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authorDmitry Lenev <dlenev@mysql.com>2010-02-01 14:43:06 +0300
committerDmitry Lenev <dlenev@mysql.com>2010-02-01 14:43:06 +0300
commitafd15c43a9103c47389835105489acd07d64e014 (patch)
tree818a7077a43f09db8708035a4f1d22d369fdd4da /mysql-test/t/multi_update.test
parenta63f8480dbc862db00fb8f76c74b1fb99fa4534a (diff)
downloadmariadb-git-afd15c43a9103c47389835105489acd07d64e014.tar.gz
Implement new type-of-operation-aware metadata locks.
Add a wait-for graph based deadlock detector to the MDL subsystem. Fixes bug #46272 "MySQL 5.4.4, new MDL: unnecessary deadlock" and bug #37346 "innodb does not detect deadlock between update and alter table". The first bug manifested itself as an unwarranted abort of a transaction with ER_LOCK_DEADLOCK error by a concurrent ALTER statement, when this transaction tried to repeat use of a table, which it has already used in a similar fashion before ALTER started. The second bug showed up as a deadlock between table-level locks and InnoDB row locks, which was "detected" only after innodb_lock_wait_timeout timeout. A transaction would start using the table and modify a few rows. Then ALTER TABLE would come in, and start copying rows into a temporary table. Eventually it would stumble on the modified records and get blocked on a row lock. The first transaction would try to do more updates, and get blocked on thr_lock.c lock. This situation of circular wait would only get resolved by a timeout. Both these bugs stemmed from inadequate solutions to the problem of deadlocks occurring between different locking subsystems. In the first case we tried to avoid deadlocks between metadata locking and table-level locking subsystems, when upgrading shared metadata lock to exclusive one. Transactions holding the shared lock on the table and waiting for some table-level lock used to be aborted too aggressively. We also allowed ALTER TABLE to start in presence of transactions that modify the subject table. ALTER TABLE acquires TL_WRITE_ALLOW_READ lock at start, and that block all writes against the table (naturally, we don't want any writes to be lost when switching the old and the new table). TL_WRITE_ALLOW_READ lock, in turn, would block the started transaction on thr_lock.c lock, should they do more updates. This, again, lead to the need to abort such transactions. The second bug occurred simply because we didn't have any mechanism to detect deadlocks between the table-level locks in thr_lock.c and row-level locks in InnoDB, other than innodb_lock_wait_timeout. This patch solves both these problems by moving lock conflicts which are causing these deadlocks into the metadata locking subsystem, thus making it possible to avoid or detect such deadlocks inside MDL. To do this we introduce new type-of-operation-aware metadata locks, which allow MDL subsystem to know not only the fact that transaction has used or is going to use some object but also what kind of operation it has carried out or going to carry out on the object. This, along with the addition of a special kind of upgradable metadata lock, allows ALTER TABLE to wait until all transactions which has updated the table to go away. This solves the second issue. Another special type of upgradable metadata lock is acquired by LOCK TABLE WRITE. This second lock type allows to solve the first issue, since abortion of table-level locks in event of DDL under LOCK TABLES becomes also unnecessary. Below follows the list of incompatible changes introduced by this patch: - From now on, ALTER TABLE and CREATE/DROP TRIGGER SQL (i.e. those statements that acquire TL_WRITE_ALLOW_READ lock) wait for all transactions which has *updated* the table to complete. - From now on, LOCK TABLES ... WRITE, REPAIR/OPTIMIZE TABLE (i.e. all statements which acquire TL_WRITE table-level lock) wait for all transaction which *updated or read* from the table to complete. As a consequence, innodb_table_locks=0 option no longer applies to LOCK TABLES ... WRITE. - DROP DATABASE, DROP TABLE, RENAME TABLE no longer abort statements or transactions which use tables being dropped or renamed, and instead wait for these transactions to complete. - Since LOCK TABLES WRITE now takes a special metadata lock, not compatible with with reads or writes against the subject table and transaction-wide, thr_lock.c deadlock avoidance algorithm that used to ensure absence of deadlocks between LOCK TABLES WRITE and other statements is no longer sufficient, even for MyISAM. The wait-for graph based deadlock detector of MDL subsystem may sometimes be necessary and is involved. This may lead to ER_LOCK_DEADLOCK error produced for multi-statement transactions even if these only use MyISAM: session 1: session 2: begin; update t1 ... lock table t2 write, t1 write; -- gets a lock on t2, blocks on t1 update t2 ... (ER_LOCK_DEADLOCK) - Finally, support of LOW_PRIORITY option for LOCK TABLES ... WRITE was abandoned. LOCK TABLE ... LOW_PRIORITY WRITE from now on has the same priority as the usual LOCK TABLE ... WRITE. SELECT HIGH PRIORITY no longer trumps LOCK TABLE ... WRITE in the wait queue. - We do not take upgradable metadata locks on implicitly locked tables. So if one has, say, a view v1 that uses table t1, and issues: LOCK TABLE v1 WRITE; FLUSH TABLE t1; -- (or just 'FLUSH TABLES'), an error is produced. In order to be able to perform DDL on a table under LOCK TABLES, the table must be locked explicitly in the LOCK TABLES list.
Diffstat (limited to 'mysql-test/t/multi_update.test')
-rw-r--r--mysql-test/t/multi_update.test11
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/mysql-test/t/multi_update.test b/mysql-test/t/multi_update.test
index 6f8cc94e6b7..68b44a33428 100644
--- a/mysql-test/t/multi_update.test
+++ b/mysql-test/t/multi_update.test
@@ -474,7 +474,8 @@ drop table t1,t2;
#
# Test alter table and a concurrent multi update
-# (This will force update to reopen tables)
+# (Before we have introduced data-lock-aware metadata locks
+# this test case forced update to reopen tables).
#
create table t1 (a int, b int);
@@ -494,9 +495,9 @@ send alter table t1 add column c int default 100 after a;
connect (updater,localhost,root,,test);
connection updater;
# Wait till "alter table t1 ..." of session changer is in work.
-# = There is one session is in state "Locked".
+# = There is one session waiting.
let $wait_condition= select count(*)= 1 from information_schema.processlist
- where state= 'Table lock';
+ where state= 'Waiting for table';
--source include/wait_condition.inc
send update t1, v1 set t1.b=t1.a+t1.b+v1.b where t1.a=v1.a;
@@ -505,9 +506,9 @@ connection locker;
# - "alter table t1 ..." of session changer and
# - "update t1, v1 ..." of session updater
# are in work.
-# = There are two session is in state "Locked".
+# = There are two session waiting.
let $wait_condition= select count(*)= 2 from information_schema.processlist
- where state= 'Table lock';
+ where state= 'Waiting for table';
--source include/wait_condition.inc
unlock tables;