RESET QUERY CACHE is reported to be a session command, which will
cause it to be sent to all servers. RESET [MASTER|SLAVE] are
classified as write, which will cause them to be sent to the master.
It could be argued that RESET [MASTER|SLAVE] should cause an error
to be sent to the client.
Recognize the XA keyword and classify the statement as write.
Needs to be dealt with explicitly as sqlite3 assumes there are
no keywords starting with the letter X.
That URL will now return information about the statements in
the query classifier cache. The information is collected using
the same map in a serial manner from all routing workers (that
each have their own cache). Since all caches will contains the
same statements, collecting the information in a serial manner
means that the overall memory consumption will be lower than
what it would be if the information was collected in parallel.
A non version specific executable comment, such as "/*! SELECT 1; */"
is during classification handled as if it would not be a comment. That
is, the contained statement will *always* be parsed.
A version specific executable comment, such as "/*!99999 CREATE PROCEDURE
bypass BEGIN */ SELECT ... " is during classification handled as it would
be a general comment. That is, the contained statement will *never* be
parsed.
In addition, in the latter case the parse result will never be better than
QC_QUERY_PARTIALLY_PARSED. The rationale is that since the comment is version
specific, we cannot know how the server will actually interpret the statement.
This will have an impact on the masking filter and the database firewall that
now will reject statements containing _version specific_ executable comments.
Using a void return value as an integer results in undefined behavior.
apparently in this case it doesn't translate into a crash and instead only
manifests itself when all the planets align.
A statement like
SELECT ... INTO OUTFILE|DUMPFILE ...
is now classified as a QUERY_TYPE_WRITE, instead of as
QUERY_TYPE_GSYSVAR_WRITE so that it will be sent only to the
master.
SELECT...FOR UPDATE locks the rows for update, but only if
autocommit==0 or a transaction is active, so in principle even if
it were classified as READ it'd still be sent to master when it
actually matters.
However, even if autocommit==1 and/or no transaction is active, a
slave in read only mode will reject the statement if the user is
subject to the read only restriction (a user with super privileges
is not), which might be considered a server bug. By classifying the
statement as a write, it'll be sent to master and always succeed.
Only for qc_sqlite.
After a second look qc_mysqlembedded will not support dupping
the statement information. Without additional changes, simply stashing
an info object away, parsing another new GWBUF, deleting that and
then using the stashed away info object will not work; the THD object
will be corrupted. As qc_mysqlembedded is _only_ used for verifying the
sqlite-based parser this is not important anyway.
The query classifier stores information about the statement carried
by a GWBUF in the GWBUF itself. We need to be able to store that
object out side the lifetime of the GWBUF. So, we require that a
query classifier is capable of duplicating references to that object.