The two depended on the PCRE2 and Connector-C libraries which means that
the libraries need to be built first. This information needs to be told to
CMake with the add_dependency call.
From the documentation:
* `never`: When there is an active transaction, no data will be returned
from the cache, but all requests will always be sent to the backend.
The cache will be populated inside _explicitly_ read-only transactions.
Inside transactions that are not explicitly read-only, the cache will
be populated _until_ the first non-SELECT statement.
* `read_only_transactions`: The cache will be used and populated inside
_explicitly_ read-only transactions. Inside transactions that are not
explicitly read-only, the cache will be populated, but not used
_until_ the first non-SELECT statement.
* `all_transactions`: The cache will be used and populated inside
_explicitly_ read-only transactions. Inside transactions that are not
explicitly read-only, the cache will be used and populated _until_ the
first non-SELECT statement.
When deciding whether the cache should be consulted or not,
the value of the configuration parameter 'cache_in_transaction'
is taken into account as well.
If something is SELECTed that should be cached for some, but not
for the current user, the cached entry it nevertheless updated.
That way the cached data will always be the last fetched value
and it is also possible to use this behaviour for explicitly
updating the cache entry.
KILL commands are now sent to the backends in an asynchronous manner. As
the LocalClient class is used to connect to the servers, this will cause
an extra connection to be created on top of the original connections
created by the session.
If the user does not have the permissions to execute the KILL, the error
message is currently lost. This could be solved by adding a "result
handler" into the LocalClient class which is called with the result.
When the LocalClient is constructed, it is possible to extract all the
needed information at that time. The only obstacle is the fact that the
LocalClient is constructed at the same time the session is. Since the
client DCB is created before the session, it is safe to extract the shared
data directly from it.
Since the module command interface was expanded to include a JSON output
parameter, there is no longer a need for an output DCB. As the JSON can be
printed by both maxadmin and the REST API, this allows the removal of
explicit output formatting in module commands.
When the database firewall filter is used in white-list mode,
'USE <db>' should be allowed. When connecting, it is always
possible to specify the database anyway so restricting
'USE <db>' serves no purpose.
By moving the initialization into Worker::run, all threads, including the
main thread, are properly initialized. This was not noticed before as
qc_sqlite initialized the main thread in the process initialization
callback.
MXS-1412: while discarding a result set don't buffer any data: this
avoids to store useless data.
Additionally the colum definitions buffer is used instead of the offset
value.
The enums exposed by the connector are not intended to be used by the
users of the library. The fact that the protocol, and other, modules used
it was in violation of how the library is intended to be used.
Adding an internal mapping into MaxScale also removes some of the
dependencies that the core has on the connector.
Cleaned up the MaxScale version of the mysql.h header by removing all
unused includes. This revealed a large amount of dependencies on these
removed includes in other files which needed to be fixed.
Also sorted all includes in changed files by type and alphabetical
order. Removed explicit revision history from modified files.
By processing each buffer individually, the need to iterate over the whole
resultset is removed. Profiling showed that most of the time was spent
navigating the linked list of buffers when an offset into the whole
resultset was used instead of an offset to the individual response buffer.
Thread-local non-POD types are not supported on CentOS 6 and thus they
need to be replaced with pointers to the relevant objects and initialized
at runtime.
In addition to this, functor objects don't appear to work as expected in
CentOS 6 and replacing them with a simple for-loop seems to work.
The basic rule type that matches everything was not created when a rule
with only an optional part was defined. This caused a crash when only one
rule with only an optional part was created. This was caused by the
expectation that the list of rules was never empty.
Reloading of rules now properly uses the current rule file if no argument
was provided. The rule version counter also used atomic operations for the
sake of correctness.
The rule parsing is now only required for DML type statements that should
be fully parsed.
Only text format queries (COM_QUERY, COM_STMT_PREPARE) can be parsed by
the query classifier.
Also fixed invalid use of a NULL value in a string constructor.
The DbfwSession now only exposes the necessary methods with the exception
of the DOWNSTREAM and UPSTREAM structures. These will be handled when the
session implements the filter template.
Renamed the structures to C++ naming style and added initial declarations
for DbfwSession methods.
The DbfwSession methods are not yet fully implemented which is why parts
of the class are still public. The intention is to use the filter template
when the session class is sufficiently refactored.