oracle.com>
(Fixing both InnoDB and XtraDB)
Re-opening a TABLE object (after e.g. FLUSH TABLES or open table cache
eviction) causes ha_innobase to call
dict_stats_update(DICT_STATS_FETCH_ONLY_IF_NOT_IN_MEMORY).
Inside this call, the following is done:
dict_stats_empty_table(table);
dict_stats_copy(table, t);
On the other hand, commands like UPDATE make this call to get the "rows in
table" statistics in table->stats.records:
ha_innobase->info(HA_STATUS_VARIABLE|HA_STATUS_NO_LOCK)
note the HA_STATUS_NO_LOCK parameter. It means, no locks are taken by
::info() If the ::info() call happens between dict_stats_empty_table
and dict_stats_copy calls, the UPDATE's optimizer will get an estimate
of table->stats.records=1, which causes it to pick a full table scan,
which in turn will take a lot of row locks and cause other bad
consequences.
Followup from 5.5 patch. Removing memory barriers on intel is wrong as
this doesn't prevent the compiler and/or processor from reorganizing reads
before the mutex release. Forcing a memory barrier before reading the waiters will
guarantee that no speculative reading takes place.
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.
Fix memory barrier issues on releasing mutexes. We must have a full
memory barrier between releasing a mutex lock and reading its waiters.
This prevents us from missing to release waiters due to reading the
number of waiters speculatively before releasing the lock. If threads
try and wait between us reading the waiters count and releasing the
lock, those threads might stall indefinitely.
Also, we must use proper ACQUIRE/RELEASE semantics for atomic
operations, not ACQUIRE/ACQUIRE.
commit ef92aaf9ec
Author: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
Date: Wed Jun 22 22:37:28 2016 +0300
MDEV-10083: Orphan ibd file when playing with foreign keys
Analysis: row_drop_table_for_mysql did not allow dropping
referenced table even in case when actual creating of the
referenced table was not successfull if foreign_key_checks=1.
Fix: Allow dropping referenced table even if foreign_key_checks=1
if actual table create returned error.
Analysis: row_drop_table_for_mysql did not allow dropping
referenced table even in case when actual creating of the
referenced table was not successfull if foreign_key_checks=1.
Fix: Allow dropping referenced table even if foreign_key_checks=1
if actual table create returned error.