Commit Graph

56 Commits (a2debe0f0263b9d25757205c5e657ca280db6d9c)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Önder Kalacı dceaddbe4d
Remove real-time/router executors (step 1) (#3125)
See #3125 for details on each item.

* Remove real-time/router executor tests-1

These are the ones which doesn't have '_%d' in the test
output files.

* Remove real-time/router executor tests-2

These are the ones which has in the test
output files.

* Move the tests outputs to correct place

* Make sure that single shard commits use 2PC on adaptive executor

It looks like we've messed the tests in #2891. Fixing back.

* Use adaptive executor for all router queries

This becomes important because when task-tracker is picked, we
used to pick router executor, which doesn't make sense.

* Remove explicit references to real-time/router executors in the tests

* JobExecutorType never picks real-time/router executors

* Make sure to go incremental in test output numbers

* Even users cannot pick real-time anymore

* Do not use real-time/router custom scans

* Get rid of unnecessary normalizations

* Reflect unneeded normalizations

* Get rid of unnecessary test output file
2019-10-25 10:54:54 +02:00
Onder Kalaci 219f3676a0 Improve some tests around local execution and CTE inlining on pg 12 2019-09-25 10:53:19 +02:00
Hadi Moshayedi 48078a30e6 Fix wait_until_metadata_sync() for postgres 12.
Postgres 12 now has an assertion that the calls to WaitLatchOrSocket
handle postmaster death.
2019-09-23 14:15:35 -07:00
Philip Dubé 06faba91c0 Include ifdefs for pg12 API changes, update local_shard_executiuon test to avoid CTE inlining 2019-09-23 20:22:35 +00:00
Jelte Fennema e4cfea3751 Correctly add schema when distributing sequence definitons
Fixes 2958
2019-09-13 17:19:35 +02:00
Onder Kalaci 0b0c779c77 Introduce the concept of Local Execution
/*
 * local_executor.c
 *
 * The scope of the local execution is locally executing the queries on the
 * shards. In other words, local execution does not deal with any local tables
 * that are not shards on the node that the query is being executed. In that sense,
 * the local executor is only triggered if the node has both the metadata and the
 * shards (e.g., only Citus MX worker nodes).
 *
 * The goal of the local execution is to skip the unnecessary network round-trip
 * happening on the node itself. Instead, identify the locally executable tasks and
 * simply call PostgreSQL's planner and executor.
 *
 * The local executor is an extension of the adaptive executor. So, the executor uses
 * adaptive executor's custom scan nodes.
 *
 * One thing to note that Citus MX is only supported with replication factor = 1, so
 * keep that in mind while continuing the comments below.
 *
 * On the high level, there are 3 slightly different ways of utilizing local execution:
 *
 * (1) Execution of local single shard queries of a distributed table
 *
 *      This is the simplest case. The executor kicks at the start of the adaptive
 *      executor, and since the query is only a single task the execution finishes
 *      without going to the network at all.
 *
 *      Even if there is a transaction block (or recursively planned CTEs), as long
 *      as the queries hit the shards on the same, the local execution will kick in.
 *
 * (2) Execution of local single queries and remote multi-shard queries
 *
 *      The rule is simple. If a transaction block starts with a local query execution,
 *      all the other queries in the same transaction block that touch any local shard
 *      have to use the local execution. Although this sounds restrictive, we prefer to
 *      implement in this way, otherwise we'd end-up with as complex scenarious as we
 *      have in the connection managements due to foreign keys.
 *
 *      See the following example:
 *      BEGIN;
 *          -- assume that the query is executed locally
 *          SELECT count(*) FROM test WHERE key = 1;
 *
 *          -- at this point, all the shards that reside on the
 *          -- node is executed locally one-by-one. After those finishes
 *          -- the remaining tasks are handled by adaptive executor
 *          SELECT count(*) FROM test;
 *
 *
 * (3) Modifications of reference tables
 *
 *		Modifications to reference tables have to be executed on all nodes. So, after the
 *		local execution, the adaptive executor keeps continuing the execution on the other
 *		nodes.
 *
 *		Note that for read-only queries, after the local execution, there is no need to
 *		kick in adaptive executor.
 *
 *  There are also few limitations/trade-offs that is worth mentioning. First, the
 *  local execution on multiple shards might be slow because the execution has to
 *  happen one task at a time (e.g., no parallelism). Second, if a transaction
 *  block/CTE starts with a multi-shard command, we do not use local query execution
 *  since local execution is sequential. Basically, we do not want to lose parallelism
 *  across local tasks by switching to local execution. Third, the local execution
 *  currently only supports queries. In other words, any utility commands like TRUNCATE,
 *  fails if the command is executed after a local execution inside a transaction block.
 *  Forth, the local execution cannot be mixed with the executors other than adaptive,
 *  namely task-tracker, real-time and router executors. Finally, related with the
 *  previous item, COPY command cannot be mixed with local execution in a transaction.
 *  The implication of that any part of INSERT..SELECT via coordinator cannot happen
 *  via the local execution.
 */
2019-09-12 11:51:25 +02:00