dict_table_rename_in_cache(): Use strcpy() instead of strncpy(),
because they are known to be equivalent in this case (the length
of old_name was already validated).
mariabackup: Invoke strncpy() with one less than the buffer size,
and explicitly add NUL as the last byte of the buffer.
Based on the performance testing that was conducted in MDEV-17492,
the InnoDB adaptive hash index could only help performance in specific,
almost-read-only workloads. It could slow down all kinds of workloads
(especially DROP TABLE, TRUNCATE TABLE, ALTER TABLE, or DROP INDEX
operations), and it can become corrupted, causing crashes (such as
MDEV-18815, MDEV-20203) and possibly data corruption. Furthermore,
the adaptive hash index consumes space from the InnoDB buffer pool,
which could hurt performance when the working set would almost fit
in the buffer pool.
Given all this, it is best to disable the adaptive hash index by default.
if ${CRC32_LIBRARY} target has no COMPILE_FLAGS yet,
GET_TARGET_PROPERTY returns COMPILE_FLAGS-NOTFOUND, which
doesn't work very well when it's later fed back into COMPILE_FLAGS.
GET_PROPERTY() returns an empty string in this case.
Cherry-picked from 10.4 - 13e8f728ec
Signed-off-by: Vicențiu Ciorbaru <vicentiu@mariadb.org>
only my_getopt should use it, because it changes my_getopt's behavior.
If one simply wants to skip the separator - don't ask it to be added
in the first place
process all --defaults* options uniformly,
get rid of special case for --no-defaults and --print-defaults
use realpath instead of blindly concatenating pwd and relative path.
When "--export" mariabackup option is used, mariabackup starts the server in
bootstrap mode to generate *.cfg files for the certain innodb tables.
The started instance of the server reads options from the file, pointed
out in "--defaults-file" mariabackup option.
If the server uses the same config file as mariabackup, and binlog is
switched on in that config file, then "mariabackup --prepare --export"
will create binary log files in the server's binary log directory, what
can cause issues.
The fix is to add "--skip-log-bin" in mysld options when the server is
started to generate *.cfg files.
The general reason why innodb redo log file is limited by 512G is that
log_block_convert_lsn_to_no() returns value limited by 1G. But there is no
need to have unique log block numbers in log group. The fix removes 512G
limit and limits log group size by
(uint32_t maximum value) * (minimum page size), which, in turns, can be
removed if fil_io() is no longer used for innodb redo log io.
Added the condition in innochecksum tool to check page id mismatch.
This could catch the write corruption caused by InnoDB.
Added the debug insert inside fil_io() to check whether it writes
the page to wrong offset.
cmake -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
Maintainer mode makes all warnings errors. This patch fix warnings. Mostly about
deprecated `register` keyword.
Too much warnings came from Mroonga and I gave up on it.
if ${CRC32_LIBRARY} target has no COMPILE_FLAGS yet,
GET_TARGET_PROPERTY returns COMPILE_FLAGS-NOTFOUND, which
doesn't work very well when it's later fed back into COMPILE_FLAGS.
GET_PROPERTY() returns an empty string in this case.
Server and command line tools now support option --tls_version to specify the
TLS version between client and server. Valid values are TLSv1.0, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3
or a combination of them. E.g.
--tls_version=TLSv1.3
--tls_version=TLSv1.2,TLSv1.3
In case there is a gap between versions, the lowest version will be used:
--tls_version=TLSv1.1,TLSv1.3 -> Only TLSv1.1 will be available.
If the used TLS library doesn't support the specified TLS version, it will use
the default configuration.
Limitations:
SSLv3 is not supported. The default configuration doesn't support TLSv1.0 anymore.
TLSv1.3 protocol currently is only supported by OpenSSL 1.1.0 (client and server) and
GnuTLS 3.6.5 (client only).
Overview of TLS implementations and protocols
Server:
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| Library | Supported TLS versions |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| WolfSSL | TLSv1.1, TLSv1,2 |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| OpenSSL | (TLSv1.0), TLSv1.1, TLSv1,2, TLSv1.3 |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| LibreSSL | (TLSv1.0), TLSv1.1, TLSv1,2, TLSv1.3 |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
Client (MariaDB Connector/C)
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| Library | Supported TLS versions |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| GnuTLS | (TLSv1.0), TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3 |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| Schannel | (TLSv1.0), TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2 |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| OpenSSL | (TLSv1.0), TLSv1.1, TLSv1,2, TLSv1.3 |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
| LibreSSL | (TLSv1.0), TLSv1.1, TLSv1,2, TLSv1.3 |
+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
documentation
Apparently, WolfSSL wants to have *exactly* the same defines for
the user of the library as the was when building library itself.
A lot of #defines have an impact on ABI (structure sizes, alignment etc)