sprint() recently became more strict, throwing on sprint("%s", 5). Replace
with the more modern format().
Mechanically converted with https://github.com/avikivity/unsprint.
After the new in-memory representation of cells was introduced there was
a regression in atomic_cell_or_collection::operator<< which stopped
printing the content of the cell. This makes debugging more incovenient
are time-consuming. This patch fixes the problem. Schema is propagated
to the atomic_cell_or_collection printer and the full content of the
cell is printed.
Fixes#3571.
Message-Id: <20181024095413.10736-1-pdziepak@scylladb.com>
Currently timeout is opt-in, that is, all methods that even have it
default it to `db::no_timeout`. This means that ensuring timeout is used
where it should be is completely up to the author and the reviewrs of
the code. As humans are notoriously prone to mistakes this has resulted
in a very inconsistent usage of timeout, many clients of
`flat_mutation_reader` passing the timeout only to some members and only
on certain call sites. This is small wonder considering that some core
operations like `operator()()` only recently received a timeout
parameter and others like `peek()` didn't even have one until this
patch. Both of these methods call `fill_buffer()` which potentially
talks to the lower layers and is supposed to propagate the timeout.
All this makes the `flat_mutation_reader`'s timeout effectively useless.
To make order in this chaos make the timeout parameter a mandatory one
on all `flat_mutation_reader` methods that need it. This ensures that
humans now get a reminder from the compiler when they forget to pass the
timeout. Clients can still opt-out from passing a timeout by passing
`db::no_timeout` (the previous default value) but this will be now
explicit and developers should think before typing it.
There were suprisingly few core call sites to fix up. Where a timeout
was available nearby I propagated it to be able to pass it to the
reader, where I couldn't I passed `db::no_timeout`. Authors of the
latter kind of code (view, streaming and repair are some of the notable
examples) should maybe consider propagating down a timeout if needed.
In the test code (the wast majority of the changes) I just used
`db::no_timeout` everywhere.
Tests: unit(release, debug)
Signed-off-by: Botond Dénes <bdenes@scylladb.com>
Message-Id: <1edc10802d5eb23de8af28c9f48b8d3be0f1a468.1536744563.git.bdenes@scylladb.com>
read_mutation_from_flat_mutation_reader's internal adapter can build a
single mutation only and hence can consume only a single partition.
If more than one partitions are pushed down from the producer the
adaptor will very likely crash. To avoid unnecessary investigations add
an assert() to fail early and make it clear what the real problem is.
All other consume_ methods have an assert() already for their
invariants so this is just following suit.
Introduce class result_options to carry result options through the
request pipeline, which at this point mean the result type and the
digest algorithm. This class allows us to encapsulate the concrete
digest algorithm to use.
Signed-off-by: Duarte Nunes <duarte@scylladb.com>
mutation_rebuilder will be used not only with streamed_mutations
but also with flat_mutation_readers so it's better for it to be
independent from streamed_mutation.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jastrzebski <piotr@scylladb.com>
Change the clustering key argument in mutation::set_cell from
exploded_clustering_prefix to clustering_key_prefix, which allows for
some overall code simplification and fewer copies. This mostly affects
the cql3 layer.
Signed-off-by: Duarte Nunes <duarte@scylladb.com>
This reverts commit aa392810ff, reversing
changes made to a24ff47c637e6a5fd158099b8a65f1191fc2d023; it uses
boost::intrusive::detail directly, which it must not, and doesn't compile on
all boost versions as a consequence.
Renaming the function to external_memory_usage() makes it clear that
sizeof(T) is not included, something that was a source of confusion in
the past.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Dziepak <pdziepak@scylladb.com>
If mutation is bigger than this limit
it won't be read and mutation_from_streamed_mutation
will return empty optional.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jastrzebski <piotr@scylladb.com>
Originally, streamed_mutations guaranteed that emitted tombstones are
disjoint. In order to achieve that two separate objects were produced
for each range tombstone: range_tombstone_begin and range_tombstone_end.
Unfortunately, this forced sstable writer to accumulate all clustering
rows between range_tombstone_begin and range_tombstone_end.
However, since there is no need to write disjoint tombstones to sstables
(see #1153 "Write range tombstones to sstables like Cassandra does") it
is also not necessary for streamed_mutations to produce disjoint range
tombstones.
This patch changes that by making streamed_mutation produce
range_tombstone objects directly.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Dziepak <pdziepak@scylladb.com>
This patch as a per-partition row limit. It ensures both local
queries and the reconciliation logic abide by this limit.
Signed-off-by: Duarte Nunes <duarte@scylladb.com>
"Currently data query digest includes cells and tombstones which may have
expired or be covered by higher-level tombstones. This causes digest
mismatch between replicas if some elements are compacted on one of the
nodes and not on others. This mismatch triggers read-repair which doesn't
resolve because mutations received by mutation queries are not differing,
they are compacted already.
The fix adds compacting step before writing and digesting query results by
reusing the algorithm used by mutation query. This is not the most optimal
way to fix this. The compaction step could be folded with the query writing,
there is redundancy in both steps. However such change carries more risk,
and thus was postponed.
perf_simple_query test (cassandra-stress-like partitions) shows regression
from 83k to 77k (7%) ops/s.
Fixes #1165."
Currently data query digest includes cells and tombstones which may have
expired or be covered by higher-level tombstones. This causes digest
mismatch between replicas if some elements are compacted on one of the
nodes and not on others. This mismatch triggers read-repair which doesn't
resolve because mutations received by mutation queries are not differing,
they are compacted already.
The fix adds compacting step before writing and digesting query results by
reusing the algorithm used by mutation query. This is not the most optimal
way to fix this. The compaction step could be folded with the query writing,
there is redundancy in both steps. However such change carries more risk,
and thus was postponed.
perf_simple_query test (cassandra-stress-like partitions) shows regression
from 83k to 77k (7%) ops/s.
Fixes#1165.
Schema is tracked in memtable and cache per-entry. Entries are
upgraded lazily on access. Incoming mutations are upgraded to table's
current schema on given shard.
Mutating nodes need to keep schema_ptr alive in case schema version is
requested by target node.
Allows for having more than one clustering row range set, depending on
PK queried (although right now limited to one - which happens to be exactly
the number of mutiplexing paging needs... What a coincidence...)
Encapsulates the row_ranges member in a query function, and if needed holds
ranges outside the default one in an extra object.
Query result::builder::add_partition now fetches the correct row range for
the partition, and this is the range used in subsequent iteration.
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.
By passing mutation_partition oither by const ref or rref instead of
by value one move can be avoided if copying is necessary.
Signed-off-by: Paweł Dziepak <pdziepak@cloudius-systems.com>