Switch vector dimension handling to fixed-width `uint32_t` type,
update parsing/validation, and add boundary tests.
The dimension is parsed as `unsigned long` at first which is guaranteed
to be **at least** 32-bit long, which is safe to downcast to `uint32_t`.
Move `MAX_VECTOR_DIMENSION` from `cql3_type::raw_vector` to `cql3_type`
to ensure public visibility for checks outside the class.
Add tests to verify the type boundaries.
Fixes: https://scylladb.atlassian.net/browse/SCYLLADB-223
Signed-off-by: Yaniv Kaul <yaniv.kaul@scylladb.com>
Co-authored-by: Dawid Pawlik <dawid.pawlik@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#28762
The ANN vector queries with all-zero vectors are allowed even on vector indexes with similarity function set to cosine.
When enabling the rescoring option, those queries would fail as the rescoring calls `similarity_cosine` function underneath, causing an `InvalidRequest` exception as all-zero vectors were not allowed matching Cassandra's behaviour.
To eliminate the discrepancy we want the all-zero vector `similarity_cosine` calls to pass, but return the NaN as the cosine similarity for zero vectors is mathematically incorrect. We decided not to use arbitrary values contrary to USearch, for which the distance (not to be confused with similarity) is defined as cos(0, 0) = 0, cos(0, x) = 1 while supporting the range of values [0, 2].
If we wanted to convert that to similarity, that would mean sim_cos(0, x) = 0.5, which does not support mathematical reasoning why that would be more similar than for example vectors marking obtuse angles.
It's safe to assume that all-zero vectors for cosine similarity shouldn't make any impact, therefore we return NaN and eliminate them from best results.
Adjusted the tests accordingly to check both proper Cassandra and Scylla's behaviour.
Fixes: SCYLLADB-456
Backport to 2026.1 needed, as it fixes the bug for ANN vector queries using rescoring introduced there.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#28609
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test/vector_search: add reproducer for rescoring with zero vectors
vector_search: return NaN for similarity_cosine with all-zero vectors
Improves performance of deserialization of vector data for calculating similarity functions.
Instead of deserializing vector data into a std::vector<data_value>, we deserialize directly into a std::vector<float>
and then pass it to similarity functions as a std::span<const float>.
This avoids overhead of data_value allocations and conversions.
Example QPS of `SELECT id, similarity_cosine({vector<float, 1536>}, {vector<float, 1536>}) ...`:
client concurrency 1: before: ~135 QPS, after: ~1005 QPS
client concurrency 20: before: ~280 QPS, after: ~2097 QPS
Measured using https://github.com/zilliztech/VectorDBBench (modified to call above query without ANN search)
Fixes https://scylladb.atlassian.net/browse/SCYLLADB-471Closesscylladb/scylladb#28615
The ANN vector queries with all-zero vectors are allowed even on vector
indexes with similarity function set to cosine.
When enabling the rescoring option, those queries would fail as the rescoring
calls `similarity_cosine` function underneath, causing an `InvalidRequest` exception
as all-zero vectors were not allowed matching Cassandra's behaviour.
To eliminate the discrepancy we want the all-zero vector `similarity_cosine` calls to pass,
but return the NaN as the cosine similarity for zero vectors is mathematically incorrect.
We decided not to use arbitrary values contrary to USearch, for which the distance
(not to be confused with similarity) is defined as cos(0, 0) = 0, cos(0, x) = 1 while
supporting the range of values [0, 2].
If we wanted to convert that to similarity, that would mean sim_cos(0, x) = 0.5,
which does not support mathematical reasoning why that would be more similar than
for example vectors marking obtuse angles.
It's safe to assume that all-zero vectors for cosine similarity shouldn't make any impact,
therefore we return NaN and eliminate them from best results.
Adjusted the tests accordingly to check both proper Cassandra and Scylla's behaviour.
Fixes: SCYLLADB-456
This patch introduces scalar functions `similarity_cosine()`,
`similarity_euclidean()`, and `similarity_dot_product()`
which should return a float - similarity of the given vectors
calculated according to the function's similarity metric.
The argument types of this function are retrieved with
the `retrieve_vector_arg_types`, but shall be assignable to
`vector<float, N>` where `N` is the same for both arguments.
This patch introduces a dimensionality check during the execusion
of those functions.
This patch retrieves the argument types for similarity functions.
Newly introduced `retrieve_vector_arg_types` function checks if
the provided arguments are vectors of floats and if
both the vector values match the same type (dimension).
If so, we know the exact type and set it as the function arguments type.
Otherwise, if the exact type is unkown, but we can assign to vector<float, N>
then the dimensionality check will be done during execution of
the similarity function.
This also takes care of null values and bind variables the same way
as implemented in Cassandra to stay compatible.
Meaning that if we can infer the type from one argument, then the latter
may be unknown (null or ?).
Additionally this patch adds `test_assignment_any_vector` function
which tests the weak assignment to vector<float, N> as mentioned
above.
This commit introduces `compute_cosine_similarity`, `compute_euclidean_similarity`,
`compute_dot_product_similarity` functions to calculate the vectors similarity
in respective metric.
The similarity is a float value meaning how similar the vectors are in a range of [0, 1].
Values closer to 1 indicate greater similarity.
The `dot_product` similarity requires L2 normalized vectors as arguments.
The similarity is calculated based on the jVector's implementation used by Cassandra.
f967f1c924/jvector-base/src/main/java/io/github/jbellis/jvector/vector/VectorSimilarityFunction.java (L36-L69)
This patch removes the dependence of vector search module
on the cql3 module by moving the contents of cql3/type_json.hh
to types/json_utils.hh and removing the usage of cql3 primary_key
object in vector_store_client. We also make the needed adjustments
to files that were previously using the afformentioned type_json.hh
file.
This fixes the circular dependency cql3 <-> vector_search.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#26482
Once we create types atomically the code which is before commit
may depend on newly added types, so it has to access both old and
new types. New storage called in_progress_types_storage was added.
When describing a table, we need to do it carefully: if some
columns were dropped, we must specify that explicitly by
```
ALTER TABLE {table} DROP {column} USING TIMESTAMP ...
```
in the result of the DESCRIBE statement. Failing to do so
could lead to data resurrection.
However, if a table has been altered many, many times,
we might end up with a huge create statement. Constructing
it could, in turn, trigger an oversized allocation.
Some tests ran into that very problem in fact.
In this commit, we want to mitigate the problem: instead of
allocating a contiguous chunk of memory for the create
statement, we use `fragmented_ostringstream` and `managed_string`
to possibly keep data scattered in memory. It makes handling
`cql3::description` less convenient in the code, but since
the struct is pretty much immediately serialized after
creating it, it's a very good trade-off.
We provide a reproducer. It consistently passes with this commit,
while having about 50% chance of failure before it (based on my
own experiments). Playing with the parameters of the test
doesn't seem to improve that chance, so let's keep it as-is.
Fixesscylladb/scylladb#24018
This reverts commit 0b516da95b, reversing
changes made to 30199552ac. It breaks
cluster.random_failures.test_random_failures.test_random_failures
in debug mode (at least).
Fixes#24513
Once we create types atomically the code which is before commit
may depend on newly added types, so it has to access both old and
new types. New storage called in_progress_types_storage was added.
Given two sets of equivalent types, return the set
intersection.
This is a generic function which adapts to the actual
input type.
A unit test is added.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#22763
Replace boost::make_iterator_range() with std::ranges::subrange.
This change improves code modernization and reduces external dependencies:
- Replace boost::make_iterator_range() with std::ranges::subrange
- Remove boost/range/iterator_range.hpp include
- Improve iterator type detection in interval.hh using std::ranges::const_iterator_t<Range>
This is part of ongoing efforts to modernize our codebase and minimize
external dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#21787
Modernize the codebase by replacing Boost range adaptors with C++23 standard library views,
reducing external dependencies and leveraging modern C++ language features.
Key Changes:
- Replace `boost::adaptors::filtered` with `std::views::filter`
- Remove `#include <boost/range/adaptor/filtered.hpp>`
- Utilize standard library range views
Motivation:
- Reduce project's external dependency footprint
- Leverage standard library's range and view capabilities
- Improve long-term code maintainability
- Align with modern C++ best practices
Implementation Challenges and Considerations:
1. Range Conversion and Move Semantics
- `std::ranges::to` adaptor requires rvalue references
- Necessitated updates to variable and parameter constness
- Example: `cql3/restrictions/statement_restrictions.cc` modified to remove `const`
from `common` to enable efficient range conversion
2. Range Iteration and Mutation
- Range views may mutate internal state during iteration
- Cannot pass ranges by const reference in some scenarios
- Solution: Pass ranges by rvalue reference to explicitly indicate
state invalidation
Limitations:
- One instance of `boost::adaptors::filtered` temporarily preserved
due to lack of a C++23 alternative for `boost::join()`
- A comprehensive replacement will be addressed in a follow-up change
This change is part of our ongoing effort to modernize the codebase,
reducing external dependencies and adopting modern C++ practices.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#21648
The later includes the former and in addition to `seastar::format()`,
`print.hh` also provides helpers like `seastar::fprint()` and
`seastar::print()`, which are deprecated and not used by scylladb.
Previously, we include `seastar/core/print.hh` for using
`seastar::format()`. and in seastar 5b04939e, we extracted
`seastar::format()` into `seastar/core/format.hh`. this allows us
to include a much smaller header.
In this change, we just include `seastar/core/format.hh` in place of
`seastar/core/print.hh`.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#21574
now that we are allowed to use C++23. we now have the luxury of using
`std::ranges::any_of`.
in this change, we replace `boost::algorithm::any_of` with
`std::ranges::any_of`
to reduce the dependency to boost for better maintainability, and
leverage standard library features for better long-term support.
this change is part of our ongoing effort to modernize our codebase
and reduce external dependencies where possible.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
now that we are allowed to use C++23. we now have the luxury of using
`std::views::values`.
in this change, we:
- replace `boost::adaptors::map_values` with `std::views::values`
- update affected code to work with `std::views::values`
- the places where we use `boost::join()` are not changed, because
we cannot use `std::views::concat` yet. this helper is only
available in C++26.
to reduce the dependency to boost for better maintainability, and
leverage standard library features for better long-term support.
this change is part of our ongoing effort to modernize our codebase
and reduce external dependencies where possible.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#21265
the log.hh under the root of the tree was created keep the backward
compatibility when seastar was extracted into a separate library.
so log.hh should belong to `utils` directory, as it is based solely
on seastar, and can be used all subsystems.
in this change, we move log.hh into utils/log.hh to that it is more
modularized. and this also improves the readability, when one see
`#include "utils/log.hh"`, it is obvious that this source file
needs the logging system, instead of its own log facility -- please
note, we do have two other `log.hh` in the tree.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
This includes way too much, including <boost/regex.hpp>, which is huge.
Drop includes of adaptors.hpp and replace by what is needed.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#21187
Scylla doesn't allow for the types of arguments or the return type
to be frozen. As a result, before these changes, create statements
produced to restore UDFs as part of `DESCRIBE` statements could not
be executed.
We fix that and add a reproducer test and another one to verify that
the implementation is correct.
Auth has been managed via Raft since Scylla 6.0. Restoring data
following the usual procedure (1) is error-prone and so a safer
method must have been designed and implemented. That's what
happens in this PR.
We want to extend `DESC SCHEMA` by auth and service levels
to provide a safe way to backup and restore those two components.
To realize that, we change the meaning of `DESC SCHEMA WITH INTERNALS`
and add a new "tier": `DESC SCHEMA WITH INTERNALS AND PASSWORDS`.
* `DESC SCHEMA` -- no change, i.e. the statement describes the current
schema items such as keyspaces, tables, views, UDTs, etc.
* `DESC SCHEMA WITH INTERNALS` -- does the same as the previous tier
and also describes auth and service levels. No information about
passwords is returned.
* `DESC SCHEMA WITH INTERNALS AND PASSWORDS` -- does the same
as the previous tier and also includes information about the salted
hashes corresponding to the passwords of roles.
To restore existing roles, we extend the `CREATE ROLE` statement
by allowing to use the option `WITH SALTED HASH = '[...]'`.
---
Implementation strategy:
* Add missing things/adjust existing ones that will be used later.
* Implement creating a role with salted hash.
* Add tests for creating a role with salted hash.
* Prepare for implementing describe functionality of auth and service levels.
* Implement describe functionality for elements of auth and service levels.
* Extend the grammar.
* Add tests for describe auth and service levels.
* Add/update documentation.
---
(1): https://opensource.docs.scylladb.com/stable/operating-scylla/procedures/backup-restore/restore.html
In case the link stops working, restoring a schema was realised
by managing raw files on disk.
Fixesscylladb/scylladb#18750Fixesscylladb/scylladb#18751Fixesscylladb/scylladb#20711Closesscylladb/scylladb#20168
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
docs: Update user documentation for backup and restore
docs/dev: Add documentation for DESC SCHEMA
test: Add tests for describing auth and service levels
cql3/functions/user_function: Remove newline character before and after UDF body
cql3: Implement DESCRIBE SCHEMA WITH INTERNALS AND PASSWORDS
auth: Implement describing auth
auth/authenticator: Add member functions for querying password hash
service/qos/service_level_controller: Describe service levels
data_dictionary: Remove keyspace_element.hh
treewide: Start using new overloads of describe
treewide: Fix indentation in describe functions
treewide: Return create statement optionally in describe functions
treewide: Add new describe overloads to implementations of data_dictionary::keyspace_element
treewide: Start using schema::ks_name() instead of schema::keyspace_name()
cql3: Refactor `description`
cql3: Move description to dedicated files
test: Add tests for `CREATE ROLE WITH SALTED HASH`
cql3/statements: Restrict CREATE ROLE WITH SALTED HASH
auth: Allow for creating roles with SALTED HASH
types: Introduce a function `cql3_type_name_without_frozen()`
cql3/util: Accept std::string_view rather than const sstring&
We remove newline characters that are printed before and after
a UDF's body. This way, we want to keep the create statement
as close to what was actually provided as possible. Although
there should be no semantic differences with or without the
newline characters, it's a lot more convenient in testing when
they're not present.
Fixesscylladb/scylladb#20711
The interface is not used anywhere anymore, so we can
remove it safely. It has been replaced by custom
functions for each keyspace element and `cql3::description`.
We add a new parameter in functions used to generate instances
of `cql3::description` for types related to situations where we
might not need a create statement. An example of such a scenario
could be `DESCRIBE TYPES`.
We're removing `data_dictionary::keyspace_element`.
Before we can do that, we need to substitute the existing
methods used for describing keyspace elements with their
new versions returning `cql3::description`.
That's what happens in this commit.
before this change, we rely on `using namespace seastar` to use
`seastar::format()` without qualifying the `format()` with its
namespace. this works fine until we changed the parameter type
of format string `seastar::format()` from `const char*` to
`fmt::format_string<...>`. this change practically invited
`seastar::format()` to the club of `std::format()` and `fmt::format()`,
where all members accept a templated parameter as its `fmt`
parameter. and `seastar::format()` is not the best candidate anymore.
despite that argument-dependent lookup (ADT for short) favors the
function which is in the same namespace as its parameter, but
`using namespace` makes `seastar::format()` more competitive,
so both `std::format()` and `seastar::format()` are considered
as the condidates.
that is what is happening scylladb in quite a few caller sites of
`format()`, hence ADT is not able to tell which function the winner
in the name lookup:
```
/__w/scylladb/scylladb/mutation/mutation_fragment_stream_validator.cc:265:12: error: call to 'format' is ambiguous
265 | return format("{} ({}.{} {})", _name_view, s.ks_name(), s.cf_name(), s.id());
| ^~~~~~
/usr/bin/../lib/gcc/x86_64-redhat-linux/14/../../../../include/c++/14/format:4290:5: note: candidate function [with _Args = <const std::basic_string_view<char> &, const seastar::basic_sstring<char, unsigned int, 15> &, const seastar::basic_sstring<char, unsigned int, 15> &, const utils::tagged_uuid<table_id_tag> &>]
4290 | format(format_string<_Args...> __fmt, _Args&&... __args)
| ^
/__w/scylladb/scylladb/seastar/include/seastar/core/print.hh:143:1: note: candidate function [with A = <const std::basic_string_view<char> &, const seastar::basic_sstring<char, unsigned int, 15> &, const seastar::basic_sstring<char, unsigned int, 15> &, const utils::tagged_uuid<table_id_tag> &>]
143 | format(fmt::format_string<A...> fmt, A&&... a) {
| ^
```
in this change, we
change all `format()` to either `fmt::format()` or `seastar::format()`
with following rules:
- if the caller expects an `sstring` or `std::string_view`, change to
`seastar::format()`
- if the caller expects an `std::string`, change to `fmt::format()`.
because, `sstring::operator std::basic_string` would incur a deep
copy.
we will need another change to enable scylladb to compile with the
latest seastar. namely, to pass the format string as a templated
parameter down to helper functions which format their parameters.
to miminize the scope of this change, let's include that change when
bumping up the seastar submodule. as that change will depend on
the seastar change.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
assert() is traditionally disabled in release builds, but not in
scylladb. This hasn't caused problems so far, but the latest abseil
release includes a commit [1] that causes a 1000 insn/op regression when
NDEBUG is not defined.
Clearly, we must move towards a build system where NDEBUG is defined in
release builds. But we can't just define it blindly without vetting
all the assert() calls, as some were written with the expectation that
they are enabled in release mode.
To solve the conundrum, change all assert() calls to a new SCYLLA_ASSERT()
macro in utils/assert.hh. This macro is always defined and is not conditional
on NDEBUG, so we can later (after vetting Seastar) enable NDEBUG in release
mode.
[1] 66ef711d68Closesscylladb/scylladb#20006
It will hold a temporary shallow copy of declared functions.
Then each modification adds/removes/replaces stored function object.
At the end change is commited by moving temporary copy to the
main functions class instance.
This is done to ease code reuse in the following commit.
It'd also help should we ever want properly mount functions
class to schema object instead of static storage.
forward_service is nondescriptive and misnamed, as it does more than
forward requests. It's a classic map/reduce algorithm (and in fact one
of its parameters is "reducer"), so name it accordingly.
The name "forward" leaked into the wire protocol for the messaging
service RPC isolation cookie, so it's kept there. It's also maintained
in the name of the logger (for "nodetool setlogginglevel") for
compatibility with tests.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#19444
Getting token() function first tries to find a schema for underlying
table and continues with nullptr if there's no one. Later, when creating
token_fct, the schema is passed as is and referenced. If it's null crash
happens.
It used to throw before 5983e9e7b2 (cql3: test_assignment: pass optional
schema everywhere) on missing schema, but this commit changed the way
schema is looked up, so nullptr is now possible.
fixes: #18637
Signed-off-by: Pavel Emelyanov <xemul@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#18639
in in {fmt} before v10, it provides the specialization of `fmt::formatter<..>`
for `std::string_view` as well as the specialization of `fmt::formatter<..>`
for `fmt::string_view` which is an implementation builtin in {fmt} for
compatibility of pre-C++17. and this type is used even if the code is
compiled with C++ stadandard greater or equal to C++17. also, before v10,
the `fmt::formatter<std::string_view>::format()` is defined so it accepts
`std::string_view`. after v10, `fmt::formatter<std::string_view>` still
exists, but it is now defined using `format_as()` machinery, so it's
`format()` method does not actually accept `std::string_view`, it
accepts `fmt::string_view`, as the former can be converted to
`fmt::string_view`.
this is why we can inherit from `fmt::formatter<std::string_view>` and
use `formatter<std::string_view>::format(foo, ctx);` to implement the
`format()` method with {fmt} v9, but we cannot do this with {fmt} v10,
and we would have following compilation failure:
```
FAILED: service/CMakeFiles/service.dir/RelWithDebInfo/topology_state_machine.cc.o
/home/kefu/.local/bin/clang++ -DFMT_DEPRECATED_OSTREAM -DFMT_SHARED -DSCYLLA_BUILD_MODE=release -DSEASTAR_API_LEVEL=7 -DSEASTAR_LOGGER_COMPILE_TIME_FMT -DSEASTAR_LOGGER_TYPE_STDOUT -DSEASTAR_SCHEDULING_GROUPS_COUNT=16 -DSEASTAR_SSTRING -DXXH_PRIVATE_API -DCMAKE_INTDIR=\"RelWithDebInfo\" -I/home/kefu/dev/scylladb -I/home/kefu/dev/scylladb/build/gen -I/home/kefu/dev/scylladb/seastar/include -I/home/kefu/dev/scylladb/build/seastar/gen/include -I/home/kefu/dev/scylladb/build/seastar/gen/src -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections -O3 -g -gz -std=gnu++20 -fvisibility=hidden -Wall -Werror -Wextra -Wno-error=deprecated-declarations -Wimplicit-fallthrough -Wno-c++11-narrowing -Wno-deprecated-copy -Wno-mismatched-tags -Wno-missing-field-initializers -Wno-overloaded-virtual -Wno-unsupported-friend -Wno-enum-constexpr-conversion -Wno-unused-parameter -ffile-prefix-map=/home/kefu/dev/scylladb=. -march=westmere -mllvm -inline-threshold=2500 -fno-slp-vectorize -U_FORTIFY_SOURCE -Werror=unused-result -MD -MT service/CMakeFiles/service.dir/RelWithDebInfo/topology_state_machine.cc.o -MF service/CMakeFiles/service.dir/RelWithDebInfo/topology_state_machine.cc.o.d -o service/CMakeFiles/service.dir/RelWithDebInfo/topology_state_machine.cc.o -c /home/kefu/dev/scylladb/service/topology_state_machine.cc
/home/kefu/dev/scylladb/service/topology_state_machine.cc:254:41: error: no matching member function for call to 'format'
254 | return formatter<std::string_view>::format(it->second, ctx);
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~
/usr/include/fmt/core.h:2759:22: note: candidate function template not viable: no known conversion from 'seastar::basic_sstring<char, unsigned int, 15>' to 'const fmt::basic_string_view<char>' for 1st argument
2759 | FMT_CONSTEXPR auto format(const T& val, FormatContext& ctx) const
| ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
because the inherited `format()` method actually comes from
`fmt::formatter<fmt::string_view>`. to reduce the confusion, in this
change, we just inherit from `fmt::format<string_view>`, where
`string_view` is actually `fmt::string_view`. this follows
the document at
https://fmt.dev/latest/api.html#formatting-user-defined-types,
and since there is less indirection under the hood -- we do not
use the specialization created by `FMT_FORMAT_AS` which inherit
from `formatter<fmt::string_view>`, hopefully this can improve
the compilation speed a little bit. also, this change addresses
the build failure with {fmt} v10.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#18299
before this change, we rely on the default-generated fmt::formatter
created from operator<<, but fmt v10 dropped the default-generated
formatter.
in this change, we define formatters for std::vector<data_type>,
and drop its operator<<.
Refs #13245
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
This patch fixes a UBSAN-reported integer overflow during one of our
existing tests,
test_native_functions.py::test_mintimeuuid_extreme_from_totimestamp
when attempting to convert an extreme "date" value, millions of years
in the past, into a "timestamp" value. When UBSAN crashing is enabled,
this test crashes before this patch, and succeeds after this patch.
The "date" CQL type is 32-bit count of *days* from the epoch, which can
span 2^31 days (5 million years) before or after the epoch. Meanwhile,
the "timestamp" type measures the number of milliseconds from the same
epoch, in 64 bits. Luckily (or intentionally), every "date", however
extreme, can be converted into a "timestamp": This is because 2^31 days
is 1.85e17 milliseconds, well below timestamp's limit of 2^63 milliseconds
(9.2e18).
But it turns out that our conversion function, date_to_time_point(),
used some boost::gregorian library code, which carried out these
calculations in **microsecond** resolution. The extra conversion to
microseconds wasn't just wasteful, it also caused an integer overflow
in the extreme case: 2^31 days is 1.85e20 microseconds, which does NOT
fit in a 64-bit integer. UBSAN notices this overflow, and complains
(plus, the conversion is incorrect).
The fix is to do the trivial conversion on our own (a day is, by
convention, exactly 86400 seconds - no fancy library is needed),
without the grace of Boost. The result is simpler, faster, correct
for the Pliocene-age dates, and fixes the UBSAN crash in the test.
Fixes#17516
Signed-off-by: Nadav Har'El <nyh@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#17527
get0() dates back from the days where Seastar futures carried tuples, and
get0() was a way to get the first (and usually only) element. Now
it's a distraction, and Seastar is likely to deprecate and remove it.
Replace with seastar::future::get(), which does the same thing.