This UDF coordinates connectivity checks accross the whole cluster.
This UDF gets the list of active readable nodes in the cluster, and
coordinates all connectivity checks in sequential order.
The algorithm is:
for sourceNode in activeReadableWorkerList:
c = connectToNode(sourceNode)
for targetNode in activeReadableWorkerList:
result = c.execute(
"SELECT citus_check_connection_to_node(targetNode.name,
targetNode.port")
emit sourceNode.name,
sourceNode.port,
targetNode.name,
targetNode.port,
result
- result -> true -> connection attempt from source to target succeeded
- result -> false -> connection attempt from source to target failed
- result -> NULL -> connection attempt from the current node to source node failed
I suggest you use the following query to get an overview on the connectivity:
SELECT bool_and(COALESCE(result, false))
FROM citus_check_cluster_node_health();
Whenever this query returns false, there is a connectivity issue, check in detail.
PostgreSQL does not need calling this function since 7.4 release, and it
is a NOOP.
For more details, check PostgreSQL commit below :
commit dd04e958c8b03c0f0512497651678c7816af3198
Author: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Date: Sun Mar 9 03:34:10 2003 +0000
tuplestore_donestoring() isn't needed anymore, but provide a no-op
macro definition so as not to create compatibility problems.
diff --git a/src/include/utils/tuplestore.h b/src/include/utils/tuplestore.h
index b46babacd1..76fe9fb428 100644
--- a/src/include/utils/tuplestore.h
+++ b/src/include/utils/tuplestore.h
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2002, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
- * $Id: tuplestore.h,v 1.8 2003/03/09 02:19:13 tgl Exp $
+ * $Id: tuplestore.h,v 1.9 2003/03/09 03:34:10 tgl Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
@@ -41,6 +41,9 @@ extern Tuplestorestate *tuplestore_begin_heap(bool randomAccess,
extern void tuplestore_puttuple(Tuplestorestate *state, void *tuple);
+/* tuplestore_donestoring() used to be required, but is no longer used */
+#define tuplestore_donestoring(state) ((void) 0)
+
/* backwards scan is only allowed if randomAccess was specified 'true' */
extern void *tuplestore_gettuple(Tuplestorestate *state, bool forward,
bool *should_free);
Since sequences are not marked as distributed while creating table if no
metadata worker node exists, we are marking all sequences distributed
while syncing metadata explicitly.
We've both allowed delegating functions and procedures from worker nodes
and also prevented delegation if a function/procedure has already been
propagated from another node.
Before that PR we were updating citus.pg_dist_object metadata, which keeps
the metadata related to objects on Citus, only on the coordinator node. In
order to allow using those object from worker nodes (or erroring out with
proper error message) we've started to propagate that metedata to worker
nodes as well.
citus_check_connection_to_node runs a simple query on a remote node and
reports whether this attempt was successful.
This UDF will be used to make sure each worker node can connect to all
the worker nodes in the cluster.
parameters:
nodename: required
nodeport: optional (default: 5432)
return value:
boolean success
As of master branch, Citus does all the modifications to replicated tables
(e.g., reference tables and distributed tables with replication factor > 1),
via 2PC and avoids any shardstate=3. As a side-effect of those changes,
handling node failures for replicated tables change.
With this PR, when one (or multiple) node failures happen, the users would
see query errors on modifications. If the problem is intermitant, that's OK,
once the node failure(s) recover by themselves, the modification queries would
succeed. If the node failure(s) are permenant, the users should call
`SELECT citus_disable_node(...)` to disable the node. As soon as the node is
disabled, modification would start to succeed. However, now the old node gets
behind. It means that, when the node is up again, the placements should be
re-created on the node. First, use `SELECT citus_activate_node()`. Then, use
`SELECT replicate_table_shards(...)` to replicate the missing placements on
the re-activated node.
With this commit, we make sure to use a dedicated connection per
node for all the metadata operations within the same transaction.
This is needed because the same metadata (e.g., metadata includes
the distributed table on the workers) can be modified accross
multiple connections.
With this connection we guarantee that there is a single metadata connection.
But note that this connection can be used for any other operation.
In other words, this connection is not only reserved for metadata
operations.
The checks for preventing to remove a node are very much reference
table centric. We are soon going to add the same checks for replicated
tables. So, make the checks generic such that:
(a) replicated tables fit naturally
(b) we can the same checks in `citus_disable_node`.
We re-define the meaning of active shard placement. It used
to only be defined via shardstate == SHARD_STATE_ACTIVE.
Now, we also add one more check. The worker node that the
placement is on should be active as well.
This is a preparation for supporting citus_disable_node()
for MX with multiple failures at the same time.
With this change, the maintanince daemon only needs to
sync the "node metadata" (e.g., pg_dist_node), not the
shard metadata.
Before this commit, we acquire the metadata locks on the reference
tables while removing/disabling a node on all the MX nodes.
Although it has some marginal benefits, such as a concurrent
modification during remove/disable node blocks, instead of erroring
out, the drawbacks seems worse. Both citus_remove_node and citus_disable_node
are not tolerant to multiple node failures.
With this commit, we relax the locks. The implication is that while
a node is removed/disabled, users might see query errors. On the
other hand, this change becomes removing/disabling nodes more
tolerant to multiple node failures.
During pg upgrades, we have seen that it is not guaranteed that a
columnar table will be created after metadata objects got created.
Prior to changes done in this commit, we had such a dependency
relationship in `pg_depend`:
```
columnar_table ----> columnarAM ----> citus extension
^ ^
| |
columnar.storage_id_seq -------------------- |
|
columnar.stripe -------------------------------
```
Since `pg_upgrade` just knows to follow topological sort of the objects
when creating database dump, above dependency graph doesn't imply that
`columnar_table` should be created before metadata objects such as
`columnar.storage_id_seq` and `columnar.stripe` are created.
For this reason, with this commit we add new records to `pg_depend` to
make columnarAM depending on all rel objects living in `columnar`
schema. That way, `pg_upgrade` will know it needs to create those before
creating `columnarAM`, and similarly, before creating any tables using
`columnarAM`.
Note that in addition to inserting those records via installation script,
we also do the same in `citus_finish_pg_upgrade()`. This is because,
`pg_upgrade` rebuilds catalog tables in the new cluster and that means,
we must insert them in the new cluster too.
- [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
We recently introduced a set of patches to 10.2, and introduced 10.2-4
migration version. This migration version only resides on `release-10.2`
branch, and is missing on our default branch. This creates a problem
because we do not have a valid migration path from 10.2 to latest 11.0.
To remedy this issue, I copied the relevant migration files from
`release-10.2` branch, and renamed some of our migration files on
default branch to make sure we have a linear upgrade path.
Before this commit, we required the user to be owner of the shard/table
in order to call lock_shard_resources.
However, that is too restrictive. We can have users with GRANTS
to the table who are not owners of the tables/shards.
With this commit, we allow such patterns.
This change creates a slightly higher abstraction of the `PartitionedResultDestReceiver` where it decouples the partitioning from writing it to a file. This allows for easier reuse for other `DestReceiver`'s that would like to route different tuples to different `DestReceiver`'s.
Originally there was a lot of state kept in `PartitionedResultDestReceiver` to be able to lazily create `FileDestReceivers` when the first tuple arrived for that target. This convoluted the implementation of the processing of tuples with where they should go.
This refactor changes that where it makes the `PartitionedResultDestReceiver` completely agnostic of what kind of Receivers it is writing to. When constructed you pass it a list of `DestReceiver` compatible pointers with the length of `partitionCount`. Internally the `PartitionedResultDestReceiver` keeps track of which `DestReceiver`'s have been started or not, and start them when they first receive a tuple.
Alternatively, if the instantiating code of the `PartitionedResultDestReceiver` wants, the startup can be turned from lazily to eagerly. When the startup is eager (not lazy) all `rStartup` functions on the list of `DestReceiver`'s are called during the startup of the `PartitionedResultDestReceiver` and marked as such.
A downside of this approach is the following. On highly partitioned destinations we now need to allocate a `FileDestReceiver` for every target, _always_. When the data passed into the `PartitionedResultDestReceiver` is highly skewed to a small set of `FileDestReceiver`'s this will waste some memory. Given the small size of a `FileDestReceiver`, and the fact that actual file handles are only created during the processing of the startup of the `FileDestReceiver` I think this memory waste is not a problem. If this would become a problem we could refactor the source list into some kind of generator object which can generate the `DestReceiver`'s on the fly.
* Refactor some checks in citus local tables
* all existing citus local tables are auto converted after upgrade
* Update warning messages in CreateCitusLocalTable
* Hide notice msg for auto converting local tables
* Hide hint msg
Co-authored-by: Ahmet Gedemenli <afgedemenli@gmail.com>
Clang 13 complains about a suspicious string concatenation. It thinks we
might have missed a comma. This adds parentheses to make it clear that
concatenation is indeed what we meant.
It seems like the decision for 2PC is more complicated than
it should be.
With this change, we do one behavioral change. In essense,
before this commit, when a SELECT task with replication factor > 1
is executed, the executor was triggering 2PC. And, in fact,
the transaction manager (`ConnectionModifiedPlacement()`) was
able to understand not to trigger 2PC when no modification happens.
However, for transaction blocks like:
BEGIN;
-- a command that triggers 2PC
-- A SELECT command on replication > 1
..
COMMIT;
The SELECT was used to be qualified as required 2PC. And, as a side-effect
the executor was setting `xactProperties.errorOnAnyFailure = true;`
So, the commands was failing at the time of execution. Now, they fail at
the end of the transaction.
In the past, we allowed users to manually switch to 1PC
(e.g., one phase commit). However, with this commit, we
don't. All multi-shard modifications are done via 2PC.
With Citus 9.0, we introduced `citus.single_shard_commit_protocol` which
defaults to 2PC.
With this commit, we prevent any user to set it to 1PC and drop support
for `citus.single_shard_commit_protocol`.
Although this might add some overhead for users, it is already the default
behaviour (so less likely) and marking placements as INVALID is much
worse.
- citus_get_all_dependencies_for_object: emulate what Citus
would qualify as
dependency when adding
a new node
- citus_get_dependencies_for_object: emulate what Citus would qualify
as dependency when creating an
object
Example use:
```SQL
-- find all the depedencies of table test
SELECT
pg_identify_object(t.classid, t.objid, t.objsubid)
FROM
(SELECT * FROM pg_get_object_address('table', '{test}', '{}')) as addr
JOIN LATERAL
citus_get_all_dependencies_for_object(addr.classid, addr.objid, addr.objsubid) as t(classid oid, objid oid, objsubid int)
ON TRUE
ORDER BY 1;
```
Add/fix tests
Fix creating partitions
Add test for mx - partition creating case
Enable cascading to partitioned tables
Fix mx partition adding test
Fix cascading through fkeys
Style
Disable converting with non-inherited fkeys
Fix detach bug
Early return in case of cascade & Add tests
Style
Fix undistribute_table bug & Fix test outputs
Remove RemovePartitionRelationIds
Test with undistribute_table
Add test for mx+convert+undistribute
Remove redundant usage of CreatePartitionedCitusLocalTable
Add some comments
Introduce bulk functions for generating attach/detach partition commands
Fix: Convert partitioned tables after adding fkey
Change the error message for partitions
Introduce function ErrorIfPartitionTableAddedToMetadata
Polish attach/detach command generation functions
Use time_partitions for testing
Move mx tests to citus_local_tables_mx
Add new partitioned table to cascade test
Add test with time series management UDFs
Fix test output
Fix: Assertion fail on relation access tracking
Style
Refactor creating partitioned citus local tables
Remove CreatePartitionedCitusLocalTable
Style
Error out if converting multi-level table
Revert some old tests
Error out adding partitioned partition
Polish
Polish/address
Fix create table partition of case
Use CascadeOperationForRelationIdList if no cascade needed
Fix create partition bug
Revert / Add new tests to mx
Style
Fix dropping fkey bug
Add test with IF NOT EXISTS
Convert to CLT when doing ATTACH PARTITION
Add comments
Add more tests with time series management
Edit the error message for converting the child
Use OR instead of AND in ErrorIfUnsupportedAlterTableStmt
Edit/improve tests
Disable ddl prop when dropping default column definitions
Disable/enable ddl prop just before/after the command
Add comment
Add sequence test
Add trigger test
Remove NeedCascadeViaForeignKeys
Add one more insert to sequence test
Add comment
Style
Fix test output shard ids
Update comments
Disable creating fkey on partitions
Move partition check to CreateCitusLocalTable
Add comment
Add check for attachingmulti-level partition
Add test for pg_constraint
Check pg_dist_partition in tests
Add test inserting on the worker
* Add udf to include shardId in broken partition shard index names
* Address reviews: rename index such that operations can be done on it
* More comprehensive index tests
* Final touches and formatting
* Make (columnar.stripe) first_row_number index a unique constraint
Since stripe_first_row_number_idx is required to scan a columnar
table, we need to make sure that it is created before doing anything
with columnar tables during pg upgrades.
However, a plain btree index is not a dependency of a table, so
pg_upgrade cannot guarantee that stripe_first_row_number_idx gets
created when creating columnar.stripe, unless we make it a unique
"constraint".
To do that, drop stripe_first_row_number_idx and create a unique
constraint with the same name to keep the code change at minimum.
* Add more pg upgrade tests for columnar
* Fix a logic error in uprade_columnar_after test
Co-authored-by: Onur Tirtir <onurcantirtir@gmail.com>
Since PG14 we can now use binary encoding for arrays and composite types
that contain user defined types. This was fixed in this commit in
Postgres: 670c0a1d47
This change starts using that knowledge, by not necessarily falling back
to text encoding anymore for those types.
While doing this and testing a bit more I found various cases where
binary encoding would fail that our checks didn't cover. This fixes
those cases and adds tests for those. It also fixes EXPLAIN ANALYZE
never using binary encoding, which was a leftover of workaround that
was not necessary anymore.
Finally, it changes the default for both `citus.enable_binary_protocol`
and `citus.binary_worker_copy_format` to `true` for PG14 and up. In our
cloud offering `binary_worker_copy_format` already was true by default.
`enable_binary_protocol` had some bug with MX and user defined types,
this bug was fixed by the above mentioned fixes.
- get_missing_time_partition_ranges: Gets the ranges of missing partitions for the given table, interval and range unless any existing partition conflicts with calculated missing ranges.
- create_time_partitions: Creates partitions by getting range values from get_missing_time_partition_ranges.
- drop_old_time_partitions: Drops partitions of the table older than given threshold.
In PG 14, procedures can have OUT parameters. In Citus' procedure
delegation framework, we need to adjust the function expression
to get the outargs parameters.
Releven PG change:
e56bce5d43
Simply call Postgres' function to report the progress on
each row recieved.
Note that we currently do not support "COPY dist/ref TO .." progress
report nicely. Citus has some specialized logic to support
"COPY dist/ref TO .." such that it either converts the underlying
command into "COPY (SELECT * FROM dist/ref ) ..." or sends COPY
command to shards directly. In the former case, "tuples_processed"
is only updated when the executor returns all the tuples, so the
progress is not accurate. In the latter case, Citus can actually
implement the progress report. But, for the sake of consistency,
we prefer to not implement at all.
Added to PG 14 with https://git.postgresql.org/gitweb/?p=postgresql.git;a=commitdiff;h=8a4f618e7ae3cb11b0b37d0f06f05c8ff905833f
Postgres changed stats expression types as of PG14. Hence we needed to
write the AppendColumnNames method. Also they removed the error on PG
side so we remove it as well.
Relevant commits on pg14:
a4d75c86bf15220df22de0a92c819ecef9db3849
388e75ad33489b77cfb9a8590a91e9287d8fb960