Commit Graph

2 Commits (4a7a8b88359a83faceb5a0e2fd3c54776923f349)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Önder Kalacı 8c0bc94b51
Enable replication factor > 1 in metadata syncing (#5392)
- [x] Add some more regression test coverage
- [x] Make sure returning works fine in case of
     local execution + remote execution
     (task->partiallyLocalOrRemote works as expected, already added tests)
- [x] Implement locking properly (and add isolation tests)
     - [x] We do #shardcount round-trips on `SerializeNonCommutativeWrites`.
           We made it a single round-trip.
- [x] Acquire locks for subselects on the workers & add isolation tests
- [x] Add a GUC to prevent modification from the workers, hence increase the
      coordinator-only throughput
       - The performance slightly drops (~%15), unless
         `citus.allow_modifications_from_workers_to_replicated_tables`
         is set to false
2021-11-15 15:10:18 +03:00
SaitTalhaNisanci 8e5041885d Refactor isolation tests (#3062)
Currently in mx isolation tests the setup is the same except the creation of tables. Isolation framework lets us define multiple `setup` stages, therefore I thought that we can put the `mx_setup` to one file and prepend this prior to running tests. 

How the structure works:
- cpp is used before running isolation tests to preprocess spec files. This way we can include any file we want to. Currently this is used to include mx common part.
- spec files are put to `/build/specs` for clear separation between generated files and template files
- a symbolic link is created for `/expected` in `build/expected/`.
- when running isolation tests, as the `inputdir`, `build` is passed so it runs the spec files from `build/specs` and checks the expected output from `build/expected`.

`/specs` is renamed as `/spec` because postgres first look at the `specs` file under current directory, so this is renamed to avoid that since we are running the isolation tests from `build/specs` now.

Note: now we use `//` instead of `#` in comments in spec files, because cpp interprets `#` as a directive and it ignores `//`.
2019-12-10 16:12:54 +01:00