Forward-declare untyped_result_set and untyped_result_set_row, and remove
the include from query_processor.hh.
Message-Id: <20170916170859.27612-3-avi@scylladb.com>
Usually, internal queries are used for short queries. Sometimes though,
like in the case of get compaction history, there could be a large
amount of results. Without paging it will overload the system.
This patch adds the ability to use paging internally.
Using paging will be done explicitely, all the relevant information
would be store in an internal_query_state, that would hold both the
paging state but also the query so consecutive calls can be made.
To use paging use the query method with a function.
The function gets beside a statement and its parameters a function that
will be used for each of the returned rows.
For example if qp is a query_processor:
qp.query("SELECT * from system.compaction_history", [] (const cql3::untyped_result_set::row& row) {
....
// do something with row
...
return stop_iteration::no; // keep on reading
});
Will run the function on each of the compaction history table rows.
To stop the iteration, the function can return stop_iteration::yes.
- introcduced "seastarx.hh" header, which does a "using namespace seastar";
- 'net' namespace conflicts with seastar::net, renamed to 'netw'.
- 'transport' namespace conflicts with seastar::transport, renamed to
cql_transport.
- "logger" global variables now conflict with logger global type, renamed
to xlogger.
- other minor changes
Make sure that errors are reported in a form of an exceptional future and
not by a direct exception throwing.
Signed-off-by: Vlad Zolotarov <vladz@scylladb.com>
Use seastar::checked_ptr<weak_ptr<pepared_statement>> instead of shared_ptr for passing prepared statements around.
This allows an easy tracking and handling of statements invalidation.
This implementation will throw an exception every time an invalidated
statement reference is dereferenced.
Signed-off-by: Vlad Zolotarov <vladz@scylladb.com>
Currently, the code is using bytes_opt and bytes_view_opt to represent
CQL values, which can hold a value or null. In preparation for
supporting a third state, unset value introduced in CQL v4, introduce
new raw_value and raw_value_view types and use them instead.
The new types are based on boost::variant<> and are capable of holding
null, unset values, and blobs that represent a value.
To minimize code duplication, have query_processor use
do_with_parser() instead of manually creating the CqlParser.
Signed-off-by: Duarte Nunes <duarte@scylladb.com>
- Add a inserts, updates, deletes members to cql_stats.
- Store cql_stats& in a modification_statement and increment the corresponding counter according to the value of a "type" field.
- Store cql_stats& in a batch_statement and increment the statistics for each BATCH member.
Signed-off-by: Vlad Zolotarov <vladz@cloudius-systems.com>
- Add a "reads" counter to a cql3::cql_stats struct.
- Store a reference for a query_processor::_cql_stats in the select_statement object.
- Increment a "reads" counter where needed.
Signed-off-by: Vlad Zolotarov <vladz@cloudius-systems.com>
Currently, query_processor.cc code formatting is all over the place,
which makes the file hard to read. Apply some formatting magic to make
it prettier.
Message-Id: <1470832486-26020-2-git-send-email-penberg@scylladb.com>
Adding this method allows to use tracing helper functions
and remove the no longer needed accessors in the query_state.
Signed-off-by: Vlad Zolotarov <vladz@cloudius-systems.com>
This patch adds support for thrift prepared statements. It specializes
the result_message::prepared into two types:
result_message::prepared::cql and result_message::prepared::thrift, as
their identifiers have different types.
Signed-off-by: Duarte Nunes <duarte@scylladb.com>
- Store a trace state inside a client_state.
- Start tracing in a cql_server::connection::process_query().
Signed-off-by: Vlad Zolotarov <vladz@cloudius-systems.com>
Currently we only do that when column set changes. When prepared
statements are executed, paramaters like read repair chance are read
from schema version stored in the statement. Not invalidating prepared
statements on changes of such parameters will appear as if alter took
no effect.
Fixes#1255.
Message-Id: <1462985495-9767-1-git-send-email-tgrabiec@scylladb.com>
Add the statistics counter for a number of unprepared statements
executions and expose it with collectd.
Since in our implementation a number of unprepared statements executions
equals to a number of executions of prepare() function we may simply
increment the new statistics counter every time query_processor::get_statement()
is called.
Fixes#1068
Signed-off-by: Vlad Zolotarov <vladz@cloudius-systems.com>
Message-Id: <1461503492-32228-1-git-send-email-vladz@cloudius-systems.com>
The default recognition error messages in antlr C++ backend are
different from Java backend which makes Scylla's CQL error messages
incompatible with Cassandra. This makes it very hard to write CQL level
test cases which are portable between Scylla and Cassandra.
To fix the issue, override the most common lexer and parser error
messages to follow the convention set by the antlr Java backend. This
unlocks various test cases in AlterTest, for example.
Message-Id: <1460032883-14422-1-git-send-email-penberg@scylladb.com>
We want the statements to be removed before we ack the schema change,
otherwise it will race with all future operations.
Since the subscriber will be invoked on each shard, there is no need
to broadcast to all shards, we can just handle current shard.
Replicates https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-7910 :
"Prepare a statement with a wildcard in the select clause.
2. Alter the table - add a column
3. execute the prepared statement
Expected result - get all the columns including the new column
Actual result - get the columns except the new column"
Since 4641dfff24, query_state keeps a
copy of client_state, not a reference. Therefore _cl is no longer
updated by queries using _qp. Fix by using the client_state from _qp.
Fixes#525.
We use boost::any to convert to and from database values (stored in
serlialized form) and native C++ values. boost::any captures information
about the data type (how to copy/move/delete etc.) and stores it inside
the boost::any instance. We later retrieve the real value using
boost::any_cast.
However, data_value (which has a boost::any member) already has type
information as a data_type instance. By teaching data_type intances about
the corresponding native type, we can elimiante the use of boost::any.
While boost::any is evil and eliminating it improves efficiency somewhat,
the real goal is growing native type support in data_type. We will use that
later to store native types in the cache, enabling O(log n) access to
collections, O(1) access to tuples, and more efficient large blob support.
Encapsulate the '_values' vector to make it easier to switch the
underlying type from bytes_opt to bytes_view_opt.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Enberg <penberg@cloudius-systems.com>
Only unexpected server errors should be logged, exception classes
deriving from cassandra_exception do not count as those.
Fixes#60.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Dziepak <pdziepak@cloudius-systems.com>
The logger class constructor registers itself with the logger registry,
in order to enable dynamically setting log levels. However, since
thread_local variables may be (and are) initialized at the time of first
use, when the program starts up no loggers are registered.
Fix by making loggers global, not thread_local. This requires that the
registry use locking to prevent registration happening on different threads
from corrupting the registry.
Note that technically global variables can also be initialized at the
point of first use, and there is no portable way for classes to self-register.
However this is the best we can do.
It is common for some operations, like system table updates, to try and guarantee
some particular ordering of operations.
The way Origin does it, is by simply incrementing one to the current timestamp.
Our calls, however, are being dispatched through our internal query processor, which
has a builtin client_state.
Our client_state has a mechanism to guarantee monotonicity, by adding 1 if needed
to operations that happen subsequentially. By using a clock that is not wired up
to this mechanism, we can't really guarantee that if other operations happened to
get in between.
If we expose this mechanism through the query_processor, we will be able to guarantee
that.
Signed-off-by: Glauber Costa <glommer@cloudius-systems.com>