With this commit, we make sure that local execution adds the
intermediate result size as the distributed execution adds. Plus,
it enforces the citus.max_intermediate_result_size value.
We should not access CurrentLocalExecutionStatus directly because that
would mean that we could also set it directly, which we shouldn't
because we have checks to see if the new state is possible, otherwise we
error.
Before this commit, the logic was:
- As long as the outer side of the JOIN is not a JOIN (e.g., relation
or subquery etc.), we check for the existence of any recurring
tuples. There were two implications of this decision.
First, even if a subquery which is on the outer side contains
distributed table JOIN reference table, Citus would unnecessarily throw
an error. Note that, the JOIN inside the subquery would already
be going to be tested recursively. But, as long as that check
passes, there is no reason for the upper JOIN to fail. An example, which
used to fail and now works:
SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM dist JOIN ref) as foo LEFT JOIN dist;
Second, certain JOINs, especially with ON (true) conditions were not
represented as Citus expects the JOINs to be in the format
DeferredErrorIfUnsupportedRecurringTuplesJoin().
Use short lived per-tuple context in citus_evaluate_expr like
(pg) evaluate_expr does.
We should not use planState->ExprContext when evaluating expressions
as it might lead to freeing the same executor twice (first one happens
in citus_evaluate_expr itself and the other one happens when postgres
doing clean-up for the top level executor state), which in turn might
cause seg.faults.
However, now as we don't have necessary planState info to evaluate
prepared statements, we also add planState->es_param_list_info to
per-tuple ExprContext.
With postgres 13, there is a global lock that prevents multiple VACUUMs
happening in the current database. This global lock is taken for a short
time but this creates a problem because of the following:
- We execute the VACUUM for the shell table through the standard process
utility. In this step the global lock is taken for the current database.
- If the current node has shard placements then it tries to execute
VACUUM over a connection to localhost with ExecuteUtilityTaskList.
- the VACUUM on shard placements cannot proceed because it is waiting
for the global lock for the current database to be released.
- The acquired lock from the VACUUM for shell table will not be released
until the transaction is committed.
- So there is a deadlock.
As a solution, we commit the current transaction in case of VACUUM after
the VACUUM is executed for the shell table. Executing the VACUUM on a
shell table is not important because the data there will probably be
truncated. PostprocessVacuumStmt takes the necessary locks on the shell
table so we don't need to take any extra locks after we commit the
current transaction.
The prepare for upgrade script creates the `'public.pg_dist_rebalance_strategy` table which is not dropped when the upgrade is finished. This may block future upgrades.
In our test structure, we have been passing postgres configurations from
the terminal, which causes problems after it hits to a certain length
hence it cannot start the server and understanding why it failed is not
easy because there isn't a nice error message.
This commit changes this to write the settings directly to the postgres
configuration file. This way we can add as many postgres settings as we
want to without needing to worry about the length problem.
Multi-row & router INSERT's were crashing with local execution if at
least one of the DEFAULT columns were not specified in VALUES list.
This was because, the changes we make on query->values_lists and
query->targetList was sufficient for deparsing given INSERT for remote
execution but not sufficient for local execution.
With this commit, DEFAULT value normalization for multi-row & router
INSERT's is fixed by adding dummy column references for unspecified
DEFAULT columns.
Citus has the logic to truncate the long shard names to prevent
various issues, including self-deadlocks. However, for partitioned
tables, when index is created on the parent table, the index names
on the partitions are auto-generated by Postgres. We use the same
Postgres function to generate the index names on the shards of the
partitions. If the length exceeds the limit, we switch to sequential
execution mode.
In postmasters execution of _PG_init, IsUnderPostmaster will be false and
we want to do the cleanup at that time only, otherwise there is a chance that
there will be parallel queries and we might do a cleanup for things that are
already in use.
After the connection timeout, we fail the session/pool. However, the
underlying connection can still be trying to connect. That is dangerous
because the new placement executions have already been in place. The
executor cannot handle the situation where multiple of
EXECUTION_ORDER_ANY task executions succeeds.
Adding a regression test doesn't seem easily doable. To reproduce the issue
- Add 2 worker nodes
- create a reference table
- set citus.node_connection_timeout to 1ms (requires code change)
- Continiously execute `SELECT count(*) FROM ref_table`
- Sometime later, you hit an out-of-array access in
`ScheduleNextPlacementExecution()` hence crashing.
- The reason for that is sometimes the first connection
successfully established while the executor is already
trying to execute the query on the second node.
We currently do not support volatile functions in update/delete statements
because the function evaluation logic does not know how to distinguish
volatile functions (that need to be evaluated per row) from stable functions
(that need to be evaluated per query), and it is also not safe to push the
volatile functions down on replicated tables.
Add sort method parameter for regression tests
Fix check-style
Change sorting method parameters to enum
Polish
Add task fields to OutTask
Add test into multi_explain
Fix isolation test
As the previous versions of Citus don't know how to handle citus local
tables, we should prevent downgrading from 9.5 to older versions if any
citus local tables exists.
Pushing down the CALLs to the node that the CALL is executed is
dangerous and could lead to infinite recursion.
When the coordinator added as worker, Citus was by chance preventing
this. The coordinator was marked as "not metadatasynced" node
in pg_dist_node, which prevented CALL/function delegation to happen.
With this commit, we do the following:
- Fix metadatasynced column for the coordinator on pg_dist_node
- Prevent pushdown of function/procedure to the same node that
the function/procedure is being executed. Today, we do not sync
pg_dist_object (e.g., distributed functions metadata) to the
worker nodes. But, even if we do it now, the function call delegation
would prevent the infinite recursion.
* Not take ShareUpdateExlusiveLock on pg_dist_transaction
We were taking ShareUpdateExlusiveLock on pg_dist_transaction during
recovery to prevent multiple recoveries happening concurrenly. VACUUM(
not FULL) also takes ShareUpdateExclusiveLock, and they can conflict. It
seems that VACUUM will skip the table if there is a conflicting lock
already taken unless it is doing the vacuum to prevent id wraparound, in
which case there can be a deadlock. I guess the deadlock happens if:
- VACUUM takes a lock on pg_dist_transaction and is done for id
wraparound problem
- The transaction in the maintenance tries to take a lock but
cannot as that conflicts with the lock acquired by VACUUM
- The transaction in the maintenance daemon has a very old xid hence
VACUUM cannot proceed.
If we take a row exclusive lock in transaction recovery then it wouldn't
conflict with VACUUM hence it could proceed so the deadlock would be
resolved. To prevent concurrent transaction recoveries happening, an
advisory lock is taken with ShareUpdateExlusiveLock as before.
* Use CITUS_OPERATIONS tag
* Not allow removing a single node with ref tables
We should not allow removing a node if it is the only node in the
cluster and there is a data on it. We have this check for distributed
tables but we didn't have it for reference tables.
* Update src/test/regress/expected/single_node.out
Co-authored-by: Onur Tirtir <onurcantirtir@gmail.com>
* Update src/test/regress/sql/single_node.sql
Co-authored-by: Onur Tirtir <onurcantirtir@gmail.com>
This commit brings following features:
Foreign key support from citus local tables to reference tables
* Foreign key support from reference tables to citus local tables
(only with RESTRICT & NO ACTION behavior)
* ALTER TABLE ENABLE/DISABLE trigger command support
* CREATE/DROP/ALTER trigger command support
and disallows:
* ALTER TABLE ATTACH/DETACH PARTITION commands
* CREATE TABLE <postgres table> ATTACH PARTITION <citus local table>
commands
* Foreign keys from postgres tables to citus local tables
(the other way was already disallowed)
for citus local tables.
Introduce table entry utility functions
Citus table cache entry utilities are introduced so that we can easily
extend existing functionality with minimum changes, specifically changes
to these functions. For example IsNonDistributedTableCacheEntry can be
extended for citus local tables without the need to scan the whole
codebase and update each relevant part.
* Introduce utility functions to find the type of tables
A table type can be a reference table, a hash/range/append distributed
table. Utility methods are created so that we don't have to worry about
how a table is considered as a reference table etc. This also makes it
easy to extend the table types.
* Add IsCitusTableType utilities
* Rename IsCacheEntryCitusTableType -> IsCitusTableTypeCacheEntry
* Change citus table types in some checks
create_distributed_function(function_name,
distribution_arg_name,
colocate_with text)
This UDF did not allow colocate_with parameters when there were no
disttribution_arg_name supplied. This commit changes the behaviour to
allow missing distribution_arg_name parameters when the function should
be colocated with a reference table.
* Hide citus.subquery_pushdown flag
This flag is dangerous and could likely to let queries
return wrong results.
The flag has a very specific purpose for a very specific
data distribution and query structure. In those cases, when
the flag is set, the user can skip recursive planning altogether
*at their own risk*.
The meaning of the flag is that "I know what I'm doing such that
the query structure/data distribution is on my control, so Citus
can skip many correctness checks".
For regular users, enabling this flag is discouraged. We have to
keep the support only for backward compatibility for some users.
In addition to that, give a NOTICE to discourage new users to
use it.
* Update and separate test images
The build image was a single one and it would contain pg11, pg12 and
pg13. Now it is separated so that we can build each pg major
independently.
Tags are used as full postgres versions so that we can know which
version we use by looking at the tag. For example exttester:11.9 would
mean we are using pg11.9.
pg11 is updated from 11.5 to 11.9.
pg12 is updated from 12rc to 12.4.
* Ignore memory usage in pg13 explain
* Use citus instead of personal repo
RemoveCoordinatorPlacement does not do what it says. It removes the
coordinator placement only if there are other placements, so it is not a
single node, and only if the coordinator has a placement.
AllTargetExpressionsAreColumnReferences would return false if a query
had an entry that is referencing the outer query. It seems safe to not
have this for non-distributed tables, such as reference tables. We
already have separate checks for other cases such as having limits.
FindNodeCheck is not clear about what the function is doing. They are
renamed to FindNodeMatchingCheckFunctionXXX. Also for choosing elements in these
functions, CheckNodeFunc type is introduced.
It seems that currently we process even postgres tables in explain
commands. This is because we register a hook for explain and we don't
have any check to see if the query has any citus table.
With this commit, we now send the buffer usage as well to the relevant
API. There is some duplicate in the code but it is because of the
existing structure, we can refactor this separately.
The codebase is updated to use varattnosync and varnosyn and we defined
the macros for older versions. This way we can just remove the macros
when we drop an older version.
CMDTAG_SELECT exists in PG12 hence defining a MACRO such as
CMDTAG_SELECT -> "SELECT" is not possible. I chose CMDTAG_SELECT_COMPAT
because with the COMPAT suffix it is explicit that it maps to different
things in different versions and also has a less chance of mapping
something irrevelant. For example if we used SELECT as a macro, then it
would map every SELECT to whatever it is mapping to, which might have
unexpected/undesired behaviour.
The error message when index has opclassopts is improved and the commit
from postgres side is also included for future reference.
Also some minor style related changes are applied.
Error out if index has opclassopts.
Changelog entry on PG13:
Allow CREATE INDEX to specify the GiST signature length and maximum number of integer ranges (Nikita Glukhov)
It seems that we don't support propagating commands related to base
types. Therefore Alter TYPE options doesn't seem to apply to us. I have
added a test to verify that we don't propagate them.
Changelog entry on pg13:
Add ALTER TYPE options useful for extensions, like TOAST and I/O functions control (Tomas Vondra, Tom Lane)
Unicode escapes work as expected, related tests are added.
Changelog entry on PG13:
Allow Unicode escapes, e.g., E'\u####', U&'\####', to specify any character available in the database encoding, even when the database encoding is not UTF-8 (Tom Lane)
Tests for is_normalized and normalized ar eadded. One thing that seems
to be because of existent bug is that when we don't give the second
argument to normalize or is_normalized, which is optional, it crashes.
Because in the executor part, in the expression we don't have the
default argument.
Changelog entry in PG-13:
Add SQL functions NORMALIZE() to normalize Unicode strings, and IS NORMALIZED to check for normalization (Peter Eisentraut)
Commit on Postgres:
2991ac5fc9b3904ca4582be6d323497d7c3d17c9
It seems that row suffix notation is working fine with our code, a test
is added.
Changelog entry in PG13:
Allow ROW values values to have their members extracted with suffix notation (Tom Lane)
PG13 now supports dropping expression from a column such as generated
columns. We error out with this currently.
Changelog entry in postgres:
Add ALTER TABLE clause DROP EXPRESSION to remove generated properties from columns (Peter Eisentraut)
Postgres 13 added a new VACUUM option, PARALLEL. It is now supported
in our code as well.
Relevant changelog message on postgres:
Allow VACUUM to process indexes in parallel (Masahiko Sawada, Amit Kapila)
This commit mostly adds pg_get_triggerdef_command to our ruleutils_13.
This doesn't add anything extra for ruleutils 13 so it is basically a copy
of the change on ruleutils_12
With pg13, constants functions from "FROM" clause are replaced. This
means that in citus side, we will see the constraints in restriction
info, instead of the function call. For example:
SELECT * FROM table1 JOIN add(3,5) sum ON (id = sum) ORDER BY id ASC;
Assuming that the function `add` returns constant, it will be evaluated
on postgres side. This means that this query will be routable because
there will be only one shard after pruning with the restrictions.
However before pg13, this would be multi shard query. And it would go
into recursive planning, the function would be evaluated on the
coordinator because it can be.
This means that with pg13, users will need to distribute the function
because when it is routable executable, it will currently also send the
function call to the worker in the query. So the function should exist
in the worker.
It could be better to replace the constant in the query tree as well so
that the query string sent to the worker has the constant value and
therefore it doesn't need the function. However I feel like users would
already have the function in workers if they have any multi shard query.
Commit on Postgres side:
7266d0997dd2a0632da38a594c78e25ff21df67e
When there is a join alias, var->varnosync will point to the alias and
var->varno will point to the table itself, but we need to use the alias
when deparsing the query. Hence a workaround is introduced to solve this
problem in ruleutils. Normally this case can be understood with
dpns->plan == NULL check but in our case, dpns->plan is always NULL. We
should sync our ruleutils at some point with postgres ruleutils. This
could be a wrong solution as well but the tests pass.