Unlike commit a54abf0175 claimed,
the caller of THD::awake() may actually hold the InnoDB lock_sys->mutex.
That commit introduced a deadlock of threads in the replication slave
when running the test rpl.rpl_parallel_optimistic_nobinlog.
lock_trx_handle_wait(): Expect the callers to acquire and release
lock_sys->mutex and trx->mutex.
innobase_kill_query(): Restore the logic for conditionally acquiring
and releasing the mutexes. THD::awake() can be called from inside
InnoDB while holding one or both mutexes, via thd_report_wait_for() and
via wsrep_innobase_kill_one_trx().
ha_innobase::unlock_row(): Use a relaxed version of the
trx_state_eq() debug assertion, because rr_unlock_row()
may be invoked after an error has been already reported
and the transaction has been rolled back.
By definition, c_lock->trx->lock.wait_lock==c_lock cannot hold.
That is, the owner transaction of a lock cannot be waiting for that
particular lock. It must have been waiting for some other lock.
Remove the dead code related to that. Also, test c_lock for NULLness
only once.
As this is the only moderately critical fopened for writing file,
create an alternate path to use open and fdopen for non-glibc platforms
that support O_CLOEXEC (BSDs).
Tested on Linux (by modifing the GLIBC defination) to take this
alternate path:
$ cd /proc/23874
$ more fdinfo/71
pos: 0
flags: 02100001
mnt_id: 24
$ ls -la fd/71
l-wx------. 1 dan dan 64 Mar 14 13:30 fd/71 -> /dev/shm/var_auto_i7rl/mysqld.1/data/ib_buffer_pool.incomplete
fts_sync(): If the dict_table_t::to_be_dropped flag is set,
do not "goto begin_sync".
Also, clean up the way how dict_index_t::index_fts_syncing
is cleared.
It looks like this regression was introduced by merging
Oracle Bug #24938374 MYSQL CRASHED AFTER LONG WAIT ON DICT OPERATION LOCK
WHILE SYNCING FTS INDEX
068f8261d4
from MySQL 5.6.38 into MariaDB 10.0.33, 10.1.29, 10.2.10.
The same hang is present in MySQL 5.7.20.
InnoDB in Debian uses utf8mb4 as default character set since
version 10.0.20-2. This leads to major pain due to keys longer
than 767 bytes.
MariaDB 10.2 (and MySQL 5.7) introduced the setting
innodb_default_row_format that is DYNAMIC by default. These
versions also changed the default values of the parameters
innodb_large_prefix=ON and innodb_file_format=Barracuda.
This would allow longer column index prefixes to be created.
The original purpose of these parameters was to allow InnoDB
to be downgraded to MySQL 5.1, which is long out of support.
Every InnoDB version since MySQL 5.5 does support operation
with the relaxed limits.
We backport the parameter innodb_default_row_format to
MariaDB 10.1, but we will keep its default value at COMPACT.
This allows MariaDB 10.1 to be configured so that CREATE TABLE
is less likely to encounter a problem with the limitation:
loose_innodb_large_prefix=ON
loose_innodb_default_row_format=DYNAMIC
(Note that the setting innodb_large_prefix was deprecated in
MariaDB 10.2 and removed in MariaDB 10.3.)
The only observable difference in the behaviour with the default
settings should be that ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC tables can be created
both in the system tablespace and in .ibd files, no matter what
innodb_file_format has been assigned to. Unlike MariaDB 10.2,
we are not changing the default value of innodb_file_format,
so ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables cannot be created without
changing the parameter.
This performance regression was introduced in the MariaDB 10.1
file format incompatibility bug fix MDEV-11623 (MariaDB 10.1.21
and MariaDB 10.2.4) and partially fixed in MariaDB 10.1.25 in
MDEV-12610 without adding a regression test case.
On a normal startup (without crash recovery), InnoDB should not read
every .ibd data file, because this is slow. Like in MySQL, for now,
InnoDB will still open every data file (without reading), and it
will read every .ibd file for which an .isl file exists, or the
DATA DIRECTORY attribute has been specified for the table.
The test case shuts down InnoDB, moves data files, replaces them
with garbage, and then restarts InnoDB, expecting no messages to
be issued for the garbage files. (Some messages will for now be
issued for the table that uses the DATA DIRECTORY attribute.)
Finally, the test shuts down the server, restores the old data files,
and restarts again to drop the tables.
fil_open_single_table_tablespace(): Remove the condition on flags,
and only call fsp_flags_try_adjust() if validate==true
(reading the first page has been requested). The only caller with
validate==false is at server startup when we are processing all
records from SYS_TABLES. The flags passed to this function are
actually derived from SYS_TABLES.TYPE and SYS_TABLES.N_COLS,
and there never was any problem with SYS_TABLES in MariaDB 10.1.
The problem that MDEV-11623 was that incorrect tablespace flags
were computed and written to FSP_SPACE_FLAGS.
lock_trx_release_locks(): Relax a debug assertion to allow
recovered TRX_STATE_COMMITTED_IN_MEMORY transactions.
trx_commit_in_memory(): Add DEBUG_SYNC instrumentation.
trx_undo_insert_cleanup(): Skip persistent changes if innodb_read_only
is set. This should only happen when a recovered committed transaction
would be cleaned up at shutdown.
Before that line there is call to buf_page_get_gen that could
return block = NULL when decrypting a page fails. However,
we should set error to be != DB_SUCCESS also. In error log
there was error about decompression but in that code there
is one case where error is not set correctly.
PageConverter::adjust_cluster_record(): Instead of writing
the invalid value DB_ROLL_PTR=0, write a value that indicates
a fresh insert, that is, prevents the DB_ROLL_PTR from being
dereferenced in any circumstances.
It can be argued that IMPORT TABLESPACE should actually
update the dict_index_t::trx_id to prevent older transactions
from accessing the table, similar to what I did on table
rebuild in MySQL 5.6.6 in
03f81a55f2
Previously, the function could theoretically return an uninitialized
value if the system tablespace contained no data files. It should be
impossible for InnoDB to start up in such scenario.
The merge omitted some InnoDB and XtraDB conflict resolutions,
most notably, failing to merge the fix of MDEV-12173.
ibuf_merge_or_delete_for_page(), lock_rec_block_validate():
Invoke fil_space_acquire_silent() instead of fil_space_acquire().
This fixes MDEV-12173.
wsrep_debug, wsrep_trx_is_aborting(): Removed unused declarations.
_fil_io(): Remove. Instead, declare default parameters for the XtraDB
fil_io().
buf_read_page_low(): Declare default parameters, and clean up some
callers.
os_aio(): Correct the macro that is defined when !UNIV_PFS_IO.
mem_heap_free_heap_top(): Remove UNIV_MEM_ASSERT_W() and unpoison
the memory region first, because part of it may have been poisoned
by an earlier mem_heap_free_top() call.
Poison the address range at the end.
mem_heap_block_free(): Poison the address range at the end.
UNIV_MEM_ASSERT_AND_ALLOC(): Replace with UNIV_MEM_ALLOC().
We want to keep the address ranges poisoned (unaccessible) as
long as possible.
UNIV_MEM_ASSERT_AND_FREE(): Replace with UNIV_MEM_FREE().
InnoDB is issuing a 'noise' message that is not a sign of abnormal
operation. The only issuers of it are the debug function
lock_rec_block_validate() and the change buffer merge.
While the error should ideally never occur in transactional locking,
we happen to know that DISCARD TABLESPACE and TRUNCATE TABLE and
possibly DROP TABLE are breaking InnoDB table locks.
When it comes to the change buffer merge, the message simply is useless
noise. We know perfectly well that a tablespace can be dropped while a
change buffer merge is pending. And the code is prepared to handle that,
which is demonstrated by the fact that whenever the message was issued,
InnoDB did not crash.
fil_inc_pending_ops(): Remove the parameter print_err.
InnoDB limited the maximum number of bytes per character to 4.
But, the filename character set that was introduced in MySQL 5.1
uses up to 5 bytes per character.
To allow InnoDB tables to be created with wider characters, let
us split the mbminmaxlen fields into mbminlen, mbmaxlen, and increase
the limit to 7 bytes per character. This will increase the payload size
of dtype_t and dict_col_t by one bit. The storage size will be unchanged
(54 bits and 77 bits will use the same number of bytes as the
previous sizes 53 and 76 bits).
The warning was originally added in
commit c67663054a
(MySQL 4.1.12, 5.0.3) to trace claimed undo log corruption that
was analyzed in https://lists.mysql.com/mysql/176250
on November 9, 2004.
Originally, the limit was 20,000 undo log headers or transactions,
but in commit 9d6d1902e0
in MySQL 5.5.11 it was increased to 2,000,000.
The message can be triggered when the progress of purge is prevented
by a long-running transaction (or just an idle transaction whose
read view was started a long time ago), by running many transactions
that UPDATE or DELETE some records, then starting another transaction
with a read view, and finally by executing more than 2,000,000
transactions that UPDATE or DELETE records in InnoDB tables. Finally,
when the oldest long-running transaction is completed, purge would
run up to the next-oldest transaction, and there would still be more
than 2,000,000 transactions to purge.
Because the message can be triggered when the database is obviously
not corrupted, it should be removed. Heavy users of InnoDB should be
monitoring the "History list length" in SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS;
there is no need to spam the error log.
The XtraDB option innodb_track_changed_pages causes
the function log_group_read_log_seg() to be invoked
even when recv_sys==NULL, leading to the SIGSEGV.
This regression was caused by
MDEV-11027 InnoDB log recovery is too noisy
innodb/buf_LRU_get_free_block
Add debug instrumentation to produce error message about
no free pages. Print error message only once and do not
enable innodb monitor.
xtradb/buf_LRU_get_free_block
Add debug instrumentation to produce error message about
no free pages. Print error message only once and do not
enable innodb monitor. Remove code that does not seem to
be used.
innodb-lru-force-no-free-page.test
New test case to force produce desired error message.
dict_foreign_find_index(): Ignore incompletely created indexes.
After a failed ADD UNIQUE INDEX, an incompletely created index
could be left behind until the next ALTER TABLE statement.
This bug affects both writing and reading encrypted redo log in
MariaDB 10.1, starting from version 10.1.3 which added support for
innodb_encrypt_log. That is, InnoDB crash recovery and Mariabackup
will sometimes fail when innodb_encrypt_log is used.
MariaDB 10.2 or Mariabackup 10.2 or later versions are not affected.
log_block_get_start_lsn(): Remove. This function would cause trouble if
a log segment that is being read is crossing a 32-bit boundary of the LSN,
because this function does not allow the most significant 32 bits of the
LSN to change.
log_blocks_crypt(), log_encrypt_before_write(), log_decrypt_after_read():
Add the parameter "lsn" for the start LSN of the block.
log_blocks_encrypt(): Remove (unused function).