EXPLAIN EXTENDED for an UPDATE/DELETE/INSERT/REPLACE statement did not
produce the warning containing the text representation of the query
obtained after the optimization phase. Such warning was produced for
SELECT statements, but not for DML statements.
The patch fixes this defect of EXPLAIN EXTENDED for DML statements.
This is a DELETE only case. Normally this statement doesn't make inserts,
but DELETE ... FOR PORTION changes it. UPDATE and INSERT initializes
autoinc by calling handler::info(HA_STATUS_AUTO). Also myisam and innodb
can lazily initialize it in their update_create_info overrides.
The solution is to initialize autoinc during delete preparation,
if period (DELETE FOR PORTION) is specified.
The initial work has been done by Kento Takeuchi by his PR #2048,
however this commit also holds a few technical modifications by
Nikita Malyavin
- query->intersection fails to get freed if the query exceeds
innodb_ft_result_cache_limit
- errors from init_ftfuncs were not propogated by delete command
This is taken from percona/percona-server@ef2c0bcb9a
not every index-using plan sets bits in table->quick_keys.
QUICK_ROR_INTERSECT_SELECT, for example, doesn't.
Use the fact that select->quick is set instead.
Also allow EXPLAIN to work.
- Handle stored function conditions correctly, with the same logic as with UDFs.
- When running queries on Spider SE, by default, we do not push down WHERE conditions containing usage of UDFs/stored functions to remote data nodes, unless the user demands (by setting spider_use_pushdown_udf).
- Disable direct update/delete when a udf condition is skipped.
Both EXPLAIN and EXPLAIN EXTENDED statements produce different results set
in case it is run in normal way and in PS mode for the statements
UPDATE/DELETE with subquery.
The use case below reproduces the issue:
MariaDB [test]> CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT KEY) ENGINE=MyISAM;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0,128 sec)
MariaDB [test]> CREATE TABLE t2 (c2 INT) ENGINE=MyISAM;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0,023 sec)
MariaDB [test]> CREATE TABLE t3 (c3 INT) ENGINE=MyISAM;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0,021 sec)
MariaDB [test]> EXPLAIN EXTENDED UPDATE t3 SET c3 =
-> ( SELECT COUNT(d1.c1) FROM ( SELECT a11.c1 FROM t1 AS a11
-> STRAIGHT_JOIN t2 AS a21 ON a21.c2 = a11.c1 JOIN t1 AS a12
-> ON a12.c1 = a11.c1 ) d1 );
+------+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+----------+--------------------------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | filtered | Extra |
+------+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+----------+--------------------------------+
| 1 | PRIMARY | t3 | ALL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | 0 | 100.00 | |
| 2 | SUBQUERY | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | Impossible WHERE noticed after reading const tables
+------+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+----------+--------------------------------+
2 rows in set (0,002 sec)
MariaDB [test]> PREPARE stmt FROM
-> EXPLAIN EXTENDED UPDATE t3 SET c3 =
-> ( SELECT COUNT(d1.c1) FROM ( SELECT a11.c1 FROM t1 AS a11
-> STRAIGHT_JOIN t2 AS a21 ON a21.c2 = a11.c1 JOIN t1 AS a12
-> ON a12.c1 = a11.c1 ) d1 );
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0,000 sec)
Statement prepared
MariaDB [test]> EXECUTE stmt;
+------+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+----------+--------------------------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | filtered | Extra |
+------+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+----------+--------------------------------+
| 1 | PRIMARY | t3 | ALL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | 0 | 100.00 | |
| 2 | SUBQUERY | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | no matching row in const table |
+------+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+----------+--------------------------------+
2 rows in set (0,000 sec)
The reason by that different result sets are produced is that on execution
of the statement 'EXECUTE stmt' the flag SELECT_DESCRIBE not set
in the data member SELECT_LEX::options for instances of SELECT_LEX that
correspond to subqueries used in the UPDTAE/DELETE statements.
Initially, these flags were set on parsing the statement
PREPARE stmt FROM "EXPLAIN EXTENDED UPDATE t3 SET ..."
but latter they were reset before starting real execution of
the parsed query during handling the statement 'EXECUTE stmt';
So, to fix the issue the functions mysql_update()/mysql_delete()
have been modified to set the flag SELECT_DESCRIBE forcibly
in the data member SELECT_LEX::options for the primary SELECT_LEX
of the UPDATE/DELETE statement.
Before this patch mergeable derived tables / view used in a multi-table
update / delete were merged before the preparation stage.
When the merge of a derived table / view is performed the on expression
attached to it is fixed and ANDed with the where condition of the select S
containing this derived table / view. It happens after the specification of
the derived table / view has been merged into S. If the ON expression refers
to a non existing field an error is reported and some other mergeable derived
tables / views remain unmerged. It's not a problem if the multi-table
update / delete statement is standalone. Yet if it is used in a stored
procedure the select with incompletely merged derived tables / views may
cause a problem for the second call of the procedure. This does not happen
for select queries using derived tables / views, because in this case their
specifications are merged after the preparation stage at which all ON
expressions are fixed.
This patch makes sure that merging of the derived tables / views used in a
multi-table update / delete statement is performed after the preparation
stage.
Approved by Oleksandr Byelkin <sanja@mariadb.com>
Before this patch mergeable derived tables / view used in a multi-table
update / delete were merged before the preparation stage.
When the merge of a derived table / view is performed the on expression
attached to it is fixed and ANDed with the where condition of the select S
containing this derived table / view. It happens after the specification of
the derived table / view has been merged into S. If the ON expression refers
to a non existing field an error is reported and some other mergeable derived
tables / views remain unmerged. It's not a problem if the multi-table
update / delete statement is standalone. Yet if it is used in a stored
procedure the select with incompletely merged derived tables / views may
cause a problem for the second call of the procedure. This does not happen
for select queries using derived tables / views, because in this case their
specifications are merged after the preparation stage at which all ON
expressions are fixed.
This patch makes sure that merging of the derived tables / views used in a
multi-table update / delete statement is performed after the preparation
stage.
Approved by Oleksandr Byelkin <sanja@mariadb.com>
First part of the fix (row0mysql.cc) addresses external columns when adding history
row on referential action. The full data must be retrieved before the
row is inserted.
Second part of the fix (the rest) avoids duplicate primary key error between
the history row generated on referential action and the history row
generated by SQL command. Both command and referential action can
happen on same table since foreign key can be self-reference (parent
and child tables are same). Moreover, the self-reference can refer
multiple rows when the key is non-unique. In such case history is
generated by referential action occured on first row but processed all
rows by a matched key. The second round is when the next row is
processed by a command but history already exists. In such case we
check TRX_ID of existing history row and if it is the same we assume
the above situation and skip adding one more history row or failing
the command.
Wrong assertion condition. SYSTEM_TIME_ALL indicates that
vers_setup_conds() is done. In case FOR SYSTEM_TIME ALL is specified
in command the assertion passes but not checks anything.
MDEV-18957 UPDATE with LIMIT clause is wrong for versioned partitioned tables
UPDATE, DELETE: replace linear search of current/historical records
with vers_setup_conds().
Additional DML cases in view.test
- Any temporary tables created under read-only mode will never be logged
to binary log. Any usage of these tables to update normal tables, even
after read-only has been disabled, will use row base logging (as the
temporary table will not be on the slave).
- Analyze, check and repair table will not be logged in read-only mode.
Other things:
- Removed not used varaibles in
MYSQL_BIN_LOG::flush_and_set_pending_rows_event.
- Set table_share->table_creation_was_logged for all normal tables.
- THD::binlog_query() now returns -1 if statement was not logged., This
is used to update table_share->table_creation_was_logged.
- Don't log admin statements in opt_readonly is set.
- Table's that doesn't have table_creation_was_logged will set binlog format to row
logging.
- Removed not needed/wrong setting of table->s->table_creation_was_logged
in create_table_from_items()
* Made make_versioned_*() proxies inline;
* Renamed truncate_history to delete_history
Part of:
MDEV-19814 Server crash in row_upd_del_mark_clust_rec or Assertion
`update->n_fields < ulint(table->n_cols + table->n_v_cols)' failed in
upd_node_t::make_versioned_helper
Analysis
========
Point in time recovery using mysqlbinlog containing queries
operating on temporary tables results in an error.
While writing the query log event in the binary log, the
thread id used for execution of DROP TABLE and DELETE commands
were incorrect. The thread variable 'thread_specific_used'
is used to determine whether a specific thread id is to used
while executing the statements i.e using 'SET
@@session.pseudo_thread_id'. This variable was not set
correctly for DROP TABLE query and was never set for DELETE
query. The thread id is important for temporary tables
since the tables are session specific. DROP TABLE and DELETE
queries executed using a wrong thread id resulted in errors
while applying the queries generated by mysqlbinlog utility.
Fix
===
Set the 'thread_specific_used' THD variable for DROP TABLE and
DELETE queries.
ReviewBoard: 21833
rpl_write_set is initialized in TABLE::mark_columns_per_binlog_row_image.
Since we just call use_all_columns for PORTION OF case, no need in
column marking logic here. Instead, initialize table->rpl_write_set in
place.
The main problem was lack of proper QueryArena handling in
`period_setup_conds`. Since mysql_prepare_update/mysql_prepare_delete
are called during `PREPARE` statement, period conditions, should be
allocated on statement query arena.
Another problem is incorrect statement state handling in
period_setup_conds, which led to unexpected mysql_update termination.
* mysql_update: move period_setup_conds() to mysql_prepare_update to
store conditions in statement's mem_root
* mtr: add period suite to default list, since --ps-protocol is now
fixed
Fixes bugs:
MDEV-18853 Assertion `0' failed in Protocol::end_statement upon DELETE .. FOR PORTION via prepared statement
MDEV-18852 Server crashes in reinit_stmt_before_use upon UPDATE .. FOR PORTION via prepared statement
st_select_lex::handle_derived() and mysql_handle_list_of_derived() had
exactly the same implementations.
- Adding a new method LEX::handle_list_of_derived() instead
- Removing public function mysql_handle_list_of_derived()
- Reusing LEX::handle_list_of_derived() in st_select_lex::handle_derived()