The template class wraps a HashMap such that only a few operations
are allowed. Usage requires specializing a RegistryTraits class
template for each entry type.
The /maxscale/ resource now has values for most of the configuration
parameters in the [maxscale] section as well as the version, commit and
uptime information.
When a cloned DCB is created, the service pointer is not copied and it
needs to be manually set in the newSession entry point. This most likely
due to the fact that the cloned DCB always has a different service and it
is not possible to deduce it.
Another option would be to pass the target service as a parameter but the
whole DCB cloning process could use with a rewrite so any modifications
beyond the required minimum are wasteful.
The example in the epoll(7) manpage only sets the EPOLLIN event flag.
Although it is not explicitly stated that only EPOLLIN events arrive for
sockets that are listening, any other types of events should not be
relevant for listeners.
If a connection has not been fully established (i.e. authentication has
been completed) then it should not be considered as a connection pool
candidate.
The DATETIME(n) values generated by a MariaDB 10.0 server were not
interpreted correctly as the wrong algorithm was used to extract the
values.
DATETIME(0) values still do not work properly and they require further
debugging and changes to the code.
The avro schema allows custom properties to be defined for the schema
fields. The avrorouter stored extra information about the table into the
schema for later use.
Currently, this information is only generated by the avrorouter
itself. Further improvements to the schema generator scripts need to be
done.
When the binlog has been read, it needs to be treated as if the
transaction or row limit has been hit. This will cause all tables to be
flushed to disk before the files are indexed.
When a MariaDB 10.0 DATETIME field with a custom length was defined, the
field offsets weren't calculated properly.
As there is no metadata for pre-10.1 DATETIME types with decimal
precision, the metadata (i.e. decimal count) needs to be gathered from the
CREATE TABLE statement. This information is then used to calculate the
correct field length when the value is decoded.
This change does not fix the incorrect interpretation of the old DATETIME
value. The converted values are still garbled due to the fact that the
value needs to be shifted out of the decimal format before it can be
properly converted.
MariaDB GTID Master registration:
creating missing binlog files (with 4 byes) between current one and the
filename coming from ROTATE_EVENT.
blr_slave_binlog_dump() is also checking possible empty files.
The DATETIME(n) values generated by a MariaDB 10.0 server were not
interpreted correctly as the wrong algorithm was used to extract the
values.
DATETIME(0) values still do not work properly and they require further
debugging and changes to the code.
The avro schema allows custom properties to be defined for the schema
fields. The avrorouter stored extra information about the table into the
schema for later use.
Currently, this information is only generated by the avrorouter
itself. Further improvements to the schema generator scripts need to be
done.
When the binlog has been read, it needs to be treated as if the
transaction or row limit has been hit. This will cause all tables to be
flushed to disk before the files are indexed.
When a MariaDB 10.0 DATETIME field with a custom length was defined, the
field offsets weren't calculated properly.
As there is no metadata for pre-10.1 DATETIME types with decimal
precision, the metadata (i.e. decimal count) needs to be gathered from the
CREATE TABLE statement. This information is then used to calculate the
correct field length when the value is decoded.
This change does not fix the incorrect interpretation of the old DATETIME
value. The converted values are still garbled due to the fact that the
value needs to be shifted out of the decimal format before it can be
properly converted.
This was originally removed, since it was checking the same word
twice. However, the parsing is clearer with it and the cost is only
paid when the KILL is detected, which is very rare.
Also, fix some incorrect parsing.
When the connection timeout was checked for a connection, it assumed that
only valid and fully established sessions should be timed out.
Taking into account the fact that connections can be idle even before the
session is fully established, the check should be expanded to all
connections regardless of the session state.
The text-version of "KILL CONNECTION" command is now supported. To keep the
overhead low, only minimal parsing is done on the query. The query
needs to start in the beginning of the mysql-packet, have no comments
and have limited whitespace as the total length of the query is limited.
Both "KILL 123" and "KILL CONNECTION 123" are accepted.
"KILL QUERY 123" is also accepted but not acted on, as it requires larger
changes.
The server internal session id may be larger than 4 bytes (MariaDB uses 8)
but only 4 are sent in the handshake. The full value can be queried
from the server, but this query is not supported by MaxScale yet. In any
case, both the protocol and MXS_SESSION now have 64 bit counters. Only the
low 32 bits are sent in the handshake, similar to server.