Reformulate mark_columns_used_by_index* function family in a more laconic
way:
mark_columns_used_by_index -> mark_index_columns
mark_columns_used_by_index_for_read_no_reset -> mark_index_columns_for_read
mark_columns_used_by_index_no_reset -> mark_index_columns_no_reset
static mark_index_columns -> do_mark_index_columns
In the code existed just before this patch binding of a table reference to
the specification of the corresponding CTE happens in the function
open_and_process_table(). If the table reference is not the first in the
query the specification is cloned in the same way as the specification of
a view is cloned for any reference of the view. This works fine for
standalone queries, but does not work for stored procedures / functions
for the following reason.
When the first call of a stored procedure/ function SP is processed the
body of SP is parsed. When a query of SP is parsed the info on each
encountered table reference is put into a TABLE_LIST object linked into
a global chain associated with the query. When parsing of the query is
finished the basic info on the table references from this chain except
table references to derived tables and information schema tables is put
in one hash table associated with SP. When parsing of the body of SP is
finished this hash table is used to construct TABLE_LIST objects for all
table references mentioned in SP and link them into the list of such
objects passed to a pre-locking process that calls open_and_process_table()
for each table from the list.
When a TABLE_LIST for a view is encountered the view is opened and its
specification is parsed. For any table reference occurred in
the specification a new TABLE_LIST object is created to be included into
the list for pre-locking. After all objects in the pre-locking have been
looked through the tables mentioned in the list are locked. Note that the
objects referenced CTEs are just skipped here as it is impossible to
resolve these references without any info on the context where they occur.
Now the statements from the body of SP are executed one by one that.
At the very beginning of the execution of a query the tables used in the
query are opened and open_and_process_table() now is called for each table
reference mentioned in the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the
query that was built when the query was parsed.
For each table reference first the reference is checked against CTEs
definitions in whose scope it occurred. If such definition is found the
reference is considered resolved and if this is not the first reference
to the found CTE the the specification of the CTE is re-parsed and the
result of the parsing is added to the parsing tree of the query as a
sub-tree. If this sub-tree contains table references to other tables they
are added to the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the query in
order the referenced tables to be opened. When the procedure that opens
the tables comes to the TABLE_LIST object created for a non-first
reference to a CTE it discovers that the referenced table instance is not
locked and reports an error.
Thus processing non-first table references to a CTE similar to how
references to view are processed does not work for queries used in stored
procedures / functions. And the main problem is that the current
pre-locking mechanism employed for stored procedures / functions does not
allow to save the context in which a CTE reference occur. It's not trivial
to save the info about the context where a CTE reference occurs while the
resolution of the table reference cannot be done without this context and
consequentially the specification for the table reference cannot be
determined.
This patch solves the above problem by moving resolution of all CTE
references at the parsing stage. More exactly references to CTEs occurred in
a query are resolved right after parsing of the query has finished. After
resolution any CTE reference it is marked as a reference to to derived
table. So it is excluded from the hash table created for pre-locking used
base tables and view when the first call of a stored procedure / function
is processed.
This solution required recursive calls of the parser. The function
THD::sql_parser() has been added specifically for recursive invocations of
the parser.
# Conflicts:
# sql/sql_cte.cc
# sql/sql_cte.h
# sql/sql_lex.cc
# sql/sql_lex.h
# sql/sql_view.cc
# sql/sql_yacc.yy
# sql/sql_yacc_ora.yy
In the code existed just before this patch binding of a table reference to
the specification of the corresponding CTE happens in the function
open_and_process_table(). If the table reference is not the first in the
query the specification is cloned in the same way as the specification of
a view is cloned for any reference of the view. This works fine for
standalone queries, but does not work for stored procedures / functions
for the following reason.
When the first call of a stored procedure/ function SP is processed the
body of SP is parsed. When a query of SP is parsed the info on each
encountered table reference is put into a TABLE_LIST object linked into
a global chain associated with the query. When parsing of the query is
finished the basic info on the table references from this chain except
table references to derived tables and information schema tables is put
in one hash table associated with SP. When parsing of the body of SP is
finished this hash table is used to construct TABLE_LIST objects for all
table references mentioned in SP and link them into the list of such
objects passed to a pre-locking process that calls open_and_process_table()
for each table from the list.
When a TABLE_LIST for a view is encountered the view is opened and its
specification is parsed. For any table reference occurred in
the specification a new TABLE_LIST object is created to be included into
the list for pre-locking. After all objects in the pre-locking have been
looked through the tables mentioned in the list are locked. Note that the
objects referenced CTEs are just skipped here as it is impossible to
resolve these references without any info on the context where they occur.
Now the statements from the body of SP are executed one by one that.
At the very beginning of the execution of a query the tables used in the
query are opened and open_and_process_table() now is called for each table
reference mentioned in the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the
query that was built when the query was parsed.
For each table reference first the reference is checked against CTEs
definitions in whose scope it occurred. If such definition is found the
reference is considered resolved and if this is not the first reference
to the found CTE the the specification of the CTE is re-parsed and the
result of the parsing is added to the parsing tree of the query as a
sub-tree. If this sub-tree contains table references to other tables they
are added to the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the query in
order the referenced tables to be opened. When the procedure that opens
the tables comes to the TABLE_LIST object created for a non-first
reference to a CTE it discovers that the referenced table instance is not
locked and reports an error.
Thus processing non-first table references to a CTE similar to how
references to view are processed does not work for queries used in stored
procedures / functions. And the main problem is that the current
pre-locking mechanism employed for stored procedures / functions does not
allow to save the context in which a CTE reference occur. It's not trivial
to save the info about the context where a CTE reference occurs while the
resolution of the table reference cannot be done without this context and
consequentially the specification for the table reference cannot be
determined.
This patch solves the above problem by moving resolution of all CTE
references at the parsing stage. More exactly references to CTEs occurred in
a query are resolved right after parsing of the query has finished. After
resolution any CTE reference it is marked as a reference to to derived
table. So it is excluded from the hash table created for pre-locking used
base tables and view when the first call of a stored procedure / function
is processed.
This solution required recursive calls of the parser. The function
THD::sql_parser() has been added specifically for recursive invocations of
the parser.
In the code existed just before this patch binding of a table reference to
the specification of the corresponding CTE happens in the function
open_and_process_table(). If the table reference is not the first in the
query the specification is cloned in the same way as the specification of
a view is cloned for any reference of the view. This works fine for
standalone queries, but does not work for stored procedures / functions
for the following reason.
When the first call of a stored procedure/ function SP is processed the
body of SP is parsed. When a query of SP is parsed the info on each
encountered table reference is put into a TABLE_LIST object linked into
a global chain associated with the query. When parsing of the query is
finished the basic info on the table references from this chain except
table references to derived tables and information schema tables is put
in one hash table associated with SP. When parsing of the body of SP is
finished this hash table is used to construct TABLE_LIST objects for all
table references mentioned in SP and link them into the list of such
objects passed to a pre-locking process that calls open_and_process_table()
for each table from the list.
When a TABLE_LIST for a view is encountered the view is opened and its
specification is parsed. For any table reference occurred in
the specification a new TABLE_LIST object is created to be included into
the list for pre-locking. After all objects in the pre-locking have been
looked through the tables mentioned in the list are locked. Note that the
objects referenced CTEs are just skipped here as it is impossible to
resolve these references without any info on the context where they occur.
Now the statements from the body of SP are executed one by one that.
At the very beginning of the execution of a query the tables used in the
query are opened and open_and_process_table() now is called for each table
reference mentioned in the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the
query that was built when the query was parsed.
For each table reference first the reference is checked against CTEs
definitions in whose scope it occurred. If such definition is found the
reference is considered resolved and if this is not the first reference
to the found CTE the the specification of the CTE is re-parsed and the
result of the parsing is added to the parsing tree of the query as a
sub-tree. If this sub-tree contains table references to other tables they
are added to the list of TABLE_LIST objects associated with the query in
order the referenced tables to be opened. When the procedure that opens
the tables comes to the TABLE_LIST object created for a non-first
reference to a CTE it discovers that the referenced table instance is not
locked and reports an error.
Thus processing non-first table references to a CTE similar to how
references to view are processed does not work for queries used in stored
procedures / functions. And the main problem is that the current
pre-locking mechanism employed for stored procedures / functions does not
allow to save the context in which a CTE reference occur. It's not trivial
to save the info about the context where a CTE reference occurs while the
resolution of the table reference cannot be done without this context and
consequentially the specification for the table reference cannot be
determined.
This patch solves the above problem by moving resolution of all CTE
references at the parsing stage. More exactly references to CTEs occurred in
a query are resolved right after parsing of the query has finished. After
resolution any CTE reference it is marked as a reference to to derived
table. So it is excluded from the hash table created for pre-locking used
base tables and view when the first call of a stored procedure / function
is processed.
This solution required recursive calls of the parser. The function
THD::sql_parser() has been added specifically for recursive invocations of
the parser.
So we are having a race condition of three of threads, resulting in a
deadlock backoff in purge, which is unexpected.
More precisely, the following happens:
T1: NOCOPY ALTER TABLE begins, and eventually it holds MDL_SHARED_NO_WRITE
lock;
T2: FLUSH TABLES begins. it sets share->tdc->flushed = true
T3: purge on a record with virtual column begins. it is going to open a
table. MDL_SHARED_READ lock is acquired therefore.
Since share->tdc->flushed is set, it waits for a TDC purge end.
T1: is going to elevate MDL LOCK to exclusive and therefore has to set
other waiters to back off.
T3: receives VICTIM status, reports a DEADLOCK, sets OT_BACKOFF_AND_RETRY
to Open_table_context::m_action
My fix is to allow opening table in purge while flushing. It is already
done the same way in other maintainance facilities like REPAIR TABLE.
Another way would be making an actual backoff, but Open_table_context
does not allow to distinguish it from other failure types, which still
seem to be unexpected. Making this would require hacking into
Open_table_context interface for no benefit, in comparison to passing
MYSQL_OPEN_IGNORE_FLUSH during table open.
The easiest way to compile and test the server with UBSAN is to run:
./BUILD/compile-pentium64-ubsan
and then run mysql-test-run.
After this commit, one should be able to run this without any UBSAN
warnings. There is still a few compiler warnings that should be fixed
at some point, but these do not expose any real bugs.
The 'special' cases where we disable, suppress or circumvent UBSAN are:
- ref10 source (as here we intentionally do some shifts that UBSAN
complains about.
- x86 version of optimized int#korr() methods. UBSAN do not like unaligned
memory access of integers. Fixed by using byte_order_generic.h when
compiling with UBSAN
- We use smaller thread stack with ASAN and UBSAN, which forced me to
disable a few tests that prints the thread stack size.
- Verifying class types does not work for shared libraries. I added
suppression in mysql-test-run.pl for this case.
- Added '#ifdef WITH_UBSAN' when using integer arithmetic where it is
safe to have overflows (two cases, in item_func.cc).
Things fixed:
- Don't left shift signed values
(byte_order_generic.h, mysqltest.c, item_sum.cc and many more)
- Don't assign not non existing values to enum variables.
- Ensure that bool and enum values are properly initialized in
constructors. This was needed as UBSAN checks that these types has
correct values when one copies an object.
(gcalc_tools.h, ha_partition.cc, item_sum.cc, partition_element.h ...)
- Ensure we do not called handler functions on unallocated objects or
deleted objects.
(events.cc, sql_acl.cc).
- Fixed bugs in Item_sp::Item_sp() where we did not call constructor
on Query_arena object.
- Fixed several cast of objects to an incompatible class!
(Item.cc, Item_buff.cc, item_timefunc.cc, opt_subselect.cc, sql_acl.cc,
sql_select.cc ...)
- Ensure we do not do integer arithmetic that causes over or underflows.
This includes also ++ and -- of integers.
(Item_func.cc, Item_strfunc.cc, item_timefunc.cc, sql_base.cc ...)
- Added JSON_VALUE_UNITIALIZED to json_value_types and ensure that
value_type is initialized to this instead of to -1, which is not a valid
enum value for json_value_types.
- Ensure we do not call memcpy() when second argument could be null.
- Fixed that Item_func_str::make_empty_result() creates an empty string
instead of a null string (safer as it ensures we do not do arithmetic
on null strings).
Other things:
- Changed struct st_position to an OBJECT and added an initialization
function to it to ensure that we do not copy or use uninitialized
members. The change to a class was also motived that we used "struct
st_position" and POSITION randomly trough the code which was
confusing.
- Notably big rewrite in sql_acl.cc to avoid using deleted objects.
- Changed in sql_partition to use '^' instead of '-'. This is safe as
the operator is either 0 or 0x8000000000000000ULL.
- Added check for select_nr < INT_MAX in JOIN::build_explain() to
avoid bug when get_select() could return NULL.
- Reordered elements in POSITION for better alignment.
- Changed sql_test.cc::print_plan() to use pointers instead of objects.
- Fixed bug in find_set() where could could execute '1 << -1'.
- Added variable have_sanitizer, used by mtr. (This variable was before
only in 10.5 and up). It can now have one of two values:
ASAN or UBSAN.
- Moved ~Archive_share() from ha_archive.cc to ha_archive.h and marked
it virtual. This was an effort to get UBSAN to work with loaded storage
engines. I kept the change as the new place is better.
- Added in CONNECT engine COLBLK::SetName(), to get around a wrong cast
in tabutil.cpp.
- Added HAVE_REPLICATION around usage of rgi_slave, to get embedded
server to compile with UBSAN. (Patch from Marko).
- Added #ifdef for powerpc64 to avoid a bug in old gcc versions related
to integer arithmetic.
Changes that should not be needed but had to be done to suppress warnings
from UBSAN:
- Added static_cast<<uint16_t>> around shift to get rid of a LOT of
compiler warnings when using UBSAN.
- Had to change some '/' of 2 base integers to shift to get rid of
some compile time warnings.
Reviewed by:
- Json changes: Alexey Botchkov
- Charset changes in ctype-uca.c: Alexander Barkov
- InnoDB changes & Embedded server: Marko Mäkelä
- sql_acl.cc changes: Vicențiu Ciorbaru
- build_explain() changes: Sergey Petrunia
The reason for this is that Galera can lock LOCK_thd_data for a long time.
Instead of stalling any long running process, like alter or repair table,
because of progress reporting, ignore the progress reporting for this
call. Progress reporting will continue on the next call after the lock has
been released.
* reuse the loop in THD::abort_current_cond_wait, don't duplicate it
* find_thread_by_id should return whatever it has found, it's the
caller's task not to kill COM_DAEMON (if the caller's a killer)
and other minor changes
Some DML operations on tables having unique secondary keys cause scanning
in the secondary index, for instance to find potential unique key violations
in the seconday index. This scanning may involve GAP locking in the index.
As this locking happens also when applying replication events in high priority
applier threads, there is a probabality for lock conflicts between two wsrep
high priority threads.
This PR avoids lock conflicts of high priority wsrep threads, which do
secondary index scanning e.g. for duplicate key detection.
The actual fix is the patch in sql_class.cc:thd_need_ordering_with(), where
we allow relaxed GAP locking protocol between wsrep high priority threads.
wsrep high priority threads (replication appliers, replayers and TOI processors)
are ordered by the replication provider, and they will not need serializability
support gained by secondary index GAP locks.
PR contains also a mtr test, which exercises a scenario where two replication
applier threads have a false positive conflict in GAP of unique secondary index.
The conflicting local committing transaction has to replay, and the test verifies
also that the replaying phase will not conflict with the latter repllication applier.
Commit also contains new test scenario for galera.galera_UK_conflict.test,
where replayer starts applying after a slave applier thread, with later seqno,
has advanced to commit phase. The applier and replayer have false positive GAP
lock conflict on secondary unique index, and replayer should ignore this.
This test scenario caused crash with earlier version in this PR, and to fix this,
the secondary index uniquenes checking has been relaxed even further.
Now innodb trx_t structure has new member: bool wsrep_UK_scan, which is set to
true, when high priority thread is performing unique secondary index scanning.
The member trx_t::wsrep_UK_scan is defined inside WITH_WSREP directive, to make
it possible to prepare a MariaDB build where this additional trx_t member is
not present and is not used in the code base. trx->wsrep_UK_scan is set to true
only for the duration of function call for: lock_rec_lock() trx->wsrep_UK_scan
is used only in lock_rec_has_to_wait() function to relax the need to wait if
wsrep_UK_scan is set and conflicting transaction is also high priority.
Reviewed-by: Jan Lindström <jan.lindstrom@mariadb.com>
Server part:
kill_handlerton() was accessing thd->ha_data[] for some other thd,
while it could be concurrently modified by its owner thd.
protect thd->ha_data[] modifications with a mutex.
require this mutex when accessing thd->ha_data[] from kill_handlerton.
InnoDB part:
on close_connection, detach trx from thd before freeing the trx
This reverts the server part of the commit 775fccea0
but keeps InnoDB part (which reverted MDEV-17092 5530a93f4).
So after this both MDEV-23536 and MDEV-17092 are reverted,
and the original bug is resurrected.
A race condition may occur between the execution of transaction commit,
and an execution of a KILL statement that would attempt to abort that
transaction.
MDEV-17092 worked around this race condition by modifying InnoDB code.
After that issue was closed, Sergey Vojtovich pointed out that this
race condition would better be fixed above the storage engine layer:
If you look carefully into the above, you can conclude that
thd->free_connection() can be called concurrently with
KILL/thd->awake(). Which is the bug. And it is partially fixed in
THD::~THD(), that is destructor waits for KILL completion:
Fix: Add necessary mutex operations to THD::free_connection()
and move WSREP specific code also there. This ensures that no
one is using THD while we do free_connection(). These mutexes
will also ensures that there can't be concurrent KILL/THD::awake().
innobase_kill_query
We can now remove usage of trx_sys_mutex introduced on MDEV-17092.
trx_t::free()
Poison trx->state and trx->mysql_thd
This patch is validated with an RQG run similar to the one that
reproduced MDEV-17092.
Analysis: select into outfile creates files everytime with 666 permission,
regardsless if umask environment variables and umask settings on OS level.
It seems hardcoded.
Fix: change 0666 to 0644 which will let anybody consume the file but not
change it.
The reason for the failure is that
thd->mdl_context.release_transactional_locks()
was called after commit & rollback even in cases where the current
transaction is still active.
For 10.2, 10.3 and 10.4 the fix is simple:
- Replace all calls to thd->mdl_context.release_transactional_locks() with
thd->release_transactional_locks(). The thd function will only call
the mdl_context function if there are no active transactional locks.
In 10.6 we will better fix where we will change the return value for
some trans_xxx() functions to indicate if transaction did close the
transaction or not. This will avoid the need of the indirect call.
Other things:
- trans_xa_commit() and trans_xa_rollback() will automatically
call release_transactional_locks() if the transaction is closed.
- We can't do that for the other functions as the caller of many of these
are doing additional work (like close_thread_tables) before calling
release_transactional_locks().
- Added missing abort_result_set() and missing DBUG_RETURN in
select_create::send_eof()
- Fixed wrong indentation in injector::transaction::commit()
This follows up commit
commit 94a520ddbe and
commit 7c5519c12d.
After these changes, the default test suites on a
cmake -DWITH_UBSAN=ON build no longer fail due to passing
null pointers as parameters that are declared to never be null,
but plenty of other runtime errors remain.
MDEV-20945: BACKUP UNLOCK + FTWRL assertion failure | SIGSEGV in I_P_List
from MDL_context::release_lock on INSERT w/ BACKUP LOCK (on optimized
builds) | Assertion `ticket->m_duration == MDL_EXPLICIT' failed
BACKUP LOCK behavior is modified so it won't be used wrong:
- BACKUP LOCK should commit any active transactions.
- BACKUP LOCK should not be allowed in stored procedures.
- When BACKUP LOCK is active, don't allow any DDL's for that connection.
- FTWRL is forbidden on the same connection while BACKUP LOCK is active.
Reviewed-by: monty@mariadb.com
This commit fixed the problems with S3 after the "DROP TABLE FORCE" changes.
It also fixes all failing replication S3 tests.
A slave is delayed if it is trying to execute replicated queries on a
table that is already converted to S3 by the master later in the binlog.
Fixes for replication events on S3 tables for delayed slaves:
- INSERT and INSERT ... SELECT and CREATE TABLE are ignored but written
to the binary log. UPDATE & DELETE will be fixed in a future commit.
Other things:
- On slaves with --s3-slave-ignore-updates set, allow S3 tables to be
opened in read-write mode. This was done to be able to
ignore-but-replicate queries like insert. Without this change any
open of an S3 table failed with 'Table is read only' which is too
early to be able to replicate the original query.
- Errors are now printed if handler::extra() call fails in
wait_while_tables_are_used().
- Error message for row changes are changed from HA_ERR_WRONG_COMMAND
to HA_ERR_TABLE_READONLY.
- Disable some maria_extra() calls for S3 tables. This could cause
S3 tables to fail in some cases.
- Added missing thr_lock_delete() to ma_open() in case of failure.
- Removed from mysql_prepare_insert() the not needed argument 'table'.
MDEV-21953 deadlock between BACKUP STAGE BLOCK_COMMIT and parallel
replication
Fixed by partly reverting MDEV-21953 to put back MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT locking
before log_and_order.
The original problem for MDEV-21953 was that while a thread was waiting in
for another threads to commit in 'log_and_order', it had the
MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT lock. The backup thread was waiting to get the
MDL_BACKUP_WAIT_COMMIT lock, which blocks all new MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT locks.
This causes a deadlock as the waited-for thread can never get past the
MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT lock in ha_commit_trans.
The main part of the bug fix is to release the MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT lock while
a thread is waiting for other 'previous' threads to commit. This ensures
that no transactional thread keeps MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT while waiting, which
ensures that there are no deadlocks anymore.
Protocol_local fixed so it can be used now.
Some Protocol:: methods made virtual so they can adapt.
as well as net_ok and net_send_error functions.
execute_sql_string function is exported to the plugins.
To be changed with the mysql_use_result.
- Adding optional qualifiers to data types:
CREATE TABLE t1 (a schema.DATE);
Qualifiers now work only for three pre-defined schemas:
mariadb_schema
oracle_schema
maxdb_schema
These schemas are virtual (hard-coded) for now, but may turn into real
databases on disk in the future.
- mariadb_schema.TYPE now always resolves to a true MariaDB data
type TYPE without sql_mode specific translations.
- oracle_schema.DATE translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- maxdb_schema.TIMESTAMP translates to MariaDB DATETIME.
- Fixing SHOW CREATE TABLE to use a qualifier for a data type TYPE
if the current sql_mode translates TYPE to something else.
The above changes fix the reported problem, so this script:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_date_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=ORACLE;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_date_column mariadb_schema.DATE);
and the slave can unambiguously treat DATE as the true MariaDB DATE
without ORACLE specific translation to DATETIME.
Similar,
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 AS SELECT mariadb_timestamp_column FROM t1;
is now replicated as:
SET sql_mode=MAXDB;
CREATE TABLE t2 (mariadb_timestamp_column mariadb_schema.TIMESTAMP);
so the slave treats TIMESTAMP as the true MariaDB TIMESTAMP
without MAXDB specific translation to DATETIME.
This happend when using XA transactions. I also added some extra asserts
to ensure that m_transactions are properly cleared.
Other things:
- Removed set_time() from THD::init_for_queries() as dispatch_command()
is already doing that.
- Removed duplicate init_for_queries() from prepare_new_connection_state().
The init_for_queries() functions should only be called once per
connection.
When high priority replication slave applier encounters lock conflict in innodb,
it will force the conflicting lock holder transaction (victim) to rollback.
This is a must in multi-master sychronous replication model to avoid cluster lock-up.
This high priority victim abort (aka "brute force" (BF) abort), is started
from innodb lock manager while holding the victim's transaction's (trx) mutex.
Depending on the execution state of the victim transaction, it may happen that the
BF abort will call for THD::awake() to wake up the victim transaction for the rollback.
Now, if BF abort requires THD::awake() to be called, then the applier thread executed
locking protocol of: victim trx mutex -> victim THD::LOCK_thd_data
If, at the same time another DBMS super user issues KILL command to abort the same victim,
it will execute locking protocol of: victim THD::LOCK_thd_data -> victim trx mutex.
These two locking protocol acquire mutexes in opposite order, hence unresolvable mutex locking
deadlock may occur.
The fix in this commit adds THD::wsrep_aborter flag to synchronize who can kill the victim
This flag is set both when BF is called for from innodb and by KILL command.
Either path of victim killing will bail out if victim's wsrep_killed is already
set to avoid mutex conflicts with the other aborter execution. THD::wsrep_aborter
records the aborter THD's ID. This is needed to preserve the right to kill
the victim from different locations for the same aborter thread.
It is also good error logging, to see who is reponsible for the abort.
A new test case was added in galera.galera_bf_kill_debug.test for scenario where
wsrep applier thread and manual KILL command try to kill same idle victim
The issue was:
T1, a parallel slave worker thread, is waiting for another worker thread to
commit. While waiting, it has the MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT lock.
T2, working for mariabackup, is doing BACKUP STAGE BLOCK_COMMIT and blocks
all commits.
This causes a deadlock as the thread T1 is waiting for can't commit.
Fixed by moving locking of MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT from ha_commit_trans() to
commit_one_phase_2()
Other things:
- Added a new argument to ha_comit_one_phase() to signal if the
transaction was a write transaction.
- Ensured that ha_maria::implicit_commit() is always called under
MDL_BACKUP_COMMIT. This code is not needed in 10.5
- Ensure that MDL_Request values 'type' and 'ticket' are always
initialized. This makes it easier to check the state of the MDL_Request.
- Moved thd->store_globals() earlier in handle_rpl_parallel_thread() as
thd->init_for_queries() could use a MDL that could crash if store_globals
where not called.
- Don't call ha_enable_transactions() in THD::init_for_queries() as this
is both slow (uses MDL locks) and not needed.
* Allocate items on thd->mem_root while refixing vcol exprs
* Make vcol tree changes register and roll them back after the statement is executed.
Explanation:
Due to collation implementation specifics an Item tree could change while fixing.
The tricky thing here is to make it on a proper arena.
It's usually not a problem when a field is deterministic, however, makes a pain vice-versa, during allocation allocating.
A non-deterministic field should be refixed on each statement, since it depends on the environment state.
Changing the tree will be temporary and therefore it should be reverted after the statement execution.
When high priority replication slave applier encounters lock conflict in innodb,
it will force the conflicting lock holder transaction (victim) to rollback.
This is a must in multi-master sychronous replication model to avoid cluster lock-up.
This high priority victim abort (aka "brute force" (BF) abort), is started
from innodb lock manager while holding the victim's transaction's (trx) mutex.
Depending on the execution state of the victim transaction, it may happen that the
BF abort will call for THD::awake() to wake up the victim transaction for the rollback.
Now, if BF abort requires THD::awake() to be called, then the applier thread executed
locking protocol of: victim trx mutex -> victim THD::LOCK_thd_data
If, at the same time another DBMS super user issues KILL command to abort the same victim,
it will execute locking protocol of: victim THD::LOCK_thd_data -> victim trx mutex.
These two locking protocol acquire mutexes in opposite order, hence unresolvable mutex locking
deadlock may occur.
The fix in this commit adds THD::wsrep_aborter flag to synchronize who can kill the victim
This flag is set both when BF is called for from innodb and by KILL command.
Either path of victim killing will bail out if victim's wsrep_killed is already
set to avoid mutex conflicts with the other aborter execution. THD::wsrep_aborter
records the aborter THD's ID. This is needed to preserve the right to kill
the victim from different locations for the same aborter thread.
It is also good error logging, to see who is reponsible for the abort.
A new test case was added in galera.galera_bf_kill_debug.test for scenario where
wsrep applier thread and manual KILL command try to kill same idle victim
- Rewrote bool Query_compressed_log_event::write() to make it more readable
(no logic changes).
- Changed DBUG_PRINT of 'is_error:' to 'is_error():' to make it easier to
find error: in traces.
- Ensure that 'db' is never null in Query_log_event (Simplified code).
- commit ea37b14409 (MDEV-16678) caused
a regression. when purge thread tries to open the table for virtual
column computation, there is no need to acquire MDL for the table.
Because purge thread already hold MDL for the table
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
All changes (except one) is of type
thd->transaction. -> thd->transaction->
thd->transaction points by default to 'thd->default_transaction'
This allows us to 'easily' have multiple active transactions for a
THD object, like when reading data from the mysql.proc table
Executing CHECK TABLE with streaming replication enabled reports
error "Streaming replication not supported with
binlog_format=STATEMENT".
Administrative commands such as CHECK TABLE, are not replicated and
temporarily set binlog format to statement.
To avoid the problem, report the error only for active transactions
for which streaming replication is enabled.
The function thd_query_safe() is used in the implementation of the
following INFORMATION_SCHEMA views:
information_schema.innodb_trx
information_schema.innodb_locks
information_schema.innodb_lock_waits
information_schema.rocksdb_trx
The implementation of the InnoDB views is in trx_i_s_common_fill_table().
This function invokes trx_i_s_possibly_fetch_data_into_cache(),
which will acquire lock_sys->mutex and trx_sys->mutex in order to
protect the set of active transactions and explicit locks.
While holding those mutexes, it will traverse the collection of
InnoDB transactions. For each transaction, thd_query_safe() will be
invoked.
When called via trx_i_s_common_fill_table(), thd_query_safe()
is acquiring THD::LOCK_thd_data while holding the InnoDB locks.
This will cause a deadlock with THD::awake() (such as executing
KILL QUERY), because THD::awake() could invoke lock_trx_handle_wait(),
which attempts to acquire lock_sys->mutex while already holding
THD::lock_thd_data.
thd_query_safe(): Invoke mysql_mutex_trylock() instead of
mysql_mutex_lock(). Return the empty string if the mutex
cannot be acquired without waiting.
in fact, in MariaDB it cannot, but it can show spurious slaves
in SHOW SLAVE HOSTS.
slave was registered in COM_REGISTER_SLAVE and un-registered after
COM_BINLOG_DUMP. If there was no COM_BINLOG_DUMP, it would never
unregister.
* The overlaps check is implemented on a handler level per row command.
It creates a separate cursor (actually, another handler instance) and
caches it inside the original handler, when ha_update_row or
ha_insert_row is issued. Cursor closes on unlocking the handler.
* Containing the same key in index means unique constraint violation
even in usual terms. So we fetch left and right neighbours and check
that they have same key prefix, excluding from the key only the period part.
If it doesnt match, then there's no such neighbour, and the check passes.
Otherwise, we check if this neighbour intersects with the considered key.
* The check does not introduce new error and fails with ER_DUPP_KEY error.
This might break REPLACE workflow and should be fixed separately
MDEV-21605 Clean up and speed up interfaces for binary row logging
MDEV-21617 Bug fix for previous version of this code
The intention is to have as few 'if' as possible in ha_write() and
related functions. This is done by pre-calculating once per statement the
row_logging state for all tables.
Benefits are simpler and faster code both when binary logging is disabled
and when it's enabled.
Changes:
- Added handler->row_logging to make it easy to check it table should be
row logged. This also made it easier to disabling row logging for system,
internal and temporary tables.
- The tables row_logging capabilities are checked once per "statements
that updates tables" in THD::binlog_prepare_for_row_logging() which
is called when needed from THD::decide_logging_format().
- Removed most usage of tmp_disable_binlog(), reenable_binlog() and
temporary saving and setting of thd->variables.option_bits.
- Moved checks that can't change during a statement from
check_table_binlog_row_based() to check_table_binlog_row_based_internal()
- Removed flag row_already_logged (used by sequence engine)
- Moved binlog_log_row() to a handler::
- Moved write_locked_table_maps() to THD::binlog_write_table_maps() as
most other related binlog functions are in THD.
- Removed binlog_write_table_map() and binlog_log_row_internal() as
they are now obsolete as 'has_transactions()' is pre-calculated in
prepare_for_row_logging().
- Remove 'is_transactional' argument from binlog_write_table_map() as this
can now be read from handler.
- Changed order of 'if's in handler::external_lock() and wsrep_mysqld.h
to first evaluate fast and likely cases before more complex ones.
- Added error checking in ha_write_row() and related functions if
binlog_log_row() failed.
- Don't clear check_table_binlog_row_based_result in
clear_cached_table_binlog_row_based_flag() as it's not needed.
- THD::clear_binlog_table_maps() has been replaced with
THD::reset_binlog_for_next_statement()
- Added 'MYSQL_OPEN_IGNORE_LOGGING_FORMAT' flag to open_and_lock_tables()
to avoid calculating of binary log format for internal opens. This flag
is also used to avoid reading statistics tables for internal tables.
- Added OPTION_BINLOG_LOG_OFF as a simple way to turn of binlog temporary
for create (instead of using THD::sql_log_bin_off.
- Removed flag THD::sql_log_bin_off (not needed anymore)
- Speed up THD::decide_logging_format() by remembering if blackhole engine
is used and avoid a loop over all tables if it's not used
(the common case).
- THD::decide_logging_format() is not called anymore if no tables are used
for the statement. This will speed up pure stored procedure code with
about 5%+ according to some simple tests.
- We now get annotated events on slave if a CREATE ... SELECT statement
is transformed on the slave from statement to row logging.
- In the original code, the master could come into a state where row
logging is enforced for all future events if statement could be used.
This is now partly fixed.
Other changes:
- Ensure that all tables used by a statement has query_id set.
- Had to restore the row_logging flag for not used tables in
THD::binlog_write_table_maps (not normal scenario)
- Removed injector::transaction::use_table(server_id_type sid, table tbl)
as it's not used.
- Cleaned up set_slave_thread_options()
- Some more DBUG_ENTER/DBUG_RETURN, code comments and minor indentation
changes.
- Ensure we only call THD::decide_logging_format_low() once in
mysql_insert() (inefficiency).
- Don't annotate INSERT DELAYED
- Removed zeroing pos_in_table_list in THD::open_temporary_table() as it's
already 0
If async slave thread (slave SQL handler), becomes a BF victim, it may occasionally happen that rollbacker thread is used to carry out the rollback instead of the async slave thread.
This can happen, if async slave thread has flagged "idle" state when BF thread tries to figure out how to kill the victim.
The issue was possible to test by using a galera cluster as slave for external master, and issuing high load of conflicting writes through async replication and directly against galera cluster nodes.
However, a deterministic mtr test for the "conflict window" has not yet been worked on.
The fix, in this patch makes sure that async slave thread state is never set to IDLE. This prevents the rollbacker thread to intervene.
The wsrep_query_state change was refactored to happen by dedicated function to make controlling the idle state change in one place.
e.g.
- dont -> don't
- occurence -> occurrence
- succesfully -> successfully
- easyly -> easily
Also remove trailing space in selected files.
These changes span:
- server core
- Connect and Innobase storage engine code
- OQgraph, Sphinx and TokuDB storage engines
Related to MDEV-21769.
It now lives from THD constructor to THD destructor. Reset before THD is
released to a cache. Change user doesn't reset debug_sync_control anymore.
Needed to be able to make use of DEBUG_SYNC() at later stages like
ha_close_connection().