When reclaiming memory from bloom filters, do not remove them from
_recognised_components, as that leads to the on-disk filter component
being left back on disk when the SSTable is deleted.
Fixes#18398
Signed-off-by: Lakshmi Narayanan Sreethar <lakshmi.sreethar@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#18400
(cherry picked from commit 6af2659b57)
Closes#18437
Disabled reclaiming memory from sstable components in the testcase as it
interferes with the false positive calculation.
Signed-off-by: Lakshmi Narayanan Sreethar <lakshmi.sreethar@scylladb.com>
(cherry picked from commit d86505e399)
instead of casting / comparing the count of duration unit, let's just
compare the durations, so that boost.test is able to print the duration
in a more informative and user friendly way (line wrapped)
test/boost/error_injection_test.cc(167): fatal error:
in "test_inject_future_disabled":
critical check wait_time > sleep_msec has failed [23839ns <= 10ms]
Refs #15902
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
(cherry picked from commit 1d33a68dd7)
The test in its original form relies on the
`error_injections_at_startup` feature, which 5.2 doesn't have, so I
adapted the test to enable error injections after bootstrapping nodes in
the backport (9c44bbce67). That is however
incorrect, it's important for the injection to be enabled while the
nodes are booting, otherwise the test will be flaky, as we observed.
Details in scylladb/scylladb#17749.
Remove the test from 5.2 branch.
Fixesscylladb/scylladb#17749Closes#17750
A materialized view in CQL allows AT MOST ONE view key column that
wasn't a key column in the base table. This is because if there were
two or more of those, the "liveness" (timestamp, ttl) of these different
columns can change at every update, and it's not possible to pick what
liveness to use for the view row we create.
We made an exception for this rule for Alternator: DynamoDB's API allows
creating a GSI whose partition key and range key are both regular columns
in the base table, and we must support this. We claim that the fact that
Alternator allows neither TTL (Alternator's "TTL" is a different feature)
nor user-defined timestamps, does allow picking the liveness for the view
row we create. But we did it wrong!
We claimed in a comment - and implemented in the code before this patch -
that in Alternator we can assume that both GSI key columns will have the
*same* liveness, and in particular timestamp. But this is only true if
one modifies both columns together! In fact, in general it is not true:
We can have two non-key attributes 'a' and 'b' which are the GSI's key
columns, and we can modify *only* b, without modifying a, in which case
the timestamp of the view modification should be b's newer timestamp,
not a's older one. The existing code took a's timestamp, assuming it
will be the same as b's, which is incorrect. The result was that if
we repeatedly modify only b, all view updates will receive the same
timestamp (a's old timestamp), and a deletion will always win over
all the modifications. This patch includes a reproducing test written by
a user (@Zak-Kent) that demonstrates how after a view row is deleted
it doesn't get recreated - because all the modifications use the same
timestamp.
The fix is, as suggested above, to use the *higher* of the two
timestamps of both base-regular-column GSI key columns as the timestamp
for the new view rows or view row deletions. The reproducer that
failed before this patch passes with it. As usual, the reproducer
passes on AWS DynamoDB as well, proving that the test is correct and
should really work.
Fixes#17119
Signed-off-by: Nadav Har'El <nyh@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#17172
(cherry picked from commit 21e7deafeb)
The test is booting nodes, and then immediately starts shutting down
nodes and removing them from the cluster. The shutting down and
removing may happen before driver manages to connect to all nodes in the
cluster. In particular, the driver didn't yet connect to the last
bootstrapped node. Or it can even happen that the driver has connected,
but the control connection is established to the first node, and the
driver fetched topology from the first node when the first node didn't
yet consider the last node to be normal. So the driver decides to close
connection to the last node like this:
```
22:34:03.159 DEBUG> [control connection] Removing host not found in
peers metadata: <Host: 127.42.90.14:9042 datacenter1>
```
Eventually, at the end of the test, only the last node remains, all
other nodes have been removed or stopped. But the driver does not have a
connection to that last node.
Fix this problem by ensuring that:
- all nodes see each other as NORMAL,
- the driver has connected to all nodes
at the beginning of the test, before we start shutting down and removing
nodes.
Fixes scylladb/scylladb#16373
(cherry picked from commit a68701ed4f)
Closes#17703
key_view::explode() contains a blatant use-after-free:
unless the input is already linearized, it returns a view to a local temporary buffer.
This is rare, because partition keys are usually not large enough to be fragmented.
But for a sufficiently large key, this bug causes a corrupted partition_key down
the line.
Fixes#17625
(cherry picked from commit 7a7b8972e5)
Closes#17725
Store schema_ptr in reader permit instead of storing a const pointer to
schema to ensure that the schema doesn't get changed elsewhere when the
permit is holding on to it. Also update the constructors and all the
relevant callers to pass down schema_ptr instead of a raw pointer.
Fixes#16180
Signed-off-by: Lakshmi Narayanan Sreethar <lakshmi.sreethar@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#16658
(cherry picked from commit 76f0d5e35b)
Closes#17694
RPC calls lose information about the type of returned exception.
Thus, if a table is dropped on receiver node, but it still exists
on a sender node and sender node streams the table's data, then
the whole operation fails.
To prevent that, add a method which synchronizes schema and then
checks, if the exception was caused by table drop. If so,
the exception is swallowed.
Use the method in streaming and repair to continue them when
the table is dropped in the meantime.
Fixes: https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/17028.
Fixes: https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/15370.
Fixes: https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/15598.
Closes#17528
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
repair: handle no_such_column_family from remote node gracefully
test: test drop table on receiver side during streaming
streaming: fix indentation
streaming: handle no_such_column_family from remote node gracefully
repair: add methods to skip dropped table
Before this PR, writes to the previous CDC generations would
always be rejected. After this PR, they will be accepted if the
write's timestamp is greater than `now - generation_leeway`.
This change was proposed around 3 years ago. The motivation was
to improve user experience. If a client generates timestamps by
itself and its clock is desynchronized with the clock of the node
the client is connected to, there could be a period during
generation switching when writes fail. We didn't consider this
problem critical because the client could simply retry a failed
write with a higher timestamp. Eventually, it would succeed. This
approach is safe because these failed writes cannot have any side
effects. However, it can be inconvenient. Writing to previous
generations was proposed to improve it.
The idea was rejected 3 years ago. Recently, it turned out that
there is a case when the client cannot retry a write with the
increased timestamp. It happens when a table uses CDC and LWT,
which makes timestamps permanent. Once Paxos commits an entry
with a given timestamp, Scylla will keep trying to apply that entry
until it succeeds, with the same timestamp. Applying the entry
involves writing to the CDC log table. If it fails, we get stuck.
It's a major bug with an unknown perfect solution.
Allowing writes to previous generations for `generation_leeway` is
a probabilistic fix that should solve the problem in practice.
Apart from this change, this PR adds tests for it and updates
the documentation.
This PR is sufficient to enable writes to the previous generations
only in the gossiper-based topology. The Raft-based topology
needs some adjustments in loading and cleaning CDC generations.
These changes won't interfere with the changes introduced in this
PR, so they are left for a follow-up.
Fixesscylladb/scylladb#7251Fixesscylladb/scylladb#15260Closesscylladb/scylladb#17134
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
docs: using-scylla: cdc: remove info about failing writes to old generations
docs: dev: cdc: document writing to previous CDC generations
test: add test_writes_to_previous_cdc_generations
cdc: generation: allow increasing generation_leeway through error injection
cdc: metadata: allow sending writes to the previous generations
(cherry picked from commit 9bb4482ad0)
Backport note: replaced `servers_add` with `server_add` loop in tests
replaced `error_injections_at_startup` (not implemented in 5.2) with
`enable_injection` post-boot
For efficiency, if a base-table update generates many view updates that
go the same partition, they are collected as one mutation. If this
mutation grows too big it can lead to memory exhaustion, so since
commit 7d214800d0 we split the output
mutation to mutations no longer than 100 rows (max_rows_for_view_updates)
each.
This patch fixes a bug where this split was done incorrectly when
the update involved range tombstones, a bug which was discovered by
a user in a real use case (#17117).
Range tombstones are read in two parts, a beginning and an end, and the
code could split the processing between these two parts and the result
that some of the range tombstones in update could be missed - and the
view could miss some deletions that happened in the base table.
This patch fixes the code in two places to avoid breaking up the
processing between range tombstones:
1. The counter "_op_count" that decides where to break the output mutation
should only be incremented when adding rows to this output mutation.
The existing code strangely incrmented it on every read (!?) which
resulted in the counter being incremented on every *input* fragment,
and in particular could reach the limit 100 between two range
tombstone pieces.
2. Moreover, the length of output was checked in the wrong place...
The existing code could get to 100 rows, not check at that point,
read the next input - half a range tombstone - and only *then*
check that we reached 100 rows and stop. The fix is to calculate
the number of rows in the right place - exactly when it's needed,
not before the step.
The first change needs more justification: The old code, that incremented
_op_count on every input fragment and not just output fragments did not
fit the stated goal of its introduction - to avoid large allocations.
In one test it resulted in breaking up the output mutation to chunks of
25 rows instead of the intended 100 rows. But, maybe there was another
goal, to stop the iteration after 100 *input* rows and avoid the possibility
of stalls if there are no output rows? It turns out the answer is no -
we don't need this _op_count increment to avoid stalls: The function
build_some() uses `co_await on_results()` to run one step of processing
one input fragment - and `co_await` always checks for preemption.
I verfied that indeed no stalls happen by using the existing test
test_long_skipped_view_update_delete_with_timestamp. It generates a
very long base update where all the view updates go to the same partition,
but all but the last few updates don't generate any view updates.
I confirmed that the fixed code loops over all these input rows without
increasing _op_count and without generating any view update yet, but it
does NOT stall.
This patch also includes two tests reproducing this bug and confirming
its fixed, and also two additional tests for breaking up long deletions
that I wanted to make sure doesn't fail after this patch (it doesn't).
By the way, this fix would have also fixed issue #12297 - which we
fixed a year ago in a different way. That issue happend when the code
went through 100 input rows without generating *any* output rows,
and incorrectly concluding that there's no view update to send.
With this fix, the code no longer stops generating the view
update just because it saw 100 input rows - it would have waited
until it generated 100 output rows in the view update (or the
input is really done).
Fixes#17117
Signed-off-by: Nadav Har'El <nyh@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#17164
(cherry picked from commit 14315fcbc3)
While describing materialized view, print `synchronous_updates` option
only if the tag is present in schema's extensions map. Previously if the
key wasn't present, the default (false) value was printed.
Fixes: #14924Closes#14928
(cherry picked from commit b92d47362f)
The reason we introduced the tombstone-limit
(query_tombstone_page_limit), was to allow paged queries to return
incomplete/empty pages in the face of large tombstone spans. This works
by cutting the page after the tombstone-limit amount of tombstones were
processed. If the read is unpaged, it is killed instead. This was a
mistake. First, it doesn't really make sense, the reason we introduced
the tombstone limit, was to allow paged queries to process large
tombstone-spans without timing out. It does not help unpaged queries.
Furthermore, the tombstone-limit can kill internal queries done on
behalf of user queries, because all our internal queries are unpaged.
This can cause denial of service.
So in this patch we disable the tombstone-limit for unpaged queries
altogether, they are allowed to continue even after having processed the
configured limit of tombstones.
Fixes: #17241Closesscylladb/scylladb#17242
(cherry picked from commit f068d1a6fa)
This PR fixes the bug of certain calls to the `mintimeuuid()` CQL function which large negative timestamps could crash Scylla. It turns out we already had protections in place against very positive timestamps, but very negative timestamps could still cause bugs.
The actual fix in this series is just a few lines, but the bigger effort was improving the test coverage in this area. I added tests for the "date" type (the original reproducer for this bug used totimestamp() which takes a date parameter), and also reproducers for this bug directly, without totimestamp() function, and one with that function.
Finally this PR also replaces the assert() which made this molehill-of-a-bug into a mountain, by a throw.
Fixes#17035Closesscylladb/scylladb#17073
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
utils: replace assert() by on_internal_error()
utils: add on_internal_error with common logger
utils: add a timeuuid minimum, like we had maximum
test/cql-pytest: tests for "date" type
(cherry picked from commit 2a4b991772)
At the end of the test, we wait until a restarted node receives a
snapshot from the leader, and then verify that the log has been
truncated.
To check the snapshot, the test used the `system.raft_snapshots` table,
while the log is stored in `system.raft`.
Unfortunately, the two tables are not updated atomically when Raft
persists a snapshot (scylladb/scylladb#9603). We first update
`system.raft_snapshots`, then `system.raft` (see
`raft_sys_table_storage::store_snapshot_descriptor`). So after the wait
finishes, there's no guarantee the log has been truncated yet -- there's
a race between the test's last check and Scylla doing that last delete.
But we can check the snapshot using `system.raft` instead of
`system.raft_snapshots`, as `system.raft` has the latest ID. And since
1640f83fdc, storing that ID and truncating
the log in `system.raft` happens atomically.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#17106
(cherry picked from commit c911bf1a33)
Add workaround for scylladb/python-driver#295.
Also an assert made at the end of the test was false, it is fixed with
appropriate comment added.
(cherry picked from commit 74bf60a8ca)
This allows the user of `raft::server` to cause it to create a snapshot
and truncate the Raft log (leaving no trailing entries; in the future we
may extend the API to specify number of trailing entries left if
needed). In a later commit we'll add a REST endpoint to Scylla to
trigger group 0 snapshots.
One use case for this API is to create group 0 snapshots in Scylla
deployments which upgraded to Raft in version 5.2 and started with an
empty Raft log with no snapshot at the beginning. This causes problems,
e.g. when a new node bootstraps to the cluster, it will not receive a
snapshot that would contain both schema and group 0 history, which would
then lead to inconsistent schema state and trigger assertion failures as
observed in scylladb/scylladb#16683.
In 5.4 the logic of initial group 0 setup was changed to start the Raft
log with a snapshot at index 1 (ff386e7a44)
but a problem remains with these existing deployments coming from 5.2,
we need a way to trigger a snapshot in them (other than performing 1000
arbitrary schema changes).
Another potential use case in the future would be to trigger snapshots
based on external memory pressure in tablet Raft groups (for strongly
consistent tables).
The PR adds the API to `raft::server` and a HTTP endpoint that uses it.
In a follow-up PR, we plan to modify group 0 server startup logic to automatically
call this API if it sees that no snapshot is present yet (to automatically
fix the aforementioned 5.2 deployments once they upgrade.)
Closesscylladb/scylladb#16816
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
raft: remove `empty()` from `fsm_output`
test: add test for manual triggering of Raft snapshots
api: add HTTP endpoint to trigger Raft snapshots
raft: server: add `trigger_snapshot` API
raft: server: track last persisted snapshot descriptor index
raft: server: framework for handling server requests
raft: server: inline `poll_fsm_output`
raft: server: fix indentation
raft: server: move `io_fiber`'s processing of `batch` to a separate function
raft: move `poll_output()` from `fsm` to `server`
raft: move `_sm_events` from `fsm` to `server`
raft: fsm: remove constructor used only in tests
raft: fsm: move trace message from `poll_output` to `has_output`
raft: fsm: extract `has_output()`
raft: pass `max_trailing_entries` through `fsm_output` to `store_snapshot_descriptor`
raft: server: pass `*_aborted` to `set_exception` call
(cherry picked from commit d202d32f81)
Backport notes:
- `has_output()` has a smaller condition in the backported version
(because the condition was smaller in `poll_output()`)
- `process_fsm_output` has a smaller body (because `io_fiber` had a
smaller body) in the backported version
- the HTTP API is only started if `raft_group_registry` is started
When we upgrade a cluster to use Raft, or perform manual Raft recovery
procedure (which also creates a fresh group 0 cluster, using the same
algorithm as during upgrade), we start with a non-empty group 0 state
machine; in particular, the schema tables are non-empty.
In this case we need to ensure that nodes which join group 0 receive the
group 0 state. Right now this is not the case. In previous releases,
where group 0 consisted only of schema, and schema pulls were also done
outside Raft, those nodes received schema through this outside
mechanism. In 91f609d065 we disabled
schema pulls outside Raft; we're also extending group 0 with other
things, like topology-specific state.
To solve this, we force snapshot transfers by setting the initial
snapshot index on the first group 0 server to `1` instead of `0`. During
replication, Raft will see that the joining servers are behind,
triggering snapshot transfer and forcing them to pull group 0 state.
It's unnecessary to do this for cluster which bootstraps with Raft
enabled right away but it also doesn't hurt, so we keep the logic simple
and don't introduce branches based on that.
Extend Raft upgrade tests with a node bootstrap step at the end to
prevent regressions (without this patch, the step would hang - node
would never join, waiting for schema).
Fixes: #14066Closes#14336
(cherry picked from commit ff386e7a44)
Backport note: contrary to the claims above, it turns out that it is
actually necessary to create snapshots in clusters which bootstrap with
Raft, because of tombstones in current schema state expire hence
applying schema mutations from old Raft log entries is not really
idempotent. Snapshot transfer, which transfers group 0 history and
state_ids, prevents old entries from applying schema mutations over
latest schema state.
Ref: scylladb/scylladb#16683
When a base table changes and altered, so does the views that might
refer to the added column (which includes "SELECT *" views and also
views that might need to use this column for rows lifetime (virtual
columns).
However the query processor implementation for views change notification
was an empty function.
Since views are tables, the query processor needs to at least treat them
as such (and maybe in the future, do also some MV specific stuff).
This commit adds a call to `on_update_column_family` from within
`on_update_view`.
The side effect true to this date is that prepared statements for views
which changed due to a base table change will be invalidated.
Fixes https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/16392
This series also adds a test which fails without this fix and passes when the fix is applied.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#16897
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
Add test for mv prepared statements invalidation on base alter
query processor: treat view changes at least as table changes
(cherry picked from commit 5810396ba1)
Table properties validation is performed on statement execution.
Thus, when one attempts to create a table with invalid options,
an incorrect command gets committed in Raft. But then its
application fails, leading to a raft machine being stopped.
Check table properties when create and alter statements are prepared.
The error is no longer returned as an exceptional future, but it
is thrown. Adjust the tests accordingly.
(cherry picked from commit 60fdc44bce)
TWCS tables require partition estimation adjustment as incoming streaming data can be segregated into the time windows.
Turns out we had two problems in this area that leads to suboptimal bloom filters.
1) With off-strategy enabled, data segregation is postponed, but partition estimation was adjusted as if segregation wasn't postponed. Solved by not adjusting estimation if segregation is postponed.
2) With off-strategy disabled, data segregation is not postponed, but streaming didn't feed any metadata into partition estimation procedure, meaning it had to assume the max windows input data can be segregated into (100). Solved by using schema's default TTL for a precise estimation of window count.
For the future, we want to dynamically size filters (see https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/2024), especially for TWCS that might have SSTables that are left uncompacted until they're fully expired, meaning that the system won't heal itself in a timely manner through compaction on a SSTable that had partition estimation really wrong.
Fixes https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/15704.
Closes scylladb/scylladb#15938
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
streaming: Improve partition estimation with TWCS
streaming: Don't adjust partition estimate if segregation is postponed
(cherry picked from commit 64d1d5cf62)
Signed-off-by: Raphael S. Carvalho <raphaelsc@scylladb.com>
Closes#16672
Fixes#9405
`sync_point` API provided with incorrect sync point id might allocate
crazy amount of memory and fail with `std::bad_alloc`.
To fix this, we can check if the encoded sync point has been modified
before decoding. We can achieve this by calculating a checksum before
encoding, appending it to the encoded sync point, and compering it with
a checksum calculated in `db::hints::decode` before decoding.
Closes#14534
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
db: hints: add checksum to sync point encoding
db: hints: add the version_size constant
(cherry picked from commit eb6202ef9c)
The only difference from the original merge commit is the include
path of `xx_hasher.hh`. On branch 5.2, this file is in the root
directory, not `utils`.
Closes#16458
Lists can grow very big. Let's use a chunked vector to prevent large contiguous
allocations.
Fixes: #15302.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#15428
(cherry picked from commit 62a8a31be7)
The default reconnection policy in Python Driver is an exponential
backoff (with jitter) policy, which starts at 1 second reconnection
interval and ramps up to 600 seconds.
This is a problem in tests (refs #15104), especially in tests that restart
or replace nodes. In such a scenario, a node can be unavailable for an
extended period of time and the driver will try to reconnect to it
multiple times, eventually reaching very long reconnection interval
values, exceeding the timeout of a test.
Fix the issue by using a exponential reconnection policy with a maximum
interval of 4 seconds. A smaller value was not chosen, as each retry
clutters the logs with reconnection exception stack trace.
Fixes#15104Closes#15112
(cherry picked from commit 17e3e367ca)
Having values of the duration type is not allowed for clustering
columns, because duration can't be ordered. This is correctly validated
when creating a table but do not validated when we alter the type.
Fixes#12913Closesscylladb/scylladb#16022
(cherry picked from commit bd73536b33)
Alternator's implementation of TagResource, UntagResource and UpdateTimeToLive (the latter uses tags to store the TTL configuration) was unsafe for concurrent modifications - some of these modifications may be lost. This short series fixes the bug, and also adds (in the last patch) a test that reproduces the bug and verifies that it's fixed.
The cause of the incorrect isolation was that we separately read the old tags and wrote the modified tags. In this series we introduce a new function, `modify_tags()` which can do both under one lock, so concurrent tag operations are serialized and therefore isolated as expected.
Fixes#6389.
Closes#13150
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test/alternator: test concurrent TagResource / UntagResource
db/tags: drop unsafe update_tags() utility function
alternator: isolate concurrent modification to tags
db/tags: add safe modify_tags() utility functions
migration_manager: expose access to storage_proxy
(cherry picked from commit dba1d36aa6)
Closes#16453
The implementation of "SELECT TOJSON(t)" or "SELECT JSON t" for a column
of type "time" forgot to put the time string in quotes. The result was
invalid JSON. This is patch is a one-liner fixing this bug.
This patch also removes the "xfail" marker from one xfailing test
for this issue which now starts to pass. We also add a second test for
this issue - the existing test was for "SELECT TOJSON(t)", and the second
test shows that "SELECT JSON t" had exactly the same bug - and both are
fixed by the same patch.
We also had a test translated from Cassandra which exposed this bug,
but that test continues to fail because of other bugs, so we just
need to update the xfail string.
The patch also fixes one C++ test, test/boost/json_cql_query_test.cc,
which enshrined the *wrong* behavior - JSON output that isn't even
valid JSON - and had to be fixed. Unlike the Python tests, the C++ test
can't be run against Cassandra, and doesn't even run a JSON parser
on the output, which explains how it came to enshrine wrong output
instead of helping to discover the bug.
Fixes#7988
Signed-off-by: Nadav Har'El <nyh@scylladb.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#16121
(cherry picked from commit 8d040325ab)
For JSON objects represented as map<ascii, int>, don't treat ASCII keys
as a nested JSON string. We were doing that prior to the patch, which
led to parsing errors.
Included the error offset where JSON parsing failed for
rjson::parse related functions to help identify parsing errors
better.
Fixes: #7949
Signed-off-by: Michael Huang <michaelhly@gmail.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#15499
(cherry picked from commit 75109e9519)
Fix a few cases where instead of printing column names in error messages, we printed weird stuff like ASCII codes or the address of the name.
Fixes#13657Closes#13658
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
cql3: fix printing of column_specification::name in some error messages
cql3: fix printing of column_definition::name in some error messages
(cherry picked from commit a29b8cd02b)
reconcilable_result_builder passes range tombstone changes to _rt_assembler
using table schema, not query schema.
This means that a tombstone with bounds (a; b), where a < b in query schema
but a > b in table schema, will not be emitted from mutation_query.
This is a very serious bug, because it means that such tombstones in reverse
queries are not reconciled with data from other replicas.
If *any* queried replica has a row, but not the range tombstone which deleted
the row, the reconciled result will contain the deleted row.
In particular, range deletes performed while a replica is down will not
later be visible to reverse queries which select this replica, regardless of the
consistency level.
As far as I can see, this doesn't result in any persistent data loss.
Only in that some data might appear resurrected to reverse queries,
until the relevant range tombstone is fully repaired.
This series fixes the bug and adds a minimal reproducer test.
Fixes#10598Closesscylladb/scylladb#16003
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
mutation_query_test: test that range tombstones are sent in reverse queries
mutation_query: properly send range tombstones in reverse queries
(cherry picked from commit 65e42e4166)
The execution loop consumes permits from the _ready_list and executes
them. The _ready_list usually contains a single permit. When the
_ready_list is not empty, new permits are queued until it becomes empty.
The execution loops relies on admission checks triggered by the read
releasing resouces, to bring in any queued read into the _ready_list,
while it is executing the current read. But in some cases the current
read might not free any resorces and thus fail to trigger an admission
check and the currently queued permits will sit in the queue until
another source triggers an admission check.
I don't yet know how this situation can occur, if at all, but it is
reproducible with a simple unit test, so it is best to cover this
corner-case in the off-chance it happens in the wild.
Add an explicit admission check to the execution loop, after the
_ready_list is exhausted, to make sure any waiters that can be admitted
with an empty _ready_list are admitted immediately and execution
continues.
Fixes: #13540Closes#13541
(cherry picked from commit b790f14456)
database_test is failing sporadically and the cause was traced back
to commit e3e7c3c7e5.
The commit forces a subset of tests in database_test, to run once
for each of predefined x_log2_compaction_group settings.
That causes two problems:
1) test becomes 240% slower in dev mode.
2) queries on system.auth is timing out, and the reason is a small
table being spread across hundreds of compaction groups in each
shard. so to satisfy a range scan, there will be multiple hops,
making the overhead huge. additionally, the compaction group
aware sstable set is not merged yet. so even point queries will
unnecessarily scan through all the groups.
Fixes#13660.
Signed-off-by: Raphael S. Carvalho <raphaelsc@scylladb.com>
Closes#13851
(cherry picked from commit a7ceb987f5)
Schema digest is calculated by querying for mutations of all schema
tables, then compacting them so that all tombstones in them are
dropped. However, even if the mutation becomes empty after compaction,
we still feed its partition key. If the same mutations were compacted
prior to the query, because the tombstones expire, we won't get any
mutation at all and won't feed the partition key. So schema digest
will change once an empty partition of some schema table is compacted
away.
Tombstones expire 7 days after schema change which introduces them. If
one of the nodes is restarted after that, it will compute a different
table schema digest on boot. This may cause performance problems. When
sending a request from coordinator to replica, the replica needs
schema_ptr of exact schema version request by the coordinator. If it
doesn't know that version, it will request it from the coordinator and
perform a full schema merge. This adds latency to every such request.
Schema versions which are not referenced are currently kept in cache
for only 1 second, so if request flow has low-enough rate, this
situation results in perpetual schema pulls.
After ae8d2a550d (5.2.0), it is more liekly to
run into this situation, because table creation generates tombstones
for all schema tables relevant to the table, even the ones which
will be otherwise empty for the new table (e.g. computed_columns).
This change inroduces a cluster feature which when enabled will change
digest calculation to be insensitive to expiry by ignoring empty
partitions in digest calculation. When the feature is enabled,
schema_ptrs are reloaded so that the window of discrepancy during
transition is short and no rolling restart is required.
A similar problem was fixed for per-node digest calculation in
c2ba94dc39e4add9db213751295fb17b95e6b962. Per-table digest calculation
was not fixed at that time because we didn't persist enabled features
and they were not enabled early-enough on boot for us to depend on
them in digest calculation. Now they are enabled before non-system
tables are loaded so digest calculation can rely on cluster features.
Fixes#4485.
Manually tested using ccm on cluster upgrade scenarios and node restarts.
Closes#14441
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test: schema_change_test: Verify digests also with TABLE_DIGEST_INSENSITIVE_TO_EXPIRY enabled
schema_mutations, migration_manager: Ignore empty partitions in per-table digest
migration_manager, schema_tables: Implement migration_manager::reload_schema()
schema_tables: Avoid crashing when table selector has only one kind of tables
(cherry picked from commit cf81eef370)
These APIs may return stale or simply incorrect data on shards
other than 0. Newer versions of Scylla are better at maintaining
cross-shard consistency, but we need a simple fix that can be easily and
without risk be backported to older versions; this is the fix.
Add a simple test to check that the `failure_detector/endpoints`
API returns nonzero generation.
Fixes: scylladb/scylladb#15816Closesscylladb/scylladb#15970
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test: rest_api: test that generation is nonzero in `failure_detector/endpoints`
api: failure_detector: fix indentation
api: failure_detector: invoke on shard 0
(cherry picked from commit 9443253f3d)
This `with` context is supposed to disable, then re-enable
autocompaction for the given keyspaces, but it used the wrong API for
it, it used the column_family/autocompaction API, which operates on
column families, not keyspaces. This oversight led to a silent failure
because the code didn't check the result of the request.
Both are fixed in this patch:
* switch to use `storage_service/auto_compaction/{keyspace}` endpoint
* check the result of the API calls and report errors as exceptions
Fixes: #13553Closes#13568
(cherry picked from commit 66ee73641e)
scylla-sstable currently has two ways to obtain the schema:
* via a `schema.cql` file.
* load schema definition from memory (only works for system tables).
This meant that for most cases it was necessary to export the schema into a CQL format and write it to a file. This is very flexible. The sstable can be inspected anywhere, it doesn't have to be on the same host where it originates form. Yet in many cases the sstable is inspected on the same host where it originates from. In this cases, the schema is readily available in the schema tables on disk and it is plain annoying to have to export it into a file, just to quickly inspect an sstable file.
This series solves this annoyance by providing a mechanism to load schemas from the on-disk schema tables. Furthermore, an auto-detect mechanism is provided to detect the location of these schema tables based on the path of the sstable, but if that fails, the tool check the usual locations of the scylla data dir, the scylla confguration file and even looks for environment variables that tell the location of these. The old methods are still supported. In fact, if a schema.cql is present in the working directory of the tool, it is preferred over any other method, allowing for an easy force-override.
If the auto-detection magic fails, an error is printed to the console, advising the user to turn on debug level logging to see what went wrong.
A comprehensive test is added which checks all the different schema loading mechanisms. The documentation is also updated to reflect the changes.
This change breaks the backward-compatibility of the command-line API of the tool, as `--system-schema` is now just a flag, the keyspace and table names are supplied separately via the new `--keyspace` and `--table` options. I don't think this will break anybody's workflow as this tools is still lightly used, exactly because of the annoying way the schema has to be provided. Hopefully after this series, this will change.
Example:
```
$ ./build/dev/scylla sstable dump-data /var/lib/scylla/data/ks/tbl2-d55ba230b9a811ed9ae8495671e9e4f8/quarantine/me-1-big-Data.db
{"sstables":{"/var/lib/scylla/data/ks/tbl2-d55ba230b9a811ed9ae8495671e9e4f8/quarantine//me-1-big-Data.db":[{"key":{"token":"-3485513579396041028","raw":"000400000000","value":"0"},"clustering_elements":[{"type":"clustering-row","key":{"raw":"","value":""},"marker":{"timestamp":1677837047297728},"columns":{"v":{"is_live":true,"type":"regular","timestamp":1677837047297728,"value":"0"}}}]}]}}
```
As seen above, subdirectories like qurantine, staging etc are also supported.
Fixes: https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/10126Closes#13448
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test/cql-pytest: test_tools.py: add tests for schema loading
test/cql-pytest: add no_autocompaction_context
docs: scylla-sstable.rst: remove accidentally added copy-pasta
docs: scylla-sstable.rst: remove paragraph with schema limitations
docs: scylla-sstable.rst: update schema section
test/cql-pytest: nodetool.py: add flush_keyspace()
tools/scylla-sstable: reform schema loading mechanism
tools/schema_loader: add load_schema_from_schema_tables()
db/schema_tables: expose types schema
(cherry picked from commit 952b455310)
Closes#15386
Off-strategy suffers with a 100% space overhead, as it adopted
a sort of all or nothing approach. Meaning all input sstables,
living in maintenance set, are kept alive until they're all
reshaped according to the strategy criteria.
Input sstables in off-strategy are very likely to be mostly disjoint,
so it can greatly benefit from incremental compaction.
The incremental compaction approach is not only good for
decreasing disk usage, but also memory usage (as metadata of
input and output live in memory), and file desc count, which
takes memory away from OS.
Turns out that this approach also greatly simplifies the
off-strategy impl in compaction manager, as it no longer have
to maintain new unused sstables and mark them for
deletion on failure, and also unlink intermediary sstables
used between reshape rounds.
Fixes https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/14992.
Backport notes: relatively easy to backport, had to include
**replica: Make compaction_group responsible for deleting off-strategy compaction input**
and
**compaction/leveled_compaction_strategy: ideal_level_for_input: special case max_sstable_size==0**
Closes#15793
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test: Verify that off-strategy can do incremental compaction
compaction/leveled_compaction_strategy: ideal_level_for_input: special case max_sstable_size==0
compaction: Clear pending_replacement list when tombstone GC is disabled
compaction: Enable incremental compaction on off-strategy
compaction: Extend reshape type to allow for incremental compaction
compaction: Move reshape_compaction in the source
compaction: Enable incremental compaction only if replacer callback is engaged
replica: Make compaction_group responsible for deleting off-strategy compaction input
The grammar mistakenly allows nothing to be parsed as an
intValue (itself accepted in LIMIT and similar clauses).
Easily fixed by removing the empty alternative. A unit test is
added.
Fixes#14705.
Closes#14707
(cherry picked from commit e00811caac)
Commit 8c4b5e4 introduced an optimization which only
calculates max purgeable timestamp when a tombstone satisfy the
grace period.
Commit 'repair: Get rid of the gc_grace_seconds' inverted the order,
probably under the assumption that getting grace period can be
more expensive than calculating max purgeable, as repair-mode GC
will look up into history data in order to calculate gc_before.
This caused a significant regression on tombstone heavy compactions,
where most of tombstones are still newer than grace period.
A compaction which used to take 5s, now takes 35s. 7x slower.
The reason is simple, now calculation of max purgeable happens
for every single tombstone (once for each key), even the ones that
cannot be GC'ed yet. And each calculation has to iterate through
(i.e. check the bloom filter of) every single sstable that doesn't
participate in compaction.
Flame graph makes it very clear that bloom filter is a heavy path
without the optimization:
45.64% 45.64% sstable_compact sstable_compaction_test_g
[.] utils::filter::bloom_filter::is_present
With its resurrection, the problem is gone.
This scenario can easily happen, e.g. after a deletion burst, and
tombstones becoming only GC'able after they reach upper tiers in
the LSM tree.
Before this patch, a compaction can be estimated to have this # of
filter checks:
(# of keys containing *any* tombstone) * (# of uncompacting sstable
runs[1])
[1] It's # of *runs*, as each key tend to overlap with only one
fragment of each run.
After this patch, the estimation becomes:
(# of keys containing a GC'able tombstone) * (# of uncompacting
runs).
With repair mode for tombstone GC, the assumption, that retrieval
of gc_before is more expensive than calculating max purgeable,
is kept. We can revisit it later. But the default mode, which
is the "timeout" (i.e. gc_grace_seconds) one, we still benefit
from the optimization of deferring the calculation until
needed.
Cherry picked from commit 38b226f997
Signed-off-by: Raphael S. Carvalho <raphaelsc@scylladb.com>
Fixes#14091.
Closes#13908
Signed-off-by: Raphael S. Carvalho <raphaelsc@scylladb.com>
Closes#15744
Modeled after get_live_members_synchronized,
get_unreachable_members_synchronized calls
replicate_live_endpoints_on_change to synchronize
the state of unreachable_members on all shards.
Fixes#12261Fixes#15088
Also, add rest_api unit test for those apis
Closes#15093
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test: rest_api: add test_gossiper
gossiper: add get_unreachable_members_synchronized
(cherry picked from commit 57deeb5d39)
Backport note: `gossiper::lock_endpoint_update_semaphore` helper
function was missing, replaced with
`get_units(g._endpoint_update_semaphore, 1)`
Currently, when creating the table, permissions may be mistakenly
granted to the user even if the table is already existing. This
can happen in two cases:
The query has a IF NOT EXISTS clause - as a result no exception
is thrown after encountering the existing table, and the permission
granting is not prevented.
The query is handled by a non-zero shard - as a result we accept
the query with a bounce_to_shard result_message, again without
preventing the granting of permissions.
These two cases are now avoided by checking the result_message
generated when handling the query - now we only grant permissions
when the query resulted in a schema_change message.
Additionally, a test is added that reproduces both of the mentioned
cases.
CVE-2023-33972
Fixes#15467.
* 'no-grant-on-no-create' of github.com:scylladb/scylladb-ghsa-ww5v-p45p-3vhq:
auth: do not grant permissions to creator without actually creating
transport: add is_schema_change() method to result_message
(cherry picked from commit ab6988c52f)