This causes no behaviorial changes, only organizes better to implement modifying CTEs
Also rename ExtactInsertRangeTableEntry to ExtractResultRelationRTE,
as the source of this function didn't match the documentation
Remove Task's upsertQuery in favor of ROW_MODIFY_NONCOMMUTATIVE
Split up AcquireExecutorShardLock into more internal functions
Tests: Normalize multi_reference_table multi_create_table_constraints
Also automated all manual tests around multi user isolation for internal citus udf's
automate upgrade_to_reference_table tests
add negative tests for lock_relation_if_exists
add tests for permissions on worker_cleanup_job_schema_cache
add tests for worker_fetch_partition_file
add tests for worker_merge_files_into_table
fix problem with worker_merge_files_and_run_query when run as non-super user and add tests for behaviour
With this commit, we're introducing the Adaptive Executor.
The commit message consists of two distinct sections. The first part explains
how the executor works. The second part consists of the commit messages of
the individual smaller commits that resulted in this commit. The readers
can search for the each of the smaller commit messages on
https://github.com/citusdata/citus and can learn more about the history
of the change.
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* adaptive_executor.c
*
* The adaptive executor executes a list of tasks (queries on shards) over
* a connection pool per worker node. The results of the queries, if any,
* are written to a tuple store.
*
* The concepts in the executor are modelled in a set of structs:
*
* - DistributedExecution:
* Execution of a Task list over a set of WorkerPools.
* - WorkerPool
* Pool of WorkerSessions for the same worker which opportunistically
* executes "unassigned" tasks from a queue.
* - WorkerSession:
* Connection to a worker that is used to execute "assigned" tasks
* from a queue and may execute unasssigned tasks from the WorkerPool.
* - ShardCommandExecution:
* Execution of a Task across a list of placements.
* - TaskPlacementExecution:
* Execution of a Task on a specific placement.
* Used in the WorkerPool and WorkerSession queues.
*
* Every connection pool (WorkerPool) and every connection (WorkerSession)
* have a queue of tasks that are ready to execute (readyTaskQueue) and a
* queue/set of pending tasks that may become ready later in the execution
* (pendingTaskQueue). The tasks are wrapped in a ShardCommandExecution,
* which keeps track of the state of execution and is referenced from a
* TaskPlacementExecution, which is the data structure that is actually
* added to the queues and describes the state of the execution of a task
* on a particular worker node.
*
* When the task list is part of a bigger distributed transaction, the
* shards that are accessed or modified by the task may have already been
* accessed earlier in the transaction. We need to make sure we use the
* same connection since it may hold relevant locks or have uncommitted
* writes. In that case we "assign" the task to a connection by adding
* it to the task queue of specific connection (in
* AssignTasksToConnections). Otherwise we consider the task unassigned
* and add it to the task queue of a worker pool, which means that it
* can be executed over any connection in the pool.
*
* A task may be executed on multiple placements in case of a reference
* table or a replicated distributed table. Depending on the type of
* task, it may not be ready to be executed on a worker node immediately.
* For instance, INSERTs on a reference table are executed serially across
* placements to avoid deadlocks when concurrent INSERTs take conflicting
* locks. At the beginning, only the "first" placement is ready to execute
* and therefore added to the readyTaskQueue in the pool or connection.
* The remaining placements are added to the pendingTaskQueue. Once
* execution on the first placement is done the second placement moves
* from pendingTaskQueue to readyTaskQueue. The same approach is used to
* fail over read-only tasks to another placement.
*
* Once all the tasks are added to a queue, the main loop in
* RunDistributedExecution repeatedly does the following:
*
* For each pool:
* - ManageWorkPool evaluates whether to open additional connections
* based on the number unassigned tasks that are ready to execute
* and the targetPoolSize of the execution.
*
* Poll all connections:
* - We use a WaitEventSet that contains all (non-failed) connections
* and is rebuilt whenever the set of active connections or any of
* their wait flags change.
*
* We almost always check for WL_SOCKET_READABLE because a session
* can emit notices at any time during execution, but it will only
* wake up WaitEventSetWait when there are actual bytes to read.
*
* We check for WL_SOCKET_WRITEABLE just after sending bytes in case
* there is not enough space in the TCP buffer. Since a socket is
* almost always writable we also use WL_SOCKET_WRITEABLE as a
* mechanism to wake up WaitEventSetWait for non-I/O events, e.g.
* when a task moves from pending to ready.
*
* For each connection that is ready:
* - ConnectionStateMachine handles connection establishment and failure
* as well as command execution via TransactionStateMachine.
*
* When a connection is ready to execute a new task, it first checks its
* own readyTaskQueue and otherwise takes a task from the worker pool's
* readyTaskQueue (on a first-come-first-serve basis).
*
* In cases where the tasks finish quickly (e.g. <1ms), a single
* connection will often be sufficient to finish all tasks. It is
* therefore not necessary that all connections are established
* successfully or open a transaction (which may be blocked by an
* intermediate pgbouncer in transaction pooling mode). It is therefore
* essential that we take a task from the queue only after opening a
* transaction block.
*
* When a command on a worker finishes or the connection is lost, we call
* PlacementExecutionDone, which then updates the state of the task
* based on whether we need to run it on other placements. When a
* connection fails or all connections to a worker fail, we also call
* PlacementExecutionDone for all queued tasks to try the next placement
* and, if necessary, mark shard placements as inactive. If a task fails
* to execute on all placements, the execution fails and the distributed
* transaction rolls back.
*
* For multi-row INSERTs, tasks are executed sequentially by
* SequentialRunDistributedExecution instead of in parallel, which allows
* a high degree of concurrency without high risk of deadlocks.
* Conversely, multi-row UPDATE/DELETE/DDL commands take aggressive locks
* which forbids concurrency, but allows parallelism without high risk
* of deadlocks. Note that this is unrelated to SEQUENTIAL_CONNECTION,
* which indicates that we should use at most one connection per node, but
* can run tasks in parallel across nodes. This is used when there are
* writes to a reference table that has foreign keys from a distributed
* table.
*
* Execution finishes when all tasks are done, the query errors out, or
* the user cancels the query.
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
All the commits involved here:
* Initial unified executor prototype
* Latest changes
* Fix rebase conflicts to master branch
* Add missing variable for assertion
* Ensure that master_modify_multiple_shards() returns the affectedTupleCount
* Adjust intermediate result sizes
The real-time executor uses COPY command to get the results
from the worker nodes. Unified executor avoids that which
results in less data transfer. Simply adjust the tests to lower
sizes.
* Force one connection per placement (or co-located placements) when requested
The existing executors (real-time and router) always open 1 connection per
placement when parallel execution is requested.
That might be useful under certain circumstances:
(a) User wants to utilize as much as CPUs on the workers per
distributed query
(b) User has a transaction block which involves COPY command
Also, lots of regression tests rely on this execution semantics.
So, we'd enable few of the tests with this change as well.
* For parameters to be resolved before using them
For the details, see PostgreSQL's copyParamList()
* Unified executor sorts the returning output
* Ensure that unified executor doesn't ignore sequential execution of DDLJob's
Certain DDL commands, mainly creating foreign keys to reference tables,
should be executed sequentially. Otherwise, we'd end up with a self
distributed deadlock.
To overcome this situaiton, we set a flag `DDLJob->executeSequentially`
and execute it sequentially. Note that we have to do this because
the command might not be called within a transaction block, and
we cannot call `SetLocalMultiShardModifyModeToSequential()`.
This fixes at least two test: multi_insert_select_on_conflit.sql and
multi_foreign_key.sql
Also, I wouldn't mind scattering local `targetPoolSize` variables within
the code. The reason is that we'll soon have a GUC (or a global
variable based on a GUC) that'd set the pool size. In that case, we'd
simply replace `targetPoolSize` with the global variables.
* Fix 2PC conditions for DDL tasks
* Improve closing connections that are not fully established in unified execution
* Support foreign keys to reference tables in unified executor
The idea for supporting foreign keys to reference tables is simple:
Keep track of the relation accesses within a transaction block.
- If a parallel access happens on a distributed table which
has a foreign key to a reference table, one cannot modify
the reference table in the same transaction. Otherwise,
we're very likely to end-up with a self-distributed deadlock.
- If an access to a reference table happens, and then a parallel
access to a distributed table (which has a fkey to the reference
table) happens, we switch to sequential mode.
Unified executor misses the function calls that marks the relation
accesses during the execution. Thus, simply add the necessary calls
and let the logic kick in.
* Make sure to close the failed connections after the execution
* Improve comments
* Fix savepoints in unified executor.
* Rebuild the WaitEventSet only when necessary
* Unclaim connections on all errors.
* Improve failure handling for unified executor
- Implement the notion of errorOnAnyFailure. This is similar to
Critical Connections that the connection managament APIs provide
- If the nodes inside a modifying transaction expand, activate 2PC
- Fix few bugs related to wait event sets
- Mark placement INACTIVE during the execution as much as possible
as opposed to we do in the COMMIT handler
- Fix few bugs related to scheduling next placement executions
- Improve decision on when to use 2PC
Improve the logic to start a transaction block for distributed transactions
- Make sure that only reference table modifications are always
executed with distributed transactions
- Make sure that stored procedures and functions are executed
with distributed transactions
* Move waitEventSet to DistributedExecution
This could also be local to RunDistributedExecution(), but in that case
we had to mark it as "volatile" to avoid PG_TRY()/PG_CATCH() issues, and
cast it to non-volatile when doing WaitEventSetFree(). We thought that
would make code a bit harder to read than making this non-local, so we
move it here. See comments for PG_TRY() in postgres/src/include/elog.h
and "man 3 siglongjmp" for more context.
* Fix multi_insert_select test outputs
Two things:
1) One complex transaction block is now supported. Simply update
the test output
2) Due to dynamic nature of the unified executor, the orders of
the errors coming from the shards might change (e.g., all of
the queries on the shards would fail, but which one appears
on the error message?). To fix that, we simply added it to
our shardId normalization tool which happens just before diff.
* Fix subeury_and_cte test
The error message is updated from:
failed to execute task
To:
more than one row returned by a subquery or an expression
which is a lot clearer to the user.
* Fix intermediate_results test outputs
Simply update the error message from:
could not receive query results
to
result "squares" does not exist
which makes a lot more sense.
* Fix multi_function_in_join test
The error messages update from:
Failed to execute task XXX
To:
function f(..) does not exist
* Fix multi_query_directory_cleanup test
The unified executor does not create any intermediate files.
* Fix with_transactions test
A test case that just started to work fine
* Fix multi_router_planner test outputs
The error message is update from:
Could not receive query results
To:
Relation does not exists
which is a lot more clearer for the users
* Fix multi_router_planner_fast_path test
The error message is update from:
Could not receive query results
To:
Relation does not exists
which is a lot more clearer for the users
* Fix isolation_copy_placement_vs_modification by disabling select_opens_transaction_block
* Fix ordering in isolation_multi_shard_modify_vs_all
* Add executor locks to unified executor
* Make sure to allocate enought WaitEvents
The previous code was missing the waitEvents for the latch and
postmaster death.
* Fix rebase conflicts for master rebase
* Make sure that TRUNCATE relies on unified executor
* Implement true sequential execution for multi-row INSERTS
Execute the individual tasks executed one by one. Note that this is different than
MultiShardConnectionType == SEQUENTIAL_CONNECTION case (e.g., sequential execution
mode). In that case, running the tasks across the nodes in parallel is acceptable
and implemented in that way.
However, the executions that are qualified here would perform poorly if the
tasks across the workers are executed in parallel. We currently qualify only
one class of distributed queries here, multi-row INSERTs. If we do not enforce
true sequential execution, concurrent multi-row upserts could easily form
a distributed deadlock when the upserts touch the same rows.
* Remove SESSION_LIFESPAN flag in unified_executor
* Apply failure test updates
We've changed the failure behaviour a bit, and also the error messages
that show up to the user. This PR covers majority of the updates.
* Unified executor honors citus.node_connection_timeout
With this commit, unified executor errors out if even
a single connection cannot be established within
citus.node_connection_timeout.
And, as a side effect this fixes failure_connection_establishment
test.
* Properly increment/decrement pool size variables
Before this commit, the idle and active connection
counts were not properly calculated.
* insert_select_executor goes through unified executor.
* Add missing file for task tracker
* Modify ExecuteTaskListExtended()'s signature
* Sort output of INSERT ... SELECT ... RETURNING
* Take partition locks correctly in unified executor
* Alternative implementation for force_max_query_parallelization
* Fix compile warnings in unified executor
* Fix style issues
* Decrement idleConnectionCount when idle connection is lost
* Always rebuild the wait event sets
In the previous implementation, on waitFlag changes, we were only
modifying the wait events. However, we've realized that it might
be an over optimization since (a) we couldn't see any performance
benefits (b) we see some errors on failures and because of (a)
we prefer to disable it now.
* Make sure to allocate enough sized waitEventSet
With multi-row INSERTs, we might have more sessions than
task*workerCount after few calls of RunDistributedExecution()
because the previous sessions would also be alive.
Instead, re-allocate events when the connectino set changes.
* Implement SELECT FOR UPDATE on reference tables
On master branch, we do two extra things on SELECT FOR UPDATE
queries on reference tables:
- Acquire executor locks
- Execute the query on all replicas
With this commit, we're implementing the same logic on the
new executor.
* SELECT FOR UPDATE opens transaction block even if SelectOpensTransactionBlock disabled
Otherwise, users would be very confused and their logic is very likely
to break.
* Fix build error
* Fix the newConnectionCount calculation in ManageWorkerPool
* Fix rebase conflicts
* Fix minor test output differences
* Fix citus indent
* Remove duplicate sorts that is added with rebase
* Create distributed table via executor
* Fix wait flags in CheckConnectionReady
* failure_savepoints output for unified executor.
* failure_vacuum output (pg 10) for unified executor.
* Fix WaitEventSetWait timeout in unified executor
* Stabilize failure_truncate test output
* Add an ORDER BY to multi_upsert
* Fix regression test outputs after rebase to master
* Add executor.c comment
* Rename executor.c to adaptive_executor.c
* Do not schedule tasks if the failed placement is not ready to execute
Before the commit, we were blindly scheduling the next placement executions
even if the failed placement is not on the ready queue. Now, we're ensuring
that if failed placement execution is on a failed pool or session where the
execution is on the pendingQueue, we do not schedule the next task. Because
the other placement execution should be already running.
* Implement a proper custom scan node for adaptive executor
- Switch between the executors, add GUC to set the pool size
- Add non-adaptive regression test suites
- Enable CIRCLE CI for non-adaptive tests
- Adjust test output files
* Add slow start interval to the executor
* Expose max_cached_connection_per_worker to user
* Do not start slow when there are cached connections
* Consider ExecutorSlowStartInterval in NextEventTimeout
* Fix memory issues with ReceiveResults().
* Disable executor via TaskExecutorType
* Make sure to execute the tests with the other executor
* Use task_executor_type to enable-disable adaptive executor
* Remove useless code
* Adjust the regression tests
* Add slow start regression test
* Rebase to master
* Fix test failures in adaptive executor.
* Rebase to master - 2
* Improve comments & debug messages
* Set force_max_query_parallelization in isolation_citus_dist_activity
* Force max parallelization for creating shards when asked to use exclusive connection.
* Adjust the default pool size
* Expand description of max_adaptive_executor_pool_size GUC
* Update warnings in FinishRemoteTransactionCommit()
* Improve session clean up at the end of execution
Explicitly list all the states that the execution might end,
otherwise warn.
* Remove MULTI_CONNECTION_WAIT_RETRY which is not used at all
* Add more ORDER BYs to multi_mx_partitioning
- All the schema creations on the workers will now be via superuser connections
- If a shard is being repaired or a shard is replicated, we will create the
schema only in the relevant worker; and in all the other cases where a schema
creation is needed, we will block operations until we ensure the schema exists
in all the workers
It has been reported a null pointer dereference could be triggered in FreeConnParamsHashEntryFields. Likely cause is an error in GetConnParams which will leave the cached ConnParamsHashEntry in a state that would cause the null pointer dereference in a subsequent connection establishment to the same server. This has been simulated by inserting ereport(ERROR, ...) at certain places in the code.
Not only would ConnParamsHashEntry be in a state that would cause a crash, it was also leaking memory in the ConnectionContext due to the loss of pointers as they are only stored on the ConnParamsHashEntry at the end of the function.
This patch rewrites both the GetConnParams to store pointers 'durably' at every point in the code so that an error would not lose the pointer as well as FreeConnParamsHashEntryFields in a way that it can clear half initialised ConnParamsHashEntry's in a safer manner.
GRANT queries are propagated on Enterprise. If a user attempts to
create a user and run a GRANT query before creating it on workers, we
fail. This issue does not happen in community as the user needs to run
the GRANTs on the workers manually.
When `master_update_node` is called to update a node's location it waits for appropriate locks to become available. This is useful during normal operation as new operations will be blocked till after the metadata update while running operations have time to finish.
When `master_update_node` is called after a node failure it is less useful to wait for running operations to finish as they can't. The lock being held indicates an operation that once attempted to commit will fail as the machine already failed. Now the downside is the failover is postponed till the termination point of the operation. This has been observed by users to take a significant amount of time causing the rest of the system to be observed unavailable.
With this patch it is possible in such situations to invoke `master_update_node` with 2 optional arguments:
- `force` (bool defaults to `false`): When called with true the update of the metadata will be forced to proceed by terminating conflicting backends. A cancel is not enough as the backend might be in idle time (eg. an interactive session, or going back and forth between an appliaction), therefore a more intrusive solution of termination is used here.
- `lock_cooldown` (int defaults to `10000`): This is the time in milliseconds before conflicting backends are terminated. This is to allow the backends to finish cleanly before terminating them. This allows the user to set an upperbound to the expected time to complete the metadata update, eg. performing the failover.
The functionality is implemented by spawning a background worker that has the task of helping a certain backend in acquiring its locks. The backend is either terminated on successful execution of the metadata update, or once the memory context of the expression gets reset, eg. on a cancel of the statement.
Adds support for propagation of SET LOCAL commands to all workers
involved in a query. For now, SET SESSION (i.e. plain SET) is not
supported whatsoever, though this code is intended as somewhat of a
base for implementing such support in the future.
As SET LOCAL modifications are scoped to the body of a BEGIN/END xact
block, queries wishing to use SET LOCAL propagation must be within such
a block. In addition, subsequent modifications after e.g. any SAVEPOINT
or ROLLBACK statements will correspondingly push or pop variable mod-
ifications onto an internal stack such that the behavior of changed
values across the cluster will be identical to such behavior on e.g.
single-node PostgreSQL (or equivalently, what values are visible to
the end user by running SHOW on such variables on the coordinator).
If nodes enter the set of participants at some point after SET LOCAL
modifications (or SAVEPOINT, ROLLBACK, etc.) have occurred, the SET
variable state is eagerly propagated to them upon their entrance (this
is identical to, and indeed just augments, the existing logic for the
propagation of the SAVEPOINT "stack").
A new GUC (citus.propagate_set_commands) has been added to control this
behavior. Though the code suggests the valid settings are 'none', 'local',
'session', and 'all', only 'none' (the default) and 'local' are presently
implemented: attempting to use other values will result in an error.
This is a preperation for the new executor, where creating shards
would go through the executor. So, explicitly generate the commands
for further processing.
If a query is router executable, it hits a single shard and therefore has a
single task associated with it. Therefore there is no need to sort the task list
that has a single element.
Also we already have a list of active shard placements, sending it in param
and reuse it.
If replication factor eqauls to 2 and there are two worker nodes,
even if two modifications hit different shards, Citus doesn't use
2PC. The reason is that it doesn't fit into the definition of
"expanding participating worker nodes".
Thus, we're simply fixing the test to fit in the comment
on top of it.
InitializeCaches() method may prematurely set
performedInitialization without actually creating
DistShardCacheHash.
Fix makes sure flag is set only if DistShardCacheHash is created successfully.
Also introduced a new memory context to allocate aforementioned hash tables.
If allocation/initialization fails for any reason we make sure
memory is reclaimed by deleting the memory context.
Instead of scattering the code around, we move all the
logic into a single function.
This will help supporting foreign keys to reference tables
in the unified executor with a single line of change, just
calling this function.
The feature is only intended for getting consistent outputs for the regression tests.
RETURNING does not have any ordering gurantees and with unified executor, the ordering
of query executions on the shards are also becoming unpredictable. Thus, we're enforcing
ordering when a GUC is set.
We implicitly add an `ORDER BY` something equivalent of
`
RETURNING expr1, expr2, .. ,exprN
ORDER BY expr1, expr2, .. ,exprN
`
As described in the code comments as well, this is probably not the most
performant approach we could implement. However, since we're only
targeting regression tests, I don't see any issues with that. If we
decide to expand this to a feature to users, we should revisit the
implementation and improve the performance.
This commit has two goals:
(a) Ensure to access both edges of the allocated stack
(b) Ensure that any compiler optimizations to prevent the
function optimized away.
Stack size after the patch:
sudo grep -A 1 stack /proc/2119/smaps
7ffe305a6000-7ffe307a9000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack]
Size: 2060 kB
Stack size before the patch:
sudo grep -A 1 stack /proc/3610/smaps
7fff09957000-7fff09978000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack]
Size: 132 kB
We used to rely on PG function flatten_join_alias_vars
to resolve actual columns referenced in target entry list.
The function goes deep and finds the actual relation. This logic
usually works fine. However, when joins are given an alias, inner
relation names are not visible to target entry entry. Thus relation
resolving should stop when we the target entry column refers an
rte of an aliased join.
We stopped using PG function and provided our own flatten function.
Our assumption that strip_implicit_coercions would leave us with a bi-
nary-compatible type to that of the partition key was wrong. Instead,
we should ensure the RHS of the comparison we perform is proactively
coerced into a compatible type (at least binary compatible).
At configuration reload, we free all "global" (i.e. GUC-set) connection
parameters, but these may still have live references in the connection
parameters hash. By marking the entries as invalid, we can ensure they
will not be used after free.
Having DATA-segment string literals made blindly freeing the keywords/
values difficult, so I've switched to allocating all in the provided
context; because of this (and with the knowledge of the end point of
the global parameters), we can safely pfree non-global parameters when
we come across an invalid connection parameter entry.
Do it in two ways (a) re-use the rte list as much as possible instead of
re-calculating over and over again (b) Limit the recursion to the relevant
parts of the query tree
Before this commit, shardPlacements were identified with shardId, nodeName
and nodeport. Instead of using nodeName and nodePort, we now use nodeId
since it apparently has performance benefits in several places in the
code.
The rule for infinite recursion is the following:
- If the query contains a subquery which is recursively planned, and
no other subqueries can be recursively planned due to correlation
(e.g., LATERAL joins), the planner keeps recursing again and again.
One interesting thing here is that even if a subquery contains only intermediate
result(s), we re-recursively plan that. In the end, the logic in the code does the following:
- Try recursive planning any of the subqueries in the query tree
- If any subquery is recursively planned, call the planner again
where the subquery is replaced with the intermediate result.
- Try recursively planning any of the queries
- If any subquery is recursively planned, call the planner again
where the subquery (in this case it is already intermediate result)
is replaced with the intermediate result.
- Try recursively planning any of the queries
- If any subquery is recursively planned, call the planner again
where the subquery (in this case it is already intermediate result)
is replaced with the intermediate result.
- Try recursively planning any of the queries
- If any subquery is recursively planned, call the planner again
where the subquery (in this case it is already intermediate result)
is replaced with the intermediate result.
......
Following scenario resulted in distributed deadlock before this commit:
CREATE TABLE partitioning_test(id int, time date) PARTITION BY RANGE (time);
CREATE TABLE partitioning_test_2009 (LIKE partitioning_test);
CREATE TABLE partitioning_test_reference(id int PRIMARY KEY, subid int);
SELECT create_distributed_table('partitioning_test_2009', 'id'),
create_distributed_table('partitioning_test', 'id'),
create_reference_table('partitioning_test_reference');
ALTER TABLE partitioning_test ADD CONSTRAINT partitioning_reference_fkey FOREIGN KEY (id) REFERENCES partitioning_test_reference(id) ON DELETE CASCADE;
ALTER TABLE partitioning_test_2009 ADD CONSTRAINT partitioning_reference_fkey_2009 FOREIGN KEY (id) REFERENCES partitioning_test_reference(id) ON DELETE CASCADE;
ALTER TABLE partitioning_test ATTACH PARTITION partitioning_test_2009 FOR VALUES FROM ('2009-01-01') TO ('2010-01-01');
Since flattening query may flatten outer joins' columns into coalesce expr that is
in the USING part, and that was not expected before this commit, these queries were
erroring out. It is fixed by this commit with considering coalesce expression as well.
We'd been ignoring updating uncrustify for some time now because I'd
thought these were misclassifications that would require an update in
our rules to address. Turns out they're legit, so I'm checking them in.
The configuration for the build is in the YAML file; the changes to the
regression runner are backward-compatible with Travis and just add the
logic to detect whether our custom (isolation- and vanilla-enabled) pkg
is present.
Before this commit, round-robin task assignment policy was relying
on the taskId. Thus, even inside a transaction, the tasks were
assigned to different nodes. This was especially problematic
while reading from reference tables within transaction blocks.
Because, we had to expand the distributed transaction to many
nodes that are not necessarily already in the distributed transaction.
In this context, we define "Fast Path Planning for SELECT" as trivial
queries where Citus can skip relying on the standard_planner() and
handle all the planning.
For router planner, standard_planner() is mostly important to generate
the necessary restriction information. Later, the restriction information
generated by the standard_planner is used to decide whether all the shards
that a distributed query touches reside on a single worker node. However,
standard_planner() does a lot of extra things such as cost estimation and
execution path generations which are completely unnecessary in the context
of distributed planning.
There are certain types of queries where Citus could skip relying on
standard_planner() to generate the restriction information. For queries
in the following format, Citus does not need any information that the
standard_planner() generates:
SELECT ... FROM single_table WHERE distribution_key = X; or
DELETE FROM single_table WHERE distribution_key = X; or
UPDATE single_table SET value_1 = value_2 + 1 WHERE distribution_key = X;
Note that the queries might not be as simple as the above such that
GROUP BY, WINDOW FUNCIONS, ORDER BY or HAVING etc. are all acceptable. The
only rule is that the query is on a single distributed (or reference) table
and there is a "distribution_key = X;" in the WHERE clause. With that, we
could use to decide the shard that a distributed query touches reside on
a worker node.
Failure&Cancellation tests for initial start_metadata_sync() calls
to worker and DDL queries that send metadata syncing messages to an MX node
Also adds message type definitions for messages that are exchanged
during metadata syncing
-
We used to error out if there is a reference table
in the query participating a union. This has caused
pushdownable queries to be evaluated in coordinator.
Now we let reference tables inside union queries as long
as there is a distributed table in from clause.
Existing join checks (reference table on the outer part)
sufficient enought that we do not need check the join relation
of reference tables.
Previously we allowed task assignment policy to have affect on router queries
with only intermediate results. However, that is erroneous since the code-path
that assigns placements relies on shardIds and placements, which doesn't exists
for intermediate results.
With this commit, we do not apply task assignment policies when a router query
hits only intermediate results.
PG recently started propagating foreign key constraints
to partition tables. This came with a select query
to validate the the constaint.
We are already setting sequential mode execution for this
command. In order for validation select query to respect
this setting we need to explicitly set the GUC.
This commit also handles detach partition part.
We update column attributes of various clauses for a query
inluding target columns, select clauses when we introduce
new range table entries in the query.
It seems having clause column attributes were not updated.
This fix resolves the issue
We had recently fixed a spinlock issue due to functions
failing, but spinlock is not being released.
This is the continuation of that work to eliminate possible
regression of the issue. Function calls that are moved out of
spinlock scope are macros and plain type casting. However,
depending on the configuration they have an alternate implementation
in PG source that performs memory allocation.
This commit moves last bit of codes to out of spinlock for completion purposes.
We were establishing connections synchronously. Establishing
connections asynchronously results in some parallelization, saving
hundreds of milliseconds.
In a test I did, this decreased the query time from 150ms to 40ms.
A spinlock is not released when an exception is thrown after
spinlock is acquired. This has caused infinite wait and eventual
crash in maintenance daemon.
This work moves the code than can fail to the outside of spinlock
scope so that in the case of failure spinlock is not left locked
since it was not locked in the first place.
Postgresql loads shared libraries before calculating MaxBackends.
However, Citus relies on MaxBackends being set. Thus, with this
commit we use the same steps to calculate MaxBackends while
Citus is being loaded (e.g., PG_Init is called).
Note that this is safe since all the elements that are used to
calculate MaxBackends are PGC_POSTMASTER gucs and a constant
value.
We disable bunch of planning options on the workers. This might be
risky if any concurrent test relies on EXPLAIN OUTPUT as well. Still,
we want to keep this test, so we should try to not parallelize this
test with such test.
Before this commit, Citus supported INSERT...SELECT queries with
ON CONFLICT or RETURNING clauses only for pushdownable ones, since
queries supported via coordinator were utilizing COPY infrastructure
of PG to send selected tuples to the target worker nodes.
After this PR, INSERT...SELECT queries with ON CONFLICT or RETURNING
clauses will be performed in two phases via coordinator. In the first
phase selected tuples will be saved to the intermediate table which
is colocated with target table of the INSERT...SELECT query. Note that,
a utility function to save results to the colocated intermediate result
also implemented as a part of this commit. In the second phase, INSERT..
SELECT query is directly run on the worker node using the intermediate
table as the source table.
When initializing a Citus formation automatically from an external piece of
software such as Citus-HA, the following process process may be used:
- decide on the groupId in the external software
- SELECT * FROM master_add_inactive_node('localhost', 9701, groupid => X)
When Citus checks for maxGroupId, it forbids other software to pick their
own group Ids to ues with the master_add_inactive_node() API.
This patch removes the extra testing around maxGroupId.
Description: Support round-robin `task_assignment_policy` for queries to reference tables.
This PR allows users to query multiple placements of shards in a round robin fashion. When `citus.task_assignment_policy` is set to `'round-robin'` the planner will use a round robin scheduling feature when multiple shard placements are available.
The primary use-case is spreading the load of reference table queries to all the nodes in the cluster instead of hammering only the first placement of the reference table. Since reference tables share the same path for selecting the shards with single shard queries that have multiple placements (`citus.shard_replication_factor > 1`) this setting also allows users to spread the query load on these shards.
For modifying queries we do not apply a round-robin strategy. This would be negated by an extra reordering step in the executor for such queries where a `first-replica` strategy is enforced.
The file handling the utility functions (DDL) for citus organically grew over time and became unreasonably large. This refactor takes that file and refactored the functionality into separate files per command. Initially modeled after the directory and file layout that can be found in postgres.
Although the size of the change is quite big there are barely any code changes. Only one two functions have been added for readability purposes:
- PostProcessIndexStmt which is extracted from PostProcessUtility
- PostProcessAlterTableStmt which is extracted from multi_ProcessUtility
A README.md has been added to `src/backend/distributed/commands` describing the contents of the module and every file in the module.
We need more documentation around the overloading of the COPY command, for now the boilerplate has been added for people with better knowledge to fill out.
Each PostgreSQL backend starts with a predefined amount of stack and this stack
size can be increased if there is a need. However, stack size increase during
high memory load may cause unexpected crashes, because if there is not enough
memory for stack size increase, there is nothing to do for process apart from
crashing. An interesting thing is; the process would get OOM error instead of
crash, if the process had an explicit memory request (with palloc) for example.
However, in the case of stack size increase, there is no system call to get OOM
error, so the process simply crashes.
With this change, we are increasing the stack size explicitly by requesting extra
memory from the stack, so that, even if there is not memory, we can at least get
an OOM instead of a crash.
In recent postgres builds you cannot set client_min_messages to
values higher then ERROR, if will silently set it to ERROR if so.
During some tests we would set it to fatal to hide random values
(eg. pid's of processes) from the test output. This patch will use
different tactics for hiding these values.
After Fast ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN with a non-NULL default in PG11, physical heaps might not contain all attributes after a ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN happens. heap_getattr() returns NULL when the physical tuple doesn't contain an attribute. So we should use heap_deform_tuple() in these cases, which fills in the missing attributes.
Our catalog tables evolve over time, and an upgrade might involve some ALTER TABLE ADD COLUMN commands.
Note that we don't need to worry about postgres catalog tables and we can use heap_getattr() for them, because they only change between major versions.
This also fixes#2453.