This is allowed:
STRING_WITH_LEN("string literal")
This is not:
char *str = "pointer to string";
... STRING_WITH_LEN(str) ..
In C++ this is also allowed:
const char str[] = "string literal";
... STRING_WITH_LEN(str) ...
When running with DBUG trace enabled, print all current active signals.
The output looks like this with the signals present in curr:
T@6 ... debug_sync_exec: wait for 'nothing' at: 'now', curr: 'something,from_function,from_myvar'
The patch is inspired from MySQL. Instead of using a single String to
hold the current active debug_sync signal, use a Hash_set to store
LEX_STRINGS. This patch ensures that a signal can not be lost, by being
overwritten by another thread via set DEBUG_SYNC = '... SIGNAL ...';
All signals are kepts "alive" until they are consumed by a wait event.
This requires updating test cases that assume the GLOBAL signal is never
consumed.
Follow-up work needed:
Port the additional syntax that allows one to set multiple signals
and also conditionally deactivate signals when waiting.
In commit 28325b0863
a compile-time option was introduced to disable the macros
DBUG_ENTER and DBUG_RETURN or DBUG_VOID_RETURN.
The parameter name WITH_DBUG_TRACE would hint that it also
covers DBUG_PRINT statements. Let us do that: WITH_DBUG_TRACE=OFF
shall disable DBUG_PRINT() as well.
A few InnoDB recovery tests used to check that some output from
DBUG_PRINT("ib_log", ...) is present. We can live without those checks.
Reviewed by: Vladislav Vaintroub
The issue was that we sent two different signals to different threads
after each other. The DEBUG_SYNC functionality cannot handle this (as
the signal is stored in a global variable) and the first one can get
lost.
Fixed by using the same signal for both threads.
- Major rewrite of ddl_log.cc and ddl_log.h
- ddl_log.cc described in the beginning how the recovery works.
- ddl_log.log has unique signature and is dynamic. It's easy to
add more information to the header and other ddl blocks while still
being able to execute old ddl entries.
- IO_SIZE for ddl blocks is now dynamic. Can be changed without affecting
recovery of old logs.
- Code is more modular and is now usable outside of partition handling.
- Renamed log file to dll_recovery.log and added option --log-ddl-recovery
to allow one to specify the path & filename.
- Added ddl_log_entry_phase[], number of phases for each DDL action,
which allowed me to greatly simply set_global_from_ddl_log_entry()
- Changed how strings are stored in log entries, which allows us to
store much more information in a log entry.
- ddl log is now always created at start and deleted on normal shutdown.
This simplices things notable.
- Added probes debug_crash_here() and debug_simulate_error() to simply
crash testing and allow crash after a given number of times a probe
is executed. See comments in debug_sync.cc and rename_table.test for
how this can be used.
- Reverting failed table and view renames is done trough the ddl log.
This ensures that the ddl log is tested also outside of recovery.
- Added helper function 'handler::needs_lower_case_filenames()'
- Extend binary log with Q_XID events. ddl log handling is using this
to check if a ddl log entry was logged to the binary log (if yes,
it will be deleted from the log during ddl_log_close_binlogged_events()
- If a DDL entry fails 3 time, disable it. This is to ensure that if
we have a crash in ddl recovery code the server will not get stuck
in a forever crash-restart-crash loop.
mysqltest.cc changes:
- --die will now replace $variables with their values
- $error will contain the error of the last failed statement
storage engine changes:
- maria_rename() was changed to be more robust against crashes during
rename.
Passing a null pointer to a nonnull argument is not only undefined
behaviour, but it also grants the compiler the permission to optimize
away further checks whether the pointer is null. GCC -O2 at least
starting with version 8 may do that, potentially causing SIGSEGV.
These problems were caught in a WITH_UBSAN=ON build with the
Bug#7024 test in main.view.
It now lives from THD constructor to THD destructor. Reset before THD is
released to a cache. Change user doesn't reset debug_sync_control anymore.
Needed to be able to make use of DEBUG_SYNC() at later stages like
ha_close_connection().
There were two newly enabled warnings:
1. cast for a function pointers. Affected sql_analyse.h, mi_write.c
and ma_write.cc, mf_iocache-t.cc, mysqlbinlog.cc, encryption.cc, etc
2. memcpy/memset of nontrivial structures. Fixed as:
* the warning disabled for InnoDB
* TABLE, TABLE_SHARE, and TABLE_LIST got a new method reset() which
does the bzero(), which is safe for these classes, but any other
bzero() will still cause a warning
* Table_scope_and_contents_source_st uses `TABLE_LIST *` (trivial)
instead of `SQL_I_List<TABLE_LIST>` (not trivial) so it's safe to
bzero now.
* added casts in debug_sync.cc and sql_select.cc (for JOIN)
* move assignment method for MDL_request instead of memcpy()
* PARTIAL_INDEX_INTERSECT_INFO::init() instead of bzero()
* remove constructor from READ_RECORD() to make it trivial
* replace some memcpy() with c++ copy assignments
Handle string length as size_t, consistently (almost always:))
Change function prototypes to accept size_t, where in the past
ulong or uint were used. change local/member variables to size_t
when appropriate.
This fix excludes rocksdb, spider,spider, sphinx and connect for now.
- Fix win64 pointer truncation warnings
(usually coming from misusing 0x%lx and long cast in DBUG)
- Also fix printf-format warnings
Make the above mentioned warnings fatal.
- fix pthread_join on Windows to set return value.
Before this patch running full mtr generated some 70 cores (at least
on systemd). Now no cores should be generated.
- Changed DBUG_ABORT()'s used by mysql-test-run to DBUG_SUICIDE()
- Changed DBUG_ABORT() used to crash server with core to DBUG_ASSERT(0)
- DBUG_ASSERT now flushes DBUG files
- Added sql/mariadb.h file that should be included first by files in sql
directory, if sql_plugin.h is not used (sql_plugin.h adds SHOW variables
that must be done before my_global.h is included)
- Removed a lot of include my_global.h from include files
- Removed include's of some files that my_global.h automatically includes
- Removed duplicated include's of my_sys.h
- Replaced include my_config.h with my_global.h
The problem was that the introduction of max-thread-mem-used can cause
an allocation error very early, even before mysql_parse() is called.
As mysql_parse() calls thd->reset_for_next_command(), which called
clear_error(), the error number was lost.
Fixed by adding an option to have unique messages for each KILL
signal and change max-thread-mem-used to use this new feature.
This removes a lot of problems with the original approach, where
one could get errors signaled silenty almost any time.
ixed by moving clear_error() from reset_for_next_command() to
do_command(), before any memory allocation for the thread.
Related changes:
- reset_for_next_command() now have an optional parameter if we should
call clear_error() or not. By default it's called, but not anymore from
dispatch_command() which was the original problem.
- Added optional paramater to clear_error() to force calling of
reset_diagnostics_area(). Before clear_error() only called
reset_diagnostics_area() if there was no error, so we normally
called reset_diagnostics_area() twice.
- This change removed several duplicated calls to clear_error()
when starting a query.
- Reset max_mem_used on COM_QUIT, to protect against kill during
quit.
- Use fatal_error() instead of setting is_fatal_error (cleanup)
- Set fatal_error if max_thead_mem_used is signaled.
(Same logic we use for other places where we are out of resources)
- Changed ER(ER_...) to ER_THD(thd, ER_...) when thd was known or if there was many calls to current_thd in the same function.
- Changed ER(ER_..) to ER_THD_OR_DEFAULT(current_thd, ER...) in some places where current_thd is not necessary defined.
- Removing calls to current_thd when we have access to thd
Part of this is optimization (not calling current_thd when not needed),
but part is bug fixing for error condition when current_thd is not defined
(For example on startup and end of mysqld)
Notable renames done as otherwise a lot of functions would have to be changed:
- In JOIN structure renamed:
examined_rows -> join_examined_rows
record_count -> join_record_count
- In Field, renamed new_field() to make_new_field()
Other things:
- Added DBUG_ASSERT(thd == tmp_thd) in Item_singlerow_subselect() just to be safe.
- Removed old 'tab' prefix in JOIN_TAB::save_explain_data() and use members directly
- Added 'thd' as argument to a few functions to avoid calling current_thd.
The bug was in DEBUG_SYNC. When waiting, debug_sync_execute() temporarily sets
thd->mysys_var->current_mutex to a new value while waiting. However, if the
old value of current_mutex was NULL, it was not restored, current_mutex
remained set to the temporary value (debug_sync_global.ds_mutex).
This made possible the following race: Thread T1 goes to KILL thread T2. In
THD::awake(), T1 loads T2->mysys_var->current_mutex, it is set to ds_mutex, T1
locks this mutex.
Now T2 runs, it does ENTER_COND, it sets T2->mysys_var->current_mutex to
LOCK_wait_commit (for example).
Then T1 resumes, it reloads mysys_var->current_mutex, now it is set to
LOCK_wait_commit, T1 unlocks this mutex instead of the ds_mutex that it locked
previously.
This causes safe_mutex to assert with the message: "Trying to unlock mutex
LOCK_wait_commit that wasn't locked".
The fix is to ensure that DEBUG_SYNC also will restore
mysys_var->current_mutex in the case where the original value was NULL.