mariadb/mysql-test/suite/innodb/r/innodb-autoinc-44030.result
Marko Mäkelä 8777458a6e MDEV-6076 Persistent AUTO_INCREMENT for InnoDB
This should be functionally equivalent to WL#6204 in MySQL 8.0.0, with
the notable difference that the file format changes are limited to
repurposing a previously unused data field in B-tree pages.

For persistent InnoDB tables, write the last used AUTO_INCREMENT
value to the root page of the clustered index, in the previously
unused (0) PAGE_MAX_TRX_ID field, now aliased as PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC.
Unlike some other previously unused InnoDB data fields, this one was
actually always zero-initialized, at least since MySQL 3.23.49.

The writes to PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC are protected by SX or X latch on the
root page. The SX latch will allow concurrent read access to the root
page. (The field PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC will only be read on the
first-time call to ha_innobase::open() from the SQL layer. The
PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC can only be updated when executing SQL, so
read/write races are not possible.)

During INSERT, the PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC is updated by the low-level
function btr_cur_search_to_nth_level(), adding no extra page
access. [Adaptive hash index lookup will be disabled during INSERT.]

If some rare UPDATE modifies an AUTO_INCREMENT column, the
PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC will be adjusted in a separate mini-transaction in
ha_innobase::update_row().

When a page is reorganized, we have to preserve the PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC
field.

During ALTER TABLE, the initial AUTO_INCREMENT value will be copied
from the table. ALGORITHM=COPY and online log apply in LOCK=NONE will
update PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC in real time.

innodb_col_no(): Determine the dict_table_t::cols[] element index
corresponding to a Field of a non-virtual column.
(The MySQL 5.7 implementation of virtual columns breaks the 1:1
relationship between Field::field_index and dict_table_t::cols[].
Virtual columns are omitted from dict_table_t::cols[]. Therefore,
we must translate the field_index of AUTO_INCREMENT columns into
an index of dict_table_t::cols[].)

Upgrade from old data files:

By default, the AUTO_INCREMENT sequence in old data files would appear
to be reset, because PAGE_MAX_TRX_ID or PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC would contain
the value 0 in each clustered index page. In new data files,
PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC can only be 0 if the table is empty or does not contain
any AUTO_INCREMENT column.

For backward compatibility, we use the old method of
SELECT MAX(auto_increment_column) for initializing the sequence.

btr_read_autoinc(): Read the AUTO_INCREMENT sequence from a new-format
data file.

btr_read_autoinc_with_fallback(): A variant of btr_read_autoinc()
that will resort to reading MAX(auto_increment_column) for data files
that did not use AUTO_INCREMENT yet. It was manually tested that during
the execution of innodb.autoinc_persist the compatibility logic is
not activated (for new files, PAGE_ROOT_AUTO_INC is never 0 in nonempty
clustered index root pages).

initialize_auto_increment(): Replaces
ha_innobase::innobase_initialize_autoinc(). This initializes
the AUTO_INCREMENT metadata. Only called from ha_innobase::open().

ha_innobase::info_low(): Do not try to lazily initialize
dict_table_t::autoinc. It must already have been initialized by
ha_innobase::open() or ha_innobase::create().

Note: The adjustments to class ha_innopart were not tested, because
the source code (native InnoDB partitioning) is not being compiled.
2016-12-16 09:19:19 +02:00

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SET @@SESSION.AUTO_INCREMENT_INCREMENT=1, @@SESSION.AUTO_INCREMENT_OFFSET=1;
CREATE TABLE t1 (c1 INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT) ENGINE=InnoDB;
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (null);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES (null);
ALTER TABLE t1 CHANGE c1 d1 INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
affected rows: 0
info: Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
SELECT * FROM t1;
d1
1
2
SHOW CREATE TABLE t1;
Table Create Table
t1 CREATE TABLE `t1` (
`d1` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
PRIMARY KEY (`d1`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=3 DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(null);
SELECT * FROM t1;
d1
1
2
3
ALTER TABLE t1 AUTO_INCREMENT = 3;
affected rows: 0
info: Records: 0 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
SHOW CREATE TABLE t1;
Table Create Table
t1 CREATE TABLE `t1` (
`d1` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
PRIMARY KEY (`d1`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=4 DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(null);
INSERT INTO t1 VALUES(null);
SELECT * FROM t1;
d1
1
2
3
4
5
DROP TABLE t1;