Add an explicit wait_for_schema_agreement() call after CREATE KEYSPACE
in create_new_test_keyspace to ensure all nodes have applied the schema
before proceeding.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29371
The alter_table case has a known failure where point lookups at QUORUM
return 0 rows after node2 restarts, even though:
- the schema was correctly synced (ALTER TABLE received from cluster)
- the data commitlog was replayed (21 mutations, 0 skipped)
- all 3 nodes were alive, so QUORUM (2/3) should be satisfiable by
node1+node3 regardless of node2's state
The LIMIT 1 table scan succeeds (data is present somewhere), but
specific key lookups return empty. This points to a bug in how node2,
acting as coordinator after restart, routes single-partition reads —
most likely stale tablet routing metadata.
Add diagnostics to help distinguish data loss from a coordinator/routing
bug on the next failure:
- log which key is missing
- dump all rows visible at QUORUM
- query each node individually at ONE consistency for the missing key
Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29350
The real keyspace name of an Alternator table T is "alternator_T".
Expand the "alternator.T" format used in the audit_tables config flag
to the real keyspace name at parse time, so users don't need to spell
out the internal "alternator_T.T" form.
Add tests for the unhappy path of Alternator audit logging:
- Category filtering: operations are not logged when their category
(DML, QUERY, DDL) is excluded from audit_categories.
- Keyspace filtering: operations on a keyspace not listed in
audit_keyspaces are not logged.
- Error entries: a failed operation (thrown exception after audit_info
is set) produces an audit entry with error=true.
- Empty-keyspace bypass: global operations like ListTables and
DescribeEndpoints are logged regardless of audit_keyspaces because
should_log() short-circuits on an empty keyspace.
Currently, the manifest advertises "powof2", which is wrong for
arbitrary count and boundaries.
Introduce a new kind of layout called "arbitrary", and produce it if
the tablet map doesn't conform to "powof2" layout.
We should also produce tablet boundaries in this case, but that's
worked on in a different PR: https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/pull/28525
This is a step towards more flexibility in managing tablets. A
prerequisite before we can split individual tablets, isolating hot
partitions, and evening-out tablet sizes by shifting boundaries.
After this patch, the system can handle tables with arbitrary tablet
count. Tablet allocator is still rounding up desired tablet count to
the nearest power of two when allocating tablets for a new table, so
unless the tablet map is allocated in some other way, the counts will
be still a power of two.
We plan to utilize arbitrary count when migrating from vnodes to
tablets, by creating a tablet map which matches vnode boundaries.
One of the reasons we don't give up on power-of-two by default yet is
that it creates an issue with merges. If tablet count is odd, one of
the tablets doesn't have a sibling and will not be merged. That can
obviously cause imbalance of token space and tablet sizes between
tablets. To limit the impact, this patch dynamically chooses which
tablet to isolate when initiating a merge. The largest tablet is
chosen, as that will minimize imbalance. Otherwise, if we always chose
the last tablet to isolate, its size would remain the same while other
tablets double in size with each odd-count merge, leading to
imbalance. The imbalance will still be there, but the difference in
tablet sizes is limited to 2x.
Example (3 tablets):
[0] owns 1/3 of tokens
[1] owns 1/3 of tokens
[2] owns 1/3 of tokens
After merge:
[0] owns 2/3 of tokens
[1] owns 1/3 of tokens
What we would like instead:
Step 1 (split [1]):
[0] owns 1/3 of tokens
[1] old 1.left, owns 1/6 of tokens
[2] old 1.right, owns 1/6 of tokens
[3] owns 1/3 of tokens
Step 2 (merge):
[0] owns 1/2 of tokens
[1] owns 1/2 of tokens
To do that, we need to be able to split individual tablets, but we're
not there yet.
Defaults to 0. When N > 0, adds a map<blob, blob> collection column to
the schema. Each row will have a collection cell with N elements.
Allows benchmarking collection handling.
The test test/cluster/test_ttl_row.py::test_row_ttl_scheduling_group wants to
verify that the new CQL per-row TTL feature does all its work (expiration
scanning, deletion of expired items) on all nodes in the "streaming"
scheduling group, not in the statement scheduling group.
As originally written, the test couldn't require that it uses exactly zero
time in the statement scheduling group - because some things do happen
there - specifically the ALTER TABLE request we use to enable TTL.
So the test checked that the time in the "wrong" group is less than 0.2
of the total time, not zero.
But in one CI run, we got to exactly 0.2 and the test failed. Running
this test locally, I see the margin is pretty narrow: The test almost
always fails if I set the threshold ratio to 0.1.
The solution in this patch is to move the ALTER TABLE work to a different
scheduling group (by using an additional service level). After doing that
the CPU usage in sl:default goes down to exactly zero - not close to zero
but exactly zero.
However, it seems that there is always some rare background work in
sl:default and debug builds it can come out more than 0ms (e.g., in
one test we saw 1ms), so we keep checking that sl:default is much
lower than sl:stream - not exactly zero.
Incidentally, I converted the serial loop adding the 200 rows in the
test's setup to a parallel loop, to make the test setup slightly faster.
I also added to the test a sanity check that the scheduling group sl:default
that we are measuring that TTL does zero work in, is actually the scheduling
group that normal writes work in (to avoid the risk of having a test that
verifies that some irrelevant scheduling group is unsurprisingly getting
zero usage...).
Fixes SCYLLADB-1495.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29447
There are several reasons we want to do that.
One is that it will give us more flexibility in distributing the
load. We can subdivide tablets at any points, and achieve more
evenly-sized tablets. In particular, we can isolate large partitions
into separate tablets.
Another reason is vnode-to-tablet migration. We could construct a
tablet map which matches exactly the vnode boundaries, so migration
can happen transparently from the CQL-coordinator's point of view.
Implementation details:
We store a vector of tokens which represent tablet boundaries in the
tablet_id_map. tablet_id keeps its meaning, it's an index into vector
of tablets. To avoid logarithmic lookup of tablet_id from the token,
we introduce a lookup structure with power-of-two aligned buckets, and
store the tablet_id of the tablet which owns the first token in the
bucket. This way, lookup needs to consider tablet id range which
overlaps with one bucket. If boundaries are more or less aligned,
there are around 1-2 tablets overlapping with a bucket, and the lookup
is still O(1).
Amount of memory used increased, but not significantly relative to old
size (because tablet_info is currently fat):
For 131'072 tablets:
Before:
Size of tablet_metadata in memory: 57456 KiB
After:
Size of tablet_metadata in memory: 59504 KiB
And reimplement existing split-related methods around it.
This way we avoid calling dht::compaction_group_of(), and
assuming anything about tablet boundaries or tablet count
being a power of two.
This will make later refactoring easier.
Currently, hints that are sent to tablet replicas which are leaving due to RF-- can be lost, because `hint_sender` only checks if the destination host is leaving. To avoid this, we add a new method `effective_replication_map::is_leaving(host, token)` which checks if the tablet identified by the given token is leaving the host. This method is called by the `hint_sender` to check if the hint should be sent only to the destination host, or to all the replicas. This way, we increase consistency. For v-node based ERPs, `is_leaving()` calls `token_metadata::is_leaving(host)`.
Fixes: SCYLLADB-287
This is an improvement, and backport is not needed.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#28770
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test: verify hints are delivered during tablet RF reduction
hint_sender: use per-tablet is_leaving() to avoid losing hints on RF reduction
erm: add is_leaving() to effective_replication_map
Fixes a race condition where tablet split can crash the server during truncation.
`truncate_table_on_all_shards()` disables compaction on all existing compaction groups, then later calls `discard_sstables()` which asserts that compaction is disabled. Between these two points, tablet split can call `set_split_mode()`, which creates new compaction groups via `make_empty_group()` — these start with `compaction_disabled_counter == 0`. When `discard_sstables()` checks its assertion, it finds these new groups and fires `on_internal_error`, aborting the server.
In `storage_group::set_split_mode()`, before creating new compaction groups, check whether the main compaction group has compaction disabled. If it does, bail out early and return `false` (not ready). This is safe because the split will be retried once truncation completes and re-enables compaction.
A new regression test `test_split_emitted_during_truncate` reproduces the
exact interleaving using two error injection points:
- **`database_truncate_wait`** — pauses truncation after compaction is disabled but before `discard_sstables()` runs.
- **`tablet_split_monitor_wait`** (new, in `service/storage_service.cc`) — pauses the split monitor at the start of `process_tablet_split_candidate()`.
The test creates a single-tablet table, triggers both operations, uses the injection points to force the problematic ordering, then verifies that truncation completes successfully and the split finishes afterward.
Fixes: SCYLLADB-1035
This needs to be backported to all currently supported version.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29250
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test: add test_split_emitted_during_truncate
table: fix race between tablet split and truncate
In partition_snapshot_row_cursor::maybe_refresh(), the !is_in_latest_version()
path calls lower_bound(_position) on the latest version's rows to find the
cursor's position in that version. When lower_bound returns null (the cursor
is positioned above all entries in the latest version in table order), the code
unconditionally sets _background_continuity = true and allows the subsequent
if(!it) block to erase the latest version's entry from the heap.
This is correct for forward traversal: null means there are no more entries
ahead, so removing the version from the heap is safe.
However, in reversed mode, null from lower_bound means the cursor is above
all entries in table order -- those entries are BELOW the cursor in query
order and will be visited LATER during reversed traversal. Erasing the heap
entry permanently loses them, causing live rows to be skipped.
The fix mirrors what prepare_heap() already does correctly: when lower_bound
returns null in reversed mode, use std::prev(rows.end()) to keep the last
entry in the heap instead of erasing it.
Add test_reversed_maybe_refresh_keeps_latest_version_entry to mvcc_test,
alongside the existing reversed cursor tests. The test creates a two-version
partition snapshot (v0 with range tombstones, v1 with a live row positioned
below all v0 entries in table order), and
traverses in reverse calling maybe_refresh() at each step -- directly
exercising the buggy code path. The test fails without the fix.
The bug was introduced by 6b7473be53 ("Handle non-evictable snapshots",
2022-11-21), which added null-iterator handling for non-evictable snapshots
(memtable snapshots lack the trailing dummy entry that evictable snapshots
have). prepare_heap() got correct reversed-mode handling at that time, but
maybe_refresh() received only forward-mode logic.
The bug is intermittent because multiple mechanisms cause iterators_valid()
to return false, forcing maybe_refresh() to take the full rebuild path via
prepare_heap() (which handles reversed mode correctly):
- Mutation cleaner merging versions in the background (changes change_mark)
- LSA segment compaction during reserve() (invalidates references)
- B-tree rebalancing on partition insertion (invalidates references)
- Debug mode's always-true need_preempt() creating many multi-version
partitions via preempted apply_monotonically()
A dtest reproducer confirmed the same root cause: with 100K overlapping range
tombstones creating a massively multi-version memtable partition (287K preemption
events), the reversed scan's latest_iterator was observed jumping discontinuously
during a version transition -- the latest version's heap entry was erased --
causing the query to walk the entire partition without finding the live row.
Fixes: SCYLLADB-1253
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29368
execute_batch_without_checking_exception_message() inserted entries
into the authorized prepared cache before verifying that
check_access() succeeded. A failed BATCH therefore left behind
cached 'authorized' entries that later let a direct EXECUTE of the
same prepared statement skip the authorization check entirely.
Move the cache insertion after the access check so that entries are
only cached on success. This matches the pattern already used by
do_execute_prepared() for individual EXECUTE requests.
Introduced in 98f5e49ea8
Fixes https://scylladb.atlassian.net/browse/SCYLLADB-1221
Backport: all supported versions
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29432
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test/cqlpy: add reproducer for BATCH prepared auth cache bypass
cql3: fix authorization bypass via BATCH prepared cache poisoning
Add parametrized integration test that verifies DESCRIBE CLUSTER returns correct
values in both normal and maintenance modes:
The parametrization keeps the validation logic (CQL queries and assertions)
identical for both modes, while the setup phase is mode-specific. This ensures
the same assertions apply to both cluster states:
- partitioner is org.apache.cassandra.dht.Murmur3Partitioner
- snitch is org.apache.cassandra.locator.SimpleSnitch
- cluster name matches system.local cluster_name
Signed-off-by: Pavel Emelyanov <xemul@scylladb.com>
Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
Previously Alternator, when emit Amazon's ARN would not stick to the
standard. After our attempt to run KCL with scylla we discovered few
issues.
Amazon's ARN looks like this:
arn:partition:service:region:account-id:resource-type/resource-id
for example:
arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:111122223333:table/TestTable/stream/2015-05-11T21:21:33.291
KCL checks for:
- ARN provided from Alternator calls must fit with basic Amazon's ARN
pattern shown above,
- region constisting only of lower letter alphabets and `-`, no
underscore character
- account-id being only digits (exactly 12)
- service being `dynamodb`
- partition starting with `aws`
The patch updates our code handling ARNs to match those findings.
1. Split `stream_arn` object into `stream_arn` - ARN for streams only and
`stream_shard_id` - id value for stream shards. The latter receives original
implementation. The former emits and parses ARN in a Amazon style.
for example:
2. Update new `stream_arn` class to encode keyspace and table together
separating them by `@`. New ARN looks like this:
arn:aws:dynamodb:us-east-1:000000000000:table/TestKeyspace@TestTable/stream/2015-05-11T21:21:33.291
3. hardcode `dynamodb` as service, `aws` as partition, `us-east-1` as
region and `000000000000` as account-id (must have 12 digits)
4. Update code handling ARNs for tags manipulation to be able to parse
Amazon's style ARNs. Emiting code is left intact - the parser is now
capable of parsing both styles.
5. Added unit tests.
Fixes#28350
Fixes: SCYLLADB-539
Fixes: #28142Closesscylladb/scylladb#28187
This series makes result metadata handling for auth LIST statements consistent and adds coverage for the driver-visible behavior.
The first patch makes the result-column metadata construction shared across the affected statements, so the metadata shape used for PREPARE and EXECUTE stays uniform and easier to reason about.
The second patch adds regression coverage for both sides of the metadata-id flow:
- a Python auth-cluster test verifies that prepared LIST ROLES OF returns a non-empty result metadata id and that a later EXECUTE reuses it without METADATA_CHANGED
- a Boost transport test covers the recovery path where the client sends an empty request metadata id and the server responds with METADATA_CHANGED and the full metadata
Together these patches tighten the implementation and protect the prepared-metadata-id behavior exposed to drivers.
Fixes: https://scylladb.atlassian.net/browse/SCYLLADB-1218
backport: this change should be backported to all active branches to help the driver operation
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29347
Add a boost test that verifies commitlog segments are replayed in
ascending segment ID order within each shard. The test creates
multiple segments, triggers replay via commitlog_replayer, and
captures the "Replaying" debug log messages to verify the order.
Correct segment ordering is required by the strongly consistent
tables feature, particularly commitlog-based storage that relies
on replayed raft items being stored in order.
Ref SCYLLADB-1411.
The test waited for two "Finished tablet repair" log messages on the
coordinator, expecting one per tablet. But there are two log sources
that emit messages matching this pattern:
repair module (repair/repair.cc:2329):
"Finished tablet repair for table=..."
topology coordinator (topology_coordinator.cc:2083):
"Finished tablet repair host=..."
When the coordinator is also a repair replica (always the case with
RF=3 and 3 nodes), both messages appear in the coordinator log for the
same tablet within 1ms of each other. The test consumed both, thinking
both tablets were done, while the second tablet repair was still running.
From the CI failure logs:
04:08:09.658 Found: repair[...]: Finished tablet repair for table=...
global_tablet_id=e42fd650-3542-11f1-9756-85403784a622:0
04:08:09.660 Found: raft_topology - Finished tablet repair host=...
tablet=e42fd650-3542-11f1-9756-85403784a622:0
Both messages are for tablet :0. Tablet :1 repair had not finished yet.
The test then wrote keys 20-29 while the second tablet repair was still
in progress. That repair flushed the memtable (via
prepare_sstables_for_incremental_repair), including keys 20-29 in the
repair scan, and mark_sstable_as_repaired set repaired_at=2 on the
resulting sstable. This caused the assertion failure on servers[0]:
"should not have post-repair keys in repaired sstables, got:
{20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29}"
Fix by matching "Finished tablet repair host=" which is unique to the
topology coordinator message and avoids the ambiguity.
Also fix an incorrect comment that said being_repaired=null when at that
point in the test being_repaired is still set to the session_id (the
delay_end_repair_update injection prevents end_repair from running).
Fixes: SCYLLADB-1478
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29444
In commit 727f68e0f5 we added the ability to SELECT:
* Individual elements of a map: `SELECT map_col[key]`.
* Individual elements of a set: `SELECT set_col[key]` returns key if the key exists in the set, or null if it doesn't, allowing to check if the element exists in the set.
* Individual pieces of a UDT: `SELECT udt_col.field`.
But at the time, we didn't provide any way to retrieve the **meta-data** for this value, namely its timestamp and TTL. We did not support `SELECT TIMESTAMP(collection[key])`, or `SELECT TIMESTAMP(udt.field)`.
Users requested to support such SELECTs in the past (see issue #15427), and Cassandra 5.0 added support for this feature - for both maps and sets and udts - so we also need this feature for compatibility. This feature was also requested recently by vector-search developers, who wanted to read Alternator columns - stored as map elements, not individual columns - with their WRITETIME information.
The first four patches in this series adds the feature (in four smaller patches instead one big one), the fifth and sixth patches add tests (cqlpy and boost tests, respectively). The seventh patch adds documentation.
All the new tests pass on Cassandra 5, failed on Scylla before the present fix, and pass with it.
The fix was surprisingly difficult. Our existing implementation (from 727f68e0f5 building on earlier machinery) doesn't just "read" `map_col[key]` and allow us to return just its timestamp. Rather, the implementation reads the entire map, serializes it in some temporary format that does **not** include the timestamps and ttls, and then takes the subscript key, at which point we no longer have the timestamp or ttl of the element. So the fix had to cross all these layers of the implementation.
While adding support for UDT fields in a pre-existing grammar nonterminal "subscriptExpr", we unintentionally added support for UDT fields also in LWT expressions (which used this nonterminal). LWT missing support for UDT fields was a long-time known compatibility issue (#13624) so we unintentionally fixed it :-) Actually, to completely fix it we needed another small change in the expression implementation, so the eighth patch in this series does this.
Fixes#15427Fixes#13624Closesscylladb/scylladb#29134
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
cql3: support UDT fields in LWT expressions
cql3: document WRITETIME() and TTL() for elements of map, set or UDT
test/boost: test WRITETIME() and TTL() on map collection elements
test/cqlpy: test WRITETIME() and TTL() on element of map, set or UDT
cql3: prepare and evaluate WRITETIME/TTL on collection elements and UDT fields
cql3: parse per-element timestamps/TTLs in the selection layer
cql3: add extended wire format for per-element timestamps and TTLs
cql3: extend WRITETIME/TTL grammar to accept collection and UDT elements
Add cqlpy tests for the current CREATE INDEX behavior of vector indexes.
Cover named and unnamed duplicates, IF NOT EXISTS, coexistence of
multiple named vector indexes on the same column, interactions between
named and unnamed indexes, and the same-name-on-different-table case.
An unprivileged user could bypass authorization checks by exploiting
the BATCH prepared statement cache:
1. Prepare an INSERT on a table the user has no access to
2. Execute it inside a BATCH — gets Unauthorized
3. Execute the same prepared INSERT directly — succeeds
Apply filter_errors() to grep_for_errors() results in
test_split_stopped_on_shutdown and
test_group0_apply_while_node_is_being_shutdown. Without filtering,
benign RPC errors like 'connection dropped: Semaphore broken' that
occur during graceful shutdown cause spurious test failures.
Accept both list[str] (from distinct_errors=True) and
list[list[str]] (from distinct_errors=False) in filter_errors(),
matching against the first line of each error group. This allows
tests that call grep_for_errors() with default arguments to
pipe results directly through filter_errors().
Precompute the expected metadata-id hashes for the prepared LIST auth and
service-level statements and verify that PREPARE returns them while EXECUTE
reuses the prepared metadata without METADATA_CHANGED. Run all cases in a
single auth-cluster test after preparing the cluster, role, and service level
once through the regular manager fixture.
Prepared LIST statements were not calculating metadata in PREPARE path, and sent empty string hash to client causing problematic behaviour where metadat_id was not recalculated correctly.
This patch moves metadata construction into get_result_metadata() for the affected LIST statements and reuse that metadata when building the result set.
This gives PREPARE a stable metadata id for LIST ROLES, LIST USERS, LIST PERMISSIONS and the service-level variants.
This patch also adds a new boost test that verifies that when an EXECUTE request carries an empty result metadata id while the server has a real metadata id for the result set, the response is marked METADATA_CHANGED and includes the full result metadata plus the server metadata id.
This covers the recovery path for clients that send an empty or otherwise unusable metadata id instead of a matching cached one.
Add a regression test that reproduces the race between tablet split and
truncation. The test:
1. Creates a single-tablet table and inserts data.
2. Triggers truncation and pauses it (via database_truncate_wait) after
compaction is disabled but before discard_sstables() runs.
3. Triggers tablet split and pauses it (via tablet_split_monitor_wait)
at the start of process_tablet_split_candidate().
4. Releases split so set_split_mode() creates new compaction groups.
5. Waits for the set_split_mode log confirming the groups exist.
6. Releases truncation so discard_sstables() encounters the new groups.
7. Verifies truncation completes and split finishes.
Adds a tablet_split_monitor_wait error injection point in
process_tablet_split_candidate() to allow pausing the split monitor
before it enters the split loop.
implement tablet split, tablet merge and tablet migration for tables that use the experimental logstor storage engine.
* tablet merge simply merges the histograms of segments of one compaction group with another.
* for tablet split we take the segments from the source compaction group, read them and write all live records to separate segments according to the split classifier, and move separated segments to the target compaction groups.
* for tablet migration we use stream_blob, similarly to file streaming of sstables. we add a new op type for streaming a logstor segment. on the source we take a snapshot of the segments with an input stream that reads the segment, and on the target we create a sink that allocates a new segment on the target shard and writes to it.
* we also do some improvements for recovery and loading of segments. we add a segment header that contains useful information for non-mixed segments, such as the table and token range.
Refs SCYLLADB-770
no backport - still a new and experimental feature
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29207
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
test: logstor: additional logstor tests
docs/dev: add logstor on-disk format section
logstor: add version and crc to buffer header
test: logstor: tablet split/merge and migration
logstor: enable tablet balancing
logstor: streaming of logstor segments using stream_blob
logstor: add take_logstor_snapshot
logstor: segment input/output stream
logstor: implement compaction_group::cleanup
logstor: tablet split
logstor: tablet merge
logstor: add compaction reenabler
logstor: add segment header
logstor: serialize writes to active segment
replica: extend compaction_group functions for logstor
replica: add compaction_group_for_logstor_segment
logstor: code cleanup
In an earlier patch, we used the CQL grammar's "subscriptExpr" in
the rule for WRITETIME() and TTL(). But since we also wanted these
to support UDT fields (x.a), not just collection subscripts (x[3]),
we expanded subscriptExpr to also support the field syntax.
But LWT expressions already used this subscriptExpr, which meant
that LWT expressions unintentionally gained support for UDT fields.
Missing support for UDT fields in LWT is a long-standing known
Cassandra-compatibility bug (#13624), and now our grammar finally
supports the missing syntax.
But supporting the syntax is not enough for correct implementation
of this feature - we also need to fix the expression handling:
Two bugs prevented expressions like `v.a = 0` from working in LWT IF
clauses, where `v` is a column of user-defined type.
The first bug was in get_lhs_receiver() in prepare_expr.cc: it lacked
a handler for field_selection nodes, causing an "unexpected expression"
internal error when preparing a condition like `IF v.a = 0`. The fix
adds a handler that returns a column_specification whose type is taken
from the prepared field_selection's type field.
The second bug was in search_and_replace() in expression.cc: when
recursing into a field_selection node it reconstructed it with only
`structure` and `field`, silently dropping the `field_idx` and `type`
fields that are set during preparation. As a result, any transformation
that uses search_and_replace() on a prepared expression containing a
field_selection — such as adjust_for_collection_as_maps() called from
column_condition_prepare() — would zero out those fields. At evaluation
time, type_of() on the field_selection returned a null data_type
pointer, causing a segmentation fault when the comparison operator tried
to call ->equal() through it. The fix preserves field_idx and type when
reconstructing the node.
Fixes#13624.
Add tests in test/boost/expr_test.cc for the low-level implementation
of writetime() and ttl() on a map element.
Signed-off-by: Nadav Har'El <nyh@scylladb.com>
This patch adds many tests verifying the behavior of WRITETIME() and
TTL() on individual elements of maps, sets and UDTs, serving as a
regression test for issue #15427. We also add tests verifying our
understanding of related issues like WRITETIME() and TTL() of entire
collections and of individual elements of *frozen* collections.
All new tests pass on Cassandra 5.0, helping to verify that our
implementation is compatible with Cassandra. They also pass on
ScyllaDB after the previous patch (most didn't before that patch).
Signed-off-by: Nadav Har'El <nyh@scylladb.com>
Since we do no longer support upgrade from versions that do not support
v2 of "view building status" code (building status is managed by raft) we can remove v1 code and upgrade code and make sure we do not boot with old "builder status" version.
v2 version was introduced by 8d25a4d678 which is included in scylla-2025.1.0.
No backport needed since this is code removal.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29105
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
view: drop unused v1 builder code
view: remove upgrade to raft code
Replace the range scan in read_verify_workload() with individual
single-partition queries, using the keys returned by
prepare_write_workload() instead of hard-coding them.
The range scan was previously observed to time out in debug mode after
a hard cluster restart. Single-partition reads are lighter on the
cluster and less likely to time out under load.
The new verification is also stricter: instead of merely checking that
the expected number of rows is returned, it verifies that each written
key is individually readable, catching any data-loss or key-identity
mismatch that the old count-only check would have missed.
This is the second attemp at stabilizing this test, after the recent
854c374ebf. That fix made sure that the
cluster has converged on topology and nodes see each other before running
the verify workload.
Fixes: SCYLLADB-1331
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29313
The supergroup replaces streaming (a.k.a. maintenance as well) group, inherits 200 shares from it and consists of four sub-groups (all have equal shares of 200 withing the new supergroup)
* maintenance_compaction. This group configures `compaction_manager::maintenance_sg()` group. User-triggered compaction runs in it
* backup. This group configures `snapshot_ctl::config::backup_sched_group`. Native backup activity runs there
* maintenance. It's a new "visible" name, everything that was called "maintenance" in the code ran in "streaming" group. Now it will run in "maintenance". The activities include those that don't communicate over RPC (see below why)
* `tablet_allocator::balance_tablets()`
* `sstables_manager::components_reclaim_reload_fiber()`
* `tablet_storage_group_manager::merge_completion_fiber()`
* metrics exporting http server altogether
* streaming. This is purely existing streaming group that just moves under the new supergroup. Everything else that was run there, continues doing so, including
* hints sender
* all view building related components (update generator, builder, workers)
* repair
* stream_manager
* messaging service (except for verb handlers that switch groups)
* join_cluster() activity
* REST API
* ... something else I forgot
The `--maintenance_io_throughput_mb_per_sec` option is introduced. It controls the IO throughput limit applied to the maintenance supergroup. If not set, the `--stream_io_throughput_mb_per_sec` option is used to preserve backward compatibility.
All new sched groups inherit `request_class::maintenance` (however, "backup" seem not to make any requests yet).
Moving more activities from "streaming" into "maintenance" (or its own group) is possible, but one will need to take care of RPC group switching. The thing is that when a client makes an RPC call, the server may switch to one of pre-negotiated scheduling groups. Verbs for existing activities that run in "streaming" group are routed through RPC index that negotiates "streaming" group on the server side. If any of that client code moves to some other group, server will still run the handlers in "streaming" which is not quite expected. That's one of the main reasons why only the selected fibers were moved to their own "maintenance" group. Similar for backup -- this code doesn't use RPC, so it can be moved. Restoring code uses load-and-stream and corresponding RPCs, so it cannot be just moved into its own new group.
Fixes SCYLLADB-351
New feature, not backporting
Closesscylladb/scylladb#28542
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
code: Add maintenance/maintenance group
backup: Add maintenance/backup group
compaction: Add maintenance/maintenance_compaction group
main: Introduce maintenance supergroup
main: Move all maintenance sched group into streaming one
database: Use local variable for current_scheduling_group
code: Live-update IO throughputs from main
When DROP TABLE races with an in-flight DML on a strongly-consistent
table, the node aborts in groups_manager::acquire_server() because the
raft group has already been erased from _raft_groups.
A concurrent DROP TABLE may have already removed the table from database
registries and erased the raft group via schedule_raft_group_deletion.
The schema.table() in create_operation_ctx() might not fail though
because someone might be holding lw_shared_ptr<table>, so that the
table is dropped but the table object is still alive.
Fix by accepting table_id in acquire_server and checking that the table
still exists in the database via find_column_family before looking up
the raft group. If the table has been dropped, find_column_family
throws no_such_column_family instead of the node aborting via
on_internal_error. When the table does exist, acquire_server proceeds
to acquire state.gate; schedule_raft_group_deletion co_awaits
gate::close, so it will wait for the DML operation to complete before
erasing the group.
Fixes SCYLLADB-1450
Add test_drop_table_during_insert that reproduces a crash when DROP TABLE
races with an in-flight INSERT on a strongly-consistent table. The test
uses an error injection to pause INSERT between obtaining the ERM and
calling acquire_server, then drops the table (which destroys the raft
group), then resumes the INSERT. Without a fix, the node aborts in
acquire_server via on_internal_error.
The test is marked as skip until the fix is in place.
Include non-primary key restrictions (e.g. regular column filters) in
the filter JSON sent to the Vector Store service. Previously only
partition key and clustering column restrictions were forwarded, so
filtering on regular columns was silently ignored.
Add get_nonprimary_key_restrictions() getter to statement_restrictions.
Add unit tests for non-primary key equality, range, and bind marker
restrictions in filter_test.
Fixes: SCYLLADB-970
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29019
LDAPRoleManager interpolated usernames directly into ldap_url_template.
That allowed LDAP filter metacharacters to change the query, and URL
metacharacters such as %, ?, and # to change how ldap_url_parse()
split the URL.
Apply two layers of encoding when substituting {USER}:
1. RFC 4515 filter escaping -- neutralises filter operators.
2. URL percent-encoding -- prevents ldap_url_parse from
misinterpreting %-sequences, ? delimiters, or # fragments.
Add validate_query_template() (called from start()) which uses a
sentinel round-trip through ldap_url_parse to reject templates
that place {USER} outside the filter component. Templates that
previously placed {USER} in the host or base DN were silently
accepted; they are now rejected at startup with a descriptive
error.
Change parse_url() to take const sstring& instead of string_view
to enforce the null-termination requirement of ldap_url_parse()
at the type level.
Add regression coverage for %2a, ?, #, and invalid {USER}
placement in the base DN, host, attributes, and extensions.
Update LDAP authorization docs to document the escaping behavior
and the {USER} placement restriction.
Fixes: SCYLLADB-1309
Vector indexes currently store the base table schema version in
`index_version`. That value is name-based, not time-based,
so it does not represent when the index was created.
Store a timeuuid instead and change the relevant interfaces from
`table_schema_version` to `utils::UUID`. This is a prerequisite
for supporting multiple vector indexes on the same column where
the oldest index must be selected deterministically via routing
implemented in Vector Store.
Update the cqlpy tests to check the new semantics directly:
recreating the index changes `index_version`, while ALTER TABLE does not.
For counter updates, use a counter ID that is constructed from the
node's rack instead of the node's host ID.
A rack can have at most two active tablet replicas at a time: a single
normal tablet replica, and during tablet migration there are two active
replicas, the normal and pending replica. Therefore we can have two
unique counter IDs per rack that are reused by all replicas in the rack.
We construct the counter ID from the rack UUID, which is constructed
from the name "dc:rack". The pending replica uses a deterministic
variation of the rack's counter ID by negating it.
This improves the performance and size of counter cells by having less
unique counter IDs and less counter shards in a counter cell.
Previously the number of counter shards was the number of different
host_id's that updated the counter, which can be typically the number of
nodes in the cluster and continue growing indefinitely when nodes are
replaced. with the rack-based counter id the number of counter shards
will be at most twice the number of different racks (including removed
racks, which should not be significant).
Fixes SCYLLADB-356
backport not needed - an enhancement
Closesscylladb/scylladb#28901
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
docs/dev: add counters doc
counters: reuse counter IDs by rack
Replace move_to_shard()/move_to_host() with as_bounce()/target_shard()/
target_host() to clarify the interface after bounce was extended to
support cross-node bouncing.
- Add virtual as_bounce() returning const bounce* to the base class
(nullptr by default, overridden in bounce to return this), replacing
the virtual move_to_shard() which conflated bounce detection with
shard access
- Rename move_to_shard() -> target_shard() (now non-virtual, returns
unsigned directly) and move_to_host() -> target_host() on bounce
- Replace dynamic_pointer_cast with static_pointer_cast at call sites
that already checked as_bounce()
- Move forward declarations of message types before the virtual
methods so as_bounce() can reference bounce
Fixes: SCYLLADB-1066
Closesscylladb/scylladb#29367
Motivation
----------
Since strongly consistent tables are based on the concept of Raft
groups, operations on them can get stuck for indefinite amounts of
time. That may be problematic, and so we'd like to implement a way
to cancel those operations at suitable times.
Description of solution
-----------------------
The situations we focus on are the following:
* Timed-out queries
* Leader changes
* Tablet migrations
* Table drops
* Node shutdowns
We handle each of them and provide validation tests.
Implementation strategy
-----------------------
1. Auxiliary commits.
2. Abort operations on timeout.
3. Abort operations on tablet removal.
4. Extend `client_state`.
5. Abort operation on shutdown.
6. Help `state_machine` be aborted as soon as possible.
Tests
-----
We provide tests that validate the correctness of the solution.
The total time spent on `test_strong_consistency.py`
(measured on my local machine, dev mode):
Before:
```
real 0m31.809s
user 1m3.048s
sys 0m21.812s
```
After:
```
real 0m34.523s
user 1m10.307s
sys 0m27.223s
```
The incremental differences in time can be found in the commit messages.
Fixes SCYLLADB-429
Backport: not needed. This is an enhancement to an experimental feature.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#28526
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
service: strong_consistency: Abort state_machine::apply when aborting server
service: strong_consistency: Abort ongoing operations when shutting down
service: client_state: Extend with abort_source
service: strong_consistency: Handle abort when removing Raft group
service: strong_consistency: Abort Raft operations on timeout
service: strong_consistency: Use timeout when mutating
service: strong_consistency: Fix indentation
service: strong_consistency: Enclose coordinator methods with try-catch
service: strong_consistency: Crash at unexpected exception
test: cluster: Extract default config & cmdline in test_strong_consistency.py
This reverts commit 8b4a91982b.
Two commits independently added rolling_max_tracker_test to test/boost/CMakeLists.txt:
8b4a919 cmake: add missing rolling_max_tracker_test and symmetric_key_test
f3a91df test/cmake: add missing tests to boost test suite
The second was merged two days after the first. They didn't conflict on
code-level and applied cleanly resulting in a duplicate add_scylla_test()
entries that breaks the CMake build:
CMake Error: add_executable cannot create target
"test_boost_rolling_max_tracker_test" because another target
with the same name already exists.
Remove the duplicate.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Emelyanov <xemul@scylladb.com>
Reported-by: Łukasz Paszkowski <lukasz.paszkowski@scylladb.com>