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As reported in MDEV-11969 "there's no way to ditch knowledge" about some domain that is no longer updated on a server. Besides being of annoyance to clutter output in DBA console stale domains can prevent the slave to connect the master as MDEV-12012 witnesses. What domain is obsolete must be evaluated by the user (DBA) according to whether the domain info is still relevant and will the domain ever receive any update. This patch introduces a method to discard obsolete gtid domains from the server binlog state. The removal requires no event group from such domain present in existing binlog files though. If there are any the containing logs must be first PURGEd in order for FLUSH BINARY LOGS DELETE_DOMAIN_ID=(list-of-domains) succeed. Otherwise the command returns an error. The list of obsolete domains can be computed through intersecting two sets - the earliest (first) binlog's Gtid_list and the current value of @@global.gtid_binlog_state - and extracting the domain id components from the intersection list items. The new DELETE_DOMAIN_ID featured FLUSH continues to rotate binlog omitting the deleted domains from the active binlog file's Gtid_list. Notice though when the command is ineffective - that none of requested to delete domain exists in the binlog state - rotation does not occur. Obsolete domain deletion is not harmful for connected slaves as long as master side binlog files *purge* is synchronized with FLUSH-DELETE_DOMAIN_ID. The slaves must have the last event from purged files processed as usual, in order not to bump later into requesting a gtid from a file which was already gone. While the command is not replicated (as ordinary FLUSH BINLOG LOGS is) slaves, even though having extra domains, won't suffer from reconnection errors thanks to master-slave gtid connection protocol allowing the master to be ignorant about a gtid domain. Should at failover such slave to be promoted into master role it may run the ex-master's FLUSH BINARY LOGS DELETE_DOMAIN_ID=(list-of-domains) to clean its own binlog state. NOTES. suite/perfschema/r/start_server_low_digest.result is re-recorded as consequence of internal parser codes changes. |
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collections | ||
extra | ||
include | ||
lib | ||
r | ||
std_data | ||
suite | ||
t | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
disabled.def | ||
mtr.out-of-source | ||
mysql-stress-test.pl | ||
mysql-test-run.pl | ||
purify.supp | ||
README | ||
README.gcov | ||
README.stress | ||
suite.pm | ||
unstable-tests | ||
valgrind.supp |
This directory contains test suites for the MariaDB server. To run currently existing test cases, execute ./mysql-test-run in this directory. Some tests are known to fail on some platforms or be otherwise unreliable. The file "unstable-tests" contains the list of such tests along with a comment for every test. To exclude them from the test run, execute # ./mysql-test-run --skip-test-list=unstable-tests In general you do not have to have to do "make install", and you can have a co-existing MariaDB installation, the tests will not conflict with it. To run the tests in a source directory, you must do "make" first. In Red Hat distributions, you should run the script as user "mysql". The user is created with nologin shell, so the best bet is something like # su - # cd /usr/share/mysql-test # su -s /bin/bash mysql -c "./mysql-test-run --skip-test-list=unstable-tests" This will use the installed MariaDB executables, but will run a private copy of the server process (using data files within /usr/share/mysql-test), so you need not start the mysqld service beforehand. You can omit --skip-test-list option if you want to check whether the listed failures occur for you. To clean up afterwards, remove the created "var" subdirectory, e.g. # su -s /bin/bash - mysql -c "rm -rf /usr/share/mysql-test/var" If one or more tests fail on your system on reasons other than listed in lists of unstable tests, please read the following manual section for instructions on how to report the problem: https://mariadb.com/kb/en/reporting-bugs If you want to use an already running MySQL server for specific tests, use the --extern option to mysql-test-run. Please note that in this mode, you are expected to provide names of the tests to run. For example, here is the command to run the "alias" and "analyze" tests with an external server: # mysql-test-run --extern socket=/tmp/mysql.sock alias analyze To match your setup, you might need to provide other relevant options. With no test names on the command line, mysql-test-run will attempt to execute the default set of tests, which will certainly fail, because many tests cannot run with an external server (they need to control the options with which the server is started, restart the server during execution, etc.) You can create your own test cases. To create a test case, create a new file in the t subdirectory using a text editor. The file should have a .test extension. For example: # xemacs t/test_case_name.test In the file, put a set of SQL statements that create some tables, load test data, and run some queries to manipulate it. Your test should begin by dropping the tables you are going to create and end by dropping them again. This ensures that you can run the test over and over again. If you are using mysqltest commands in your test case, you should create the result file as follows: # mysql-test-run --record test_case_name or # mysqltest --record < t/test_case_name.test If you only have a simple test case consisting of SQL statements and comments, you can create the result file in one of the following ways: # mysql-test-run --record test_case_name # mysql test < t/test_case_name.test > r/test_case_name.result # mysqltest --record --database test --result-file=r/test_case_name.result < t/test_case_name.test When this is done, take a look at r/test_case_name.result . If the result is incorrect, you have found a bug. In this case, you should edit the test result to the correct results so that we can verify that the bug is corrected in future releases. If you want to submit your test case you can send it to maria-developers@lists.launchpad.net or attach it to a bug report on http://mariadb.org/jira/. If the test case is really big or if it contains 'not public' data, then put your .test file and .result file(s) into a tar.gz archive, add a README that explains the problem, ftp the archive to ftp://ftp.askmonty.org/private and submit a report to http://mariadb.org/jira about it.