This patch augments Gtid_log_event with the user thread-id.
In particular that compensates for the loss of this info in
Rows_log_events.
Gtid_log_event::thread_id gets visible in mysqlbinlog output like
#231025 16:21:45 server id 1 end_log_pos 537 CRC32 0x1cf1d963 GTID 0-1-2 ddl thread_id=10
as a 32 bit unsigned integer. Note this is a 32-bit value, as
the connection id can only be 32 bits (see MDEV-15089 for
details).
While the size of Gtid event has grown by 4 bytes
replication from OLD <-> NEW is not affected by it. This patch
also slightly changes the logic to convert Gtid events to Query
events for older replicas which don't support Gtid. Instead of
hard-coding the padding of the sys var section of the generated
Query event, the length to pad is dynamically calculated based
on the length of the Gtid event.
This work was started by the late Sujatha Sivakumar.
Brandon Nesterenko took it over, reviewed initial patches and
extended the work.
Also thanks to Andrei for his help in finalizing the fixes for
MDEV-33924, which were squashed into this patch.
Reviewed-by:
=============
Andrei Elkin <andrei.elkin@mariadb.com>
Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>
This reverts commit c37b2087b4.
In c37b20887, when re-binlogging a GTID event on a replica,
it will overwrite the thread_id from the primary to be the
value of the slave applier (SQL thread or parallel worker).
This should be the value of the original thread_id on the
master connection though, to both help track temporary
tables, and be consistent with Query_log_event.
Reverting the commit to re-target 11.5, so we can re-test
with the corrected thread_id.
This patch augments Gtid_log_event with the user thread-id.
In particular that compensates for the loss of this info in
Rows_log_events.
Gtid_log_event::thread_id gets visible in mysqlbinlog output like
#231025 16:21:45 server id 1 end_log_pos 537 CRC32 0x1cf1d963 GTID 0-1-2 ddl thread_id=10
as 64 bit unsigned integer.
While the size of Gtid event has grown by 8-9 bytes
replication from OLD <-> NEW is not affected by it.
This work was started by the late Sujatha Sivakumar.
Brandon Nesterenko took it over, reviewed initial patches and extended
the work.
Reviewed-by: <andrei.elkin@mariadb.com>
Compute binlog checksums (when enabled) already when writing events
into the statement or transaction caches, where before it was done
when the caches are copied to the real binlog file. This moves the
checksum computation outside of holding LOCK_log, improving
scalabitily.
At stmt/trx cache write time, the final end_log_pos values are not
known, so with this patch these will be set to 0. Events that are
written directly to the binlog file (not through stmt/trx cache) keep
the correct end_log_pos value. The GTID and COMMIT/XID events at the
start and end of event groups are written directly, so the zero
end_log_pos is only for events in the middle of event groups, which
do not negatively affect replication.
An option --binlog-legacy-event-pos, off by default, is provided to
disable this behavior to provide backwards compatibility with any
external applications that might rely on end_log_pos in events in the
middle of event groups.
Checksums cannot be pre-computed when binlog encryption is enabled, as
encryption relies on correct end_log_pos to provide part of the
nonce/IV.
Checksum pre-computation is also disabled for WSREP/Galera, as it uses
events differently in its write-sets and so on. Extending pre-computation of
checksums to Galera where it makes sense could be added in a future patch.
The current --binlog-checksum configuration is saved in
binlog_cache_data at transaction start and used to pre-compute
checksums in cache, if applicable. When the cache is later copied to
the binlog, a check is made if the saved value still matches the
configured global value; if so, the events are block-copied directly
into the binlog file. If --binlog-checksum was changed during the
transaction, events are re-written to the binlog file one-by-one and
the checksums recomputed/discarded as appropriate.
Reviewed-by: Monty <monty@mariadb.org>
Signed-off-by: Kristian Nielsen <knielsen@knielsen-hq.org>
Commit a923d6f49c disabled numeric setting
of character_set_* variables with non-default values:
MariaDB [(none)]> set character_set_client=224;
ERROR 1115 (42000): Unknown character set: '224'
However the corresponding binlog functionality still write numeric
values for log event, and this will break binlog replay if the value is
not default. Now make the server use 'String' type for
'character_set_client' when generating binlog events
Before:
/*!\C utf8mb4 *//*!*/;
SET @@session.character_set_client=224,@@session.collation_connection=224,@@session.collation_server=33/*!*/;
After:
/*!\C utf8mb4 *//*!*/;
SET @@session.character_set_client=utf8mb4,@@session.collation_connection=33,@@session.collation_server=8/*!*/;
Note: prior to the previous commit, setting with '224' or '45' or
'utf8mb4' have the same effect, as they all set the parameter to
'utf8mb4'.
All new code of the whole pull request, including one or several files
that are either new files or modified ones, are contributed under the
BSD-new license. I am contributing on behalf of my employer Amazon Web
Services, Inc.
There are a few different cases to consider
Logging of CREATE TABLE and CREATE TABLE ... LIKE
- If REPLACE is used and there was an existing table, DDL log the drop of
the table.
- If discovery of table is to be done
- DDL LOG create table
else
- DDL log create table (with engine type)
- create the table
- If table was created
- Log entry to binary log with xid
- Mark DDL log completed
Crash recovery:
- If query was in binary log do nothing and exit
- If discoverted table
- Delete the .frm file
-else
- Drop created table and frm file
- If table was dropped, write a DROP TABLE statement in binary log
CREATE TABLE ... SELECT required a little more work as when one is using
statement logging the query is written to the binary log before commit is
done.
This was fixed by adding a DROP TABLE to the binary log during crash
recovery if the ddl log entry was not closed. In this case the binary log
will contain:
CREATE TABLE xxx ... SELECT ....
DROP TABLE xxx;
Other things:
- Added debug_crash_here() functionality to Aria to be able to test
crash in create table between the creation of the .MAI and the .MAD files.
- Major rewrite of ddl_log.cc and ddl_log.h
- ddl_log.cc described in the beginning how the recovery works.
- ddl_log.log has unique signature and is dynamic. It's easy to
add more information to the header and other ddl blocks while still
being able to execute old ddl entries.
- IO_SIZE for ddl blocks is now dynamic. Can be changed without affecting
recovery of old logs.
- Code is more modular and is now usable outside of partition handling.
- Renamed log file to dll_recovery.log and added option --log-ddl-recovery
to allow one to specify the path & filename.
- Added ddl_log_entry_phase[], number of phases for each DDL action,
which allowed me to greatly simply set_global_from_ddl_log_entry()
- Changed how strings are stored in log entries, which allows us to
store much more information in a log entry.
- ddl log is now always created at start and deleted on normal shutdown.
This simplices things notable.
- Added probes debug_crash_here() and debug_simulate_error() to simply
crash testing and allow crash after a given number of times a probe
is executed. See comments in debug_sync.cc and rename_table.test for
how this can be used.
- Reverting failed table and view renames is done trough the ddl log.
This ensures that the ddl log is tested also outside of recovery.
- Added helper function 'handler::needs_lower_case_filenames()'
- Extend binary log with Q_XID events. ddl log handling is using this
to check if a ddl log entry was logged to the binary log (if yes,
it will be deleted from the log during ddl_log_close_binlogged_events()
- If a DDL entry fails 3 time, disable it. This is to ensure that if
we have a crash in ddl recovery code the server will not get stuck
in a forever crash-restart-crash loop.
mysqltest.cc changes:
- --die will now replace $variables with their values
- $error will contain the error of the last failed statement
storage engine changes:
- maria_rename() was changed to be more robust against crashes during
rename.
(This commit is for 10.3 and upper branches)
In case of a pattern of non-STMT_END-marked Rows-log-event (A) followed by
a STMT_END marked one (B) mysqlbinlog mixes up the base64 encoded rows events
with their pseudo sql representation produced by the verbose option:
BINLOG '
base64 encoded data for A
### verbose section for A
base64 encoded data for B
### verbose section for B
'/*!*/;
In effect the produced BINLOG '...' query is not valid and is rejected with the error.
Examples of this way malformed BINLOG could have been found in binlog_row_annotate.result
that gets corrected with the patch.
The issue is fixed with introduction an auxiliary IO_CACHE to hold on the verbose
comments until the terminal STMT_END event is found. The new cache is emptied
out after two pre-existing ones are done at that time.
The correctly produced output now for the above case is as the following:
BINLOG '
base64 encoded data for A
base64 encoded data for B
'/*!*/;
### verbose section for A
### verbose section for B
Thanks to Alexey Midenkov for the problem recognition and attempt to tackle,
and to Venkatesh Duggirala who produced a patch for the upstream whose
idea is exploited here, as well as to MDEV-23077 reporter LukeXwang who
also contributed a piece of a patch aiming at this issue.
Problem:
========
During point in time recovery of binary log syntax error is reported for
BEGIN statement and recovery fails.
Analysis:
=========
In MariaDB 10.3 and later, setting the sql_mode system variable to Oracle
allows the server to understand a subset of Oracle's PL/SQL language. When
sql_mode=ORACLE is set, it switches the parser from the MariaDB parser to
Oracle compatible parser. With this change 'BEGIN' is not considered as
'START TRANSACTION'. Hence the syntax error is reported.
Fix:
===
At preset 'BEGIN' query is generated from 'Gtid_log_event::print'. The current
session specific 'sql_mode' information is not present as part of
'Gtid_log_event'. If it was available then, mysqlbinlog tool can make use of
'sql_mode == ORACLE' and can output "START TRANSACTION" in this particular
mode and for other sql_modes it will write "BEGIN" as part of output. Since it
is not available 'mysqlbinlog' tool will output all 'BEGIN' statements as
'START TRANSACTION' irrespective of 'sql_mode'.
MDEV-19964 S3 replication support
Added new configure options:
s3_slave_ignore_updates
"If the slave has shares same S3 storage as the master"
s3_replicate_alter_as_create_select
"When converting S3 table to local table, log all rows in binary log"
This allows on to configure slaves to have the S3 storage shared or
independent from the master.
Other thing:
Added new session variable '@@sql_if_exists' to force IF_EXIST to DDL's.