The purpose of a COM_RESET_CONNECTION is to reset the connection
states. This means it should be routed to all servers, the same as all
session state modifying commands.
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.
All COM_STMT_SEND_LONG_DATA commands and the COM_STMT_EXECUTE that follows
it must be sent to the same server. This implicitly works for masters but
with multiple slave servers the data could be sent to the wrong server.
By using the code added for MXS-2521, this problem can now be easily
solved by checking what the previous command was.
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.
Given the following query:
PREPARE ps FROM 'PREPARE ps2 FROM \'SELECT 1\'';
The debug assertion is hit even though this is valid, albeit unsupported,
SQL. An optimization would be to ignore the query if the prepared
statement type is another prepared statement.
See script directory for method. The script to run in the top level
MaxScale directory is called maxscale-uncrustify.sh, which uses
another script, list-src, from the same directory (so you need to set
your PATH). The uncrustify version was 0.66.