InnoDB does not allow creating multiple FULLTEXT INDEX
in ALGORITHM=INPLACE. This constraint was not being properly
enforced after MariaDB started to support ALGORITHM=INSTANT
and instant ADD COLUMN.
As a side effect of this bug, we again allow ALGORITHM=INPLACE
to rebuild a table when one FULLTEXT INDEX survives.
Also, we are returning a more accurate reason for refusing LOCK=NONE.
innobase_fulltext_exist(): Return the number of fulltext indexes.
ha_innobase::check_if_supported_inplace_alter(): If the table
needs to be rebuilt, refuse the operation if multiple fulltext
indexes would remain.
The error message modified.
Then the TABLE_SHARE::error_table_name() implementation taken from 10.3,
to be used as a name of the table in this message.
This is a merge from 10.2, but the 10.2 version of this will not
be pushed into 10.2 yet, because the 10.2 version would include
backports of MDEV-14717 and MDEV-14585, which would introduce
a crash recovery regression: Tables could be lost on
table-rebuilding DDL operations, such as ALTER TABLE,
OPTIMIZE TABLE or this new backup-friendly TRUNCATE TABLE.
The test innodb.truncate_crash occasionally loses the table due to
the following bug:
MDEV-17158 log_write_up_to() sometimes fails
Implement undo tablespace truncation via normal redo logging.
Implement TRUNCATE TABLE as a combination of RENAME to #sql-ib name,
CREATE, and DROP.
Note: Orphan #sql-ib*.ibd may be left behind if MariaDB Server 10.2
is killed before the DROP operation is committed. If MariaDB Server 10.2
is killed during TRUNCATE, it is also possible that the old table
was renamed to #sql-ib*.ibd but the data dictionary will refer to the
table using the original name.
In MariaDB Server 10.3, RENAME inside InnoDB is transactional,
and #sql-* tables will be dropped on startup. So, this new TRUNCATE
will be fully crash-safe in 10.3.
ha_mroonga::wrapper_truncate(): Pass table options to the underlying
storage engine, now that ha_innobase::truncate() will need them.
rpl_slave_state::truncate_state_table(): Before truncating
mysql.gtid_slave_pos, evict any cached table handles from
the table definition cache, so that there will be no stale
references to the old table after truncating.
== TRUNCATE TABLE ==
WL#6501 in MySQL 5.7 introduced separate log files for implementing
atomic and crash-safe TRUNCATE TABLE, instead of using the InnoDB
undo and redo log. Some convoluted logic was added to the InnoDB
crash recovery, and some extra synchronization (including a redo log
checkpoint) was introduced to make this work. This synchronization
has caused performance problems and race conditions, and the extra
log files cannot be copied or applied by external backup programs.
In order to support crash-upgrade from MariaDB 10.2, we will keep
the logic for parsing and applying the extra log files, but we will
no longer generate those files in TRUNCATE TABLE.
A prerequisite for crash-safe TRUNCATE is a crash-safe RENAME TABLE
(with full redo and undo logging and proper rollback). This will
be implemented in MDEV-14717.
ha_innobase::truncate(): Invoke RENAME, create(), delete_table().
Because RENAME cannot be fully rolled back before MariaDB 10.3
due to missing undo logging, add some explicit rename-back in
case the operation fails.
ha_innobase::delete(): Introduce a variant that takes sqlcom as
a parameter. In TRUNCATE TABLE, we do not want to touch any
FOREIGN KEY constraints.
ha_innobase::create(): Add the parameters file_per_table, trx.
In TRUNCATE, the new table must be created in the same transaction
that renames the old table.
create_table_info_t::create_table_info_t(): Add the parameters
file_per_table, trx.
row_drop_table_for_mysql(): Replace a bool parameter with sqlcom.
row_drop_table_after_create_fail(): New function, wrapping
row_drop_table_for_mysql().
dict_truncate_index_tree_in_mem(), fil_truncate_tablespace(),
fil_prepare_for_truncate(), fil_reinit_space_header_for_table(),
row_truncate_table_for_mysql(), TruncateLogger,
row_truncate_prepare(), row_truncate_rollback(),
row_truncate_complete(), row_truncate_fts(),
row_truncate_update_system_tables(),
row_truncate_foreign_key_checks(), row_truncate_sanity_checks():
Remove.
row_upd_check_references_constraints(): Remove a check for
TRUNCATE, now that the table is no longer truncated in place.
The new test innodb.truncate_foreign uses DEBUG_SYNC to cover some
race-condition like scenarios. The test innodb-innodb.truncate does
not use any synchronization.
We add a redo log subformat to indicate backup-friendly format.
MariaDB 10.4 will remove support for the old TRUNCATE logging,
so crash-upgrade from old 10.2 or 10.3 to 10.4 will involve
limitations.
== Undo tablespace truncation ==
MySQL 5.7 implements undo tablespace truncation. It is only
possible when innodb_undo_tablespaces is set to at least 2.
The logging is implemented similar to the WL#6501 TRUNCATE,
that is, using separate log files and a redo log checkpoint.
We can simply implement undo tablespace truncation within
a single mini-transaction that reinitializes the undo log
tablespace file. Unfortunately, due to the redo log format
of some operations, currently, the total redo log written by
undo tablespace truncation will be more than the combined size
of the truncated undo tablespace. It should be acceptable
to have a little more than 1 megabyte of log in a single
mini-transaction. This will be fixed in MDEV-17138 in
MariaDB Server 10.4.
recv_sys_t: Add truncated_undo_spaces[] to remember for which undo
tablespaces a MLOG_FILE_CREATE2 record was seen.
namespace undo: Remove some unnecessary declarations.
fil_space_t::is_being_truncated: Document that this flag now
only applies to undo tablespaces. Remove some references.
fil_space_t::is_stopping(): Do not refer to is_being_truncated.
This check is for tablespaces of tables. Potentially used
tablespaces are never truncated any more.
buf_dblwr_process(): Suppress the out-of-bounds warning
for undo tablespaces.
fil_truncate_log(): Write a MLOG_FILE_CREATE2 with a nonzero
page number (new size of the tablespace in pages) to inform
crash recovery that the undo tablespace size has been reduced.
fil_op_write_log(): Relax assertions, so that MLOG_FILE_CREATE2
can be written for undo tablespaces (without .ibd file suffix)
for a nonzero page number.
os_file_truncate(): Add the parameter allow_shrink=false
so that undo tablespaces can actually be shrunk using this function.
fil_name_parse(): For undo tablespace truncation,
buffer MLOG_FILE_CREATE2 in truncated_undo_spaces[].
recv_read_in_area(): Avoid reading pages for which no redo log
records remain buffered, after recv_addr_trim() removed them.
trx_rseg_header_create(): Add a FIXME comment that we could write
much less redo log.
trx_undo_truncate_tablespace(): Reinitialize the undo tablespace
in a single mini-transaction, which will be flushed to the redo log
before the file size is trimmed.
recv_addr_trim(): Discard any redo logs for pages that were
logged after the new end of a file, before the truncation LSN.
If the rec_list becomes empty, reduce n_addrs. After removing
any affected records, actually truncate the file.
recv_apply_hashed_log_recs(): Invoke recv_addr_trim() right before
applying any log records. The undo tablespace files must be open
at this point.
buf_flush_or_remove_pages(), buf_flush_dirty_pages(),
buf_LRU_flush_or_remove_pages(): Add a parameter for specifying
the number of the first page to flush or remove (default 0).
trx_purge_initiate_truncate(): Remove the log checkpoints, the
extra logging, and some unnecessary crash points. Merge the code
from trx_undo_truncate_tablespace(). First, flush all to-be-discarded
pages (beyond the new end of the file), then trim the space->size
to make the page allocation deterministic. At the only remaining
crash injection point, flush the redo log, so that the recovery
can be tested.
The functions fts_ast_visit() and fts_query() inside
InnoDB FULLTEXT INDEX query processing are not checking
for THD::killed (trx_is_interrupted()), like anything
that potentially takes a long time should do.
This is a port of the following change from MySQL 5.7.23,
with a completely rewritten test case.
commit c58c6f8f66ddd0357ecd0c99646aa6bf1dae49c8
Author: Aakanksha Verma <aakanksha.verma@oracle.com>
Date: Fri May 4 15:53:13 2018 +0530
Bug #27155294 MAX_EXECUTION_TIME NOT INTERUPTED WITH FULLTEXT SEARCH USING MECAB
This is a backport of the following fix from MySQL 5.7.23.
Some code refactoring has been omitted, and the test case has
been adapted to MariaDB.
commit 7a689acaa65e9d602575f7aa53fe36a64a07460f
Author: Krzysztof Kapuścik <krzysztof.kapuscik@oracle.com>
Date: Tue Mar 13 12:34:03 2018 +0100
Bug#27082268 Invalid FTS sync synchronization
The fix closes two issues:
Bug #27082268 - INNODB: FAILING ASSERTION: SYM_NODE->TABLE != NULL DURING FTS SYNC
Bug #27095935 - DEADLOCK BETWEEN FTS_DROP_INDEX AND FTS_OPTIMIZE_SYNC_TABLE
Both issues were related to a FTS cache sync being done during
operations that perfomed DDL actions on internal FTS tables
(ALTER TABLE, TRUNCATE). In some cases the FTS tables and/or
internal cache structures could get removed while still being
used to perform FTS synchronization leading to crashes. In other
the sync operations could not get finishes as it was waiting for
dict lock which was taken by thread waiting for the background
sync to be finished.
The changes done includes:
- Stopping background operations during ALTER TABLE and TRUNCATE.
- Removal of unused code in FTS.
- Cleanup of FTS sync related code to make it more readable and
easier to maintain.
RB#18262
PROBLEM
-------
Whenever an fts table is created it registers itself in a queue which
is operated by a background thread whose job is to optimize the
fts tables in background. Additionally we place these fts tables in
non-LRU list so that they cannot be evicted from cache. But in the
scenario when a node is brought up which is already having fts
tables ,we first try to load the fts tables in dictionary ,but we skip
the part where it is added in background queue and in non-LRU list because
the background thread is not yet created,so these tables are loaded
but they can be evicted from the cache. Now coming to the deadlock scenario
1. A Server background thread is trying to evict a table from the cache
because the cache is full,so it scans the LRU list for the tables it can
evict.It finds the fts table (because of the reason explained above)
can be evicted and it takes the dict_sys->mutex (this is a system wide mutex)
submits a request to the background thread to remove this table from queue
and waits it to be completed.
2. In the mean time fts_optimize_thread() is processing another job
in the queue and needs dict_sys->mutex for a small amount of time,
but it cannot get it because it is blocked by the first background thread.
So Thread 1 is waiting for its job to be completed by Thread 2,whereas Thread 2
is waiting for dict_sys->mutex held by thread 1 ,causing the deadlock.
FIX
Problem:
=======
Multiple insert statement in table contains FULLTEXT KEY and a
FTS_DOC_ID column aborts the server if the FTS_DOC_ID exceeds
FTS_DOC_ID_MAX_STEP.
Solution:
========
Remove the exception for first committed insert statement.
Reviewed-by: Jimmy Yang<jimmy.yang@oracle.com>
RB: 18023
Introduced new alter algorithm type called NOCOPY & INSTANT for
inplace alter operation.
NOCOPY - Algorithm refuses any alter operation that would
rebuild the clustered index. It is a subset of INPLACE algorithm.
INSTANT - Algorithm allow any alter operation that would
modify only meta data. It is a subset of NOCOPY algorithm.
Introduce new variable called alter_algorithm. The values are
DEFAULT(0), COPY(1), INPLACE(2), NOCOPY(3), INSTANT(4)
Message to deprecate old_alter_table variable and make it alias
for alter_algorithm variable.
alter_algorithm variable for slave is always set to default.
- Inplace alter shouldn't support if the number of newly added fts index
exceeds 1 even though the table undergoes rebuild. It is a regression of
MDEV-14016
- Galera tests that was not updated with connection change
messages
- Test where out of memory error was changed (We are now using the
standard out of memory error in most places)
- Removed tokudb tests that uses include files that doesn't exist
in MariaDB
- Removed not supported mariadb startup option from option file
To disable debug instrumentation, save and restore the original value
of the variable DEBUG_DBUG. Assigning -d,... will enable the output of
a lot of unrelated DBUG messages to the server error log.
MariaDB inherits the MySQL limitation that ALGORITHM=INPLACE cannot
create more than one FULLTEXT INDEX at a time. As part of the MDEV-11369
Instant ADD COLUMN refactoring, MariaDB 10.3.2 accidentally stopped
enforcing the restriction.
Actually, it is a bug in MySQL 5.6 and MariaDB 10.0 that an ALTER TABLE
statement with multiple ADD FULLTEXT INDEX but without explicit
ALGORITHM=INPLACE would return in an error message, rather than
executing the operation with ALGORITHM=COPY.
ha_innobase::check_if_supported_inplace_alter(): Enforce the restriction
on multiple FULLTEXT INDEX.
prepare_inplace_alter_table_dict(): Replace some code with debug
assertions. A "goto error_handled" at this point would result in
another error, because the reference count of ctx->new_table would be 0.