in innodb_read_only mode.
The reason for the hang is that there was no notification received about
completed read io. File handles are bound to completion_port, and there
were no background "write" threads that would be waiting on completion_port,
only 2 "read" threads waiting on read_completion_port were active.
The fix is to use a single IO completion port for all IOs, if
innodb_read_only is set.
Allow 64-bit atomic operations on 32-bit systems,
only relying on HAVE_ATOMIC_BUILTINS_64, disregarding
the width of the register file.
Define UNIV_WORD_SIZE correctly on all systems, including Windows.
In MariaDB 10.0 and 10.1, it was incorrectly defined as 4 on
64-bit Windows.
Define HAVE_ATOMIC_BUILTINS_64 on Windows
(64-bit atomics are available on both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows
platforms; the operations were unnecessarily disabled even on
64-bit Windows).
MONITOR_OS_PENDING_READS, MONITOR_OS_PENDING_WRITES: Enable by default.
os_file_n_pending_preads, os_file_n_pending_pwrites,
os_n_pending_reads, os_n_pending_writes: Remove.
Use the monitor counters instead.
os_file_count_mutex: Remove. On a system that does not support
64-bit atomics, monitor_mutex will be used instead.
The function posix_fallocate() as well as the Linux system call
fallocate() can return EINTR when the operation was interrupted
by a signal. In that case, keep retrying the operation, except
if InnoDB shutdown has been initiated.
a large memory buffer on Windows
fil_extend_space_to_desired_size(), os_file_set_size(): Use calloc()
for memory allocation, and handle failures. Properly check the return
status of posix_fallocate(), and pass the correct arguments to
posix_fallocate().
On Windows, instead of extending the file by at most 1 megabyte at a time,
write a zero-filled page at the end of the file.
According to the Microsoft blog post
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20110922-00/?p=9573
this will physically extend the file by writing zero bytes.
(InnoDB never uses DeviceIoControl() to set the file sparse.)
I tested that the file extension works properly with a multi-file
system tablespace, both with --innodb-use-fallocate and
--skip-innodb-use-fallocate (the default):
./mtr \
--mysqld=--innodb-use-fallocate \
--mysqld=--innodb-autoextend-increment=1 \
--mysqld=--innodb-data-file-path='ibdata1:5M;ibdata2:5M:autoextend' \
--parallel=auto --force --retry=0 --suite=innodb &
ls -lsh mysql-test/var/*/mysqld.1/data/ibdata2
(several samples while running the test)
The function trx_purge_stop() was calling os_event_reset(purge_sys->event)
before calling rw_lock_x_lock(&purge_sys->latch). The os_event_set()
call in srv_purge_coordinator_suspend() is protected by that X-latch.
It would seem a good idea to consistently protect both os_event_set()
and os_event_reset() calls with a common mutex or rw-lock in those
cases where os_event_set() and os_event_reset() are used
like condition variables, tied to changes of shared state.
For each os_event_t, we try to document the mutex or rw-lock that is
being used. For some events, frequent calls to os_event_set() seem to
try to avoid hangs. Some events are never waited for infinitely, only
timed waits, and os_event_set() is used for early termination of these
waits.
os_aio_simulated_put_read_threads_to_sleep(): Define as a null macro
on other systems than Windows. TODO: remove this altogether and disable
innodb_use_native_aio on Windows.
os_aio_segment_wait_events[]: Initialize only if innodb_use_native_aio=0.
available space on disk
Add error handling when disk full situation happens and
intentionally bring server down with stacktrace because
on all cases InnoDB can't continue anyway.
after Operating system error number 36 in a file operation.
Analysis: os_file_get_status did not handle error ENAMETOOLONG
correctly.
Fix: Add correct handling for error ENAMETOOLONG. Note that on InnoDB
case the error is not passed all the way up to server. That would
be bigger rewamp.
Analysis: This was merge error on file fil0fil.cc. fil_system mutex was taken twice because of this.
Fix: Remove unnecessary mutex_enter and fixed the issue with slow posix_fallocate usage.
support ha_innodb.so as a dynamic plugin.
* remove obsolete *,innodb_plugin.rdiff files
* s/--plugin-load=/--plugin-load-add=/
* MYSQL_PLUGIN_IMPORT glob_hostname[]
* use my_error instead of push_warning_printf(ER_DEFAULT)
* don't use tdc_size and tc_size in a module
update test cases (XtraDB is 5.6.14, InnoDB is 5.6.10)
* copy new tests over
* disable some tests for (old) InnoDB
* delete XtraDB tests that no longer apply
small compatibility changes:
* s/HTON_EXTENDED_KEYS/HTON_SUPPORTS_EXTENDED_KEYS/
* revert unnecessary InnoDB changes to make it a bit closer to the upstream
fix XtraDB to compile on Windows (both as a static and a dynamic plugin)
disable XtraDB on Windows (deadlocks) and where no atomic ops are available (e.g. CentOS 5)
storage/innobase/handler/ha_innodb.cc:
revert few unnecessary changes to make it a bit closer to the original InnoDB
storage/innobase/include/univ.i:
correct the version to match what it was merged from