The gwbuf_hexdump_pretty displays the hex contents of the buffer alongside
the human-readable version of it. The text version helps identify parts of
the buffer that contain text which makes protocol data decoding easier.
Added new ssl_version value for TLSv1.3. This allows the list of accepted
protocol versions to be limited to all supported protocols. Previously
TLSv1.3 was only available with ssl_version=MAX.
Also fixed the enum value serialization to use a lowercase v. This causes
them to have the same value as the one used in the enum.
Previously when ssl_version was used with a value that is not supported on
the system, an unknown parameter error was returned. This could be
confusing and logging a proper error message should make it clear.
Allows for code like
CacheConfig config("MXS-2727");
config.storage = std::string("inmemory_storage");
config.soft_ttl = std::chrono::seconds(1);
config.hard_ttl = std::chrono::seconds(10);
config.max_size = 10;
config.thread_model = CACHE_THREAD_MODEL_MT;
config.enabled = true;
to be used when you want to create a configuration manually and not
from a configuration file.
TIMESTAMP2, DATETIME2 and TIME2 values with decimal parts are now
correctly converted into their string forms. Previously the decimal part
was ignored but most of the code required to extract it was in place.
Logging the pipe buffer size on startup will tell how large it was at the
time when MaxScale read it. If there are some abnormalities in it, this
will make it visible.
Logging the worker ID when the posting of a message fails will tell which
particular worker it was. For example, if the worker in question is the
main worker (i.e. ID 0), we know there's something that's blocking the
processing.
The TLS parameters were defined but the main parameter that enables it
wasn't automatically added. As the REST API documentation states that this
parameter does not need to be defined, the runtime configuration must add
it.
Authenticators and monitors now use SSL when configured. The fix has two parts:
1) Removed the extra SSLConfig inside SSLProvider, as SSLContext already contains
the config.
2) When inputting parameter values to mysql_ssl_set(), empty strings are converted
to NULL-pointers as the function expects those for unused values.
The new configuration system relieas upon static varibles being
used for declaring what arguments a particular module uses. To
ensure that the destruction order does not matter, we redundantly
store the needed data (the name).
When a connection is created, the size of the history that is about to be
replayed is known. Storing this and decrementing it each time a session
command is completed tells us when the Backend has finished replaying the
session command history. This can then be used to distinguish whether a
session command executed on a master should be retried or whether to
simply discard the connection.
When a query returns a WSREP error, most of the time it is not something
the client application is expecting. To prevent this from affecting the
client, it can be treated the same way a transaction rollback is treated:
ignore the error and try again.
If a query returned multiple resultsets and the connection was broken
between the resultsets, the backend would not know that parts of the
response were already sent. This is caused by the cyclic nature of the
state machine when multi-result responses are being processed.
To fix the problem, the result size is tracked to know how many bytes have
been sent to the client. This is a backport of the
MySQLProtocol::Result::size from 2.5(develop).
The hard limit of 10 seconds is too strict when taking into account the
fact that infinite refreshes was possible before the bug was fixed. This
also makes testing a lot easier where rapid reloads are necessary.
Certain MariaDB connectors will use the direct execution for batching
COM_STMT_PREPARE and COM_STMT_EXECUTE execution without waiting for the
COM_STMT_PREPARE to complete. In these cases the COM_STMT_EXECUTE (and
other COM_STMT commands as well) will use the special ID 0xffffffff. When
this is detected, it should be substituted with the ID of the latest
statement that was prepared.
If an error is generated while a COM_CHANGE_USER is being done, it would
always use the sequence number 1. To properly handle this case and send
the correct sequence number, the COM_CHANGE_USER progress needs to be
tracked at the session level.
The information needs to be shared between the backend and client
protocols as the final OK to the COM_CHANGE_USER, with the sequence number
3, is the one that the backend server returns. Only after this response
has been received and routed to the client can the COM_CHANGE_USER
processing stop.
If a server fails mid-resultset, there's not a lot we can do to recover
the situation. A few cases could be handled (e.g. generate an ERR if the
resultset has proceeded to the row processing stage) but these fall
outside the scope of the original issue.
If a COM_STMT_EXECUTE has no metadata in it and it has more than one
parameter, it must be routed to the same backend where the previous
COM_STMT_EXECUTE with the same ID was routed to. This prevents MDEV-19811
that is triggered by MaxScale routing the queries to different backends.
Added range-erase method to mxs::Buffer. This makes it easier to modify
the contents of mxs::Buffer.
The intended use-case for now is to erase unexpected trailing ERR packets
from resultsets.
The name of the object (i.e. the section name from the configuration
file), is now stored in the configuration object for that object.
That way, more contextual and hence morfe user friendly errors and
warnings can be generated.