Define my_thread_id as an unsigned type, to avoid mismatch with
ulonglong. Change some parameters to this type.
Use size_t in a few more places.
Declare many flag constants as unsigned to avoid sign mismatch
when shifting bits or applying the unary ~ operator.
When applying the unary ~ operator to enum constants, explictly
cast the result to an unsigned type, because enum constants can
be treated as signed.
In InnoDB, change the source code line number parameters from
ulint to unsigned type. Also, make some InnoDB functions return
a narrower type (unsigned or uint32_t instead of ulint;
bool instead of ibool).
The issue was that JOIN::rollup_write_data() used
JOIN::tmp_table_param::[start_]recinfo, which had uninitialized data.
These fields have uninitialized data, because JOIN::tmp_table_param
currently only stores some grouping-related data fields. The data about
the work (temporary) tables themselves is stored in
join->join_tab[...].tmp_table_param.
The fix is to make JOIN::rollup_write_data follow this convention
and look at the right TMP_TABLE_PARAM object
JOIN_CACHE's were initialized in check_join_cache_usage()
from make_join_readinfo(). After that make_join_readinfo() was looking
whether it's possible to use keyread. Later, after make_join_readinfo(),
optimizer decided whether to use filesort. And even later, at the
execution time, from join_read_first(), keyread was actually enabled.
The problem is, that if a query uses a vcol, base columns that it
depends on are automatically added to the read_set - because they're
needed to calculate the vcol. But if we're doing keyread, vcol is taken
from the index, not calculated, and base columns do not need to be
in the read set (even should not be - as they aren't getting values).
The bug was that JOIN_CACHE used read_set with base columns,
they were not read because of keyread, so it was caching garbage.
So read_set is only known after the keyread was decided. And after the
filesort was decided, as filesort doesn't use keyread. But
check_join_cache_usage() needs to be done in make_join_readinfo(),
as the code below depends on these checks,
Fix: keep JOIN_CACHE checks where they were, but move initialization
down to the very end of JOIN::optimize_inner. If keyread was enabled,
update the read_set to include only columns that are part of the index.
Copy the keyread logic from join_read_first() to happen at optimize time.
- Tabular EXPLAIN now prints "RECURSIVE UNION".
- There is a basic implementation of EXPLAIN FORMAT=JSON.
- it produces "recursive_union" JSON struct
- No other details or ANALYZE support, yet.
Temporary tables created for recursive CTE
were instantiated at the prepare phase. As
a result these temporary tables missed
indexes for look-ups and optimizer could not
use them.
Variant #4 of the fix.
Make ORDER BY optimization functions take into account multiple
equalities. This is done in several places:
- remove_const() checks whether we can sort the first table in the
join, or we need to put rows into temp.table and then sort.
- test_if_order_by_key() checks whether there are indexes that
can be used to produce the required ordering
- make_unireg_sortorder() constructs sort criteria for filesort.
This bug revealed a serious problem: if the same partition list
was used in two window specifications then the temporary table created
to calculate window functions contained fields for two identical
partitions. This problem was fixed as well.
- Rename Window_funcs_computation to Window_funcs_computation_step
- Introduce Window_func_sort which invokes filesort and then
invokes computation of all window functions that use this ordering.
- Expose Window functions' sort operations in EXPLAIN|ANALYZE FORMAT=JSON
Added class Window_funcs_computation, with setup() method to setup
execution, and exec() to run window function computation.
setup() is currently trivial. In the future, it is expected to optimize
the number of sorting operations and passes that are done over the temp.
table.
filesort and init_read_record() for the same table.
This will simplify code for WINDOW FUNCTIONS (MDEV-6115)
- Filesort_info renamed to SORT_INFO and moved to filesort.h
- filesort now returns SORT_INFO
- init_read_record() now takes a SORT_INFO parameter.
- unique declaration is moved to uniques.h
- subselect caching of buffers is now more explicit than before
- filesort_buffer is now reusable even if rec_length has changed.
- filsort_free_buffers() and free_io_cache() calls are removed
- Remove one malloc() when using get_addon_fields()
Other things:
- Added --debug-assert-on-not-freed-memory option to make it easier to
debug some not-freed-memory issues.
These do not have any meaning after MDEV-8646. Their only valid values are
- table_access_tabs= join_tab;
- top_table_access_tabs_count= top_join_tab_count;
Disable the code that attempts to group window functions together
by their PARTITION BY / ORDER BY clauses, because
1. It doesn't work: when I issue a query with just one window function,
and no indexes on the table, filesort is not invoked at all.
2. It is not possible to check that it works currently.
Add my own code that does invoke filesort() for each window function.
- Hopefully the sort criteria is right
- Debugging shows that filesort operates on {sort_key, rowid} pairs (OK)
- We can read the filesort rowid result in order.
"Re-factor the code for post-join operations".
The patch mainly contains the code ported from mysql-5.6 and
created for two essential architectural changes:
1. WL#5558: Resolve ORDER BY execution method at the optimization stage
2. WL#6071: Inline tmp tables into the nested loops algorithm
The first task was implemented for mysql-5.6 by Ole John Aske.
It allows to make all decisions on ORDER BY operation at the optimization
stage.
The second task implemented for mysql-5.6 by Evgeny Potemkin adds JOIN_TAB
nodes for post-join operations that require temporary tables. It allows
to execute these operations within the nested loops algorithm that used to
be used before this task only for join queries. Besides these task moves
all planning on the execution of these operations from the execution phase
to the optimization phase.
Some other re-factoring changes of mysql-5.6 were pulled in, mainly because
it was easier to pull them in than roll them back. In particular all
changes concerning Ref_ptr_array were incorporated.
The port required some changes in the MariaDB code that concerned the
functionality of EXPLAIN and ANALYZE. This was done mainly by Sergey
Petrunia.