The first and main issue was that we were putting absolute pointers into
shared memory for the `steps` field of the `ProgressMonitorData`. This
pointer was being overwritten every time a process requested the monitor
steps, which is the only reason why this even worked in the first place.
To quote a part of a relevant stack overflow answer:
> First of all, putting absolute pointers in shared memory segments is
> terrible terible idea - those pointers would only be valid in the
> process that filled in their values. Shared memory segments are not
> guaranteed to attach at the same virtual address in every process.
> On the contrary - they attach where the system deems it possible when
> `shmaddr == NULL` is specified on call to `shmat()`
Source: https://stackoverflow.com/a/10781921/2570866
In this case a race condition occurred when a second process overwrote
the pointer in between the first process its write and read of the steps
field.
This issue is fixed by not storing the pointer in shared memory anymore.
Instead we now calculate it's position every time we need it.
The second race condition I have not been able to trigger, but I found
it while investigating this. This issue was that we published the handle
of the shared memory segment, before we initialized the data in the
steps. This means that during initialization of the data, a call to
`get_rebalance_progress()` could read partial data in an unsynchronized
manner.
With a recent commit, we made (644b266dee)
the behaviour of prepared statements for local cached plans has
slightly changed.
Now, Citus caches the plans when they are re-used. This make triggering
of local cached plans on the 7th execution, and 8th execution is the
first time the plan is used from the cached.
So, the tests are improved to cover 8th execution.
With local query caching, we try to avoid deparse/parse stages as the
operation is too costly.
However, we can do deparse/parse operations once per cached queries, right
before we put the plan into the cache. With that, we avoid edge
cases like (4239) or (5038).
In a sense, we are making the local plan caching behave similar for non-cached
local/remote queries, by forcing to deparse the query once.
Add basic index support for columnar tables.
This pr brings the support for following index/constraint types:
* btree indexes
* primary keys
* unique constraints / indexes
* exclusion constraints
* hash indexes
* partial indexes
* indexes including additional columns (INCLUDE syntax), even if we don't properly support index-only scans
A shard move would fail if there was an orphaned version of the shard on
the target node. With this change before actually fail, we try to clean
up orphaned shards to see if that fixes the issue.
Sometimes the background daemon doesn't cleanup orphaned shards quickly
enough. It's useful to have a UDF to trigger this removal when needed.
We already had a UDF like this but it was only used during testing. This
exposes that UDF to users. As a safety measure it cannot be run in a
transaction, because that would cause the background daemon to stop
cleaning up shards while this transaction is running.
* 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>
We have a slightly different behavior when using truncate_local_data_after_distributing_table UDF on metadata synced clusters. This PR aims to add tests to cover such cases.
We allow distributing tables with data that have foreign keys to reference tables only on metadata synced clusters. This is the reason why some of my earlier tests failed when run on a single node Citus cluster.