PARTITION clause in SELECT means query is non-versioned (see
WITH_PARTITION_STORAGE_ENGINE in vers_setup_conds()).
vers_setup_conds() expands such query to SYSTEM_TIME_ALL which is then
added to VIEW specification. When VIEW is queried both clauses
PARTITION and FOR SYSTEM_TIME ALL lead to ER_VERS_QUERY_IN_PARTITION
(same place WITH_PARTITION_STORAGE_ENGINE).
Fix removes FOR SYSTEM_TIME ALL from VIEW by accessing original
SYSTEM_TIME clause: the one specified in parser. As a side-effect
EXPLAIN SELECT displays SYSTEM_TIME specified in SELECT which is
user-friendly.
For join to work correctly versioning condition must be added to table
on_expr. Without that JOIN_CACHE gets expression (1)
trigcond(xtitle.row_end = TIMESTAMP'2038-01-19 06:14:07.999999') and
trigcond(xtitle.elementId = x.`id` and xtitle.pkey = 'title')
instead of (2)
trigcond(xtitle.elementId = x.`id` and xtitle.pkey = 'title')
for join_null_complements(). It is NULL-row of xtitle for
complementing the join and the above comparisons of course FALSE, but
trigcond (Item_func_trig_cond) makes them TRUE via its trig_var
property which is bound to some boolean properties of JOIN_TAB.
Expression (2) evaluated to TRUE because its trig_var is bound to
first_inner_tab->not_null_compl. The expression (1) does not evaluate
correctly because row_end comparison's trig_var is bound to
first_inner->found earlier. As a result JOIN_CACHE::check_match()
skipped the row for join_null_complements().
When we add versioning condition to table's on_expr the optimizer in
make_join_select() distributes conditions differently. tmp_cond
inherits on_expr value and in Good case it is full expression
xgender.elementId = x.`id` and xgender.pkey = 'gender' and
xgender.row_end = TIMESTAMP'2038-01-19 06:14:07.999999'
while in Bad case it is only
xgender.elementId = x.`id` and xgender.pkey = 'gender'.
Later in Good row_end condition is optimized out and we get one
trigcond in form of (2).
UPDATE gets access to history records because versioning conditions
are not set for VIEW. This leads to endless loop of inserting history
records when clustered index is rebuilt and ha_rnd_next() returns
newly inserted history record.
Return back original behavior of failing on write-locked table in
historical query.
35b679b9 assumed that SELECT_LEX::lock_type influences anything, but
actually at this point table is already locked. Original bug report
was tempesta-tech/mariadb#102
Don't do skip_setup_conds() unless all errors are checked.
Fixes following errors:
ER_PERIOD_NOT_FOUND
ER_VERS_QUERY_IN_PARTITION
ER_VERS_ENGINE_UNSUPPORTED
ER_VERS_NOT_VERSIONED
Preparation for MDEV-16210:
replace.test:
key_type combinations: PK and UNIQUE.
foreign.test:
Preparation for key_type combinations.
Other fixes:
* Merged versioning.update2 into versioning.update;
* Removed test2 database and done individual drop instead.
Do not try to set versioning conditions on every SP call. It may work
incorrectly, but it's a general bug described in MDEV-774.
This patch makes system versioning stuff consistent with other code and
also fixes a use-after-free bug.
Closes#756
MDEV-16100 FOR SYSTEM_TIME erroneously resolves string user variables as transaction IDs
Problem:
Vers_history_point::resolve_unit() tested item->result_type() before
item->fix_fields() was called.
- Item_func_get_user_var::result_type() returned REAL_RESULT by default.
This caused MDEV-16100.
- Item_func_sp::result_type() crashed on assert.
This caused MDEV-16094
Changes:
1. Adding item->fix_fields() into Vers_history_point::resolve_unit()
before using data type specific properties of the history point
expression.
2. Adding a new virtual method Type_handler::Vers_history_point_resolve_unit()
3. Implementing type-specific
Type_handler_xxx::Type_handler::Vers_history_point_resolve_unit()
in the way to:
a. resolve temporal and general purpose string types to TIMESTAMP
b. resolve BIT and general purpose INT types to TRANSACTION
c. disallow use of non-relevant data type expressions in FOR SYSTEM_TIME
Note, DOUBLE and DECIMAL data types are disallowed intentionally.
- DOUBLE does not have enough precision to hold huge BIGINT UNSIGNED values
- DECIMAL rounds on conversion to INT
Both lack of precision and rounding might potentionally lead to
very unpredictable results when a wrong transaction ID would be chosen.
If one really wants dangerous use of DOUBLE and DECIMAL, explicit CAST
can be used:
FOR SYSTEM_TIME AS OF CAST(double_or_decimal AS UNSIGNED)
QQ: perhaps DECIMAL(N,0) could still be allowed.
4. Adding a new virtual method Item::type_handler_for_system_time(),
to make HEX hybrids and bit literals work as TRANSACTION rather
than TIMESTAMP.
5. sql_yacc.yy: replacing the rule temporal_literal to "TIMESTAMP TEXT_STRING".
Other temporal literals now resolve to TIMESTAMP through the new
Type_handler methods. No special grammar needed. This removed
a few shift/resolve conflicts.
(TIMESTAMP related conflicts in "history_point:" will be removed separately)
6. Removing the "timestamp_only" parameter from
vers_select_conds_t::resolve_units() and Vers_history_point::resolve_unit().
It was a hint telling that a table did not have any TRANSACTION-aware
system time columns, so it's OK to resolve to TIMESTAMP in case of uncertainty.
In the new reduction it works as follows:
- the decision between TIMESTAMP and TRANSACTION is first made
based only on the expression data type only
- then, in case if the expression resolved to TRANSACTION, the table
is checked if TRANSACTION-aware columns really exist.
This way is safer against possible ALTER TABLE statements changing
ROW START and ROW END columns from "BIGINT UNSIGNED" to "TIMESTAMP(x)"
or the other way around.
numerous fixes for CREATE ... SELECT with system versioning:
In CREATE ... SELECT the table is created based on the result set,
field properties do not count. That is
* field invisibility is *not* copied over
* AS ROW START/END is *not* copied over
* the history is *not* copied over
* system row_start/row_end fields can *not* be created from the SELECT part
vers_setup_conds() used to AND all conditions on row_start/row_end
columns and store it either in the WHERE clause or in the ON
clause for some table. In some cases this caused ON clause
to have conditions for tables that aren't part of that ON's join.
Fixed to put a table's condition always in the ON clause of the
corresponding table.
Removed unnecessary ... `OR row_end IS NULL` clause, it's not needed
in the ON clause.
Simplified handling on PS and SP.
Many related changes.
Note that AS OF condition must always be pushed down to physical tables,
it cannot be applied to a derived or a view. Thus:
* no versioning for internal temporary tables, they can never store
historical data.
* remove special versioning code from mysql_derived_prepare and
remove ER_VERS_DERIVED_PROHIBITED - derived can have no historical
data and cannot be prohibited for system versioning related reasons.
* do not expand select list for derived/views with sys vers fields,
derived/views can never have historical data.
* remove special invisiblity rules for sys vers fields, they are no
longer needed after the previous change
* remove system_versioning_hide, it lost the meaning after the
previous change.
* remove ER_VERS_SYSTEM_TIME_CLASH, it's no "clash", the inner
AS OF clause always wins.
* non-versioned fields in a historical query
reword the warning text, downgrade to note, don't
replace values with NULLs
non-standard, redundant, potentially risky in the future,
hides bugs. See #383, #384, #385
Fixed a parser bug where
SELECT * FROM (t1 join t2) FOR SYSTEM_TIME ...
was not an error.
Affected tests (forced mode):
main.index_merge_myisam
After optimization versioning AND takes operands from WHERE AND
leaving `select_lex->where` as empty dangling AND.