Commit Graph

5 Commits (ac14b2edbccacc5f2843acdedbd5c046abf08ecf)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andres Freund ac14b2edbc
Support PostgreSQL 9.6
Adds support for PostgreSQL 9.6 by copying in the requisite ruleutils
file and refactoring the out/readfuncs code to flexibly support the
old-style copy/pasted out/readfuncs (prior to 9.6) or use extensible
node APIs (in 9.6 and higher).

Most version-specific code within this change is only needed to set new
fields in the AggRef nodes we build for aggregations. Version-specific
test output files were added in certain cases, though in most they were
not necessary. Each such file begins by e.g. printing the major version
in order to clarify its purpose.

The comment atop citus_nodes.h details how to add support for new nodes
for when that becomes necessary.
2016-10-18 16:23:55 -06:00
Jason Petersen 0caf0d95f1
Fix unique-violation-in-xact segfault
An interaction between ReraiseRemoteError and DML transaction support
causes segfaults:

  * ReraiseRemoteError calls PurgeConnection, freeing a connection...
  * That connection is still in the xactParticipantHash

At transaction end, the memory in the freed connection might happen to
pass the "is this connection OK?" check, causing us to try to send an
ABORT over that connection. By removing it from the transaction hash
before calling ReraiseRemoteError, we avoid this possibility.
2016-09-27 16:44:03 -06:00
Jason Petersen 74f4e0003b
Permit multiple DDL commands in a transaction
Three changes here to get to true multi-statement, multi-relation DDL
transactions (same functionality pre-5.2, with benefits of atomicity):

    1. Changed the multi-shard utility hook to always run (consistency
       with router executor hook, removes ad-hoc "installed" boolean)

    2. Change the global connection list in multi_shard_transaction to
       instead be a hash; update related functions to operate on global
       hash instead of local hash/global list

    3. Remove check within DDL code to prevent subsequent DDL commands;
       place unset/reset guard around call to ConnectToNode to permit
       connecting to additional nodes after DDL transaction has begun

In addition, code has been added to raise an error if a ROLLBACK TO
SAVEPOINT is attempted (similar to router executor), and comprehensive
tests execute all multi-DDL scenarios (full success, user ROLLBACK, any
actual errors (say, duplicate index), partial failure (duplicate index
on one node but not others), partial COMMIT (one node fails), and 2PC
partial PREPARE (one node fails)). Interleavings with other commands
(DML, \copy) are similarly all covered.
2016-09-08 22:35:55 -05:00
Jason Petersen 850c51947a
Re-permit DDL in transactions, selectively
Recent changes to DDL and transaction logic resulted in a "regression"
from the viewpoint of users. Previously, DDL commands were allowed in
multi-command transaction blocks, though they were not processed in any
actual transactional manner. We improved the atomicity of our DDL code,
but added a restriction that DDL commands themselves must not occur in
any BEGIN/END transaction block.

To give users back the original functionality (and improved atomicity)
we now keep track of whether a multi-command transaction has modified
data (DML) or schema (DDL). Interleaving the two modification types in
a single transaction is disallowed.

This first step simply permits a single DDL command in such a block,
admittedly an incomplete solution, but one which will permit us to add
full multi-DDL command support in a subsequent commit.
2016-08-30 20:37:19 -06:00
Jason Petersen 5d525fba24
Permit "single-shard" transactions
Allows the use of modification commands (INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE) within
transaction blocks (delimited by BEGIN and ROLLBACK/COMMIT), so long as
all modifications hit a subset of nodes involved in the first such com-
mand in the transaction. This does not circumvent the requirement that
each individual modification command must still target a single shard.

For instance, after sending BEGIN, a user might INSERT some rows to a
shard replicated on two nodes. Subsequent modifications can hit other
shards, so long as they are on one or both of these nodes.

SAVEPOINTs are supported, though if the user actually attempts to send
a ROLLBACK command that specifies a SAVEPOINT they will receive an
ERROR at the end of the topmost transaction.

Placements are only marked inactive if at least one replica succeeds
in a transaction where others fail. Non-atomic behavior is possible if
the shard targeted by the initial modification within a transaction has
a higher replication factor than another shard within the same block
and a node with the latter shard has a failure during the COMMIT phase.

Other methods of denoting transaction blocks (multi-statement commands
sent all at once and functions written in e.g. PL/pgSQL or other such
languages) are not presently supported; their treatment remains the
same as before.
2016-07-21 15:57:22 -06:00