An instant ADD/DROP/reorder column could create a dummy table
object with the wrong ROW_FORMAT when innodb_default_row_format
was changed between CREATE TABLE and ALTER TABLE.
prepare_inplace_alter_table_dict(): If we had promised that
ALGORITHM=INPLACE is supported, we must preserve the ROW_FORMAT.
dict_table_t::prepare_instant(): Add debug assertions to catch
ROW_FORMAT mismatch.
The rest of the changes are related to adding
Alter_inplace_info::inplace_supported to cache the return value of
handler::check_if_supported_inplace_alter().
normal DROP TABLE with many tables continues after an error,
trying to drop as many tables as possible. But DROP TEMPORARY TABLE
was aborting on the first error. Change it to behave as DROP TABLE does.
don't do table discovery on DROP. DROP falls back to "force"
approach when a table isn't found and will try to drop in all
engines anyway. That is, trying to discover in all engines before
the drop is redundant and may be expensive.
first step in moving drop table out of the handler.
todo: other methods that don't need an open table
for now hton->drop_table is optional, for backward compatibility
reasons
When converting a table (test.s3_table) from S3 to another engine, the
following will be logged to the binary log:
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test.t1;
CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE test.t1 (...) ENGINE=new_engine
INSERT rows to test.t1 in binary-row-log-format
The bug is that the above statements are logged one by one to the binary
log. This means that a fast slave, configured to use the same S3 storage
as the master, would be able to execute the DROP and CREATE from the
binary log before the master has finished the ALTER TABLE.
In this case the slave would ignore the DROP (as it's on a S3 table) but
it will stop on CREATE of the local tale, as the table is still exists in
S3. The REPLACE part will be ignored by the slave as it can't touch the
S3 table.
The fix is to ensure that all the above statements is written to binary
log AFTER the table has been deleted from S3.
copy_data_between_tables() sets to->s->default_fields to 0, as a part
of the code disabling ON UPDATE actions for all old fields
(so ON UPDATE is enable only for new fields during copying).
After the actual copying, copy_data_between_tables() did not restore
to->s->default_fields to the original value. As a result, the
TABLE_SHARE to->s was left in a wrong state after copy_data_between_tables()
and further open_table_from_share() using this TABLE_SHARE did not
populate TABLE::default_field, which further made
TABLE::evaluate_update_default_function() crash on access to NULL
pointer.
Fix:
Changing copy_data_between_tables() to restore to->s->default_fields
to its original value after the copying loop.
- IF EXISTS ends with a list of all not existing object, instead of a
separate note for every not existing object
- Produce a "Note" for all wrongly dropped objects
(like trying to do DROP SEQUENCE for a normal table)
- Do not write existing tables that could not be dropped to binlog
Other things:
MDEV-22820 Bogus "Unknown table" warnings produced upon attempt to drop
parent table referenced by FK
This was caused by an older version of this commit patch and later fixed
The used code is largely based on code from Tencent
The problem is that in some rare cases there may be a conflict between .frm
files and the files in the storage engine. In this case the DROP TABLE
was not able to properly drop the table.
Some MariaDB/MySQL forks has solved this by adding a FORCE option to
DROP TABLE. After some discussion among MariaDB developers, we concluded
that users expects that DROP TABLE should always work, even if the
table would not be consistent. There should not be a need to use a
separate keyword to ensure that the table is really deleted.
The used solution is:
- If a .frm table doesn't exists, try dropping the table from all storage
engines.
- If the .frm table exists but the table does not exist in the engine
try dropping the table from all storage engines.
- Update storage engines using many table files (.CVS, MyISAM, Aria) to
succeed with the drop even if some of the files are missing.
- Add HTON_AUTOMATIC_DELETE_TABLE to handlerton's where delete_table()
is not needed and always succeed. This is used by ha_delete_table_force()
to know which handlers to ignore when trying to drop a table without
a .frm file.
The disadvantage of this solution is that a DROP TABLE on a non existing
table will be a bit slower as we have to ask all active storage engines
if they know anything about the table.
Other things:
- Added a new flag MY_IGNORE_ENOENT to my_delete() to not give an error
if the file doesn't exist. This simplifies some of the code.
- Don't clear thd->error in ha_delete_table() if there was an active
error. This is a bug fix.
- handler::delete_table() will not abort if first file doesn't exists.
This is bug fix to handle the case when a drop table was aborted in
the middle.
- Cleaned up mysql_rm_table_no_locks() to ensure that if_exists uses
same code path as when it's not used.
- Use non_existing_Table_error() to detect if table didn't exists.
Old code used different errors tests in different position.
- Table_triggers_list::drop_all_triggers() now drops trigger file if
it can't be parsed instead of leaving it hanging around (bug fix)
- InnoDB doesn't anymore print error about .frm file out of sync with
InnoDB directory if .frm file does not exists. This change was required
to be able to try to drop an InnoDB file when .frm doesn't exists.
- Fixed bug in mi_delete_table() where the .MYD file would not be dropped
if the .MYI file didn't exists.
- Fixed memory leak in Mroonga when deleting non existing table
- Fixed memory leak in Connect when deleting non existing table
Bugs fixed introduced by the original version of this commit:
MDEV-22826 Presence of Spider prevents tables from being force-deleted from
other engines
CHECK constraint is checked by check_expression() which walks its
items and gets into Item_field::check_vcol_func_processor() to check
for conformity with foreign key list.
WITHOUT OVERLAPS is checked for same conformity in
mysql_prepare_create_table().
Long uniques are already impossible with InnoDB foreign keys. See
ER_CANT_CREATE_TABLE in test case.
2 accompanying bugs fixed (test main.constraints failed):
1. check->name.str lived on SP execute mem_root while "check" obj
itself lives on SP main mem_root. On second SP execute check->name.str
had garbage data. Fixed by allocating from thd->stmt_arena->mem_root
which is SP main mem_root.
2. CHECK_CONSTRAINT_IF_NOT_EXISTS value was mixed with
VCOL_FIELD_REF. VCOL_FIELD_REF is assigned in check_expression() and
then detected as CHECK_CONSTRAINT_IF_NOT_EXISTS in
handle_if_exists_options().
Existing cases for MDEV-16932 in main.constraints cover both fixes.
Insert worked incorrect as well. RocksDB used table->record[0] internally to store some
intermediate results for key conversion, during index searching among other operations.
So table->record[0] is spoiled during ha_rnd_index_map in ha_check_overlaps, so in turn
the broken record data was inserted.
The fix is to store RocksDB intermediate result in its own buffer instead of table->record[0].
`rocksdb` MTR suite is is checked and runs fine.
No need for additional tests. The existing overlaps.test covers the case completely.
However, I am not going to add anything related to rocksdb to suite, to keep it away
from additional dependencies.
To run tests with RocksDB engine, one can add following to engines.combinations:
[rocksdb]
plugin-load=$HA_ROCKSDB_SO
default-storage-engine=rocksdb
rocksdb
Respect system fields in NO_ZERO_DATE mode.
This is the subject for refactoring in MDEV-19597
Conflict resolution from 7d5223310789f967106d86ce193ef31b315ecff0
MDEV-21398 Deadlock (server hang) or assertion failure in
Diagnostics_area::set_error_status upon ALTER under lock
This failure could only happen if one locked the same table
multiple times and then did an ALTER TABLE on the table.
Major change is to change all instances of
table->m_needs_reopen= true;
to
table->mark_table_for_reopen();
The main fix for the problem was to ensure that we mark all
instances of the table in the locked_table_list and when we
reopen the tables, we first close all tables before reopening
and locking them.
Other things:
- Don't call thd->locked_tables_list.reopen_tables if there
are no tables marked for reopen. (performance)
All changes (except one) is of type
thd->transaction. -> thd->transaction->
thd->transaction points by default to 'thd->default_transaction'
This allows us to 'easily' have multiple active transactions for a
THD object, like when reading data from the mysql.proc table
- ALTER_ALGORITHM should be substituted when there is no mention of
algorithm in alter statement.
- Introduced algorithm(thd) in Alter_info. It returns the
user requested algorithm. If user doesn't specify algorithm explicitly then
it returns alter_algorithm variable.
- changed algorithm() to get_algorithm(thd) to return algorithm name for
displaying the error.
- set_requested_algorithm(algo_value) to avoid direct assignment on
requested_algorithm variable.
- Avoid direct access of requested_algorithm to encapsulate
requested_algorithm variable
- Inplace alter shouldn't set default date column as '0000-00-00' when
table is not empty. So mysql_inplace_alter_table() copied
alter_ctx.error_if_not_empty to a new field of Alter_inplace_info.
In ha_innobase::check_if_supported_inplace_alter() should check the
error_if_not_empty flag and return INPLACE_NOT_SUPPORTED if the table
is not empty
This is a backport of the applicable part of
commit 93475aff8d and
commit 2c39f69d34
from 10.4.
Before 10.4 and Galera 4, WSREP_ON is a macro that points to
a global Boolean variable, so it is not that expensive to
evaluate, but we will add an unlikely() hint around it.
WSREP_ON_NEW: Remove. This macro was introduced in
commit c863159c32
when reverting WSREP_ON to its previous definition.
We replace some use of WSREP_ON with WSREP(thd), like it was done
in 93475aff8d. Note: the macro
WSREP() in 10.1 is equivalent to WSREP_NNULL() in 10.4.
Item_func_rand::seed_random(): Avoid invoking current_thd
when WSREP is not enabled.
commit 105b879d0f introduced this
warning. The warning looks harmless, but GCC does not understand
that the initialization and the use of the variables are guarded
by the same predicate.
The reason for this is to make all temporary file names similar and
also to be able to figure out from where a #sql-xxx name orginates.
New format is for most cases:
'#sql-name-current_pid-thread_id[-increment]'
Where name is one of subselect, alter, exchange, temptable or backup
The exceptions are:
ALTER PARTITION shadow files:
'#sql-shadow-thread_id-'original_table_name'
Names used with temp pool:
'#sql-name-current_pid-pool_number'
MDEV-22088 S3 partitioning support
All ALTER PARTITION commands should now work on S3 tables except
REBUILD PARTITION
TRUNCATE PARTITION
REORGANIZE PARTITION
In addition, PARTIONED S3 TABLES can also be replicated.
This is achived by storing the partition tables .frm and .par file on S3
for partitioned shared (S3) tables.
The discovery methods are enchanced by allowing engines that supports
discovery to also support of the partitioned tables .frm and .par file
Things in more detail
- The .frm and .par files of partitioned tables are stored in S3 and kept
in sync.
- Added hton callback create_partitioning_metadata to inform handler
that metadata for a partitoned file has changed
- Added back handler::discover_check_version() to be able to check if
a table's or a part table's definition has changed.
- Added handler::check_if_updates_are_ignored(). Needed for partitioning.
- Renamed rebind() -> rebind_psi(), as it was before.
- Changed CHF_xxx hadnler flags to an enum
- Changed some checks from using table->file->ht to use
table->file->partition_ht() to get discovery to work with partitioning.
- If TABLE_SHARE::init_from_binary_frm_image() fails, ensure that we
don't leave any .frm or .par files around.
- Fixed that writefrm() doesn't leave unusable .frm files around
- Appended extension to path for writefrm() to be able to reuse to function
for creating .par files.
- Added DBUG_PUSH("") to a a few functions that caused a lot of not
critical tracing.