Fixes#302
Since our previous syntax did not allow creating hash partitioned tables,
some of the previous tests manually changed partition method to hash to
be able to test it. With this change we remove unnecessary workaround and
create hash distributed tables instead. Also in some tests metadata was
created manually. With this change we also fixed this issue.
Fixes#475
With this change we prevent addition of ONLY clause to queries prepared for
worker nodes. When we add ONLY clause we may miss the inherited tables in
worker nodes created by users manually.
When executing queries with citus.task_executor = 'real-time', query
execution could, so far, spend a significant amount of time
sleeping. That's because we were
a) sleeping after several phases of query execution, even if we're not
waiting for network IO
b) sleeping for a fixed amount of time when waiting for network IO;
often a lot longer than actually required.
Just reducing the amount of time slept isn't a real solution, because
that just increases CPU usage.
Instead have the real-time executor's ManageTaskExecution return whether
a task is currently being processed, waiting for reads or writes, or
failed. When all tasks are waiting for IO use poll() to wait for IO
readyness.
That requires to slightly redefine how connection timeouts are handled:
before we counted the number of times ManageTaskExecution() was called,
and compared that with the timeout divided by the task check
interval. That, if processing of tasks took a while, could significantly
increase the time till a timeout occurred. Because it was based on the
ManageTaskExecution() being called on a constant interval, this approach
isn't feasible anymore. Instead measure the actual time since
connection establishment was started. That could in theory, if task
processing takes a very long time, lead to few passes over
PQconnectPoll().
The problem of sleeping too much also exists for the 'task-tracker'
executor, but is generally less problematic there, as processing the
individual tasks usually will take longer. That said, for e.g. the
regression tests it'd be helpful to use a similar approach.
Single table repartition subqueries now support count(distinct column)
and count(distinct (case when ...)) expressions. Repartition query
extracts column used in aggregate expression and adds them to target
list and group by list, master query stays the same (count (distinct ...))
but attribute numbers inside the aggregate expression is modified to
reflect changes in repartition query.
Now, master_create_empty_shard() will create shards according to the
value of citus.shard_placement_policy which also makes default round-robin
instead of random.
Fixes#10
This change creates a new UDF: master_modify_multiple_shards
Parameters:
modify_query: A simple DELETE or UPDATE query as a string.
The UDF is similar to the existing master_apply_delete_command UDF.
Basically, given the modify query, it prunes the shard list, re-constructs
the query for each shard and sends the query to the placements.
Depending on the value of citus.multi_shard_commit_protocol, the commit
can be done in one-phase or two-phase manner.
Limitations:
* It cannot be called inside a transaction block
* It only be called with simple operator expressions (like Single Shard Modify)
Sample Usage:
```
SELECT master_modify_multiple_shards(
'DELETE FROM customer_delete_protocol WHERE c_custkey > 500 AND c_custkey < 500');
```
Make's $(wildcard) does not sort the glob result, but returns filenames
in filesystem ordering. This makes the build result vary and hence
unreproducible on the binary level. Fix by adding $(sort).
Spotted by Debian's reproducible builds project.
This commit fixes failures happen during check-full. The change does make
clean seperation of executor types in certain places to keep the outputs
stable.
Now, we can copy to an append-partitioned distributed relation from
any worker node by providing master options such as;
COPY relation_name FROM file_path WITH (delimiter '|', master_host 'localhost', master_port 5432);
where master_port is optional and default is 5432.
Based on Andres' suggestion, I removed SetConnectionStatus, moving its
functionality directly into set_connection_status_bad, which now simply
shuts down the socket underlying a particular connection.
This keeps the functionality as-is while removing our questionable use
of internal libpq headers.
Fixes#477
This change fixes the compile time warning message in BuildMapMergeJob in
multi_physical_planner.c about mixed declarations and code. Basically, the
problematic declaration is moved up so that no expression is before it.
Allow references to columns in UPDATE statements
Queries like "UPDATE tbl SET column = column + 1" are now allowed, so long as you don't use any IMMUTABLE functions.
This change renames the distributed transaction manager parameter from
citus.copy_transaction_manager to citus.multi_shard_commit_protocol.
Distributed transaction manager has been used only by the COPY on hash
partitioned tables but it can be used by upcoming features so, we needed
to rename so that its name do not contain a reference to COPY.
The change also includes renames like transaction_manager_options to
commit_protocol_options and TRANSACTION_MANAGER_1PC to COMMIT_PROTOCOL_1PC.
With this change, declaration of MultiShardCommitProtocol (was
CopyTransactionManager) is moved from multi_copy.c to multi_transaction.c.
Currently that's just COPY FROM. There's other places where we could
check for permissions earlier (to fail less verbosely), but since
there's other pending changes in the whole DDL area, which is affected
by this, I'm just adding a note to those places.
That's important because ownership of relations implies special
privileges. Without this change, a distributed table can be accessible
by a table's owner, but a shard created by another user might not.
Some small parts of citus currently require superuser privileges; which
is obviously not desirable for production scenarios. Run these small
parts under superuser privileges (we use the extension owner) to avoid
that.
This does not yet coordinate grants between master and workers. Thus it
allows to create shards, load data, and run queries as a non-superuser,
but it is not easily possible to allow differentiated accesses to
several users.
\stage so far directly inserted into pg_dist_shard and
pg_dist_shard_placement. That makes it hard to do effective permission
checks. Thus move the inserts into two C functions.
These two new functions aren't the nicest abstraction. But as we are
planning to obsolete \stage, it doesn't seem worthwhile to refactor the
client-side code of \stage to allow the use of
master_create_empty_shard() et al.
Previously several commands, amongst them commands like
master_create_distributed_table(), were allowed for everyone. That's not
good: Even though citus currently requires superuser permissions, we
shouldn't allow non-superusers to perform actions as sensitive as making
a table distributed.
There's no checks on the worker_* functions, as these usually just punt
the action to underlying postgres functionality, which then perform the
necessary checks.
Citus' extension version now has a -$schemaversion appendix. When the
schema is changed, a new schema version has to be added; changes to the
same schema version several commits inside a single pull request are ok.
Schema migration scripts between each schema version have to be
added. To ensure upgrade scripts work correctly a new regression test
ensures that all steps work.
The extension scripts to-be-used for CREATE EXTENSION (i.e. not
extension updates) are generated by concatenating citus.sql and the
relevant migration scripts.
Otherwise the owner of relations and such will depend on the username of
the user running the regression tests. As "postgres" is the most common
username for that purpose, hardcode that in pg_regress_multi.pl.
So far we've always used libpq defaults when connecting to workers; bar
special environment variables being set that'll always be the user that
started the server. That's not desirable because it prevents using
users with fewer privileges.
Thus change the various APIs creating connections to workers to always
use usernames. That means:
1) MultiClientConnect() needs to, optionally, accept a username
2) GetOrEstablishConnection(), including the underlying cache, need to
use the current user as part of the connection cache key. That way
connections for separate users are distinct, and we always use one
with the correct authorization.
3) The task tracker needs to keep track of the username associated with
a task, so it can use it when establishing connections outside the
originating session.
This commit adds a fast shard pruning path for INSERTs on
hash-partitioned tables. The rationale behind this change is
that if there exists a sorted shard interval array, a single
index lookup on the array allows us to find the corresponding
shard interval. As mentioned above, we need a sorted
(wrt shardminvalue) shard interval array. Thus, this commit
updates shardIntervalArray to sortedShardIntervalArray in the
metadata cache. Then uses the low-level API that is defined in
multi_copy to handle the fast shard pruning.
The performance impact of this change is more apparent as more
shards exist for a distributed table. Previous implementation
was relying on linear search through the shard intervals. However,
this commit relies on constant lookup time on shard interval
array. Thus, the shard pruning becomes less dependent on the
shard count.
When we notice that pg_dist_partition is being invalidated we assume
that the citus extension is being dropped and drop state such as
extensionLoaded and the cached oids of all the metadata tables.
This frees the user from needing to reconnect after running DROP
EXTENSION, so we also no longer send a warning message.
- non-router plannable queries can be executed
by router executor if they satisfy the criteria
- router executor is removed from configuration,
now task executor can not be set to router
- removed some tests that error out for router executor