fil_iterate(), fil_tablespace_iterate(): Replace os_file_read()
with os_file_read_no_error_handling().
os_file_read_func(), os_file_read_no_error_handling_func():
Do not retry partial reads. There used to be an infinite amount
of retries. Because InnoDB extends both data and log files upfront,
partial reads should be impossible during normal operation.
MDEV-14545 Backup fails due to MLOG_INDEX_LOAD record
- Changed the unsupported_redo test case to avoid checkpoint
- Inserting more rows in purge_secondary test case to display evict monitor.
InnoDB in Debian uses utf8mb4 as default character set since
version 10.0.20-2. This leads to major pain due to keys longer
than 767 bytes.
MariaDB 10.2 (and MySQL 5.7) introduced the setting
innodb_default_row_format that is DYNAMIC by default. These
versions also changed the default values of the parameters
innodb_large_prefix=ON and innodb_file_format=Barracuda.
This would allow longer column index prefixes to be created.
The original purpose of these parameters was to allow InnoDB
to be downgraded to MySQL 5.1, which is long out of support.
Every InnoDB version since MySQL 5.5 does support operation
with the relaxed limits.
We backport the parameter innodb_default_row_format to
MariaDB 10.1, but we will keep its default value at COMPACT.
This allows MariaDB 10.1 to be configured so that CREATE TABLE
is less likely to encounter a problem with the limitation:
loose_innodb_large_prefix=ON
loose_innodb_default_row_format=DYNAMIC
(Note that the setting innodb_large_prefix was deprecated in
MariaDB 10.2 and removed in MariaDB 10.3.)
The only observable difference in the behaviour with the default
settings should be that ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC tables can be created
both in the system tablespace and in .ibd files, no matter what
innodb_file_format has been assigned to. Unlike MariaDB 10.2,
we are not changing the default value of innodb_file_format,
so ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables cannot be created without
changing the parameter.
Disable the test encryption.innodb_encryption-page-compression
because the wait_condition would seem to time out deterministically.
MDEV-14814 has to be addressed in 10.2 separately.
Datafile::validate_first_page(): Do not invoke
page_size_t::page_size_t(flags) before validating the tablespace flags.
This avoids a crash in MDEV-15333 innodb.restart test case.
FIXME: Reduce the number of error messages. The first one is enough.
This performance regression was introduced in the MariaDB 10.1
file format incompatibility bug fix MDEV-11623 (MariaDB 10.1.21
and MariaDB 10.2.4) and partially fixed in MariaDB 10.1.25 in
MDEV-12610 without adding a regression test case.
On a normal startup (without crash recovery), InnoDB should not read
every .ibd data file, because this is slow. Like in MySQL, for now,
InnoDB will still open every data file (without reading), and it
will read every .ibd file for which an .isl file exists, or the
DATA DIRECTORY attribute has been specified for the table.
The test case shuts down InnoDB, moves data files, replaces them
with garbage, and then restarts InnoDB, expecting no messages to
be issued for the garbage files. (Some messages will for now be
issued for the table that uses the DATA DIRECTORY attribute.)
Finally, the test shuts down the server, restores the old data files,
and restarts again to drop the tables.
fil_open_single_table_tablespace(): Remove the condition on flags,
and only call fsp_flags_try_adjust() if validate==true
(reading the first page has been requested). The only caller with
validate==false is at server startup when we are processing all
records from SYS_TABLES. The flags passed to this function are
actually derived from SYS_TABLES.TYPE and SYS_TABLES.N_COLS,
and there never was any problem with SYS_TABLES in MariaDB 10.1.
The problem that MDEV-11623 was that incorrect tablespace flags
were computed and written to FSP_SPACE_FLAGS.
lock_trx_release_locks(): Relax a debug assertion to allow
recovered TRX_STATE_COMMITTED_IN_MEMORY transactions.
trx_commit_in_memory(): Add DEBUG_SYNC instrumentation.
trx_undo_insert_cleanup(): Skip persistent changes if innodb_read_only
is set. This should only happen when a recovered committed transaction
would be cleaned up at shutdown.
When code from MySQL 5.7.9 was merged to MariaDB 10.2.2
in commit 2e814d4702
an assignment validate=true was inadvertently added to the function
dict_check_sys_tables().
This causes InnoDB to open every single .ibd file on startup, even
when no crash recovery was needed.
Simply removing the assignment would make some tests fail. We do the
best to retain almost the same level of inconsistency detection.
In the test innodb.table_flags, access to one of the tables will not
be blocked despite inconsistent flags.
dict_check_sys_tables(): Remove the problematic assignment, and skip
validation in normal startup.
dict_load_table_one(): If the .ibd file cannot be opened, mark the
table as corrupted and unreadable.
fil_node_open_file(): Validate FSP_SPACE_FLAGS with the expected
flags. If reading the tablespace fails, invalidate node->handle
instead of letting it remain stale. This bug was caught by a
fil_validate() assertion failure.
fsp_flags_try_adjust(): If the tablespace file is invalid, do nothing.
PageConverter::adjust_cluster_record(): Instead of writing
the invalid value DB_ROLL_PTR=0, write a value that indicates
a fresh insert, that is, prevents the DB_ROLL_PTR from being
dereferenced in any circumstances.
It can be argued that IMPORT TABLESPACE should actually
update the dict_index_t::trx_id to prevent older transactions
from accessing the table, similar to what I did on table
rebuild in MySQL 5.6.6 in
03f81a55f2
MDEV-14222 Unnecessary 'cascade' memory allocation for every updated row
when there is no FOREIGN KEY
This reverts the MySQL 5.7.2 change
377774689b
which introduced these problems. MariaDB 10.2.2 inherited these problems
in commit 2e814d4702.
The FOREIGN KEY CASCADE and SET NULL operations implemented as
procedural recursion are consuming more than 8 kilobytes of stack
(9 stack frames) per iteration in a non-debug GNU/Linux AMD64 build.
This is why we need to limit the maximum recursion depth to 15 steps
instead of the 255 that it used to be in MySQL 5.7 and MariaDB 10.2.
A corresponding change was made in MySQL 5.7.21 in
7b26dc98a6
This corruption was introduced in MDEV-13331. It would have been caught
by the MySQL 5.7 test innodb.update-cascade which MariaDB was missing
until now.
row_ins_check_foreign_constraint(): Never replace err == DB_LOCK_WAIT
with other values than DB_LOCK_WAIT_TIMEOUT.
Problem was that wrong error message was returned when insert
returned FK-error and there was no duplicate key to process.
row_ins
If error from insert was DB_NO_REFERENCED_ROW and there was
no duplicate key we should ignore ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
and return original error message.
Suppress some messages that are emitted rarely
(when the FIL_PAGE_FILE_FLUSH_LSN of the first page of ibdata1
does not match the latest redo log checkpoint).
Import and adjust the innodb.innodb_buffer_pool_resize tests,
except innodb.innodb_buffer_pool_resize_debug, which would time out.
buf_pool_clear_hash_index(): Adjust assertions.
When InnoDB has completed the rollback of a recovered transaction,
it used to display the transaction identifier.
This was broken in MySQL 5.7.2 in
2f5f3cd3ac
which was merged to MariaDB 10.2.2 in
commit 2e814d4702.
trx_rollback_active(): Cache the transaction ID before it will be
reset by transaction commit. Do not display the message if the
rollback was interrupted by shutdown (MDEV-13797, MDEV-12352).
If a crash occurs during ALTER TABLE…ALGORITHM=COPY, InnoDB would spend
a lot of time rolling back writes to the intermediate copy of the table.
To reduce the amount of busy work done, a work-around was introduced in
commit fd069e2bb3 in MySQL 4.1.8 and 5.0.2,
to commit the transaction after every 10,000 inserted rows.
A proper fix would have been to disable the undo logging altogether and
to simply drop the intermediate copy of the table on subsequent server
startup. This is what happens in MariaDB 10.3 with MDEV-14717,MDEV-14585.
In MariaDB 10.2, the intermediate copy of the table would be left behind
with a name starting with the string #sql.
This is a backport of a bug fix from MySQL 8.0.0 to MariaDB,
contributed by jixianliang <271365745@qq.com>.
Unlike recent MySQL, MariaDB supports ALTER IGNORE. For that operation
InnoDB must for now keep the undo logging enabled, so that the latest
row can be rolled back in case of an error.
In Galera cluster, the LOAD DATA statement will retain the existing
behaviour and commit the transaction after every 10,000 rows if
the parameter wsrep_load_data_splitting=ON is set. The logic to do
so (the wsrep_load_data_split() function and the call
handler::extra(HA_EXTRA_FAKE_START_STMT)) are joint work
by Ji Xianliang and Marko Mäkelä.
The original fix:
Author: Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani <thirunarayanan.balathandayuth@oracle.com>
Date: Wed Dec 2 16:09:15 2015 +0530
Bug#17479594 AVOID INTERMEDIATE COMMIT WHILE DOING ALTER TABLE ALGORITHM=COPY
Problem:
During ALTER TABLE, we commit and restart the transaction for every
10,000 rows, so that the rollback after recovery would not take so long.
Fix:
Suppress the undo logging during copy alter operation. If fts_index is
present then insert directly into fts auxiliary table rather
than doing at commit time.
ha_innobase::num_write_row: Remove the variable.
ha_innobase::write_row(): Remove the hack for committing every 10000 rows.
row_lock_table_for_mysql(): Remove the extra 2 parameters.
lock_get_src_table(), lock_is_table_exclusive(): Remove.
Reviewed-by: Marko Mäkelä <marko.makela@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Shaohua Wang <shaohua.wang@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Jon Olav Hauglid <jon.hauglid@oracle.com>
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.
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.
InnoDB limited the maximum number of bytes per character to 4.
But, the filename character set that was introduced in MySQL 5.1
uses up to 5 bytes per character.
To allow InnoDB tables to be created with wider characters, let
us split the mbminmaxlen fields into mbminlen, mbmaxlen, and increase
the limit to 7 bytes per character. This will increase the payload size
of dtype_t and dict_col_t by one bit. The storage size will be unchanged
(54 bits and 77 bits will use the same number of bytes as the
previous sizes 53 and 76 bits).
MDEV-14511 tried to avoid some consistency problems related to InnoDB
persistent statistics. The persistent statistics are being written by
an InnoDB internal SQL interpreter that requires the InnoDB data dictionary
cache to be locked.
Before MDEV-14511, the statistics were written during DDL in separate
transactions, which could unnecessarily reduce performance (each commit
would require a redo log flush) and break atomicity, because the statistics
would be updated separately from the dictionary transaction.
However, because it is unacceptable to hold the InnoDB data dictionary
cache locked while suspending the execution for waiting for a
transactional lock (in the mysql.innodb_index_stats or
mysql.innodb_table_stats tables) to be released, any lock conflict
was immediately be reported as "lock wait timeout".
To fix MDEV-14941, an attempt to reduce these lock conflicts by acquiring
transactional locks on the user tables in both the statistics and DDL
operations was made, but it would still not entirely prevent lock conflicts
on the mysql.innodb_index_stats and mysql.innodb_table_stats tables.
Fixing the remaining problems would require a change that is too intrusive
for a GA release series, such as MariaDB 10.2.
Thefefore, we revert the change MDEV-14511. To silence the
MDEV-13201 assertion, we use the pre-existing flag trx_t::internal.
innodb.truncate_inject: Replacement for innodb_zip.wl6501_error_1
Note: unlike MySQL, in some cases TRUNCATE does not return
an error in MariaDB. This should be fixed in the scope of
MDEV-13564 or similar.
recv_log_recover_10_3(): Determine if a log from MariaDB 10.3 is clean.
recv_find_max_checkpoint(): Allow startup with a clean 10.3 redo log.
srv_prepare_to_delete_redo_log_files(): When starting up with a 10.3 log,
display a "Downgrading redo log" message instead of "Upgrading".
The XtraDB option innodb_track_changed_pages causes
the function log_group_read_log_seg() to be invoked
even when recv_sys==NULL, leading to the SIGSEGV.
This regression was caused by
MDEV-11027 InnoDB log recovery is too noisy
innodb/buf_LRU_get_free_block
Add debug instrumentation to produce error message about
no free pages. Print error message only once and do not
enable innodb monitor.
xtradb/buf_LRU_get_free_block
Add debug instrumentation to produce error message about
no free pages. Print error message only once and do not
enable innodb monitor. Remove code that does not seem to
be used.
innodb-lru-force-no-free-page.test
New test case to force produce desired error message.