- FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS now resets most global_status_vars.
At this stage, this is mainly to be used for testing.
- FLUSH SESSION STATUS added as an alias for FLUSH STATUS.
- FLUSH STATUS does not require any privilege (before required RELOAD).
- FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS requires RELOAD privilege.
- All global status reset moved to FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS.
- Replication semisync status variables are now reset by
FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS.
- In test cases, the only changes are:
- Replace FLUSH STATUS with FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS
- Replace FLUSH STATUS with FLUSH STATUS; FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS.
This was only done in a few tests where the test was using SHOW STATUS
for both local and global variables.
- Uptime_since_flush_status is now always provided, independent if
ENABLED_PROFILING is enabled when compiling MariaDB.
- @@global.Uptime_since_flush_status is reset on FLUSH GLOBAL STATUS
and @@session.Uptime_since_flush_status is reset on FLUSH SESSION STATUS.
- When connected, @@session.Uptime_since_flush_status is set to 0.
This task is to ensure we have a clear definition and rules of how to
repair or optimize a table.
The rules are:
- REPAIR should be used with tables that are crashed and are
unreadable (hardware issues with not readable blocks, blocks with
'unexpected data' etc)
- OPTIMIZE table should be used to optimize the storage layout for the
table (recover space for delete rows and optimize the index
structure.
- ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE should be used to rebuild the .frm file
(the table definition) and the table (with the original table row
format). If the table is from and older MariaDB/MySQL release with a
different storage format, it will convert the data to the new
format. ALTER TABLE ... FORCE is used as part of mariadb-upgrade
Here follows some more background:
The 3 ways to repair a table are:
1) ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE" (not other options).
As an alias we allow: "ALTER TABLE table_name ENGINE=original_engine"
2) "REPAIR TABLE" (without FORCE)
3) "OPTIMIZE TABLE"
All of the above commands will optimize row space usage (which means that
space will be needed to hold a temporary copy of the table) and
re-generate all indexes. They will also try to replicate the original
table definition as exact as possible.
For ALTER TABLE and "REPAIR TABLE without FORCE", the following will hold:
If the table is from an older MariaDB version and data conversion is
needed (for example for old type HASH columns, MySQL JSON type or new
TIMESTAMP format) "ALTER TABLE table_name FORCE, algorithm=COPY" will be
used.
The differences between the algorithms are
1) Will use the fastest algorithm the engine supports to do a full repair
of the table (except if data conversions are is needed).
2) Will use the storage engine internal REPAIR facility (MyISAM, Aria).
If the engine does not support REPAIR then
"ALTER TABLE FORCE, ALGORITHM=COPY" will be used.
If there was data incompatibilities (which means that FORCE was used)
then there will be a warning after REPAIR that ALTER TABLE FORCE is
still needed.
The reason for this is that REPAIR may be able to go around data
errors (wrong incompatible data, crashed or unreadable sectors) that
ALTER TABLE cannot do.
3) Will use the storage engine internal OPTIMIZE. If engine does not
support optimize, then "ALTER TABLE FORCE" is used.
The above will ensure that ALTER TABLE FORCE is able to
correct almost any errors in the row or index data. In case of
corrupted blocks then REPAIR possible followed by ALTER TABLE is needed.
This is important as mariadb-upgrade executes ALTER TABLE table_name
FORCE for any table that must be re-created.
Bugs fixed with InnoDB tables when using ALTER TABLE FORCE:
- No error for INNODB_DEFAULT_ROW_FORMAT=COMPACT even if row length
would be too wide. (Independent of innodb_strict_mode).
- Tables using symlinks will be symlinked after any of the above commands
(Independent of the setting of --symbolic-links)
If one specifies an algorithm together with ALTER TABLE FORCE, things
will work as before (except if data conversion is required as then
the COPY algorithm is enforced).
ALTER TABLE .. OPTIMIZE ALL PARTITIONS will work as before.
Other things:
- FORCE argument added to REPAIR to allow one to first run internal
repair to fix damaged blocks and then follow it with ALTER TABLE.
- REPAIR will not update frm_version if ha_check_for_upgrade() finds
that table is still incompatible with current version. In this case the
REPAIR will end with an error.
- REPAIR for storage engines that does not have native repair, like InnoDB,
is now using ALTER TABLE FORCE.
- REPAIR csv-table USE_FRM now works.
- It did not work before as CSV tables had extension list in wrong
order.
- Default error messages length for %M increased from 128 to 256 to not
cut information from REPAIR.
- Documented HA_ADMIN_XX variables related to repair.
- Added HA_ADMIN_NEEDS_DATA_CONVERSION to signal that we have to
do data conversions when converting the table (and thus ALTER TABLE
copy algorithm is needed).
- Fixed typo in error message (caused test changes).
Fixing the problem that an operation involving a mix of
two or more GEOMETRY operands did not preserve their SRIDs.
Now SRIDs are preserved by hybrid functions, subqueries, TVCs, UNIONs, VIEWs.
Incompatible change:
An attempt to mix two different SRIDs now raises an error.
Details:
- Adding a new class Type_extra_attributes. It's a generic
container which can store very specific data type attributes.
For now it can store one uint32 and one const pointer attribute
(for GEOMETRY's SRID and for ENUM/SET TYPELIB respectively).
In the future it can grow as needed.
Type_extra_attributes will also be reused soon to store "const Type_zone*"
pointers for the TIMESTAMP's "WITH TIME ZONE 'tz'" attribute
(a timestamp data type with a fixed time zone independent from @@time_zone).
The time zone attribute will be stored in exactly the same way like
a TYPELIB pointer is stored by ENUM/SET.
- Removing Column_definition_attributes members "interval" and "srid".
Deriving Column_definition_attributes from the generic attribute container
Type_extra_attributes instead.
- Adding a new class Type_typelib_attributes, to store
the TYPELIB of the ENUM and SET data types. Deriving Field_enum from it.
Removing the member Field_enum::typelib.
- Adding a new class Type_geom_attributes, to store
the GEOMETRY related attributes. Deriving Field_geom from it.
Removing the member Field_geom::srid.
- Removing virtual methods:
Field::get_typelib()
Type_all_attributes::get_typelib() and
Type_all_attributes::set_typelib()
They were very specific to TYPELIB.
Adding more generic virtual methods instead:
* Field::type_extra_attributes() - to get extra attributes
* Type_all_attributes::type_extra_attributes() - to get extra attributes
* Type_all_attributes::type_extra_attributes_addr() - to set extra attributes
- Removing Item_type_holder::enum_set_typelib. Deriving Item_type_holder
from the generic attribute container Type_extra_attributes instead.
This makes it possible for UNION to preserve SRID
(in addition to preserving TYPELIB).
- Deriving Item_hybrid_func from Type_extra_attributes.
This makes it possible for hybrid functions (e.g. CASE, COALESCE,
LEAST, GREATEST etc) to preserve SRID.
- Deriving Item_singlerow_subselect from Type_extra_attributes and
overriding methods:
* Item_cache::type_extra_attributes()
* subselect_single_select_engine::fix_length_and_dec()
* Item_singlerow_subselect::type_extra_attributes()
* Item_singlerow_subselect::type_extra_attributes_addr()
This is needed to preserve SRID in subqueries and TVCs
- Cleanup: fixing the data type of members
* Binlog_type_info::m_enum_typelib
* Binlog_type_info::m_set_typelib
from "TYPELIB *" to "const TYPELIB *"
I checked all stack overflow potential problems found with
gcc -Wstack-usage=16384
and
clang -Wframe-larger-than=16384 -no-inline
Fixes:
Added '#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wframe-larger-than="'
to a lot of function to where stack usage large but resonable.
- Added stack check warnings to BUILD scrips when using clang and debug.
Function changed to use malloc instead allocating things on stack:
- read_bootstrap_query() now allocates line_buffer (20000 bytes) with
malloc() instead of using stack. This has a small performance impact
but this is not releant for bootstrap.
- mroonga grn_select() used 65856 bytes on stack. Changed it to use
malloc().
- Wsrep_schema::replay_transaction() and
Wsrep_schema::recover_sr_transactions().
- Connect zipOpen3()
Not fixed:
- mroonga/vendor/groonga/lib/expr.c grn_proc_call() uses
43712 byte on stack. However this is not easy to fix as the stack
used is caused by a lot of code generated by defines.
- Most changes in mroonga/groonga where only adding of pragmas to disable
stack warnings.
- rocksdb/options/options_helper.cc uses 20288 of stack space.
(no reason to fix except to get rid of the compiler warning)
- Causes using alloca() where the allocation size is resonable.
- An issue in libmariadb (reported to connectors).
This patch also fixes:
MDEV-33050 Build-in schemas like oracle_schema are accent insensitive
MDEV-33084 LASTVAL(t1) and LASTVAL(T1) do not work well with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33085 Tables T1 and t1 do not work well with ENGINE=CSV and lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33086 SHOW OPEN TABLES IN DB1 -- is case insensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33088 Cannot create triggers in the database `MYSQL`
MDEV-33103 LOCK TABLE t1 AS t2 -- alias is not case sensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33109 DROP DATABASE MYSQL -- does not drop SP with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33110 HANDLER commands are case insensitive with lower-case-table-names=0
MDEV-33119 User is case insensitive in INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS
MDEV-33120 System log table names are case insensitive with lower-cast-table-names=0
- Removing the virtual function strnncoll() from MY_COLLATION_HANDLER
- Adding a wrapper function CHARSET_INFO::streq(), to compare
two strings for equality. For now it calls strnncoll() internally.
In the future it will turn into a virtual function.
- Adding new accent sensitive case insensitive collations:
- utf8mb4_general1400_as_ci
- utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci
They implement accent sensitive case insensitive comparison.
The weight of a character is equal to the code point of its
upper case variant. These collations use Unicode-14.0.0 casefolding data.
The result of
my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci.strcoll()
is very close to the former
my_charset_utf8mb3_general_ci.strcasecmp()
There is only a difference in a couple dozen rare characters, because:
- the switch from "tolower" to "toupper" comparison, to make
utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci closer to utf8mb3_general_ci
- the switch from Unicode-3.0.0 to Unicode-14.0.0
This difference should be tolarable. See the list of affected
characters in the MDEV description.
Note, utf8mb4_general1400_as_ci correctly handles non-BMP characters!
Unlike utf8mb4_general_ci, it does not treat all BMP characters
as equal.
- Adding classes representing names of the file based database objects:
Lex_ident_db
Lex_ident_table
Lex_ident_trigger
Their comparison collation depends on the underlying
file system case sensitivity and on --lower-case-table-names
and can be either my_charset_bin or my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci.
- Adding classes representing names of other database objects,
whose names have case insensitive comparison style,
using my_charset_utf8mb3_general1400_as_ci:
Lex_ident_column
Lex_ident_sys_var
Lex_ident_user_var
Lex_ident_sp_var
Lex_ident_ps
Lex_ident_i_s_table
Lex_ident_window
Lex_ident_func
Lex_ident_partition
Lex_ident_with_element
Lex_ident_rpl_filter
Lex_ident_master_info
Lex_ident_host
Lex_ident_locale
Lex_ident_plugin
Lex_ident_engine
Lex_ident_server
Lex_ident_savepoint
Lex_ident_charset
engine_option_value::Name
- All the mentioned Lex_ident_xxx classes implement a method streq():
if (ident1.streq(ident2))
do_equal();
This method works as a wrapper for CHARSET_INFO::streq().
- Changing a lot of "LEX_CSTRING name" to "Lex_ident_xxx name"
in class members and in function/method parameters.
- Replacing all calls like
system_charset_info->coll->strcasecmp(ident1, ident2)
to
ident1.streq(ident2)
- Taking advantage of the c++11 user defined literal operator
for LEX_CSTRING (see m_strings.h) and Lex_ident_xxx (see lex_ident.h)
data types. Use example:
const Lex_ident_column primary_key_name= "PRIMARY"_Lex_ident_column;
is now a shorter version of:
const Lex_ident_column primary_key_name=
Lex_ident_column({STRING_WITH_LEN("PRIMARY")});
Under terms of MDEV 27490 we'll add support for non-BMP identifiers
and upgrade casefolding information to Unicode version 14.0.0.
In Unicode-14.0.0 conversion to lower and upper cases can increase octet length
of the string, so conversion won't be possible in-place any more.
This patch removes virtual functions performing in-place casefolding:
- my_charset_handler_st::casedn_str()
- my_charset_handler_st::caseup_str()
and fixes the code to use the non-inplace functions instead:
- my_charset_handler_st::casedn()
- my_charset_handler_st::caseup()
- Add `as <int_type>` to sequence creation options
- int_type can be signed or unsigned integer types, including
tinyint, smallint, mediumint, int and bigint
- Limitation: when alter sequence as <new_int_type>, cannot have any
other alter options in the same statement
- Limitation: increment remains signed longlong, and the hidden
constraint (cache_size x abs(increment) < longlong_max) stays for
unsigned types. This means for bigint unsigned, neither
abs(increment) nor (cache_size x abs(increment)) can be between
longlong_max and ulonglong_max
- Truncating maxvalue and minvalue from user input to the nearest max
or min value of the type, plus or minus 1. When the truncation
happens, a warning is emitted
- Information schema table for sequences
The IDENT_sys doesn't include keywords, so the function with the
keyword name can be created, but cannot be called.
Moving keywords to new rules keyword_func_sp_var_and_label and
keyword_func_sp_var_not_label so the functions with these
names are allowed.
This patch adds PACKAGE support with SQL/PSM dialect for sql_mode=DEFAULT:
- CREATE PACKAGE
- DROP PACKAGE
- CREATE PACKAGE BODY
- DROP PACKAGE BODY
- Package function and procedure invocation from outside of the package:
-- using two step identifiers
SELECT pkg.f1();
CALL pkg.p1()
-- using three step identifiers
SELECT db.pkg.f1();
CALL db.pkg.p1();
This is a non-standard MariaDB extension.
However, later this code can be used to implement
the SQL Standard and DB2 dialects of CREATE MODULE.
Like all IF NOT EXISTS syntax, a Note should be generated.
The original commit of Seqeuences cleared the IF NOT EXISTS part
in the sql/sql_yacc.yy with lex->create_info.init(). Without this
bit set there was no way it could do anything other than error.
To remedy this removal, the sql_yacc.yy components have been
minimised as they where all set at the beginning of the ALTER.
This way the opt_if_not_exists correctly set the IF_EXISTS flag.
In MDEV-13005 (bb4dd70e7c) the error code changed, requiring
ER_UNKNOWN_SEQUENCES to be handled in the function
No_such_table_error_handler::handle_condition.
1. WITHOUT/WITH VALIDATION may be added to EXCHANGE PARTITION or CONVERT TABLE:
alter table tp exchange partition p1 with table t with validation;
alter table tp exchange partition p1 with table t; -- same as with validation
alter table tp exchange partition p1 with table t without validation;
2. Optional THAN keyword for RANGE partitioning. Normally you type:
create table tp (a int primary key) partition by range (a) (
partition p0 values less than (100),
partition p1 values less than maxvalue);
Now you may type (PARTITION keyword is also optional):
create table tp (a int primary key) partition by range (a) (
p0 values less (100),
p1 values less maxvalue);
The crash happened with an indexed virtual column whose
value is evaluated using a function that has a different meaning
in sql_mode='' vs sql_mode=ORACLE:
- DECODE()
- LTRIM()
- RTRIM()
- LPAD()
- RPAD()
- REPLACE()
- SUBSTR()
For example:
CREATE TABLE t1 (
b VARCHAR(1),
g CHAR(1) GENERATED ALWAYS AS (SUBSTR(b,0,0)) VIRTUAL,
KEY g(g)
);
So far we had replacement XXX_ORACLE() functions for all mentioned function,
e.g. SUBSTR_ORACLE() for SUBSTR(). So it was possible to correctly re-parse
SUBSTR_ORACLE() even in sql_mode=''.
But it was not possible to re-parse the MariaDB version of SUBSTR()
after switching to sql_mode=ORACLE. It was erroneously mis-interpreted
as SUBSTR_ORACLE().
As a result, this combination worked fine:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t1 ... g CHAR(1) GENERATED ALWAYS AS (SUBSTR(b,0,0)) VIRTUAL, ...;
INSERT ...
FLUSH TABLES;
SET sql_mode='';
INSERT ...
But the other way around it crashed:
SET sql_mode='';
CREATE TABLE t1 ... g CHAR(1) GENERATED ALWAYS AS (SUBSTR(b,0,0)) VIRTUAL, ...;
INSERT ...
FLUSH TABLES;
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
INSERT ...
At CREATE time, SUBSTR was instantiated as Item_func_substr and printed
in the FRM file as substr(). At re-open time with sql_mode=ORACLE, "substr()"
was erroneously instantiated as Item_func_substr_oracle.
Fix:
The fix proposes a symmetric solution. It provides a way to re-parse reliably
all sql_mode dependent functions to their original CREATE TABLE time meaning,
no matter what the open-time sql_mode is.
We take advantage of the same idea we previously used to resolve sql_mode
dependent data types.
Now all sql_mode dependent functions are printed by SHOW using a schema
qualifier when the current sql_mode differs from the function sql_mode:
SET sql_mode='';
CREATE TABLE t1 ... SUBSTR(a,b,c) ..;
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
SHOW CREATE TABLE t1; -> mariadb_schema.substr(a,b,c)
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 ... SUBSTR(a,b,c) ..;
SET sql_mode='';
SHOW CREATE TABLE t1; -> oracle_schema.substr(a,b,c)
Old replacement names like substr_oracle() are still understood for
backward compatibility and used in FRM files (for downgrade compatibility),
but they are not printed by SHOW any more.
MDEV-27106 added REMOTE_TABLE, REMOTE_DATABASE, REMOTE_SERVER spider
table options. In this commit, we add all remaining options for table
params that are not marked to be deprecated.
All these options are parsed as strings from sql statements and have
string values at the sql level, so that we can determine whether it is
specified by checking its nullness.
The string values are further parsed by Spider into their actual types
in the SPIDER_SHARE, including string list, bounded nonnegative int,
bounded nonnegative int list, nonnegative longlong, boolean, and key
hints. Except for string lists, all other types are validated during
this parsing process.
Most of the options are backward compatible, i.e. they accept any
values that is accepted by there corresponding param parser. The only
exception is the index hint IDX which corresponds to the idxNNN param
name. For example,
'idx000 "f PRIMARY", idx001 "u k1"'
translates to
IDX="f PRIMARY u k1".
We include a test with all options specified, and tests involving
spider table options of all actual types.
Any table options, if present, will cause comments to be ignored with
a warning. The warning can be disabled by setting a new spider
global/session system variable spider_suppress_comment_ignored_warning
to 1.
Another global/session variable introduced is spider_ignore_comments,
which if set to 1, will cause COMMENT and CONNECTION strings to be
ignored unconditionally, whether or not table options are specified.