bzip2/lz4/lzma/lzo/snappy compression is now provided via *services*
they're almost like normal services, but in include/providers/
and they're supposed to provide exactly the same interface
as original compression libraries (but not everything,
only enough of if for the code to compile).
the services are implemented via dummy functions that return
corresponding error values (LZMA_PROG_ERROR, LZO_E_INTERNAL_ERROR, etc).
the actual compression libraries are linked into corresponding
provider plugins. Providers are daemon plugins that when loaded
replace service pointers to point to actual compression functions.
That is, run-time dependency on compression libraries is now on plugins,
and the server doesn't need any compression libraries to run, but
will automatically support the compression when a plugin is loaded.
InnoDB and Mroonga use compression plugins now. RocksDB doesn't,
because it comes with standalone utility binaries that cannot
load plugins.
Syntax for CONVERT keyword
ALTER TABLE tbl_name
[alter_option [, alter_option] ...] |
[partition_options]
partition_option: {
...
| CONVERT PARTITION partition_name TO TABLE tbl_name
}
Examples:
ALTER TABLE t1 CONVERT PARTITION p2 TO TABLE tp2;
New ALTER_PARTITION_CONVERT_OUT command for
fast_alter_partition_table() is done in alter_partition_convert_out()
function which basically does ha_rename_table().
Partition to extract is marked with the same flag as dropped
partition: PART_TO_BE_DROPPED. Note that we cannot have multiple
partitioning commands in one ALTER.
For DDL logging basically the principle is the same as for other
fast_alter_partition_table() commands. The only difference is that it
integrates late Atomic DDL functions and introduces additional phase
of WFRM_BACKUP_ORIGINAL. That is required for binlog consistency
because otherwise we could not revert back after WFRM_INSTALL_SHADOW
is done. And before DDL log is complete if we crash or fail the
altered table will be already new but binlog will miss that ALTER
command. Note that this is different from all other atomic DDL in that
it rolls back until the ddl_log_complete() is done even if everything
was done fully before the crash.
Test cases added to:
parts.alter_table \
parts.partition_debug \
versioning.partition \
atomic.alter_partition
Dead code cleanup:
part_info->num_parts usage was wrong and working incorrectly in
mysql_drop_partitions() because num_parts is already updated in
prep_alter_part_table(). We don't have to update part_info->partitions
because part_info is destroyed at alter_partition_lock_handling().
Cleanups:
- DBUG_EVALUATE_IF() macro replaced by shorter form DBUG_IF();
- Typo in ER_KEY_COLUMN_DOES_NOT_EXITS.
Refactorings:
- Splitted write_log_replace_delete_frm() into write_log_delete_frm()
and write_log_replace_frm();
- partition_info via DDL_LOG_STATE;
- set_part_info_exec_log_entry() removed.
DBUG_EVALUATE removed
DBUG_EVALUTATE was only added for consistency together with
DBUG_EVALUATE_IF. It is not used anywhere in the code.
DBUG_SUICIDE() fix on release build
On release DBUG_SUICIDE() was statement. It was wrong as
DBUG_SUICIDE() is used in expression context.
* comment - use the standard style
* no need to reimplement for with while
* TODO comments for not implemented types
* rename the error not to refer to the underlying library, it's
the implementation detail
* use res->length(0) to set length to 0, but preserve the already
allocated buffer
* rename main.sformat -> main.func_sformat
* removed a duplicated part of the test
SFORMAT() SQL function that uses fmtlib (https://fmt.dev/)
for python-like (also Rust, C++20, etc) string formatting
Only fmtlib 7.0.0+ is supported, older fmtlib
produces different results in the test.
No native support for temporal and decimal values,
* TIME_RESULT is handled as STRING_RESULT
* DECIMAL_RESULT as REAL_RESULT
This is a complete rewrite of DROP TABLE, also as part of other DDL,
such as ALTER TABLE, CREATE TABLE...SELECT, TRUNCATE TABLE.
The background DROP TABLE queue hack is removed.
If a transaction needs to drop and create a table by the same name
(like TRUNCATE TABLE does), it must first rename the table to an
internal #sql-ib name. No committed version of the data dictionary
will include any #sql-ib tables, because whenever a transaction
renames a table to a #sql-ib name, it will also drop that table.
Either the rename will be rolled back, or the drop will be committed.
Data files will be unlinked after the transaction has been committed
and a FILE_RENAME record has been durably written. The file will
actually be deleted when the detached file handle returned by
fil_delete_tablespace() will be closed, after the latches have been
released. It is possible that a purge of the delete of the SYS_INDEXES
record for the clustered index will execute fil_delete_tablespace()
concurrently with the DDL transaction. In that case, the thread that
arrives later will wait for the other thread to finish.
HTON_TRUNCATE_REQUIRES_EXCLUSIVE_USE: A new handler flag.
ha_innobase::truncate() now requires that all other references to
the table be released in advance. This was implemented by Monty.
ha_innobase::delete_table(): If CREATE TABLE..SELECT is detected,
we will "hijack" the current transaction, drop the table in
the current transaction and commit the current transaction.
This essentially fixes MDEV-21602. There is a FIXME comment about
making the check less failure-prone.
ha_innobase::truncate(), ha_innobase::delete_table():
Implement a fast path for temporary tables. We will no longer allow
temporary tables to use the adaptive hash index.
dict_table_t::mdl_name: The original table name for the purpose of
acquiring MDL in purge, to prevent a race condition between a
DDL transaction that is dropping a table, and purge processing
undo log records of DML that had executed before the DDL operation.
For #sql-backup- tables during ALTER TABLE...ALGORITHM=COPY, the
dict_table_t::mdl_name will differ from dict_table_t::name.
dict_table_t::parse_name(): Use mdl_name instead of name.
dict_table_rename_in_cache(): Update mdl_name.
For the internal FTS_ tables of FULLTEXT INDEX, purge would
acquire MDL on the FTS_ table name, but not on the main table,
and therefore it would be able to run concurrently with a
DDL transaction that is dropping the table. Previously, the
DROP TABLE queue hack prevented a race between purge and DDL.
For now, we introduce purge_sys.stop_FTS() to prevent purge from
opening any table, while a DDL transaction that may drop FTS_
tables is in progress. The function fts_lock_table(), which will
be invoked before the dictionary is locked, will wait for
purge to release any table handles.
trx_t::drop_table_statistics(): Drop statistics for the table.
This replaces dict_stats_drop_index(). We will drop or rename
persistent statistics atomically as part of DDL transactions.
On lock conflict for dropping statistics, we will fail instantly
with DB_LOCK_WAIT_TIMEOUT, because we will be holding the
exclusive data dictionary latch.
trx_t::commit_cleanup(): Separated from trx_t::commit_in_memory().
Relax an assertion around fts_commit() and allow DB_LOCK_WAIT_TIMEOUT
in addition to DB_DUPLICATE_KEY. The call to fts_commit() is
entirely misplaced here and may obviously break the consistency
of transactions that affect FULLTEXT INDEX. It needs to be fixed
separately.
dict_table_t::n_foreign_key_checks_running: Remove (MDEV-21175).
The counter was a work-around for missing meta-data locking (MDL)
on the SQL layer, and not really needed in MariaDB.
ER_TABLE_IN_FK_CHECK: Replaced with ER_UNUSED_28.
HA_ERR_TABLE_IN_FK_CHECK: Remove.
row_ins_check_foreign_constraints(): Do not acquire
dict_sys.latch either. The SQL-layer MDL will protect us.
This was reviewed by Thirunarayanan Balathandayuthapani
and tested by Matthias Leich.
MDEV-25604 Atomic DDL: Binlog event written upon recovery does not
have default database
The purpose of this task is to ensure that ALTER TABLE is atomic even if
the MariaDB server would be killed at any point of the alter table.
This means that either the ALTER TABLE succeeds (including that triggers,
the status tables and the binary log are updated) or things should be
reverted to their original state.
If the server crashes before the new version is fully up to date and
commited, it will revert to the original table and remove all
temporary files and tables.
If the new version is commited, crash recovery will use the new version,
and update triggers, the status tables and the binary log.
The one execption is ALTER TABLE .. RENAME .. where no changes are done
to table definition. This one will work as RENAME and roll back unless
the whole statement completed, including updating the binary log (if
enabled).
Other changes:
- Added handlerton->check_version() function to allow the ddl recovery
code to check, in case of inplace alter table, if the table in the
storage engine is of the new or old version.
- Added handler->table_version() so that an engine can report the current
version of the table. This should be changed each time the table
definition changes.
- Added ha_signal_ddl_recovery_done() and
handlerton::signal_ddl_recovery_done() to inform all handlers when
ddl recovery has been done. (Needed by InnoDB).
- Added handlerton call inplace_alter_table_committed, to signal engine
that ddl_log has been closed for the alter table query.
- Added new handerton flag
HTON_REQUIRES_NOTIFY_TABLEDEF_CHANGED_AFTER_COMMIT to signal when we
should call hton->notify_tabledef_changed() during
mysql_inplace_alter_table. This was required as MyRocks and InnoDB
needed the call at different times.
- Added function server_uuid_value() to be able to generate a temporary
xid when ddl recovery writes the query to the binary log. This is
needed to be able to handle crashes during ddl log recovery.
- Moved freeing of the frm definition to end of mysql_alter_table() to
remove duplicate code and have a common exit strategy.
-------
InnoDB part of atomic ALTER TABLE
(Implemented by Marko Mäkelä)
innodb_check_version(): Compare the saved dict_table_t::def_trx_id
to determine whether an ALTER TABLE operation was committed.
We must correctly recover dict_table_t::def_trx_id for this to work.
Before purge removes any trace of DB_TRX_ID from system tables, it
will make an effort to load the user table into the cache, so that
the dict_table_t::def_trx_id can be recovered.
ha_innobase::table_version(): return garbage, or the trx_id that would
be used for committing an ALTER TABLE operation.
In InnoDB, table names starting with #sql-ib will remain special:
they will be dropped on startup. This may be revisited later in
MDEV-18518 when we implement proper undo logging and rollback
for creating or dropping multiple tables in a transaction.
Table names starting with #sql will retain some special meaning:
dict_table_t::parse_name() will not consider such names for
MDL acquisition, and dict_table_rename_in_cache() will treat such
names specially when handling FOREIGN KEY constraints.
Simplify InnoDB DROP INDEX.
Prevent purge wakeup
To ensure that dict_table_t::def_trx_id will be recovered correctly
in case the server is killed before ddl_log_complete(), we will block
the purge of any history in SYS_TABLES, SYS_INDEXES, SYS_COLUMNS
between ha_innobase::commit_inplace_alter_table(commit=true)
(purge_sys.stop_SYS()) and purge_sys.resume_SYS().
The completion callback purge_sys.resume_SYS() must be between
ddl_log_complete() and MDL release.
--------
MyRocks support for atomic ALTER TABLE
(Implemented by Sergui Petrunia)
Implement these SE API functions:
- ha_rocksdb::table_version()
- hton->check_version = rocksdb_check_versionMyRocks data dictionary
now stores table version for each table.
(Absence of table version record is interpreted as table_version=0,
that is, which means no upgrade changes are needed)
- For inplace alter table of a partitioned table, call the underlying
handlerton when checking if the table is ok. This assumes that the
partition engine commits all changes at once.
Before this fix, one would get a 'Trigger ... already exists' when trying
to create a trigger matching the original name and 'Trigger ... does not
exists" when trying to drop it.
Fixes a reported bug in MDEV-25180 Atomic ALTER TABLE
MDEV-25517 Atomic DDL: Assertion `query_arg' in THD::binlog_query
upon DROP TRIGGER
The bug was that the stmt_query variable was not populated
with the query in case of DROP TRIGGER of an orphan trigger
(.TRN file exists & table exists, but the trigger was not in
table->triggers).
TO_CHAR(expr, fmt)
- expr: required parameter, data/time/timestamp type expression
- fmt: optional parameter, format string, supports
YYYY/YYY/YY/RRRR/RR/MM/MON/MONTH/MI/DD/DY/HH/HH12/HH24/SS and special
characters. The default value is "YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS"
In Oracle, TO_CHAR() can also be used to convert numbers to strings, but
this is not supported. This will gave an error in this patch.
Other things:
- If format strings is a constant, it's evaluated only once and if there
is any errors in it, they are given at once and the statement will abort.
Original author: woqutech
Lots of optimizations and cleanups done as part of review
The ROWNUM() function is for SELECT mapped to JOIN->accepted_rows, which is
incremented for each accepted rows.
For Filesort, update, insert, delete and load data, we map ROWNUM() to
internal variables incremented when the table is changed.
The connection between the row counter and Item_func_rownum is done
in sql_select.cc::fix_items_after_optimize() and
sql_insert.cc::fix_rownum_pointers()
When ROWNUM() is used anywhere in query, the optimization to ignore ORDER
BY in sub queries are disabled. This was done to get the following common
Oracle query to work:
select * from (select * from t1 order by a desc) as t where rownum() <= 2;
MDEV-3926 "Wrong result with GROUP BY ... WITH ROLLUP" contains a discussion
about this topic.
LIMIT optimization is enabled when in a top level WHERE clause comparing
ROWNUM() with a numerical constant using any of the following expressions:
- ROWNUM() < #
- ROWNUM() <= #
- ROWNUM() = 1
ROWNUM() can be also be the right argument to the comparison function.
LIMIT optimization is done in two cases:
- For the current sub query when the ROWNUM comparison is done on the top
level:
SELECT * from t1 WHERE rownum() <= 2 AND t1.a > 0
- For an inner sub query, when the upper level has only a ROWNUM comparison
in the WHERE clause:
SELECT * from (select * from t1) as t WHERE rownum() <= 2
In Oracle mode, one can also use ROWNUM without parentheses.
Other things:
- Fixed bug where the optimizer tries to optimize away sub queries
with RAND_TABLE_BIT set (non-deterministic queries). Now these
sub queries will not be converted to joins. This bug fix was also
needed to get rownum() working inside subqueries.
- In remove_const() remove setting simple_order to FALSE if ROLLUP is
USED. This code was disable a long time ago because of wrong assignment
in the following code. Instead we set simple_order to false if
RAND_TABLE_BIT was used in the SELECT list. This ensures that
we don't delete ORDER BY if the result set is not deterministic, like
in 'SELECT RAND() AS 'r' FROM t1 ORDER BY r';
- Updated parameters for Sort_param::init_for_filesort() to be able
to provide filesort with information where the number of accepted
rows should be stored
- Reordered fields in class Filesort to optimize storage layout
- Added new error messsage to tell that a function can't be used in HAVING
- Added field 'with_rownum' to THD to mark that ROWNUM() is used in the
query.
Co-author: Oleksandr Byelkin <sanja@mariadb.com>
LIMIT optimization for sub query
This patch changes the main name of 3 byte character set from utf8 to
utf8mb3. New old_mode UTF8_IS_UTF8MB3 is added and set TRUE by default,
so that utf8 would mean utf8mb3. If not set, utf8 would mean utf8mb4.
This commit implements the standard SQL extension
OFFSET start { ROW | ROWS }
[FETCH { FIRST | NEXT } [ count ] { ROW | ROWS } { ONLY | WITH TIES }]
To achieve this a reserved keyword OFFSET is introduced.
The general logic for WITH TIES implies:
1. The number of rows a query returns is no longer known during optimize
phase. Adjust optimizations to no longer consider this.
2. During end_send make use of an "order Cached_item"to compare if the
ORDER BY columns changed. Keep returning rows until there is a
change. This happens only after we reached the row limit.
3. Within end_send_group, the order by clause was eliminated. It is
still possible to keep the optimization of using end_send_group for
producing the final result set.
Adds an implementation for SELECT ... FOR UPDATE SKIP LOCKED /
SELECT ... LOCK IN SHARED MODE SKIP LOCKED
This is implemented only InnoDB at the moment, not in RockDB yet.
This adds a new hander flag HA_CAN_SKIP_LOCKED than
will be used when the storage engine advertises the flag.
When a storage engine indicates this flag it will get
TL_WRITE_SKIP_LOCKED and TL_READ_SKIP_LOCKED transaction types.
The Lex structure has been updated to store both the FOR UPDATE/LOCK IN
SHARE as well as the SKIP LOCKED so the SHOW CREATE VIEW
implementation is simplier.
"SELECT FOR UPDATE ... SKIP LOCKED" combined with CREATE TABLE AS or
INSERT.. SELECT on the result set is not safe for STATEMENT based
replication. MIXED replication will replicate this as row based events."
Thanks to guidance from Facebook commit
193896c466
This helped verify basic test case, and components that need implementing
(even though every part was implemented differently).
Thanks Marko for guidance on simplier InnoDB implementation.
Reviewers: Marko, Monty
This feature adds the functionality of ignorability for indexes.
Indexes are not ignored be default.
To control index ignorability explicitly for a new index,
use IGNORE or NOT IGNORE as part of the index definition for
CREATE TABLE, CREATE INDEX, or ALTER TABLE.
Primary keys (explicit or implicit) cannot be made ignorable.
The table INFORMATION_SCHEMA.STATISTICS get a new column named IGNORED that
would store whether an index needs to be ignored or not.
Added new enum variable `wsrep_mode` which can be used to turn on WSREP
features which are not part of default behaviour.
Added enum `BINLOG_ROW_FORMAT_ONLY`, `REQUIRED_PRIMARY_KEY` and
`STRICT_REPLICATION`. `wsrep-mode=STRICT_REPLICATION` behaves
like variable `wsrep_strict_ddl`.
Variable wsrep_strict_ddl is deprecated and if set we use
new wsrep_mode setting instead.
Reviewed and improved by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
Let us introduce the parameter innodb_read_only_compressed
that is ON by default, making any ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables
read-only.
I developed the ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED format based on
Heikki Tuuri's rough design between 2005 and 2008. It might
have been a good idea back then, but no proper benchmarks were
ever run to validate the design or the implementation.
The format has been more or less obsolete for years.
It limits innodb_page_size to 16384 bytes (the default),
and instant ALTER TABLE is not supported.
This is the first step towards deprecating and removing
write support for ROW_FORMAT=COMPRESSED tables.
and inaccurately
Analysis: The list of all privileges is 118 characters wide. However, the
format of error message was: "%-.32s command denied to user...". get_length()
sets the maximum width to 32 characters. As a result, only first 32
characters of list of privilege are stored.
Fix: Changing the format to "%-.100T..." so that get_length() sets width to
100. Hence, first 100 characters of the list of privilege are stored and the
type specifier 'T' appends '...' so that truncation can be seen.
The COM_MULTI did not take off. No connector is using it.
Remove related code from server, and client.
If anything it is a step simplification of already-bloated
dispatch_command(), and related code.
MDEV-22531 Remove maria::implicit_commit()
MDEV-22607 Assertion `ha_info->ht() != binlog_hton' failed in
MYSQL_BIN_LOG::unlog_xa_prepare
From the handler point of view, Aria now looks like a transactional
engine. One effect of this is that we don't need to call
maria::implicit_commit() anymore.
This change also forces the server to call trans_commit_stmt() after doing
any read or writes to system tables. This work will also make it easier
to later allow users to have system tables in other engines than Aria.
To handle the case that Aria doesn't support rollback, a new
handlerton flag, HTON_NO_ROLLBACK, was added to engines that has
transactions without rollback (for the moment only binlog and Aria).
Other things
- Moved freeing of MARIA_SHARE to a separate function as the MARIA_SHARE
can be still part of a transaction even if the table has closed.
- Changed Aria checkpoint to use the new MARIA_SHARE free function. This
fixes a possible memory leak when using S3 tables
- Changed testing of binlog_hton to instead test for HTON_NO_ROLLBACK
- Removed checking of has_transaction_manager() in handler.cc as we can
assume that as the transaction was started by the engine, it does
support transactions.
- Added new class 'start_new_trans' that can be used to start indepdendent
sub transactions, for example while reading mysql.proc, using help or
status tables etc.
- open_system_tables...() and open_proc_table_for_Read() doesn't anymore
take a Open_tables_backup list. This is now handled by 'start_new_trans'.
- Split thd::has_transactions() to thd::has_transactions() and
thd::has_transactions_and_rollback()
- Added handlerton code to free cached transactions objects.
Needed by InnoDB.
squash! 2ed35999f2a2d84f1c786a21ade5db716b6f1bbc