This adds a replication_model GUC which is used as the replication
model for any new distributed table that is not a reference table.
With this change, tables with replication factor 1 are no longer
implicitly MX tables.
The GUC is similarly respected during empty shard creation for e.g.
existing append-partitioned tables. If the model is set to streaming
while replication factor is greater than one, table and shard creation
routines will error until this invalid combination is corrected.
Changing this parameter requires superuser permissions.
We changed error message which appears when user tries to execute outer join command and
that command requires repartitioning. Old error message mentioned about 1-to-1 shard
partitioning which may not be clear to user.
Instead use pg_plan_query() like the normal explain does, and use that
to explain the query. That's important because it allows to remove
the duplicated planner logic from multi_explain - and that logic is
about to get more complicated.
They make fixing explain for prepared statement harder, and they don't
really fit into EXPLAIN in the first place. Additionally they're
currently not exercised in any tests.
This commit is intended to improve the error messages while planning
INSERT INTO .. SELECT queries. The main motivation for this change is
that we used to map multiple cases into a single message. With this change,
we added explicit error messages for many cases.
Enables use views within distributed queries.
User can create and use a view on distributed tables/queries
as he/she would use with regular queries.
After this change router queries will have full support for views,
insert into select queries will support reading from views, not
writing into. Outer joins would have a limited support, and would
error out at certain cases such as when a view is in the inner side
of the outer join.
Although PostgreSQL supports writing into views under certain circumstances.
We disallowed that for distributed views.
With this change we start to error out on router planner queries where a common table
expression with data-modifying statement is present. We already do not support if
there is a data-modifying statement using result of the CTE, now we also error out
if CTE itself is data-modifying statement.
With this commit, we implemented some basic features of reference tables.
To start with, a reference table is
* a distributed table whithout a distribution column defined on it
* the distributed table is single sharded
* and the shard is replicated to all nodes
Reference tables follows the same code-path with a single sharded
tables. Thus, broadcast JOINs are applicable to reference tables.
But, since the table is replicated to all nodes, table fetching is
not required any more.
Reference tables support the uniqueness constraints for any column.
Reference tables can be used in INSERT INTO .. SELECT queries with
the following rules:
* If a reference table is in the SELECT part of the query, it is
safe join with another reference table and/or hash partitioned
tables.
* If a reference table is in the INSERT part of the query, all
other participating tables should be reference tables.
Reference tables follow the regular co-location structure. Since
all reference tables are single sharded and replicated to all nodes,
they are always co-located with each other.
Queries involving only reference tables always follows router planner
and executor.
Reference tables can have composite typed columns and there is no need
to create/define the necessary support functions.
All modification queries, master_* UDFs, EXPLAIN, DDLs, TRUNCATE,
sequences, transactions, COPY, schema support works on reference
tables as expected. Plus, all the pre-requisites associated with
distribution columns are dismissed.
We used to disable router planner and executor
when task executor is set to task-tracker.
This change enables router planning and execution
at all times regardless of task execution mode.
We are introducing a hidden flag enable_router_execution
to enable/disable router execution. Its default value is
true. User may disable router planning by setting it to false.
This commit fixes a bug when the SELECT target list includes a constant
value.
Previous behaviour of target list re-ordering:
* Iterate over the INSERT target list
* If it includes a Var, find the corresponding SELECT entry
and update its resno accordingly
* If it does not include a Var (which we only considered to be
DEFAULTs), generate a new SELECT target entry
* If the processed target entry count in SELECT target list is less
than the original SELECT target list (GROUP BY elements not included in
the SELECT target entry), add them in the SELECT target list and
update the resnos accordingly.
* However, this step was leading to add the CONST SELECT target entries
twice. The reason is that when CONST target list entries appear in the
SELECT target list, the INSERT target list doesn't include a Var. Instead,
it includes CONST as it does for DEFAULTs.
New behaviour of target list re-ordering:
* Iterate over the INSERT target list
* If it includes a Var, find the corresponding SELECT entry
and update its resno accordingly
* If it does not include a Var (which we consider to be
DEFAULTs and CONSTs on the SELECT), generate a new SELECT
target entry
* If any target entry remains on the SELECT target list which are resjunk,
(GROUP BY elements not included in the SELECT target entry), keep them
in the SELECT target list by updating the resnos.
Fixcitusdata/citus#886
The way postgres' explain hook is designed means that our hook is never
called during EXPLAIN EXECUTE. So, we special-case EXPLAIN EXECUTE by
catching it in the utility hook. We then replace the EXECUTE with the
original query and pass it back to Citus.
This commit adds INSERT INTO ... SELECT feature for distributed tables.
We implement INSERT INTO ... SELECT by pushing down the SELECT to
each shard. To compute that we use the router planner, by adding
an "uninstantiated" constraint that the partition column be equal to a
certain value. standard_planner() distributes that constraint to all
the tables where it knows how to push the restriction safely. An example
is that the tables that are connected via equi joins.
The router planner then iterates over the target table's shards,
for each we replace the "uninstantiated" restriction, with one that
PruneShardList() handles. Do so by replacing the partitioning qual
parameter added in multi_planner() with the current shard's
actual boundary values. Also, add the current shard's boundary values to the
top level subquery to ensure that even if the partitioning qual is
not distributed to all the tables, we never run the queries on the shards
that don't match with the current shard boundaries. Finally, perform the
normal shard pruning to decide on whether to push the query to the
current shard or not.
We do not support certain SQLs on the subquery, which are described/commented
on ErrorIfInsertSelectQueryNotSupported().
We also added some locking on the router executor. When an INSERT/SELECT command
runs on a distributed table with replication factor >1, we need to ensure that
it sees the same result on each placement of a shard. So we added the ability
such that router executor takes exclusive locks on shards from which the SELECT
in an INSERT/SELECT reads in order to prevent concurrent changes. This is not a
very optimal solution, but it's simple and correct. The
citus.all_modifications_commutative can be used to avoid aggressive locking.
An INSERT/SELECT whose filters are known to exclude any ongoing writes can be
marked as commutative. See RequiresConsistentSnapshot() for the details.
We also moved the decison of whether the multiPlan should be executed on
the router executor or not to the planning phase. This allowed us to
integrate multi task router executor tasks to the router executor smoothly.
The necessity for this functionality comes from the fact that ruleutils.c is not supposed to be
used on "rewritten" queries (i.e. ones that have been passed through QueryRewrite()).
Query rewriting is the process in which views and such are expanded,
and, INSERT/UPDATE targetlists are reordered to match the physical order,
defaults etc. For the details of reordeing, see transformInsertRow().
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.
This commit completes having support in Citus by adding having support for
real-time and task-tracker executors. Multiple tests are added to regression
tests to cover new supported queries with having support.
So far placements were assigned an Oid, but that was just used to track
insertion order. It also did so incompletely, as it was not preserved
across changes of the shard state. The behaviour around oid wraparound
was also not entirely as intended.
The newly introduced, explicitly assigned, IDs are preserved across
shard-state changes.
The prime goal of this change is not to improve ordering of task
assignment policies, but to make it easier to reference shards. The
newly introduced UpdateShardPlacementState() makes use of that, and so
will the in-progress connection and transaction management changes.
Related to #786
This change adds the `pg_dist_node` table that contains the information
about the workers in the cluster, replacing the previously used
`pg_worker_list.conf` file (or the one specified with `citus.worker_list_file`).
Upon update, `pg_worker_list.conf` file is read and `pg_dist_node` table is
populated with the file's content. After that, `pg_worker_list.conf` file
is renamed to `pg_worker_list.conf.obsolete`
For adding and removing nodes, the change also includes two new UDFs:
`master_add_node` and `master_remove_node`, which require superuser
permissions.
'citus.worker_list_file' guc is kept for update purposes but not used after the
update is finished.
count_agg_clause *adds* the cost of the aggregates to the state
variable, it doesn't reinitialize it. That is intentional, as it is used
to incrementally add costs in some places.
is now a `::regtype` using the qualified name of the column type,
not the column type OID which may differ between master/worker nodes.
Test coverage of a hash reparitition using a UDT as the join column.
Note that the UDFs `worker_hash_partition_table` and `worker_range_partition_table`
are unchanged, and rightly expect an OID for the column type; but the
planner code building the commands now allows for `::regtype` casting
to do its magic.
Fixescitusdata/citus#111.
This commit enables to create different worker and master temporary folders.
This change is important for citus-mx on task-tracker execution. In simple words,
on citus-mx, the worker could actually be reponsible for the master tasks as well.
Prior to this change, both master and worker logic on task-tracker executor was
accessing and using the same files for different purposes which was dangerous on
certain cases (i.e., when task_tracker_delay is low).
Before this change, count on a distributed returned NULL if all shards
were pruned away, because on the master we replace with count(..) call
with a sum(..) call to sum the counts from the shards. However, sum
returns NULL when there are no rows, whereas count is expected to return
0.
In subquery pushdown, we allow outer joins if the join condition is on the
partition columns. WhereClauseList() used to return all join conditions including
outer joins. However, this has been changed with a commit related to outer join
support on regular queries. With this commit, we refactored ExtractFromExpressionWalker()
to return two lists of qualifiers. The first list is for inner join and filter
clauses and the second list is for outer join clauses. Therefore, we can also
use outer join clauses to check subquery pushdown prerequisites.
We remove schema name parameter from worker_fetch_foreign_file and
worker_fetch_regular_table functions. We now send schema name
concatanated with table name.
Fixes#676
We added old versions (i.e. without schema name) of worker_apply_shard_ddl_command,
worker_fetch_foreign_file and worker_fetch_regular_table back. During function call
of one of these functions, we set schema name as public schema and call the newer
version of the functions.
We can now support richer set of queries in router planner.
This allow us to support CTEs, joins, window function, subqueries
if they are known to be executed at a single worker with a single
task (all tables are filtered down to a single shard and a single
worker contains all table shards referenced in the query).
Fixes : #501
Fixes#555
Before this change, we were resolving HLL function and type Oid without qualified name.
Now we find the schema name where HLL objects are stored and generate qualified names for
each objects.
Similar fix is also applied for cstore_table_size function call.
Fixes#394
This change adds LIMIT/OFFSET support for non router-plannable
distributed queries.
In cases that we can push the LIMIT down, we add the OFFSET value to
that LIMIT in the worker queries. When a query with LIMIT x OFFSET y is issued,
the query is propagated to the workers as LIMIT (x+y) OFFSET 0, and on the
master table, the original LIMIT and OFFSET values are used. With this change,
we can use OFFSET wherever we can use LIMIT.
- Enables using VOLATILE functions (like nextval()) in INSERT queries
- Enables using STABLE functions (like now()) targetLists and joinTrees
UPDATE and INSERT can now contain non-immutable functions. INSERT can contain any kind of
expression, while UPDATE can contain any STABLE function, so long as a Var is not passed
into the STABLE function, even indirectly. UPDATE TagetEntry's can now also include Vars.
There's an exception, CASE/COALESCE statements may not contain mutable functions.
Functions calls in master_modify_multiple_shards are also evaluated.
It turns out some tests exercised this behavior, but removing it should
have no ill effects. Besides, both copy and INSERT disallow NULLs in a
table's partition column.
Fixes a bug where anti-joins on hash-partitioned distributed tables
would incorrectly prune shards early, result in incorrect results (test
included).
The old targetlist wasn't used so far, but the upcoming RETURNING
support relies on it.
This also allows to get rid of some crufty code in
multi_executor.c:multi_ExecutorStart(), which used the worker query's
targetlist instead of the main statement's (which didn't have one up to
now).
The targetlist contains TargetEntrys containing expressions, not
expressions directly. That didn't matter so far, but with the upcoming
RETURNING support, the targetlist is inspected to build a TupleDesc.
ExecCleanTypeFromTL hits an assert when looking at something that's not
a TargetEntry.
Mark the entry as resjunk, so it's not actually used.
For CITUS_RTE_RELATION type fragments, reloading shardIntervals from the
database is rather expensive. So store a pointer to the full shard
interval, instead of just the shard id. There's no new memory lifetime
hazards here, because we already passed a pointer to the shardInterval's
->shardId field around.
The plan time for the query in issue #607 goes from 2889 ms to 106 ms.
with this change.
By far the most expensive part of ShardIntervalsOverlap() is computing
the function to use to determine overlap. Luckily we already have that
computed and cached.
The plan time for the query in issue #607 goes from 8764 ms to 2889 ms
with this change.
now copies all column references in count distinct aggreagete
to worker target list and group by. Master target list is
also updated to reflect changes in attribute order.
Fixes 569
Fixes#475
With this change we prevent addition of ONLY clause to queries prepared for
worker nodes. When we add ONLY clause we may miss the inherited tables in
worker nodes created by users manually.
Single table repartition subqueries now support count(distinct column)
and count(distinct (case when ...)) expressions. Repartition query
extracts column used in aggregate expression and adds them to target
list and group by list, master query stays the same (count (distinct ...))
but attribute numbers inside the aggregate expression is modified to
reflect changes in repartition query.
Fixes#10
This change creates a new UDF: master_modify_multiple_shards
Parameters:
modify_query: A simple DELETE or UPDATE query as a string.
The UDF is similar to the existing master_apply_delete_command UDF.
Basically, given the modify query, it prunes the shard list, re-constructs
the query for each shard and sends the query to the placements.
Depending on the value of citus.multi_shard_commit_protocol, the commit
can be done in one-phase or two-phase manner.
Limitations:
* It cannot be called inside a transaction block
* It only be called with simple operator expressions (like Single Shard Modify)
Sample Usage:
```
SELECT master_modify_multiple_shards(
'DELETE FROM customer_delete_protocol WHERE c_custkey > 500 AND c_custkey < 500');
```
Fixes#477
This change fixes the compile time warning message in BuildMapMergeJob in
multi_physical_planner.c about mixed declarations and code. Basically, the
problematic declaration is moved up so that no expression is before it.
Allow references to columns in UPDATE statements
Queries like "UPDATE tbl SET column = column + 1" are now allowed, so long as you don't use any IMMUTABLE functions.
Some small parts of citus currently require superuser privileges; which
is obviously not desirable for production scenarios. Run these small
parts under superuser privileges (we use the extension owner) to avoid
that.
This does not yet coordinate grants between master and workers. Thus it
allows to create shards, load data, and run queries as a non-superuser,
but it is not easily possible to allow differentiated accesses to
several users.
So far we've always used libpq defaults when connecting to workers; bar
special environment variables being set that'll always be the user that
started the server. That's not desirable because it prevents using
users with fewer privileges.
Thus change the various APIs creating connections to workers to always
use usernames. That means:
1) MultiClientConnect() needs to, optionally, accept a username
2) GetOrEstablishConnection(), including the underlying cache, need to
use the current user as part of the connection cache key. That way
connections for separate users are distinct, and we always use one
with the correct authorization.
3) The task tracker needs to keep track of the username associated with
a task, so it can use it when establishing connections outside the
originating session.
This commit adds a fast shard pruning path for INSERTs on
hash-partitioned tables. The rationale behind this change is
that if there exists a sorted shard interval array, a single
index lookup on the array allows us to find the corresponding
shard interval. As mentioned above, we need a sorted
(wrt shardminvalue) shard interval array. Thus, this commit
updates shardIntervalArray to sortedShardIntervalArray in the
metadata cache. Then uses the low-level API that is defined in
multi_copy to handle the fast shard pruning.
The performance impact of this change is more apparent as more
shards exist for a distributed table. Previous implementation
was relying on linear search through the shard intervals. However,
this commit relies on constant lookup time on shard interval
array. Thus, the shard pruning becomes less dependent on the
shard count.
- non-router plannable queries can be executed
by router executor if they satisfy the criteria
- router executor is removed from configuration,
now task executor can not be set to router
- removed some tests that error out for router executor
With #426, some new warning messages started to arise, because of
cross assignment of Node and Expr pointers. This change fixes the
warnings with type casts.
Fixes#379
Varchar VAR struct is wrapped in RELABELTYPE struct inside PostgreSQL code and
IsPartitionColumnRecursive function considers only VAR types so returning false
for varchar.
This change adds strip_implicit_coercions() call to the columnExpression in
IsPartitionColumnRecursive function so that we get rid of implicit coercions like
RELABELTYPE are stripped to VAR.
This change fixes the problem with joins with VARCHAR columns. Prior to
this change, when we tried to do large table joins on varchar columns, we got
an error of the form:
ERROR: cannot perform local joins that involve expressions
DETAIL: local joins can be performed between columns only.
This is because we have a check in CheckJoinBetweenColumns() which requires the
join clause to have only 'Var' nodes (i.e. columns). Postgres adds a relabel t
ype cast to cast the varchar to text; hence the type of the node is not T_Var
and the join fails.
The fix involves calling strip_implicit_coercions() to the left and right
arguments so that RELABELTYPE is stripped to VAR.
Fixes#76.
Fixes#375
Prior to this change, shard pruning couldn't be done if:
- Table is hash-distributed
- Partition column of is VARCHAR
- Query to be pruned is a subquery
There were two problems:
- A bug in left-side/right-side checks for the partition column
- We were not considering relabeled types (VARCHAR was relabeled as TEXT)
While reading this code last week, it appeared as though there was no
place we ensured that the partition clause actually used equality ops.
As such, I was worried that we might transform a clause such as id < 5
into a constraint like hash(id) = hash(5) when doing shard pruning. The
relevant code seemed to just ensure:
1. The node is an OpExpr
2. With a related hash function
3. It compares the partition column
4. Against a constant
A superficial reading implied we didn't actually make sure the original
op was equality-related, but it turns out the hash lookup function DOES
ensure that for us. So I added a comment.
This change removes the whitelisting check on the WHERE clauses. Note that, before
this change, citus was already allowing all types of nodes with the following
format (i.e., wrap with a boolean test):
* SELECT col FROM table WHERE (ANY EXPRESSION) is TRUE;
Thus, this change is mostly useful for allowing the expressions in the WHERE clause
directly and avoiding "unsupport clause type" errors.
Fixes issue #258
Prior to this change, Citus gives a deceptive NOTICE message when a query
including ANY or ALL on a non-partition column is issued on a hash
partitioned table.
Let the github_events table be hash-distributed on repo_id column. Then,
issuing this query:
SELECT count(*) FROM github_events WHERE event_id = ANY ('{1,2,3}')
Gives this message:
NOTICE: cannot use shard pruning with ANY (array expression)
HINT: Consider rewriting the expression with OR clauses.
Note that since event_id is not the partition column, shard pruning would
not be applied in any case. However, the NOTICE message would be valid
and be given if the ANY clause would have been applied on repo_id column.
Reviewer: Murat Tuncer
All citusdb references in
- extension, binary names
- file headers
- all configuration name prefixes
- error/warning messages
- some functions names
- regression tests
are changed to be citus.
Previously we used, for historical reasons, MessageContext.
That is problematic if a single message from the client
causes a lot of statements to be planned. E.g. for the
copy_to_distributed_table script one insert statement
is planned for each row inserted via COPY, and only freed
when COPY has finished.
This entirely removes any restriction on the type of partitioning
during DML planning and execution. Though there aren't actually any
technical limitations preventing DML commands against append- (or even
range-) partitioned tables, we had initially forbidden this, as any
future stage operation could cause shards to overlap, banning all
subsequent DML operations to partition values contained within more
than one shards. This ended up mostly restricting us, so we're now
removing that restriction.
When two data types have the same binary representation, PostgreSQL may
add an implicit coercion between them by wrapping a node in a relabel
type. This wrapper signals that the wrapped value is completely binary
compatible with the designated "final type" of the relabel node. As an
example, the varchar type is often relabeled to text, since functions
provided for use with text (comparisons, hashes, etc.) are completely
compatible with varchar as well.
The hash-partitioned codepath contains functions that verify queries
actually contain an equality constraint on the partition column, but
those functions expect such constraints to be comparison operations
between a Var and Const. The RelabelType wrapper node causes these
functions to always return false, which bypasses shard pruning.