In preparation of sorting and grouping all includes we wanted to move
this file to the toplevel includes for good grouping/sorting.
(cherry picked from commit 0dac63afc0)
This PR provides successful compilation against PG16Beta2. It does some
necessary refactoring to prepare for full support of version 16, in
https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6952 .
Change RelFileNode to RelFileNumber or RelFileLocator
Relevant PG commit
b0a55e43299c4ea2a9a8c757f9c26352407d0ccc
new header for varatt.h
Relevant PG commit:
d952373a987bad331c0e499463159dd142ced1ef
drop support for Abs, use fabs
Relevant PG commit
357cfefb09115292cfb98d504199e6df8201c957
tuplesort PGcommit: d37aa3d35832afde94e100c4d2a9618b3eb76472
Relevant PG commit:
d37aa3d35832afde94e100c4d2a9618b3eb76472
Fix vacuum in columnar
Relevant PG commit:
4ce3afb82ecfbf64d4f6247e725004e1da30f47c
older one:
b6074846cebc33d752f1d9a66e5a9932f21ad177
Add alloc_flags to pg_clean_ascii
Relevant PG commit:
45b1a67a0fcb3f1588df596431871de4c93cb76f
Merge GetNumConfigOptions() into get_guc_variables()
Relevant PG commit:
3057465acfbea2f3dd7a914a1478064022c6eecd
Minor PG refactor PG_FUNCNAME_MACRO __func__
Relevant PG commit
320f92b744b44f961e5d56f5f21de003e8027a7f
Pass NULL context to stringToQualifiedNameList, typeStringToTypeName
The pre-PG16 error behaviour for the following
stringToQualifiedNameList & typeStringToTypeName
was ereport(ERROR, ...)
Now with PG16 we have this context input. We preserve the same behaviour
by passing a NULL context, because of the following:
(copy paste comment from PG16)
If "context" isn't an ErrorSaveContext node, this behaves as
errstart(ERROR, domain), and the errsave() macro ends up acting
exactly like ereport(ERROR, ...).
Relevant PG commit
858e776c84f48841e7e16fba7b690b76e54f3675
Use RangeVarCallbackMaintainsTable instead of RangeVarCallbackOwnsTable
Relevant PG commit:
60684dd834a222fefedd49b19d1f0a6189c1632e
FIX THIS: Not implemented grant-level control of role inheritance
see PG commit
e3ce2de09d814f8770b2e3b3c152b7671bcdb83f
Make Scan node abstract
PG commit:
8c73c11a0d39049de2c1f400d8765a0eb21f5228
Change in Var representations, get_relids_in_jointree
PG commit
2489d76c4906f4461a364ca8ad7e0751ead8aa0d
Deadlock detection changes because SHM_QUEUE is removed
Relevant PG Commit:
d137cb52cb7fd44a3f24f3c750fbf7924a4e9532
TU_UpdateIndexes
Relevant PG commit
19d8e2308bc51ec4ab993ce90077342c915dd116
Use object_ownercheck and object_aclcheck functions
Relevant PG commits:
afbfc02983f86c4d71825efa6befd547fe81a926
c727f511bd7bf3c58063737bcf7a8f331346f253
Rework Permission Info for successful compilation
Relevant PG commits:
postgres/postgres@a61b1f7postgres/postgres@b803b7d
---------
Co-authored-by: onderkalaci <onderkalaci@gmail.com>
This commit is the second and last phase of dropping PG13 support.
It consists of the following:
- Removes all PG_VERSION_13 & PG_VERSION_14 from codepaths
- Removes pg_version_compat entries and columnar_version_compat entries
specific for PG13
- Removes alternative pg13 test outputs
- Removes PG13 normalize lines and fix the test outputs based on that
It is a continuation of 5bf163a27d
1) For distributed tables that are not colocated.
2) When joining on a non-distribution column for colocated tables.
3) When merging into a distributed table using reference or citus-local tables as the data source.
This is accomplished primarily through the implementation of the following two strategies.
Repartition: Plan the source query independently,
execute the results into intermediate files, and repartition the files to
co-locate them with the merge-target table. Subsequently, compile a final
merge query on the target table using the intermediate results as the data
source.
Pull-to-coordinator: Execute the plan that requires evaluation at the coordinator,
run the query on the coordinator, and redistribute the resulting rows to ensure
colocation with the target shards. Direct the MERGE SQL operation to the worker
nodes' target shards, using the intermediate files colocated with the data as the
data source.
Description:
Implementing CDC changes using Logical Replication to avoid
re-publishing events multiple times by setting up replication origin
session, which will add "DoNotReplicateId" to every WAL entry.
- shard splits
- shard moves
- create distributed table
- undistribute table
- alter distributed tables (for some cases)
- reference table operations
The citus decoder which will be decoding WAL events for CDC clients,
ignores any WAL entry with replication origin that is not zero.
It also maps the shard names to distributed table names.
As we did for GENERATED STORED columns in #4613, we should not drop
column
default expressions that are not based on sequences from shard relation
since
such expressions need to exist e.g. for foreign key actions.
For the column default expressions that are based on sequences we cannot
do much, so we need to disallow having ON DELETE SET DEFAULT actions on
such columns in a separate PR, see #6339.
Fixes#6318.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes a bug that might cause inserting incorrect DEFAULT
values when applying foreign key actions
* Blocking split setup
* Add missing type
* Missing API from Metadata Sync
* Shard Split e2e code
* Worker Split Copy DestReceiver skeleton
* Basic destreceiver code
* worker_split_copy UDF
* UDF calling
* Split points are text
* Isolate Tenant and Split Shard Unification
* Fixing executor and misc
* Reindent code
* Fixing UDF definitions
* Hello World Local Copy works
* Remote copy hello world works
* Local and Remote binary test
* Fixing text local copy and adding tests
* Hello World shard split works
* Negative tests
* Blocking Split workflow works
* Refactor
* Bug fix
* Reindent
* Cleaning up and adding comments
* Basic test for shard split workflow
* ReIndent
* Circle CI integration
* Removing include causing circle-ci build failure
* Remove SplitCopyDestReceiver and use PartitionedResultDestReceiver
* Add support for citus.enable_binary_protocol
* Reindent
* Fix build break
* Update Test
* Cleanup on catch
* Addressing open comments
* Update downgrade script and quote schema/table in COPY statement
* Fix metadata sync issue. Update regression test
* Isolation test and bug fix
* Add Isolation test, fix foreign constraint deadlock issue
* Misc code review comments
* Test name needing to be quoted
* Refactor code from review comments
* Explaining shardGroupSplitIntervalListList
* Fix upgrade & downgrade
* Fix broken test
* Test fix Round 2
* Fixing bug and modifying test appropriately
* Fully qualify copy udf name. Run Reindent
* Address PR comments
* Fix null handling when creating AuxiliaryStructures
* Ensure local copy is triggered in tests
* Limit max shards that can be created with split
* Test failure fix
* Remove split_mode and use shard_transfer_mode instead'
* Fix test failure
* Fix test failure
* Fixing permission issue when splitting non-superuser owned tables
* Fix test expected output
* Remove extra space
* Fix test
* attempt to fix test
* Addressing Marco's PR comment
* Only clean shards created by workflow
* Remove from merge
* Update test
This PR makes all of the features open source that were previously only
available in Citus Enterprise.
Features that this adds:
1. Non blocking shard moves/shard rebalancer
(`citus.logical_replication_timeout`)
2. Propagation of CREATE/DROP/ALTER ROLE statements
3. Propagation of GRANT statements
4. Propagation of CLUSTER statements
5. Propagation of ALTER DATABASE ... OWNER TO ...
6. Optimization for COPY when loading JSON to avoid double parsing of
the JSON object (`citus.skip_jsonb_validation_in_copy`)
7. Support for row level security
8. Support for `pg_dist_authinfo`, which allows storing different
authentication options for different users, e.g. you can store
passwords or certificates here.
9. Support for `pg_dist_poolinfo`, which allows using connection poolers
in between coordinator and workers
10. Tracking distributed query execution times using
citus_stat_statements (`citus.stat_statements_max`,
`citus.stat_statements_purge_interval`,
`citus.stat_statements_track`). This is disabled by default.
11. Blocking tenant_isolation
12. Support for `sslkey` and `sslcert` in `citus.node_conninfo`
Columnar: support relation options with ALTER TABLE.
Use ALTER TABLE ... SET/RESET to specify relation options rather than
alter_columnar_table_set() and alter_columnar_table_reset().
Not only is this more ergonomic, but it also allows better integration
because it can be treated like DDL on a regular table. For instance,
citus can use its own ProcessUtility_hook to distribute the new
settings to the shards.
DESCRIPTION: Columnar: support relation options with ALTER TABLE.
DESCRIPTION: Add GUC to control ddl creation behaviour in transactions
Historically we would _not_ propagate objects when we are in a transaction block. Creation of distributed tables would not always work in sequential mode, hence objects created in the same transaction as distributing a table that would use the just created object wouldn't work. The benefit was that the user could still benefit from parallelism.
Now that the creation of distributed tables is supported in sequential mode it would make sense for users to force transactional consistency of ddl commands for distributed tables. A transaction could switch more aggressively to sequential mode when creating new objects in a transaction.
We don't change the default behaviour just yet.
Also, many objects would not even propagate their creation when the transaction was already set to sequential, leaving the probability of a self deadlock. The new policy checks solve this discrepancy between objects as well.
Replaces citus.enable_object_propagation with citus.enable_metadata_sync
Also, within Citus 11 release cycle, we added citus.enable_metadata_sync_by_default,
that is also replaced with citus.enable_metadata_sync.
In essence, when citus.enable_metadata_sync is set to true, all the objects
and the metadata is send to the remote node.
We strongly advice that the users never changes the value of
this GUC.
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.
Some Copy related functions copied from Postgres had support for both old and new protocols
Postgres removed support for old version so we remove it too
Relevant PG commit:
3174d69fb96a66173224e60ec7053b988d5ed4d9
New macros: standard_ProcessUtility_compat, ProcessUtility_compat, ColumnarProcessUtility_compat, PrevProcessUtilityHook_compat
The functions now have a new bool parameter: readOnlyTree
These new macros give us the ability to use this new parameter for PG14 and it doesn't give the parameter for previous versions
In multi_ProcessUtility and ColumnarProcessUtility, before doing anything else, we check if readOnlyTree parameter is true and create a copy of pstmt
Existing readOnlyTree parameters are set to false since we already handle the read only case at multi_ProcessUtility and ColumnarProcessUtility
Relevant PG commit:
7c337b6b527b7052e6a751f966d5734c56f668b5
DESCRIPTION: Add support for ALTER DATABASE OWNER
This adds support for changing the database owner. It achieves this by marking the database as a distributed object. By marking the database as a distributed object it will look for its dependencies and order the user creation commands (enterprise only) before the alter of the database owner. This is mostly important when adding new nodes.
By having the database marked as a distributed object it can easily understand for which `ALTER DATABASE ... OWNER TO ...` commands to propagate by resolving the object address of the database and verifying it is a distributed object, and hence should propagate changes of owner ship to all workers.
Given the ownership of the database might have implications on subsequent commands in transactions we force sequential mode for transactions that have a `ALTER DATABASE ... OWNER TO ...` command in them. This will fail the transaction with meaningful help when the transaction already executed parallel statements.
By default the feature is turned off since roles are not automatically propagated, having it turned on would cause hard to understand errors for the user. It can be turned on by the user via setting the `citus.enable_alter_database_owner`.
When COPY is used for copying into co-located files, it was
not allowed to use local execution. The primary reason was
Citus treating co-located intermediate results as co-located
shards, and COPY into the distributed table was done via
"format result". And, local execution of such COPY commands
was not implemented.
With this change, we implement support for local execution with
"format result". To do that, we use the buffer for every file
on shardState->copyOutState, similar to how local copy on
shards are implemented. In fact, the logic is similar to
local copy on shards, but instead of writing to the shards,
Citus writes the results to a file.
The logic relies on LOCAL_COPY_FLUSH_THRESHOLD, and flushes
only when the size exceeds the threshold. But, unlike local
copy on shards, in this case we write the headers and footers
just once.
When distributing a columnar table, as well as changing options on a distributed columnar table, this patch will forward the settings from the coordinator to the workers.
For propagating options changes on an already distributed table this change is pretty straight forward. Before applying the change in options locally we will create a `DDLJob` that contains a call to `alter_columnar_table_set(...)` for every shard placement with all settings of the current table. This goes both for setting an option as well as resetting. This will reset the values to the defaults configured on the coordinator. Having the effect that the coordinator is authoritative on the settings and makes sure the shards have the same settings set as the table on the coordinator.
When a columnar table is distributed it is using the `TableDDLCommand` infra structure to create a new kind of `TableDDLCommand`. This new type, called a `TableDDLCommandFunction` contains a context and 2 function pointers to execute. One function returns the command as applied on the table, the second function will return the sql command to apply to a shard with a given shard id. The schema name is ignored as it will use the fully qualified name of the shard in the same schema as the base table.
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
Postgres introduced QueryCompletion struct. Hence a compat utility is
added to finish query completion for older versions and pg >= 13.
The commit on Postgres side:
2f9661311b83dc481fc19f6e3bda015392010a40
DESCRIPTION: Alter role only works for citus managed roles
Alter role was implemented before we implemented good role management that hooks into the object propagation framework. This is a refactor of all alter role commands that have been implemented to
- be on by default
- only work for supported roles
- make the citus extension owner a supported role
Instead of distributing the alter role commands for roles at the beginning of the node activation role it now _only_ executes the alter role commands for all users in all databases and in the current database.
In preparation of full role support small refactors have been done in the deparser.
Earlier tests targeting other roles than the citus extension owner have been either slightly changed or removed to be put back where we have full role support.
Fixes#2549
If current transaction is connected to local group we should not use
local copy, because we might not see some of the changes that are made
over the connection to the local group.
A copy will be executed locally if
- Local execution is enabled and current transaction accessed a local placement
- Local execution is enabled and we are inside a transaction block.
So even if local execution is enabled but we are not in a transaction block, the copy will not be run locally.
This will not run locally:
```
COPY distributed_table FROM STDIN;
....
```
This will run locally:
```
SET citus.enable_local_execution to 'on';
BEGIN;
COPY distributed_table FROM STDIN;
COMMIT;
....
```
.
There are 3 ways to do a copy in postgres programmatically:
- from a file
- from a program
- from a callback function
I have chosen to implement it with a callback function, which means that we write the rows of copy from a callback function to the output buffer, which is used to insert tuples into the actual table.
For each shard id, we have a buffer that keeps the current rows to be written, we perform the actual copy operation either when:
- copy buffer for the given shard id reaches to a threshold, which is currently 512KB
- we reach to the end of the copy
The buffer size is debatable(512KB). At a given time, we might allocate (local placement * buffer size) memory at most.
The local copy uses the same copy format as remote copy, which means that we serialize the data in the same format as remote copy and send it locally.
There was also the option to use ExecSimpleRelationInsert to insert
slots one by one, which would avoid the extra
serialization/deserialization but doing some benchmarks it seems that
using buffers are significantly better in terms of the performance.
You can see this comment for more details: https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/3557#discussion_r389499054
DESCRIPTION: Provide a GUC to turn of the new dependency propagation functionality
In the case the dependency propagation functionality introduced in 9.0 causes issues to a cluster of a user they can turn it off almost completely. The only dependency that will still be propagated and kept track of is the schema to emulate the old behaviour.
GUC to change is `citus.enable_object_propagation`. When set to `false` the functionality will be mostly turned off. Be aware that objects marked as distributed in `pg_dist_object` will still be kept in the catalog as a distributed object. Alter statements to these objects will not be propagated to workers and may cause desynchronisation.
DESCRIPTION: Add feature flag to turn off create type propagation
When `citus.enable_create_type_propagation` is set to `false` citus will not propagate `CREATE TYPE` statements to the workers. Types are still distributed when tables that depend on these types are distributed.
DESCRIPTION: Distribute Types to worker nodes
When to propagate
==============
There are two logical moments that types could be distributed to the worker nodes
- When they get used ( just in time distribution )
- When they get created ( proactive distribution )
The just in time distribution follows the model used by how schema's get created right before we are going to create a table in that schema, for types this would be when the table uses a type as its column.
The proactive distribution is suitable for situations where it is benificial to have the type on the worker nodes directly. They can later on be used in queries where an intermediate result gets created with a cast to this type.
Just in time creation is always the last resort, you cannot create a distributed table before the type gets created. A good example use case is; you have an existing postgres server that needs to scale out. By adding the citus extension, add some nodes to the cluster, and distribute the table. The type got created before citus existed. There was no moment where citus could have propagated the creation of a type.
Proactive is almost always a good option. Types are not resource intensive objects, there is no performance overhead of having 100's of types. If you want to use them in a query to represent an intermediate result (which happens in our test suite) they just work.
There is however a moment when proactive type distribution is not beneficial; in transactions where the type is used in a distributed table.
Lets assume the following transaction:
```sql
BEGIN;
CREATE TYPE tt1 AS (a int, b int);
CREATE TABLE t1 AS (a int PRIMARY KEY, b tt1);
SELECT create_distributed_table('t1', 'a');
\copy t1 FROM bigdata.csv
```
Types are node scoped objects; meaning the type exists once per worker. Shards however have best performance when they are created over their own connection. For the type to be visible on all connections it needs to be created and committed before we try to create the shards. Here the just in time situation is most beneficial and follows how we create schema's on the workers. Outside of a transaction block we will just use 1 connection to propagate the creation.
How propagation works
=================
Just in time
-----------
Just in time propagation hooks into the infrastructure introduced in #2882. It adds types as a supported object in `SupportedDependencyByCitus`. This will make sure that any object being distributed by citus that depends on types will now cascade into types. When types are depending them self on other objects they will get created first.
Creation later works by getting the ddl commands to create the object by its `ObjectAddress` in `GetDependencyCreateDDLCommands` which will dispatch types to `CreateTypeDDLCommandsIdempotent`.
For the correct walking of the graph we follow array types, when later asked for the ddl commands for array types we return `NIL` (empty list) which makes that the object will not be recorded as distributed, (its an internal type, dependant on the user type).
Proactive distribution
---------------------
When the user creates a type (composite or enum) we will have a hook running in `multi_ProcessUtility` after the command has been applied locally. Running after running locally makes that we already have an `ObjectAddress` for the type. This is required to mark the type as being distributed.
Keeping the type up to date
====================
For types that are recorded in `pg_dist_object` (eg. `IsObjectDistributed` returns true for the `ObjectAddress`) we will intercept the utility commands that alter the type.
- `AlterTableStmt` with `relkind` set to `OBJECT_TYPE` encapsulate changes to the fields of a composite type.
- `DropStmt` with removeType set to `OBJECT_TYPE` encapsulate `DROP TYPE`.
- `AlterEnumStmt` encapsulates changes to enum values.
Enum types can not be changed transactionally. When the execution on a worker fails a warning will be shown to the user the propagation was incomplete due to worker communication failure. An idempotent command is shown for the user to re-execute when the worker communication is fixed.
Keeping types up to date is done via the executor. Before the statement is executed locally we create a plan on how to apply it on the workers. This plan is executed after we have applied the statement locally.
All changes to types need to be done in the same transaction for types that have already been distributed and will fail with an error if parallel queries have already been executed in the same transaction. Much like foreign keys to reference tables.