Manually track query/load/compaction/etc. memory in Allocator instead of mem hook.
Can still use Mem Hook when cannot manually track memory code segments and find memory locations during debugging.
This will cause memory tracking loss for Query, loss less than 10% compared to the past, but this is expected to be more controllable.
Similarly, Mem Hook will no longer track unowned memory to the orphan mem tracker by default, so the total memory of all MemTrackers will be less than before.
Not need to get memory size from jemalloc in Mem Hook each memory alloc and free, which would lose performance in the past.
Not require caching bthread local in pthread local for memory hook, in the past this has caused core dumps inside bthread, seems to be a bug in bthread.
ThreadContext life cycle to manual control
In the past, ThreadContext was automatically created when it was used for the first time (this was usually in the Jemalloc Hook when the first malloc memory), and was automatically destroyed when the thread exited.
Now instead of manually controlling the create and destroy of ThreadContext, it is mainly created manually when the task thread start and destroyed before the task thread end.
Run 43 clickbench query tests.
Use MemHook in the past:
Currently, there are some useless includes in the codebase. We can use a tool named include-what-you-use to optimize these includes. By using a strict include-what-you-use policy, we can get lots of benefits from it.
1. change PipelineTaskState to enum class
2. remove some row-based code on FoldConstantExecutor::_get_result
3. reduce memcpy on minmax runtime filter function(Now we can guarantee that the input data is aligned)
4. add Wunused-template check, and remove some unused function, change some static function to inline function.
1. replace all boost::shared_ptr to std::shared_ptr
2. replace all boost::scopted_ptr to std::unique_ptr
3. replace all boost::scoped_array to std::unique<T[]>
4. replace all boost:thread to std::thread