`citus_table_type` column of `citus_tables` and `citus_shards` will show
"schema" for tenants schema tables and "distributed" for single shard
tables that are not in a tenant schema.
PG16 removed them. They were already identical to Assert. We can merge
this directly to main branch
Relevant PG commit:
b1099eca8f
b1099eca8f38ff5cfaf0901bb91cb6a22f909bc6
Co-authored-by: onderkalaci <onderkalaci@gmail.com>
Changes test files in multi and multi-1 schedules such that they
accomodate coordinator in metadata.
Changes fall into the following buckets:
1. When coordinator is in metadata, reference table shards are present
in coordinator too.
This changes test outputs checking the table size, shard numbers etc.
for reference tables.
2. When coordinator is in metadata, postgres tables are converted to
citus local tables whenever a foreign key relationship to them is
created. This changes some test cases which tests it should not be
possible to create foreign keys to postgres tables.
3. Remove lines that add/remove coordinator for testing purposes.
Creating a second PR to make reviewing easier.
This PR tests:
- replicate_reference_tables
- fix_partition_shard_index_names
- isolate_tenant_to_new_shard
- replicate_table_shards
Adds Support for Single Shard Tables in
`update_distributed_table_colocation`.
This PR changes checks that make sure tables should be hash distributed
table to hash or single shard distributed tables.
Verify Citus UDFs work well with single shard tables
SUPPORTED
* citus_table_size
* citus_total_relation_size
* citus_relation_size
* citus_shard_sizes
* truncate_local_data_after_distributing_table
* create_distributed_function // test function colocated with a single
shard table
* undistribute_table
* alter_table_set_access_method
UNSUPPORTED - error out for single shard tables
* master_create_empty_shard
* create_distributed_table_concurrently
* create_distributed_table
* create_reference_table
* citus_add_local_table_to_metadata
* citus_split_shard_by_split_points
* alter_distributed_table
DESCRIPTION: Adds citus.enable_schema_based_sharding GUC that allows
sharding the database based on schemas when enabled.
* Refactor the logic that automatically creates Citus managed tables
* Refactor CreateSingleShardTable() to allow specifying colocation id
instead
* Add support for schema-based-sharding via a GUC
### What this PR is about:
Add **citus.enable_schema_based_sharding GUC** to enable schema-based
sharding. Each schema created while this GUC is ON will be considered
as a tenant schema. Later on, regardless of whether the GUC is ON or
OFF, any table created in a tenant schema will be converted to a
single shard distributed table (without a shard key). All the tenant
tables that belong to a particular schema will be co-located with each
other and will have a shard count of 1.
We introduce a new metadata table --pg_dist_tenant_schema-- to do the
bookkeeping for tenant schemas:
```sql
psql> \d pg_dist_tenant_schema
Table "pg_catalog.pg_dist_tenant_schema"
┌───────────────┬─────────┬───────────┬──────────┬─────────┐
│ Column │ Type │ Collation │ Nullable │ Default │
├───────────────┼─────────┼───────────┼──────────┼─────────┤
│ schemaid │ oid │ │ not null │ │
│ colocationid │ integer │ │ not null │ │
└───────────────┴─────────┴───────────┴──────────┴─────────┘
Indexes:
"pg_dist_tenant_schema_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (schemaid)
"pg_dist_tenant_schema_unique_colocationid_index" UNIQUE, btree (colocationid)
psql> table pg_dist_tenant_schema;
┌───────────┬───────────────┐
│ schemaid │ colocationid │
├───────────┼───────────────┤
│ 41963 │ 91 │
│ 41962 │ 90 │
└───────────┴───────────────┘
(2 rows)
```
Colocation id column of pg_dist_tenant_schema can never be NULL even
for the tenant schemas that don't have a tenant table yet. This is
because, we assign colocation ids to tenant schemas as soon as they
are created. That way, we can keep associating tenant schemas with
particular colocation groups even if all the tenant tables of a tenant
schema are dropped and recreated later on.
When a tenant schema is dropped, we delete the corresponding row from
pg_dist_tenant_schema. In that case, we delete the corresponding
colocation group from pg_dist_colocation as well.
### Future work for 12.0 release:
We're building schema-based sharding on top of the infrastructure that
adds support for creating distributed tables without a shard key
(https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6867).
However, not all the operations that can be done on distributed tables
without a shard key necessarily make sense (in the same way) in the
context of schema-based sharding. For example, we need to think about
what happens if user attempts altering schema of a tenant table. We
will tackle such scenarios in a future PR.
We will also add a new UDF --citus.schema_tenant_set() or such-- to
allow users to use an existing schema as a tenant schema, and another
one --citus.schema_tenant_unset() or such-- to stop using a schema as
a tenant schema in future PRs.
citus.tenant_stats_limit was set to 2 when we were adding tests for it.
Then we changed it to 10, making the tests incorrect.
This PR fixes that without breaking other tests.
Citus upgrade tests require some additional logic to run, because we
have a before and after schedule and we need to swap the Citus
version in-between. This adds that logic to `run_test.py`.
In passing this makes running upgrade tests locally multiple times
faster by caching tarballs.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes a crash when explain analyze is requested for a query
that is normally locally executed.
When explain analyze is requested for a query, a task with two queries
is created. Those two queries are
1. Wrapped Query --> `SELECT ... FROM
worker_save_query_explain_analyze(<query>, <explain analyze options>)`
2. Fetch Query -->` SELECT explain_analyze_output, execution_duration
FROM worker_last_saved_explain_analyze();`
When the query is locally executed a task with multiple queries causes a
crash in production. See the Assert at
57455dc64d/src/backend/distributed/executor/tuple_destination.c#:~:text=Assert(task%2D%3EqueryCount%20%3D%3D%201)%3B
This becomes a critical issue when auto_explain extension is used. When
auto_explain extension is enabled, explain analyze is automatically
requested for every query.
One possible solution could be not to create two queries for a locally
executed query. The fetch part may not have to be a query since the
values are available in local variables.
Until we enable local execution for explain analyze, it is best to
disable local execution.
Fixes#6777.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes a bug in background shard rebalancer where the
replicate reference tables task fails if the current user is not a
superuser.
This change is to be backported to earlier releases. We should fix the
permissions for replicate_reference_tables on main branch such that it
can be run by non-superuser roles.
Fixes#6925.
Fixes#6926.
I observed a flaky test output
[here](https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/citusdata/citus/32692/workflows/32464a22-7fd6-440a-9ff7-cfa62f9ff58a/jobs/1126144)
and added `ORDER BY` clauses to similar queries in the failing test
file.
```diff
SELECT pg_identify_object_as_address(classid, objid, objsubid) from pg_catalog.pg_dist_object where objid IN('viewsc.prop_view3'::regclass::oid, 'viewsc.prop_view4'::regclass::oid);
pg_identify_object_as_address
---------------------------------
- (view,"{viewsc,prop_view3}",{})
(view,"{viewsc,prop_view4}",{})
+ (view,"{viewsc,prop_view3}",{})
(2 rows)
```
Previously INSERT .. SELECT planner were pushing down some queries that should not be pushed down due to wrong colocation checks. It was checking whether one of the table in SELECT part and target table are colocated. But now, we check colocation for all tables in SELECT part and the target table.
Another problem with INSERT .. SELECT planner was that some queries, which is valid to be pushed down, were not pushed down due to unnecessary checks which are currently supported. e.g. UNION check. As solution, we reused the pushdown planner checks for INSERT .. SELECT planner.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes a bug that causes incorrectly pushing down some
INSERT .. SELECT queries that we shouldn't
DESCRIPTION: Prevents unnecessarily pulling the data into coordinator
for some INSERT .. SELECT queries
DESCRIPTION: Drops support for pushing down INSERT .. SELECT with append
table as target
Fixes#6749.
Fixes#1428.
Fixes#6920.
---------
Co-authored-by: aykutbozkurt <aykut.bozkurt1995@gmail.com>
We mark objects as distributed objects in Citus metadata only if we need
to propagate given the command that creates it to worker nodes. For this
reason, we were not doing this for the objects that are created while
pg_dist_node is empty.
One implication of doing so is that we defer the schema propagation to
the time when user creates the first distributed table in the schema.
However, this doesn't help for schema-based sharding (#6866) because we
want to sync pg_dist_tenant_schema to the worker nodes even for empty
schemas too.
* Support test dependencies for isolation tests without a schedule
* Comment out a test due to a known issue (#6901)
* Also, reduce the verbosity for some log messages and make some
tests compatible with run_test.py.
Fixes#6779.
DESCRIPTION: Disables citus.enable_non_colocated_router_query_pushdown
GUC by default to ensure generating a consistent distributed plan for
the queries that reference non-colocated distributed tables
We already have tests for the cases where this GUC is disabled,
so I'm not adding any more tests in this PR.
Also make multi_insert_select_window idempotent.
Related to: #6793
DESCRIPTION: Forward to existing emit_log_hook in our log hook
This makes us work better with other extensions installed in Postgres.
Without this change we would overwrite their emit_log_hook, causing it
to never be called.
Fixes#6874
When we bump columnar version, some tests fail because of the output
change. Instead of changing those lines every time, I think it is better
to normalize it in tests.
A test in background_rebalance_parallel.sql was failing intermittently
where the order of tasks in the output was not deterministic. This
commit fixes the test by removing id columns for the background tasks in
the output.
A sample failing diff before this patch is below:
```diff
SELECT D.task_id,
(SELECT T.command FROM pg_dist_background_task T WHERE T.task_id = D.task_id),
D.depends_on,
(SELECT T.command FROM pg_dist_background_task T WHERE T.task_id = D.depends_on)
FROM pg_dist_background_task_depend D WHERE job_id in (:job_id) ORDER BY D.task_id, D.depends_on ASC;
task_id | command | depends_on | command
---------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------
- 1014 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674026,50,57,'auto') | 1013 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674025,50,56,'auto')
- 1016 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674032,50,57,'auto') | 1015 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674031,50,56,'auto')
- 1018 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674038,50,57,'auto') | 1017 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674037,50,56,'auto')
- 1020 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674044,50,57,'auto') | 1019 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674043,50,56,'auto')
+ 1014 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674038,50,57,'auto') | 1013 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674037,50,56,'auto')
+ 1016 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674044,50,57,'auto') | 1015 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674043,50,56,'auto')
+ 1018 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674026,50,57,'auto') | 1017 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674025,50,56,'auto')
+ 1020 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674032,50,57,'auto') | 1019 | SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(85674031,50,56,'auto')
(4 rows)
```
Notice that the dependent and dependee tasks have some commands, but
they have different task ids.
* Add support for dist insert select by selecting from a reference
table.
This was the only pushable insert .. select case that
#6773 didn't cover.
* For the cases where we insert into a Citus table but the INSERT ..
SELECT
query cannot be pushed down, allow pull-to-coordinator when possible.
Remove the checks that we had at the very beginning of
CreateInsertSelectPlanInternal so that we can try insert .. select via
pull-to-coordinator for the cases where we cannot push-down the insert
.. select query. What we support via pull-to-coordinator is still
limited due to lacking of logical planner support for SELECT queries,
but this commit at least allows using pull-to-coordinator for the cases
where the select query can be planned via router planner, without
limiting ourselves to restrictive top-level checks.
Also introduce some additional restrictions into
CreateDistributedInsertSelectPlan for the cases it was missing to check
for null-shard-key tables. Indeed, it would make more sense to have
those checks for distributed tables in general, via separate PRs against
main branch. See https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6817.
* Add support for inserting into a Postgres table.
Enable router planner and a limited version of INSERT .. SELECT planner
for the queries that reference colocated null shard key tables.
* SELECT / UPDATE / DELETE / MERGE is supported as long as it's a router
query.
* INSERT .. SELECT is supported as long as it only references colocated
null shard key tables.
Note that this is not only limited to distributed INSERT .. SELECT but
also
covers a limited set of query types that require pull-to-coordinator,
e.g.,
due to LIMIT clause, generate_series() etc. ...
(Ideally distributed INSERT .. SELECT could handle such queries too,
e.g.,
when we're only referencing tables that don't have a shard key, but
today
this is not the case. See
https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6773#discussion_r1140130562.
Add tests for ddl coverage:
* indexes
* partitioned tables + indexes with long names
* triggers
* foreign keys
* statistics
* grant & revoke statements
* truncate & vacuum
* create/test/drop view that depends on a dist table with no shard key
* policy & rls test
* alter table add/drop/alter_type column (using sequences/different data
types/identity columns)
* alter table add constraint (not null, check, exclusion constraint)
* alter table add column with a default value / set default / drop
default
* alter table set option (autovacuum)
* indexes / constraints without names
* multiple subcommands
Adds support for
* Creating new partitions after distributing (with null key) the parent
table
* Attaching partitions to a distributed table with null distribution key
(and automatically distribute the new partition with null key as well)
* Detaching partitions from it
With this PR, we allow creating distributed tables with without
specifying a shard key via create_distributed_table(). Here are the
the important details about those tables:
* Specifying `shard_count` is not allowed because it is assumed to be 1.
* We mostly call such tables as "null shard-key" table in code /
comments.
* To avoid doing a breaking layout change in create_distributed_table();
instead of throwing an error, it will inform the user that
`distribution_type`
param is ignored unless it's explicitly set to NULL or 'h'.
* `colocate_with` param allows colocating such null shard-key tables to
each other.
* We define this table type, i.e., NULL_SHARD_KEY_TABLE, as a subclass
of
DISTRIBUTED_TABLE because we mostly want to treat them as distributed
tables in terms of SQL / DDL / operation support.
* Metadata for such tables look like:
- distribution method => DISTRIBUTE_BY_NONE
- replication model => REPLICATION_MODEL_STREAMING
- colocation id => **!=** INVALID_COLOCATION_ID (distinguishes from
Citus local tables)
* We assign colocation groups for such tables to different nodes in a
round-robin fashion based on the modulo of "colocation id".
Note that this PR doesn't care about DDL (except CREATE TABLE) / SQL /
operation (i.e., Citus UDFs) support for such tables but adds a
preliminary
API.
When working on changelog, Marco suggested in
https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6856#pullrequestreview-1386601215
that we should bump columnar version to 11.3 as well.
This PR aims to contain all the necessary changes to allow upgrades to
and downgrades from 11.3.0 for columnar. Note that updating citus
extension version does not affect columnar as the two extension versions
are not really coupled.
The same changes will also be applied to the release branch in
https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6897
We are handling colocation groups with shard group count less than the
worker node count, using a method different than the usual rebalancer.
See #6739
While making the decision of using this method or not, we should've
ignored the nodes that are marked `shouldhaveshards = false`. This PR
excludes those nodes when making the decision.
Adds a test such that:
coordinator: []
worker 1: [1_1, 1_2]
worker 2: [2_1, 2_2]
(rebalance)
coordinator: []
worker 1: [1_1, 2_1]
worker 2: [1_2, 2_2]
If we take the coordinator into account, the rebalancer considers the
first state as balanced and does nothing (because shard_count <
worker_count)
But with this pr, we ignore the coordinator because it's
shouldhaveshards = false
So the rebalancer distributes each colocation group to both workers
Also, fixes an unrelated flaky test in the same file
We need to break sequence dependency for a table while creating the
table during non-transactional metadata sync to ensure idempotency of
the creation of the table.
**Problem:**
When we send `SELECT
pg_catalog.worker_drop_sequence_dependency(logicalrelid::regclass::text)
FROM pg_dist_partition` to workers during the non-transactional sync,
table might not be in `pg_dist_partition` at worker, and sequence
dependency is not broken at the worker.
**Solution:**
We break sequence dependency via `SELECT
pg_catalog.worker_drop_sequence_dependency(logicalrelid::regclass::text)`
for each table while creating it at the workers. It is safe to send
since the udf is a no-op when there is no sequence dependency.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes a bug related to sequence idempotency at
non-transactional sync.
Fixes https://github.com/citusdata/citus/issues/6888.
There was a bug related to regex. We sometimes caught the wrong line
when the test name is also included in comments.
Example: We caught the wrong line as multi_metadata_sync is included in
the comment before the test line.
```
# ----------
# multi_metadata_sync tests the propagation of mx-related metadata changes to metadata workers
# multi_unsupported_worker_operations tests that unsupported operations error out on metadata workers
# ----------
test: multi_metadata_sync
```
Solution: Restrict regex rule better.
In #6814 we started using the Python test runner for upgrade tests in
run_test.py, instead of the Perl based one. This had a problem though,
not all tests in minimal_schedule can be run with the Python runner.
This adds a separate minimal schedule for the pg_upgrade tests which
doesn't include the tests that break with the Python runner.
This PR also fixes various other issues that came up while testing
the upgrade tests.
- Query generator is used to create queries, allowed by the grammar which is documented at `query_generator/query_gen.py` (currently contains only joins).
- This PR adds a CI test which utilizes the query generator to compare the results of generated queries that are executed on Citus tables and local (undistributed) tables. It fails if there is an unexpected error at results. The error can be related to Citus, the query generator, or even Postgres.
- The tool is configured by the file `query_generator/config/config.yaml`, which limits table counts at generated queries and sets many table related parameters (e.g. row count).
- Run time of the CI task can be configured from the config file. By default, we run 250 queries with maximum table count of 40 inside each query.
`PlaceHolderVar` is not relevant to be processed inside a restriction
clause. Otherwise, `pull_var_clause_default` would throw error. PG would
create the restriction to physical `Var` that `PlaceHolderVar` points to
anyway, so it is safe to skip this restriction.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes a bug related to WHERE clause list which contains
placeholder.
Fixes https://github.com/citusdata/citus/issues/6758
DESCRIPTION: Changes the regression test setups adding the coordinator
to metadata by default.
When creating a Citus cluster, coordinator can be added in metadata
explicitly by running `citus_set_coordinator_host ` function. Adding the
coordinator to metadata allows to create citus managed local tables.
Other Citus functionality is expected to be unaffected.
This change adds the coordinator to metadata by default when creating
test clusters in regression tests.
There are 3 ways to run commands in a sql file (or a schedule which is a
sequence of sql files) with Citus regression tests. Below is how this PR
adds the coordinator to metadata for each.
1. `make <schedule_name>`
Changed the sql files (sql/multi_cluster_management.sql and
sql/minimal_cluster_management.sql) which sets up the test clusters such
that they call `citus_set_coordinator_host`. This ensures any following
tests will have the coordinator in metadata by default.
2. `citus_tests/run_test.py <sql_file_name>`
Changed the python code that sets up the cluster to always call `
citus_set_coordinator_host`.
For the upgrade tests, a version check is included to make sure
`citus_set_coordinator_host` function is available for a given version.
3. ` make check-arbitrary-configs `
Changed the python code that sets up the cluster to always call
`citus_set_coordinator_host `.
#6864 will be used to track the remaining work which is to change the
tests where coordinator is added/removed as a node.
This PR updates the tenant stats implementation to set partitionKeyValue
and colocationId in ExecuteLocalTaskListExtended, in addition to
LocallyExecuteTaskPlan. This ensures that tenant stats can be properly
gathered regardless of the code path taken. The changes were initially
made while testing stored procedure calls for tenant stats.
.. rather than having it in user facing functions. That way, we
can use the same logic for creating Citus tables from other places
too.
This would be useful for creating tenant tables via a simple function
call in the utility hook, for schema-based sharding purposes.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes memory errors, caught by valgrind, of type
"conditional jump or move depends on uninitialized value"
When running Citus tests under Postgres with valgrind, the test cases
calling into `NonBlockingShardSplit` function produce valgrind errors of
type "conditional jump or move depends on uninitialized value".
The issue is caused by creating a HTAB in a wrong way. HASH_COMPARE flag
should have been used when creating a HTAB with user defined comparison
function. In the absence of HASH_COMPARE flag, HTAB falls back into
built-in string comparison function. However, valgrind somehow discovers
that the match function is not assigned to the user defined function as
intended.
Fixes#6835
Fixes the bug that causes updating the citus_stat_tenants periods
incorrectly.
`TimestampDifferenceExceeds` expects the difference in milliseconds but
it was microseconds, this is fixed.
`tenantStats->lastQueryTime` was updated during monitoring too, now it's
updated only when there are tenant queries.
DESCRIPTION:
Makefile changes to build different versions of CDC decoder for different base decoders like pgoutput and wal2json with the same name and copy it to $packagelib/cdc_decoders dir. This helps the user to use logical replication slots normally with pgoutput without being aware of CDC decoder.
1) Changed src/backend/distributed/cdc/Makefile to setup a build directory
for CDC in build-cdc-$(DECODER) dir and copy the source files (.c.h and Makefile.decoder) to
the build dir and build it for each base decoder.
2) copy the pgoutput.so and wal2json.so into the above build dir and
install them in PG packagelibdir/citus_decoders directory.
3)Added a testcase 016_cdc_wal2json.pl for testing the wal2json decoder
using pg_recv_logical_changes function.
DESCRIPTION: Adds control for background task executors involving a node
### Background and motivation
Nonblocking concurrent task execution via background workers was
introduced in [#6459](https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6459), and
concurrent shard moves in the background rebalancer were introduced in
[#6756](https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6756) - with a hard
dependency that limits to 1 shard move per node. As we know, a shard
move consists of a shard moving from a source node to a target node. The
hard dependency was used because the background task runner didn't have
an option to limit the parallel shard moves per node.
With the motivation of controlling the number of concurrent shard
moves that involve a particular node, either as source or target, this
PR introduces a general new GUC
citus.max_background_task_executors_per_node to be used in the
background task runner infrastructure. So, why do we even want to
control and limit the concurrency? Well, it's all about resource
availability: because the moves involve the same nodes, extra
parallelism won’t make the rebalance complete faster if some resource is
already maxed out (usually cpu or disk). Or, if the cluster is being
used in a production setting, the moves might compete for resources with
production queries much more than if they had been executed
sequentially.
### How does it work?
A new column named nodes_involved is added to the catalog table that
keeps track of the scheduled background tasks,
pg_dist_background_task. It is of type integer[] - to store a list
of node ids. It is NULL by default - the column will be filled by the
rebalancer, but we may not care about the nodes involved in other uses
of the background task runner.
Table "pg_catalog.pg_dist_background_task"
Column | Type
============================================
job_id | bigint
task_id | bigint
owner | regrole
pid | integer
status | citus_task_status
command | text
retry_count | integer
not_before | timestamp with time zone
message | text
+nodes_involved | integer[]
A hashtable named ParallelTasksPerNode keeps track of the number of
parallel running background tasks per node. An entry in the hashtable is
as follows:
ParallelTasksPerNodeEntry
{
node_id // The node is used as the hash table key
counter // Number of concurrent background tasks that involve node node_id
// The counter limit is citus.max_background_task_executors_per_node
}
When the background task runner assigns a runnable task to a new
executor, it increments the counter for each of the nodes involved with
that runnable task. The limit of each counter is
citus.max_background_task_executors_per_node. If the limit is reached
for any of the nodes involved, this runnable task is skipped. And then,
later, when the running task finishes, the background task runner
decrements the counter for each of the nodes involved with the done
task. The following functions take care of these increment-decrement
steps:
IncrementParallelTaskCountForNodesInvolved(task)
DecrementParallelTaskCountForNodesInvolved(task)
citus.max_background_task_executors_per_node can be changed in the
fly. In the background rebalancer, we simply give {source_node,
target_node} as the nodesInvolved input to the
ScheduleBackgroundTask function. The rest is taken care of by the
general background task runner infrastructure explained above. Check
background_task_queue_monitor.sql and
background_rebalance_parallel.sql tests for detailed examples.
#### Note
This PR also adds a hard node dependency if a node is first being used
as a source for a move, and then later as a target. The reason this
should be a hard dependency is that the first move might make space for
the second move. So, we could run out of disk space (or at least
overload the node) if we move the second shard to it before the first
one is moved away.
Fixes https://github.com/citusdata/citus/issues/6716
DESCRIPTION: PR description that will go into the change log, up to 78
characters
---------
Co-authored-by: Hanefi Onaldi <Hanefi.Onaldi@microsoft.com>
Fixes flakiness in multi_metadata_sync test
https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/citusdata/citus/31863/workflows/ea937480-a4cc-4646-815c-bb2634361d98/jobs/1074457
```diff
SELECT
logicalrelid, repmodel
FROM
pg_dist_partition
WHERE
logicalrelid = 'mx_test_schema_1.mx_table_1'::regclass
OR logicalrelid = 'mx_test_schema_2.mx_table_2'::regclass;
logicalrelid | repmodel
-----------------------------+----------
- mx_test_schema_1.mx_table_1 | s
mx_test_schema_2.mx_table_2 | s
+ mx_test_schema_1.mx_table_1 | s
(2 rows)
```
This is a simple issue of missing `ORDER BY` clauses. I went ahead and
added some other missing ones in the same file as well. Also, I replaced
existing `ORDER BY logicalrelid` with `ORDER BY logicalrelid::text`, in
order to compare names, not OIDs.
DESCRIPTION: Adds views that monitor statistics on tenant usages
This PR adds `citus_stats_tenants` view that monitors the tenants on the
cluster.
`citus_stats_tenants` shows the node id, colocation id, tenant
attribute, read count in this period and last period, and query count in
this period and last period of the tenant.
Tenant attribute currently is the tenant's distribution column value,
later when schema based sharding is introduced, this meaning might
change.
A period is a time bucket the queries are counted by. Read and query
counts for this period can increase until the current period ends. After
that those counts are moved to last period's counts, which cannot
change. The period length can be set using 'citus.stats_tenants_period'.
`SELECT` queries are counted as _read_ queries, `INSERT`, `UPDATE` and
`DELETE` queries are counted as _write_ queries. So in the view read
counts are `SELECT` counts and query counts are `SELECT`, `INSERT`,
`UPDATE` and `DELETE` count.
The data is stored in shared memory, in a struct named
`MultiTenantMonitor`.
`citus_stats_tenants` shows the data from local tenants.
`citus_stats_tenants` show up to `citus.stats_tenant_limit` number of
tenants.
The tenants are scored based on the number of queries they run and the
recency of those queries. Every query ran increases the score of tenant
by `ONE_QUERY_SCORE`, and after every period ends the scores are halved.
Halving is done lazily.
To retain information a longer the monitor keeps up to 3 times
`citus.stats_tenant_limit` tenants. When the tenant count hits `3 *
citus.stats_tenant_limit`, last `citus.stats_tenant_limit` tenants are
removed. To see all stored tenants you can use
`citus_stats_tenants(return_all_tenants := true)`
- [x] Create collector view that gets data from all nodes. #6761
- [x] Add monitoring log #6762
- [x] Create enable/disable GUC #6769
- [x] Parse the annotation string correctly #6796
- [x] Add local queries and prepared statements #6797
- [x] Rename to citus_stat_statements #6821
- [x] Run pgbench
- [x] Fix role permissions #6812
---------
Co-authored-by: Gokhan Gulbiz <ggulbiz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jelte Fennema <github-tech@jeltef.nl>
Over the last few months run_test.py got more and more complex. This
refactors the code in `run_test.py` to be better understandable. Mostly
this splits up separate pieces of logic into separate functions.
In CI we would sometimes get this failure:
```diff
-- The original shard is marked for deferred drop with policy_type = 2.
-- The previous shard should be dropped at the beginning of the second split call
SELECT * from pg_dist_cleanup;
record_id | operation_id | object_type | object_name | node_group_id | policy_type
-----------+--------------+-------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+---------------+-------------
+ 60 | 778 | 3 | citus_shard_split_slot_18_21216_778 | 16 | 0
512 | 778 | 1 | citus_split_shard_by_split_points_deferred_schema.table_to_split_8981001 | 16 | 2
-(1 row)
+(2 rows)
```
Replication slots sometimes cannot be deleted right away. Which is hard
to resolve, but luckily we can filter these cleanup records out easily
by filtering by policy_type.
While debugging this issue I learnt that we did not use
`GetNextCleanupRecordId` in all places where we created cleanup
records. This caused test failures when running tests multiple times,
when they set `citus.next_cleanup_record_id`. I tried fixing that by
calling GetNextCleanupRecordId in all places but that caused many
other tests to fail due to deadlocks. So, instead this adresses
that issue by using `ALTER SEQUENCE ... RESTART` instead of
`citus.next_cleanup_record_id`. In a follow up PR we should
probably get rid of `citus.next_cleanup_record_id`, since it's
only used in one other file.
DESCRIPTION: Fix an issue that caused some queries with custom
aggregates to fail
While playing around with https://github.com/pgvector/pgvector I noticed
that the AVG query was broken. That's because we treat it as any other
AVG by breaking it down in SUM and COUNT, but there are no SUM/COUNT
functions in this case, but there is a perfectly usable combinefunc.
This PR changes our aggregate logic to prefer custom aggregates with a
combinefunc even if they have a common name.
Co-authored-by: Marco Slot <marco.slot@gmail.com>
DESCRIPTION:
- The CDC decoder is refacroted into a seperate extension that can be used loaded dynamically without having to reload citus.
- CDC decoder code can be compiled using DECODER flag to work with different decoders like pgoutput and wal2json.
by default the base decode is "pgoutput".
- the dynamic_library_path config is adjusted dynamically to prefer the decoders in cdc_decoders directory in citus init
so that the users can use the replication subscription commands without having to make any config changes.
DESCRIPTION: Refactor and unify shard move and copy functions
Shard move and copy functions share a lot of code in common. This PR
unifies these functions into one, along with some helper functions. To
preserve the current behavior, we'll introduce and use an enum
parameter, and hardcoded strings for producing error/warning messages.
For some tests such as upgrade tests and arbitrary config tests we set
up the citus cluster using Python. This setup is slightly different from
the perl based setup script (`multi_regress.pl`). Most importantly it
uses replication factor 1 by default.
This changes our run_test.py script to be able to run a schedule using
python instead of `multi_regress.pl`, for the tests that require it.
For now arbitrary config tests are still not runnable with
`run_test.py`, but this brings us one step closer to being able to do
that.
Fixes#6804
Having as little Perl as possible in our repo seems a worthy goal. Sadly
Postgres its Perl based TAP infrastructure was the only way in which we
could
run tests that were hard to do using only SQL commands. This change adds
infrastructure to run such "application style tests" using python and
converts all our existing Perl TAP tests to this new infrastructure.
Some of the helper functions that are added in this PR are currently
unused. Most of these will be used by the CDC PR that depends on this.
Some others are there because they were needed by the PgBouncer test
framework that this is based on, and the functions seemed useful enough
to citus testing to keep.
The main features of the test suite are:
1. Application style tests using a programming language that our
developers know how to write.
2. Caching of Citus clusters in-between tests using the ["fixture"
pattern][fixture] from `pytest` to achieve speedy tests. To make this
work in practice any changes made during a test are automatically
undone. Schemas, replication slots, subscriptions, publications are
dropped at the end of each test. And any changes made by `ALTER SYSTEM`
or manually editing of `pg_hba.conf` are undone too.
3. Automatic parallel execution of tests using the `-n auto` flag that's
added by `pytest-xdist`. This improved the speed of tests greatly with
the similar test framework I created for PgBouncer. Right now it doesn't
help much yet though, since this PR only adds two tests (one of which
takes ~10 times longer than the other).
Possible future improvements are:
1. Clean up even more things at the end of each test (e.g. users that
were created). These are fairly easy to add, but I have not done so yet
since they were not needed yet for this PR or the CDC PR. So I would not
be able to test the cleanup easily.
2. Support for query block detection similar to what we can now do using
isolation tests.
[fixture]: https://docs.pytest.org/en/6.2.x/fixture.html
Add new metadata sync methods which uses MemorySyncContext api so that during the sync we can
- free memory to prevent OOM,
- use either transactional or nontransactional modes according to the GUC .
- Create MetadataSyncContext api to encapsulate
both transactional and nontransactional modes,
- Add a GUC to switch between metadata sync transaction modes.
This pull request proposes a change to the logic used for propagating
identity columns to worker nodes in citus. Instead of creating a
dependent sequence for each identity column and changing its default
value to `nextval(seq)/worker_nextval(seq)`, this update will pass the
identity columns as-is to the worker nodes.
Please note that there are a few limitations to this change.
1. Only bigint identity columns will be allowed in distributed tables to
ensure compatibility with the DDL from any node functionality. Our
current distributed sequence implementation only allows insert
statements from all nodes for bigint sequences.
2. `alter_distributed_table` and `undistribute_table` operations will
not be allowed for tables with identity columns. This is because we do
not have a proper way of keeping sequence states consistent across the
cluster.
DESCRIPTION: Prevents using identity columns on data types other than
`bigint` on distributed tables
DESCRIPTION: Prevents using `alter_distributed_table` and
`undistribute_table` UDFs when a table has identity columns
DESCRIPTION: Fixes a bug that prevents enforcing identity column
restrictions on worker nodes
Depends on #6740Fixes#6694
DESCRIPTION: This PR removes the task dependencies between shard moves
for which the shards belong to different colocation groups. This change
results in scheduling multiple tasks in the RUNNABLE state. Therefore it
is possible that the background task monitor can run them concurrently.
Previously, all the shard moves planned in a rebalance operation took
dependency on each other sequentially.
For instance, given the following table and shards
colocation group 1 colocation group 2
table1 table2 table3 table4 table 5
shard11 shard21 shard31 shard41 shard51
shard12 shard22 shard32 shard42 shard52
if the rebalancer planner returned the below set of moves
` {move(shard11), move(shard12), move(shard41), move(shard42)}`
background rebalancer scheduled them such that they depend on each other
sequentially.
```
{move(reftables) if there is any, none}
|
move( shard11)
|
move(shard12)
| {move(shard41)<--- move(shard12)} This is an artificial dependency
move(shard41)
|
move(shard42)
```
This results in artificial dependencies between otherwise independent
moves.
Considering that the shards in different colocation groups can be moved
concurrently, this PR changes the dependency relationship between the
moves as follows:
```
{move(reftables) if there is any, none} {move(reftables) if there is any, none}
| |
move(shard11) move(shard41)
| |
move(shard12) move(shard42)
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Jelte Fennema <jelte.fennema@microsoft.com>
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.
Today we allow planning the queries that reference non-colocated tables
if the shards that query targets are placed on the same node. However,
this may not be the case, e.g., after rebalancing shards because it's
not guaranteed to have those shards on the same node anymore.
This commit adds citus.enable_non_colocated_router_query_pushdown GUC
that can be used to disallow planning such queries via router planner,
when it's set to false. Note that the default value for this GUC will be
"true" for 11.3, but we will alter it to "false" on 12.0 to not
introduce
a breaking change in a minor release.
Closes#692.
Even more, allowing such queries to go through router planner also
causes
generating an incorrect plan for the DML queries that reference
distributed
tables that are sharded based on different replication factor settings.
For
this reason, #6779 can be closed after altering the default value for
this
GUC to "false", hence not now.
DESCRIPTION: Adds `citus.enable_non_colocated_router_query_pushdown` GUC
to ensure generating a consistent distributed plan for the queries that
reference non-colocated distributed tables (when set to "false", the
default is "true").
Soon I will be doing some changes related to #692 in router planner
and those changes require updating ~5/6 tests related to router
planning. And to make those test files runnable by run_test.py
multiple times, we need to make some other tests (that they're
run in parallel / they badly depend on) ready for run_test.py too.
Because they're only interested in distributed tables. Even more,
this replaces HasDistributionKey() check with
IsCitusTableType(DISTRIBUTED_TABLE) because this doesn't make a
difference on main and sounds slightly more intuitive. Plus, this
would also allow safely using this function in
https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6773.
This would be useful for testing #6773. This is because, given that
#6773
only adds support for router / fast-path queries, theoretically almost
all
the tests that we have in that test file should work for null-shard-key
tables too (and they indeed do).
I deliberately did not replace multi_router_planner_fast_path.sql with
the one that I'm adding into arbitrary configs because we might still
want to see when we're able to go through fast-path planning for the
usual distributed tables (the ones that have a shard key).
DESCRIPTION: Check before logicalrep for rebalancer, error if needed
Check if we can use logical replication or not, in case of shard
transfer mode = auto, before executing the shard moves. If we can't,
error out. Before this PR, we used to error out in the middle of shard
moves:
```sql
set citus.shard_count = 4; -- just to get the error sooner
select citus_remove_node('localhost',9702);
create table t1 (a int primary key);
select create_distributed_table('t1','a');
create table t2 (a bigint);
select create_distributed_table('t2','a');
select citus_add_node('localhost',9702);
select rebalance_table_shards();
NOTICE: Moving shard 102008 from localhost:9701 to localhost:9702 ...
NOTICE: Moving shard 102009 from localhost:9701 to localhost:9702 ...
NOTICE: Moving shard 102012 from localhost:9701 to localhost:9702 ...
ERROR: cannot use logical replication to transfer shards of the relation t2 since it doesn't have a REPLICA IDENTITY or PRIMARY KEY
```
Now we check and error out in the beginning, without moving the shards.
fixes: #6727
ci/fix_styles.sh were complaining about `black` and `isort` packages are
not found even if I `pipenv install --dev` due to broken lock file. I
regenerated the lock file and now it works fine. We also wanted to
upgrade required python version for the pipfile.
Fixes#6672
2) Move all MERGE related routines to a new file merge_planner.c
3) Make ConjunctionContainsColumnFilter() static again, and rearrange the code in MergeQuerySupported()
4) Restore the original format in the comments section.
5) Add big serial test. Implement latest set of comments
This implements the phase - II of MERGE sql support
Support routable query where all the tables in the merge-sql are distributed, co-located, and both the source and
target relations are joined on the distribution column with a constant qual. This should be a Citus single-task
query. Below is an example.
SELECT create_distributed_table('t1', 'id');
SELECT create_distributed_table('s1', 'id', colocate_with => ‘t1’);
MERGE INTO t1
USING s1 ON t1.id = s1.id AND t1.id = 100
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE SET val = s1.val + 10
WHEN MATCHED THEN
DELETE
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
INSERT (id, val, src) VALUES (s1.id, s1.val, s1.src)
Basically, MERGE checks to see if
There are a minimum of two distributed tables (source and a target).
All the distributed tables are indeed colocated.
MERGE relations are joined on the distribution column
MERGE .. USING .. ON target.dist_key = source.dist_key
The query should touch only a single shard i.e. JOIN AND with a constant qual
MERGE .. USING .. ON target.dist_key = source.dist_key AND target.dist_key = <>
If any of the conditions are not met, it raises an exception.
(cherry picked from commit 44c387b978)
This implements MERGE phase3
Support pushdown query where all the tables in the merge-sql are Citus-distributed, co-located, and both
the source and target relations are joined on the distribution column. This will generate multiple tasks
which execute independently after pushdown.
SELECT create_distributed_table('t1', 'id');
SELECT create_distributed_table('s1', 'id', colocate_with => ‘t1’);
MERGE INTO t1
USING s1
ON t1.id = s1.id
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE SET val = s1.val + 10
WHEN MATCHED THEN
DELETE
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
INSERT (id, val, src) VALUES (s1.id, s1.val, s1.src)
*The only exception for both the phases II and III is, UPDATEs and INSERTs must be done on the same shard-group
as the joined key; for example, below scenarios are NOT supported as the key-value to be inserted/updated is not
guaranteed to be on the same node as the id distribution-column.
MERGE INTO target t
USING source s ON (t.customer_id = s.customer_id)
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN - -
INSERT(customer_id, …) VALUES (<non-local-constant-key-value>, ……);
OR this scenario where we update the distribution column itself
MERGE INTO target t
USING source s On (t.customer_id = s.customer_id)
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE SET customer_id = 100;
(cherry picked from commit fa7b8949a8)
In #6720 I'm adding a `pytest` based testing framework. This adds the
dependencies for those. They have already been [merged into our docker
files][the-process-merge] in the the-process repo preparation for #6720.
But by not having them on our citus main branch it is impossible to
make changes to the Pipfile, because our CI Dockerfiles and master
are out of date.
Since #6720 will need some more discussion and might take a few more
weeks to be merged, this takes out the Pipfile changes. By merging this
PR we can unblock new Pipfile changes.
Unblocks and partially addresses #6766
[the-process-merge]: https://github.com/citusdata/the-process/pull/117
In the past, having columnar tables in the cluster was causing pg
upgrades to fail when attempting to access columnar metadata. This is
because, pg_dump doesn't see objects that we use for columnar-am related
booking as the dependencies of the tables using columnar-am.
To fix that; in #5456, we inserted some "normal dependency" edges (from
those objects to columnar-am) into pg_depend.
This helped us ensuring the existency of a class of metadata objects
--such as columnar.storageid_seq-- and helped fixing #5437.
However, the normal-dependency edges that we added for indexes on
columnar metadata tables --such columnar.stripe_pkey-- didn't help at
all because they were indeed causing dependency loops (#5510) and
pg_dump was not able to take those dependency edges into the account.
For this reason, this commit deletes those dependency edges so that
pg_dump stops complaining about them. Note that it's not critical to
delete those edges from pg_depend since they're not breaking pg upgrades
but were triggering some warning messages. And given that backporting
a sql change into older versions is hard a lot, we skip backporting
this.
This commit hides port numbers in upgrade_columnar_after because the
port numbers assigned to nodes in upgrade schedule differ from the ones
that flaky test detector assigns.
When run_test.py is run for an upgrade_.*_after.sql then, then
automatically run the corresponding uprade_.*_before.sql file first.
This is because all those upgrade_.*_after.sql files depend on the
objects created in upgrade_.*_before.sql files by definition.
Decide core distribution params in CreateCitusTable to reduce the
chances of
creating Citus tables based on incorrect combinations of distribution
method
and replication model params.
Also introduce DistributedTableParams struct to encapsulate the
parameters
that are specific to distributed tables.
So that we can run the tests that require fake_fdw by using minimal
schedule too.
Also move multi_create_fdw.sql up in multi_1_schedule to make it
available to more tests.
Now that we will soon add another table type having DISTRIBUTE_BY_NONE
as distribution method and that we want the code to interpret such
tables mostly as distributed tables, let's make the definition of those
other two table types more strict by removing
CITUS_TABLE_WITH_NO_DIST_KEY
macro.
And instead, use HasDistributionKey() check in the places where the
logic applies to all table types that have / don't have a distribution
key. In future PRs, we might want to convert some of those
HasDistributionKey() checks if logic only applies to Citus local /
reference tables, not the others.
And adding HasDistributionKey() also allows us to consider having
DISTRIBUTE_BY_NONE as the distribution method as a "table attribute"
that can apply to distributed tables too, rather something that
determines the table type.
Split the main logic that allows creating a Citus table into the
internal function CreateCitusTable().
Old CreateDistributedTable() function was assuming that it's creating
a reference table when the distribution method is DISTRIBUTE_BY_NONE.
However, soon this won't be the case when adding support for creating
single-shard distributed tables because their distribution method would
also be the same.
Now the internal method CreateCitusTable() doesn't make any assumptions
about table's replication model or such. Instead, it expects callers to
properly set all such metadata bits.
Even more, some of the parameters the old CreateDistributedTable() takes
--such as the shard count-- were not meaningful for a reference table,
and would be the same as for new table type.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes a bug in shard copy operations.
For copying shards in both shard move and shard split operations, Citus
uses the COPY statement.
A COPY all statement in the following form
` COPY target_shard FROM STDIN;`
throws an error when there is a GENERATED column in the shard table.
In order to fix this issue, we need to exclude the GENERATED columns in
the COPY and the matching SELECT statements. Hence this fix converts the
COPY and SELECT all statements to the following form:
```
COPY target_shard (col1, col2, ..., coln) FROM STDIN;
SELECT (col1, col2, ..., coln) FROM source_shard;
```
where (col1, col2, ..., coln) does not include a GENERATED column.
GENERATED column values are created in the target_shard as the values
are inserted.
Fixes#6705.
---------
Co-authored-by: Teja Mupparti <temuppar@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: aykut-bozkurt <51649454+aykut-bozkurt@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jelte Fennema <jelte.fennema@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Gürkan İndibay <gindibay@microsoft.com>
DESCRIPTION: Adds logic to distribute unbalanced shards
If the number of shard placements (for a colocation group) is less than
the number of workers, it means that some of the workers will remain
empty. With this PR, we consider these shard groups as a colocation
group, in order to make them be distributed evenly as much as possible
across the cluster.
Example:
```sql
create table t1 (a int primary key);
create table t2 (a int primary key);
create table t3 (a int primary key);
set citus.shard_count =1;
select create_distributed_table('t1','a');
select create_distributed_table('t2','a',colocate_with=>'t1');
select create_distributed_table('t3','a',colocate_with=>'t2');
create table tb1 (a bigint);
create table tb2 (a bigint);
select create_distributed_table('tb1','a');
select create_distributed_table('tb2','a',colocate_with=>'tb1');
select citus_add_node('localhost',9702);
select rebalance_table_shards();
```
Here we have two colocation groups, each with one shard group. Both
shard groups are placed on the first worker node. When we add a new
worker node and try to rebalance table shards, the rebalance planner
considers it well balanced and does nothing. With this PR, the
rebalancer tries to distribute these shard groups evenly across the
cluster as much as possible. For this example, with this PR, the
rebalancer moves one of the shard groups to the second worker node.
fixes: #6715
DESCRIPTION: Correctly report shard size in citus_shards view
When looking at citus_shards, people are interested in the actual size
that all the data related to the shard takes up on disk.
`pg_total_relation_size` is the function to use for that purpose. The
previously used `pg_relation_size` does not include indexes or TOAST.
Especially the missing toast can have enormous impact on the size of the
shown data.
With this small change, arbitrary config tests can have multiple acceptable correct outputs.
For an arbitrary config tests named `t`, now you can define `expected/t.out`, `expected/t_0.out`, `expected/t_1.out` etc and the test will succeed if the output of `sql/t.sql` is equal to any of the `t.out` or `t_{0, 1, ...}.out` files.
First of all, this commit sets next_shard_id for
single_node_truncate.sql because shard ids in the test output were
changing whenever we modify a prior test file.
Then the flaky test detector started complaining about
single_node_truncate.sql. We fix that by specifying the correct
test dependency for it in run_test.py.
2 improvements to prevent memory leaks during altering or undistributing
distributed tables with a lot of partitions and shards:
1. Free memory for each call to ConvertTable so that colocated and partition tables at
`AlterDistributedTable`, `UndistributeTable`, or
`AlterTableSetAccessMethod` will not cause an increase
in memory usage,
2. Free memory while executing attach partition commands for each partition table at
`AlterDistributedTable` to prevent an increase in memory usage.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes memory leak issue during altering distributed table
with a lot of partition and shards.
Fixes https://github.com/citusdata/citus/issues/6503.
In #6718 I accidentally added Python type hint syntax that was only
supported on Python 3.10. Our CI uses 3.9, so this PR changes that to a
syntax that's supported on 3.9 too.
We have memory leak during distribution of a table with a lot of
partitions as we do not release memory at ExprContext until all
partitions are not distributed. We improved 2 things to resolve the
issue:
1. We create and delete MemoryContext for each call to
`CreateDistributedTable` by partitions,
2. We rebuild the cache after we insert all the placements instead of
each placement for a shard.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes memory leak during distribution of a table with a lot
of partitions and shards.
Fixes https://github.com/citusdata/citus/issues/6572.
When auto_explain module is loaded and configured, EXPLAIN will be
implicitly run for all the supported commands. Postgres does not support
`EXPLAIN` for `ALTER` command. However, auto_explain will try to
`EXPLAIN` other supported commands internally triggered by `ALTER`.
For instance,
`ALTER TABLE target_table ADD CONSTRAINT fkey_167 FOREIGN KEY (col_1)
REFERENCES ref_table(key) ... `
command may trigger a SELECT command in the following form for foreign
key validation purpose:
`SELECT fk.col_1 FROM ONLY target_table fk LEFT OUTER JOIN ONLY
ref_table pk ON ( pk.key OPERATOR(pg_catalog.=) fk.col_1) WHERE pk.key
IS NULL AND (fk.col_1 IS NOT NULL) `
For Citus tables, the Citus utility hook should ensure that constraint
validation is skipped for shell tables but they are done for shard
tables. The reason behind this design choice can be summed up as:
- An ALTER TABLE command via coordinator node is run in a distributed
transaction.
- Citus does not support nested distributed transactions.
- A SELECT query on a distributed table (aka shell table) is also run in
a distributed transaction.
- Therefore, Citus does not support running a SELECT query on a shell
table while an ALTER TABLE command is running.
With
eadc88a800
a bug is introduced breaking the skip constraint validation behaviour of
Citus. With this change, we see that validation queries on distributed
tables are triggered within `ALTER` command adding constraints with
validation check. This regression did not cause an issue for regular use
cases since the citus executor hook blocks those queries heuristically
when there is an ALTER TABLE command in progress.
The issue is surfaced as a crash (#6424 Workers, when configured to use
auto_explain, crash during distributed transactions.) when auto_explain
is enabled. This is due to auto_explain trying to execute the SELECT
queries in a nested distributed transaction.
Now since the regression with constraint validation is fixed in
https://github.com/citusdata/citus/issues/6543, we should be able to
remove the workaround.
We should not omit to free PGResult when we receive single tuple result
from an internal backend.
Single tuple results are normally freed by our ReceiveResults for
`tupleDescriptor != NULL` flow but not for those with `tupleDescriptor
== NULL`. See PR #6722 for details.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes memory leak issue with query results that returns
single row.
O Simple fix is to add ORDER BY to have definitive results.
O Add search_path explicitly after reconnecting, this avoids creating objects in public schema
which prevents us from repetitive running of tests.
O multi_mx_modification is not designed to run repetitive, so isolate it.
Some of our tests depend on previous tests. Normally all these tests
should be part of a base schedule, but that's not always the case. The
flaky test detection script should ensure that we don't introduce other
dependencies by accident in new tests. But we have many old tests that
are not worth the effort of changing. This adds a way to define such
test dependencies in `run_test.py`, so that it can make sure to run any
dependencies before the actual test.
Our repo was complaining about the cryptography package being
vulnerable. This updates it, including our mitmproxy fork, because that
was pinning an outdated version.
Relevant commit on our mitmproxy fork:
2fd18ef051
Relevant PR on the-process:
https://github.com/citusdata/the-process/pull/112
Prevents memory leak during ConvertTable call for a table with a lot of
partitions.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes memory leak during undistribution and alteration of a
table with a lot of partitions.
Postgres got minor updates this starts using the images with the latest
version for our tests.
These new Postgres versions caused a compilation issue in PG14 and PG13
due to some function being backported that we had already backported
ourselves. Due this backport being a static inline function it doesn't
matter who provides this and there will be no linkage errors when either
running old Citus packages on new PG versions or the other way around.
The failure_create_distributed_table_non_empty test would sometimes fail
like this:
```diff
-- in the first test, cancel the first connection we sent from the coordinator
SELECT citus.mitmproxy('conn.cancel(' || pg_backend_pid() || ')');
- mitmproxy
----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-(1 row)
-
+ERROR: canceling statement due to user request
+CONTEXT: COPY mitmproxy_result, line 0
+SQL statement "COPY mitmproxy_result FROM '/home/circleci/project/src/test/regress/tmp_check/mitmproxy.fifo'"
+PL/pgSQL function citus.mitmproxy(text) line 11 at EXECUTE
SELECT create_distributed_table('test_table', 'id');
```
Source:
https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/citusdata/citus/30474/workflows/be1c9f9d-22c9-465c-964a-dcdd1cb8c99c/jobs/985441
Because the cancel command had no filter it would actually sometimes
cancel the mitmproxy cancel command itself. This PR addresses that by
simply removing this test.
This is basically the exact same issue as #6217, only in a different
place in the file. It's fixed here by removing the test since there's
already many different similar tests.
In #6314 I refactored the connection cleanup to be simpler to
understand and use. However, by doing so I introduced a use-after-free
possibility (that valgrind luckily picked up):
In the `ShouldShutdownConnection` path of
`AfterXactHostConnectionHandling`
we free connections without removing the `transactionNode` from the
dlist that it might be part of. Before the refactoring this wasn't a
problem, because the dlist would be completely reset quickly after in
`ResetGlobalVariables` (without reading or writing the dlist entries).
The refactoring changed this by moving the `dlist_delete` call to
`ResetRemoteTransaction`, which in turn was called in the
`!ShouldShutdownConnection` path of `AfterXactHostConnectionHandling`.
Thus this `!ShouldShutdownConnection` path would now delete from the
`dlist`, but the `ShouldShutdownConnection` path would not. Thus to
remove itself the deleting path would sometimes update nodes in the list
that were freed right before.
There's two ways of fixing this:
1. Call `dlist_delete` from **both** of paths.
2. Call `dlist_delete` from **neither** of the paths.
This commit implements the second approach, and #6684 implements the
first. We need to choose which approach we prefer.
To make calling `dlist_delete` from both paths actually work, we also need
to use a slightly different check to determine if we need to call dlist_delete.
Various regression tests showed that there can be cases where the
`transactionState` is something else than `REMOTE_TRANS_NOT_STARTED`
but the connection was not added to the `InProgressTransactions` list
One example of such a case is when running `TransactionStateMachine`
without calling `StartRemoteTransactionBegin` beforehand. In those
cases the connection won't be added to `InProgressTransactions`, but
the `transactionState` is changed to `REMOTE_TRANS_SENT_COMMAND`.
Sidenote: This bug already existed in 11.1, but valgrind didn't catch it
back then. My guess is that this happened because #6314 was merged after
the initial release branch was cut.
Fixes#6638
If there is a problem with an ongoing rebalance, we did not show details
on background tasks that are stuck in runnable state. Similar to how we
show details for errored tasks, we now show details on tasks that are
being retried.
Earlier we showed the following output when a task was stuck:
```
┌────────────────────────────┐
│ { ↵│
│ "tasks": [ ↵│
│ ], ↵│
│ "task_state_counts": {↵│
│ "done": 13, ↵│
│ "blocked": 2, ↵│
│ "runnable": 1 ↵│
│ } ↵│
│ } │
└────────────────────────────┘
```
Now we show details like the following:
```
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
| {
| "tasks": [
| {
| "state": "runnable",
| "command": "SELECT pg_catalog.citus_move_shard_placement(1
| "message": "ERROR: Moving shards to a node that shouldn't
| "retried": 2,
| "task_id": 3
| }
| ],
| "task_state_counts": {
| "blocked": 1,
| "runnable": 1
| }
| }
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
```
DESCRIPTION: Fix background rebalance when reference table has no PK
For the background rebalance we would always fail if a reference table
that was not replicated to all nodes would not have a PK (or replica
identity). Even when we used force_logical or block_writes as the shard
transfer mode. This fixes that and adds some regression tests.
Fixes#6680
We should disallow dropping table_name option if foreign table is in
metadata. Otherwise, we get table not found error which contains
shardid.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes an unexpected foreign table error by disallowing to drop the table_name option.
Fixes#6663
This change is a precursor to attempts to add more editorconfig rules in
our codebase. It is a good idea to comply with POSIX standards and have
an empty newline at the end of text files. However, once we have such a
rule, arbitrary configs scripts used to fail before this change.
Related: #5981
Fixes#6570.
In the past, having columnar tables in the cluster was causing pg
upgrades to fail when attempting to access columnar metadata. This is
because, pg_dump doesn't see objects that we use for columnar-am related
booking as the dependencies of the tables using columnar-am.
To fix that; in #5456, we inserted some "normal dependency" edges (from
those objects to columnar-am) into pg_depend.
This helped us ensuring the existency of a class of metadata objects
--such as columnar.storageid_seq-- and helped fixing #5437.
However, the normal-dependency edges that we added for indexes on
columnar metadata tables --such columnar.stripe_pkey-- didn't help at
all because they were indeed causing dependency loops (#5510) and
pg_dump was not able to take those dependency edges into the account.
For this reason, instead of inserting such dependency edges from indexes
to columnar-am, we allow columnar metadata accessors to fall-back to
sequential scan during pg upgrades.
Sometimes isolation_non_blocking_shard_split would fail like this:
```diff
step s2-show-pg_dist_cleanup:
SELECT object_name, object_type, policy_type FROM pg_dist_cleanup;
object_name |object_type|policy_type
------------------------------+-----------+-----------
+citus_shard_split_slot_2_10_39| 3| 0
public.to_split_table_1500001 | 1| 2
-(1 row)
+(2 rows)
```
Source:
https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/citusdata/citus/30237/workflows/edcf34b7-d7d3-4d10-8293-b6f59b00cdf2/jobs/970960
The reason is that replication slots have now become part of
pg_dist_cleanup too, and sometimes they cannot be cleaned up right away.
This is harmless as they will be cleaned up eventually. So this simply
filters out the replication slots for those tests.
Recursive planner should handle all the tree from bottom to top at
single pass. i.e. It should have already recursively planned all
required parts in its first pass. Otherwise, this means we have bug at
recursive planner, which needs to be handled. We add a check here and
return error.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes wrong results by throwing error in case recursive
planner multipass the query.
We found 3 different cases which causes recursive planner passes the
query multiple times.
1. Sublink in WHERE clause is planned at second pass after we
recursively planned a distributed table at the first pass. Fixed by PR
#6657.
2. Local-distributed joins are recursively planned at both the first and
the second pass. Issue #6659.
3. Some parts of the query is considered to be noncolocated at the
second pass as we do not generate attribute equivalances between
nondistributed and distributed tables. Issue #6653
DESCRIPTION: Fix foreign key validation skip at the end of shard move
In eadc88a we started completely skipping foreign key constraint
validation at the end of a non blocking shard move, instead of only for
foreign keys to reference tables. However, it turns out that this didn't
work at all because of a hard to notice bug: By resetting the
SkipConstraintValidation flag at the end of our utility hook, we
actually make the SET command that sets it a no-op.
This fixes that bug by removing the code that resets it. This is fine
because #6543 removed the only place where we set the flag in C code. So
the resetting of the flag has no purpose anymore. This PR also adds a
regression test, because it turned out we didn't have any otherwise we
would have caught that the feature was completely broken.
It also moves the constraint validation skipping to the utility hook.
The reason is that #6550 showed us that this is the better place to skip
it, because it will also skip the planning phase and not just the
execution.
We should do the sublink conversations at the end of the recursive
planning because earlier steps might have transformed the query into a
shape that needs recursively planning the sublinks.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes early sublink check at recursive planner.
Related to PR https://github.com/citusdata/citus/pull/6650
Fixes#6655.
heap_modify_tuple() fetches values[i] if replace[i] is set true,
regardless of the fact that whether isnull[i] is true or false. So
similar to replace[], let's init values[] & isnull[] too.
DESCRIPTION: Fixes an uninitialized memory access in
create_distributed_function()
This change allows creating a constraint without a name using an index.
The index name will be used as the constraint name the same way postgres
handles it.
Fixes issue #6644
This commit also cleans up some leftovers from nameless constraint checks.
With this commit, we now fully support adding all nameless constraints
directly to a table.
Co-authored-by: naisila <nicypp@gmail.com>
Adds NOT VALID option to deparser. When we need to deparse:
"ALTER TABLE ADD FOREIGN KEY ... NOT VALID"
"ALTER TABLE ADD CHECK ... NOT VALID"
NOT VALID option should be propagated to workers.
Fixes issue #6646
This commit also uses AppendColumnNameList function
instead of repeated code blocks in two appropriate places
in the "ALTER TABLE" deparser.
If an update query on a reference table has a returns clause with a
subquery that accesses some other local table, we end-up with an crash.
This commit prevents the crash, but does not prevent other error
messages from happening due to Citus not being able to pushdown the
results of that subquery in a valid SQL command.
Related: #6634
DESCRIPTION: Fix regression in allowed foreign keys on distributed
tables
In commit eadc88a we changed how we skip foreign key validation. The
goal was to skip it in more cases. However, one change had the
unintended regression of introducing failures when trying to create
certain foreign keys. This reverts that part of the change.
The way of skipping validation of foreign keys that was introduced in
eadc88a was skipping validation during execution. The reason that
this caused this regression was because some foreign key validation
queries already fail during planning. In those cases it never gets to
the execution step where it would later be skipped.
Fixes#6543
Multiple `check-xxx` targets create tablespaces. If you run
two of these at the same time you would get an error like:
```diff
CREATE TABLESPACE test_tablespace LOCATION :'test_tablespace';
+ERROR: directory "/home/rajesh/citus/citus/src/test/regress/tmp_check/ts0/PG_14_202107181" already in use as a tablespace
```
This fixes that by moving creation of table space directory creation and
removal to pg_regress_multi.pl instead of being in the Makefile.
DESCRIPTION: Enable adding FOREIGN KEY constraints on Citus tables
without a name
This PR enables adding a foreign key to a distributed/reference/Citus
local table without specifying the name of the constraint, e.g. `ALTER
TABLE items ADD FOREIGN KEY (user_id) REFERENCES users (id);`
This implements the phase - II of MERGE sql support
Support routable query where all the tables in the merge-sql are distributed, co-located, and both the source and
target relations are joined on the distribution column with a constant qual. This should be a Citus single-task
query. Below is an example.
SELECT create_distributed_table('t1', 'id');
SELECT create_distributed_table('s1', 'id', colocate_with => ‘t1’);
MERGE INTO t1
USING s1 ON t1.id = s1.id AND t1.id = 100
WHEN MATCHED THEN
UPDATE SET val = s1.val + 10
WHEN MATCHED THEN
DELETE
WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN
INSERT (id, val, src) VALUES (s1.id, s1.val, s1.src)
Basically, MERGE checks to see if
There are a minimum of two distributed tables (source and a target).
All the distributed tables are indeed colocated.
MERGE relations are joined on the distribution column
MERGE .. USING .. ON target.dist_key = source.dist_key
The query should touch only a single shard i.e. JOIN AND with a constant qual
MERGE .. USING .. ON target.dist_key = source.dist_key AND target.dist_key = <>
If any of the conditions are not met, it raises an exception.
citus_job_list() lists all background jobs by simply showing the records
in pg_dist_background_job.
citus_job_status(job_id bigint, raw boolean default false) shows the
status of a single background job by appending a jsonb details column to
the associated row from pg_dist_background_job. If the raw argument is
set, machine readable sizes are used instead of human readable
alternatives.
citus_rebalance_status(raw boolean default false) shows the status of
the last rebalance operation. If the raw argument is set, machine
readable sizes are used instead of human readable alternatives.
The original implementation of GPIDs didn't work correctly when using
`pg_dist_poolinfo` together with PgBouncer. The reason is that it
assumed that once a connection was made to a worker, the originating
GPID should stay the same for ever. But when pg_dist_poolinfo is used
this isn't the case, because the same connection on the worker might be
used by different backends of the coordinator.
This fixes that issue by updating the GPID whenever a new application
name is set on a connection. This is the only thing that's needed,
because PgBouncer already sets the application name correctly on the
server connection whenever a client is updated.
DESCRIPTION: Enable adding CHECK constraints on distributed tables
without the client having to provide a constraint name.
This PR enables the following command syntax for adding check
constraints to distributed tables.
ALTER TABLE ... ADD CHECK ...
by creating a default constraint name and transforming the command into
the below syntax before sending it to workers.
ALTER TABLE ... ADD CONSTRAINT \<conname> CHECK ...
Table Constraints UNIQUE, PRIMARY KEY and EXCLUDE may have option
DEFERRABLE in their command syntax. This PR handles the option when
deparsing the relevant constraint statements.
NOT DEFERRABLE
and
INITIALLY IMMEDIATE (if DEFERRABLE}
are the default values for the option so we only append the non-default
values to the alter table statement.
In #6412 I made a change to not re-assign the global PID if it was
already set. This inadvertently introduced a regression where `userId`
and `databaseId` would not be set on the backend data when the global
PID was assigned in the authentication hook.
This fixes it by doing two things:
1. Removing `userId` from `BackendData`, since it's not used anywhere
anyway.
2. Move assignment of `databaseId` to dedicated
`SetBackendDataDatabaseId` function, that isn't a no-op when global
pid is already set.
Since #6412 is not released yet this does not need a description.
In #6598 it was noticed that Citus could generate syntactically invalid
statements during logical replication. With #6603 we resolved the direct
issue, by only generating valid subscription names. But there was also
the underlying problem that we did not escape certain identifier
strings. While in theory this should be okay since we should only
generate names that are valid, this issue reiterated that we should not
take this for granted. As an extra line of defense this quotes all
identifiers we use during logical replication setup.
Apparently no-one actually ran the mx_base_schedule, because the tests
in schedule itself were already failing. This updates it to be in line
with multi_mx_schedule again to make the tests pass again. Notably it
doesn't contain multi_mx_node_metadata and multi_extension. Because
those tests take long to run and the were not necessary to make
multi_mx_create_table pass again.