Test `tableam` expects that this CREATE TABLE statement:
`CREATE TABLE test_partitioned(id int, p int, val int) PARTITION BY
RANGE (p) USING fake_am;`
will produce this error:
`specifying a table access method is not supported on a partitioned
table`
but as of this PG commit it is possible to specify an access method
on a partitioned table:
https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git;a=commitdiff;h=374c7a229
This fix moves the CREATE TABLE statement to pg17, and adds an
additional test to show parent access method is inherited.
This commit is the second and last phase of dropping PG13 support.
It consists of the following:
- Removes all PG_VERSION_13 & PG_VERSION_14 from codepaths
- Removes pg_version_compat entries and columnar_version_compat entries
specific for PG13
- Removes alternative pg13 test outputs
- Removes PG13 normalize lines and fix the test outputs based on that
It is a continuation of 5bf163a27d
Changes test files in multi and multi-1 schedules such that they
accomodate coordinator in metadata.
Changes fall into the following buckets:
1. When coordinator is in metadata, reference table shards are present
in coordinator too.
This changes test outputs checking the table size, shard numbers etc.
for reference tables.
2. When coordinator is in metadata, postgres tables are converted to
citus local tables whenever a foreign key relationship to them is
created. This changes some test cases which tests it should not be
possible to create foreign keys to postgres tables.
3. Remove lines that add/remove coordinator for testing purposes.
The new shard copy code that was created for shard splits has some
advantages over the old shard copy code. The old code was using
worker_append_table_to_shard, which wrote to disk twice. And it also
didn't use binary copy when that was possible. Both of these issues
were fixed in the new copy code. This PR starts using this new copy
logic also for shard moves, not just for shard splits.
On my local machine I created a single shard table like this.
```sql
set citus.shard_count = 1;
create table t(id bigint, a bigint);
select create_distributed_table('t', 'id');
INSERT into t(id, a) SELECT i, i from generate_series(1, 100000000) i;
```
I then turned `fsync` off to make sure I wasn't bottlenecked by disk.
Finally I moved this shard between nodes with `citus_move_shard_placement`
with `block_writes`.
Before this PR a move took ~127s, after this PR it took only ~38s. So for this
small test this resulted in spending ~70% less time.
And I also tried the same test for a table that contained large strings:
```sql
set citus.shard_count = 1;
create table t(id bigint, a bigint, content text);
select create_distributed_table('t', 'id');
INSERT into t(id, a, content) SELECT i, i, 'aunethautnehoautnheaotnuhetnohueoutnehotnuhetncouhaeohuaeochgrhgd.athbetndairgexdbuhaobulrhdbaetoausnetohuracehousncaoehuesousnaceohuenacouhancoexdaseohusnaetobuetnoduhasneouhaceohusnaoetcuhmsnaetohuacoeuhebtokteaoshetouhsanetouhaoug.lcuahesonuthaseauhcoerhuaoecuh.lg;rcydabsnetabuesabhenth' from generate_series(1, 20000000) i;
```
* Remove if conditions with PG_VERSION_NUM < 13
* Remove server_above_twelve(&eleven) checks from tests
* Fix tests
* Remove pg12 and pg11 alternative test output files
* Remove pg12 specific normalization rules
* Some more if conditions in the code
* Change RemoteCollationIdExpression and some pg12/pg13 comments
* Remove some more normalization rules
* Add user-defined sequence support for MX
* Remove default part when propagating to workers
* Fix ALTER TABLE with sequences for mx tables
* Clean up and add tests
* Propagate DROP SEQUENCE
* Removing function parts
* Propagate ALTER SEQUENCE
* Change sequence type before propagation & cleanup
* Revert "Propagate ALTER SEQUENCE"
This reverts commit 2bef64c5a29f4e7224a7f43b43b88e0133c65159.
* Ensure sequence is not used in a different column with different type
* Insert select tests
* Propagate rename sequence stmt
* Fix issue with group ID cache invalidation
* Add ALTER TABLE ALTER COLUMN TYPE .. precaution
* Fix attnum inconsistency and add various tests
* Add ALTER SEQUENCE precaution
* Remove Citus hook
* More tests
Co-authored-by: Marco Slot <marco.slot@gmail.com>
* Move local execution after the remote execution
Before this commit, when both local and remote tasks
exist, the executor was starting the execution with
local execution. There is no strict requirements on
this.
Especially considering the adaptive connection management
improvements that we plan to roll soon, moving the local
execution after to the remote execution makes more sense.
The adaptive connection management for single node Citus
would look roughly as follows:
- Try to connect back to the coordinator for running
parallel queries.
- If succeeds, go on and execute tasks in parallel
- If fails, fallback to the local execution
So, we'll use local execution as a fallback mechanism. And,
moving it after to the remote execution allows us to implement
such further scenarios.