The directio(3C) function on Solaris is supported on NFS and UFS
while the majority of users should be on ZFS, which is a copy-on-write
file system that implements transparent compression and therefore
cannot support unbuffered I/O.
Let us remove the call to directio() and simply treat
innodb_flush_method=O_DIRECT in the same way as the previous
default value innodb_flush_method=fsync on Solaris. Also, let us
remove some dead code around calls to os_file_set_nocache() on
platforms where fcntl(2) is not usable with O_DIRECT.
On IBM AIX, O_DIRECT is not documented for fcntl(2), only for open(2).
AIX compilation failed, because glibc's non-standard extension to
`struct tm` were used - additional members tm_gmtoff and tm_zone.
The patch fixes it by adding corresponding compile-time check.
Additionally, for the calculation of GMT offset on AIX, a portable
variant of timegm() was required.Implementation here is inspired by
SergeyD's answer on Stackoverflow :
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16647819/timegm-cross-platform
Remove alarm() remnants
- Replace thread-unsafe use of alarm() inside my_lock.c with a
timed loop.
- Remove configure time checks
- Remove mysys my_alarm.c/my_alarm.h
This allows to simplify net_real_read() and net_real_write() a bit.
Removed some superfluous #ifdef/ifndef MYSQL_SERVER from net_serv.cc
The code always runs in server, either normal or embedded.
Dead code for switching socket between blocking and non-blocking modes,
is also removed.
Removed pthread_kill() with alarm signal that woke up main thread on
server shutdown. Used shutdown(2) on polling sockets instead, to the same
effect.
Removed yet another superstitious pthread_kill(), that ran on non-Windows
in terminate_slave_thread().
KDF(key_str, salt [, {info | iterations} [, kdf_name [, width ]]])
kdf_name is "hkdf" or "pbkdf2_hmac" (default).
width (in bits) can be any number divisible by 8,
by default it's taken from @@block_encryption_mode
iterations must be positive, and is 1000 by default
OpenSSL 1.0 doesn't support HKDF, so it'll return NULL.
This OpenSSL version is still used in SLES 12 and CentOS 7
Thanks to references from Brad Smith, BSDs use getmntinfo as
a system call for mounted filesystems.
Most BSDs return statfs structures, (and we use OSX's statfs64),
but NetBSD uses a statvfs structure.
Simplify Linux getmntent_r to just use getmntent.
AIX uses getmntent.
An attempt at writing Solaris compatibility with
a small bit of HPUX compatibility was made based on man page
entries only. Fixes welcome.
statvfs structures now use f_bsize for consistency with statfs
Test case adjusted as PATH_MAX is OS defined (e.g. 1023 on AIX)
Fixes: 0ee5cf837e
also fixes:
MDEV-27818: Disk plugin does not show zpool mounted devices
This is because zpool mounted point don't begin with /.
Due to the proliferation of multiple filesystem types since this
was written, we restrict the entries listed in the disks plugin
to excude:
* read only mount points (no point monitoring, and
includes squash, snaps, sysfs, procfs, cgroups...)
* mount points that aren't directories (excludes /etc/hostname and
similar mounts in containers). (getmntent (Linux/AIX) only)
* exclude systems where there is no capacity listed (excludes various
virtual filesystem types).
Reviewer: Sergei Golubchik
As pointed out with MDEV-29308 there are issues with the code as is.
MariaDB is built as C++11 / C99. aligned_alloc() is not guarenteed
to be exposed when building with any mode other than C++17 / C11.
The other *BSD's have their stdlib.h header to expose the function
with C+11 anyway, but the issue exists in the C99 code too, the
build just does not use -Werror. Linux globally defines _GNU_SOURCE
hiding the issue as well.
Table_cache_instance: Define the structure aligned at
the CPU cache line, and remove a pad[] data member.
Krunal Bauskar reported this to improve performance on ARMv8.
aligned_malloc(): Wrapper for the Microsoft _aligned_malloc()
and the ISO/IEC 9899:2011 <stdlib.h> aligned_alloc().
Note: The parameters are in the Microsoft order (size, alignment),
opposite of aligned_alloc(alignment, size).
Note: The standard defines that size must be an integer multiple
of alignment. It is enforced by AddressSanitizer but not by GNU libc
on Linux.
aligned_free(): Wrapper for the Microsoft _aligned_free() and
the standard free().
HAVE_ALIGNED_ALLOC: A new test. Unfortunately, support for
aligned_alloc() may still be missing on some platforms.
We will fall back to posix_memalign() for those cases.
HAVE_MEMALIGN: Remove, along with any use of the nonstandard memalign().
PFS_ALIGNEMENT (sic): Removed; we will use CPU_LEVEL1_DCACHE_LINESIZE.
PFS_ALIGNED: Defined using the C++11 keyword alignas.
buf_pool_t::page_hash_table::create(),
lock_sys_t::hash_table::create():
lock_sys_t::hash_table::resize(): Pad the allocation size to an
integer multiple of the alignment.
Reviewed by: Vladislav Vaintroub
Added checking for support of vfork by a platform where
building being done. Set HAVE_VFORK macros in case vfork()
system call is supported. Use vfork() system call if the
macros HAVE_VFORK is set, else use fork().
This is useful for thing like Item_true and Item_false that we
allocated and initalize once and want to ensure that nothing can
change them
Main changes:
- Memory protection is achived by allocating memory with mmap() and
protect it from write with mprotect()
- init_alloc_root(...,MY_ROOT_USE_MPROTECT) will create a
memroot that one can later use with protect_root() to turn it
read only or turn it back to read-write. All allocations to this
memroot is done with mmap() to ensure page alligned allocations.
- alloc_root() code was rearranged to combine normal and valgrind code.
- init_alloc_root() now changes block size to be power of 2's, to get less
memory fragmentation.
- Changed MEM_ROOT structure to make it smaller. Also renamed
MEM_ROOT m_psi_key to psi_key.
- Moved MY_THREAD_SPECIFIC marker in MEM_ROOT from block size (old hack)
to flags.
- Added global variable my_system_page_size. This is initialized at
startup.
This fixed the MySQL bug# 20338 about misuse of double underscore
prefix __WIN__, which was old MySQL's idea of identifying Windows
Replace it by _WIN32 standard symbol for targeting Windows OS
(both 32 and 64 bit)
Not that connect storage engine is not fixed in this patch (must be
fixed in "upstream" branch)
Systemd has a socket activation feature where a mariadb.socket
definition defines the sockets to listen to, and passes those
file descriptors directly to mariadbd to use when a connection
occurs.
The new functionality is utilized when starting as follows:
systemctl start mariadb.socket
The mariadb.socket definition only needs to contain the network
information, ListenStream= directives, the mariadb.service
definition is still used for service instigation.
When mariadbd is started in this way, the socket, port, bind-address
backlog are all assumed to be self contained in the mariadb.socket
definition and as such the mariadb settings and command line
arguments of these network settings are ignored.
See man systemd.socket for how to limit this to specific ports.
Extra ports, those specified with extra_port in socket activation
mode, are those with a FileDescriptorName=extra. These need
to be in a separate service name like mariadb-extra.socket and
these require a Service={mariadb.service} directive to map to the
original service. Extra ports need systemd v227 or greater
(not RHEL/Centos7 - v219) when FileDescriptorName= was added,
otherwise the extra ports are treated like ordinary ports.
The number of sockets isn't limited when using systemd socket activation
(except by operating system limits on file descriptors and a minimal
amount of memory used per file descriptor). The systemd sockets passed
can include any ownership or permissions, including those the
mariadbd process wouldn't normally have the permission to create.
This implementation is compatible with mariadb.service definitions.
Those services started with:
systemctl start mariadb.service
does actually start the mariadb.service and used all the my.cnf
settings of sockets and ports like it previously did.
`mallinfo` is deprecated since glibc 2.33 and has been replaced by mallinfo2.
The deprecation causes building the server to fail if glibc version is > 2.33.
Check if mallinfo2 exist on the system and use it instead.
Add CRC32C code to mysys. The x86-64 implementation uses PCMULQDQ in addition to CRC32 instruction
after Intel whitepaper, and is ported from rocksdb code.
Optimized ARM and POWER CRC32 were already present in mysys.
When MDEV-22669 introduced CRC-32C acceleration to IA-32,
it worked around a compiler bug by disabling the acceleration
on GCC 4 for IA-32 altogether, even though the compiler bug
only affects -fPIC builds that are targeting IA-32.
Let us extend the solution fe5dbfe723
and define HAVE_CPUID_INSTRUCTION that allows us to implement
a necessary and sufficient work-around of the compiler bug.