It turned out that ha_innobase::truncate() would prematurely
commit the transaction already before the completion of the
ha_innobase::create(). All of this must be atomic.
innodb.truncate_crash: Use the correct DEBUG_SYNC point, and
tolerate non-truncation of the table, because the redo log
for the TRUNCATE transaction commit might be flushed due to
some InnoDB background activity.
dict_build_tablespace_for_table(): Merge to the function
dict_build_table_def_step().
dict_build_table_def_step(): If a table is being created during
an already started data dictionary transaction (such as TRUNCATE),
persistently write the table_id to the undo log header before
creating any file. In this way, the recovery of TRUNCATE will be
able to delete the new file before rolling back the rename of
the original table.
dict_table_rename_in_cache(): Add the parameter replace_new_file,
used as part of rolling back a TRUNCATE operation.
fil_rename_tablespace_check(): Add the parameter replace_new.
If the parameter is set and a file identified by new_path exists,
remove a possible tablespace and also the file.
create_table_info_t::create_table_def(): Remove some debug assertions
that no longer hold. During TRUNCATE, the transaction will already
have been started (and performed a rename operation) before the
table is created. Also, remove a call to dict_build_tablespace_for_table().
create_table_info_t::create_table(): Add the parameter create_fk=true.
During TRUNCATE TABLE, do not add FOREIGN KEY constraints to the
InnoDB data dictionary, because they will also not be removed.
row_table_add_foreign_constraints(): If trx=NULL, do not modify
the InnoDB data dictionary, but only load the FOREIGN KEY constraints
from the data dictionary.
ha_innobase::create(): Lock the InnoDB data dictionary cache only
if no transaction was passed by the caller. Unlock it in any case.
innobase_rename_table(): Add the parameter commit = true.
If !commit, do not lock or unlock the data dictionary cache.
ha_innobase::truncate(): Lock the data dictionary before invoking
rename or create, and let ha_innobase::create() unlock it and
also commit or roll back the transaction.
trx_undo_mark_as_dict(): Renamed from trx_undo_mark_as_dict_operation()
and declared global instead of static.
row_undo_ins_parse_undo_rec(): If table_id is set, this must
be rolling back the rename operation in TRUNCATE TABLE, and
therefore replace_new_file=true.
This is a backport of the following commits:
commit b4165985c9
commit 69e88de0fe
commit 40f4525f43
commit 656f66def2
Now that MDEV-14717 made RENAME TABLE crash-safe within InnoDB,
it should be safe to drop the #sql- tables within InnoDB during
crash recovery. These tables can be one of two things:
(1) #sql-ib related to deferred DROP TABLE (follow-up to MDEV-13407)
or to table-rebuilding ALTER TABLE...ALGORITHM=INPLACE
(since MDEV-14378, only related to the intermediate copy of a table),
(2) #sql- related to the intermediate copy of a table during
ALTER TABLE...ALGORITHM=COPY
We will not drop tables whose name starts with #sql2, because
the server can be killed during an ALGORITHM=COPY operation at
a point where the original table was renamed to #sql2 but the
finished intermediate copy was not yet renamed from #sql-
to the original table name.
If an old version of MariaDB Server before 10.2.13 (MDEV-11415)
was killed while ALTER TABLE...ALGORITHM=COPY was in progress,
after recovery there could be undo log records for some records that were
inserted into an intermediate copy of the table. Due to these undo log
records, InnoDB would resurrect locks at recovery, and the intermediate
table would be locked while we are trying to drop it. This would cause
a call to row_rename_table_for_mysql(), either from
row_mysql_drop_garbage_tables() or from the rollback of a RENAME
operation that was part of the ALTER TABLE.
row_rename_table_for_mysql(): Do not attempt to parse FOREIGN KEY
constraints when renaming from #sql-something to #sql-something-else,
because it does not make any sense.
row_drop_table_for_mysql(): When deferring DROP TABLE due to locks,
do not rename the table if its name already starts with the #sql-
prefix, which is what row_mysql_drop_garbage_tables() uses.
Previously, the too strict prefix #sql-ib was used, and some
tables were renamed unnecessarily.