Minor renaming of the session state enum values. Also exposed the session
state stringification function in the public header and removed the
stringification macro.
The error flag was set before the function was called which caused the
function to never be used. As the core should handle the filtering of
multiple errors on the same DCB, the protocol modules should not check it.
When an attempt to accept a client DCB fails, the session should only be
deleted directly if the allocation of the client DCB fails. Otherwise the
closing of the DCB triggers the session deletion.
The information stored for each prepared statement would not be cleared
until the end of the session. This is a problem if the sessions last for a
very long time as the stored information is unused once a COM_STMT_CLOSE
has been received.
In addition to this, the session command response maps were not cleared
correctly if all backends had processed all session commands.
When a response to a prepared statement was processed, the number of EOF
packets was used to see whether the response was complete. This code used
a function that does not work with the special packet returned by a PS
preparation that is similar to an OK packet.
The correct method is to count the total number of packets in the
response.
When doing a loop over each DCB, don't process DCBs without sessions. For
now this is correct behavior as only DCBs in the persistent pool have no
session.
For lifetime management keep RWBackends in a vector of unique_ptrs.
RWSplitSession keeps the unique_ptrs very private, and provides a vector
of plain pointers for all other interfaces.
This is essentially just a search and replace to change SRWBackend to
RWBackend* and SRWBackendList to PRWBackends, a vector of a raw
pointers. In the next few commits vector<unique_ptr<RWBackend>>
will be used for life time management.
There are a lot of diffs from the global search and replace. Only a few manual
edits had to be done.
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/SRWBackends/prwbackends/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/const mxs::SRWBackend\&/const mxs::RWBackend\*/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/const SRWBackend\&/const RWBackend\*/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/mxs::SRWBackend\&/mxs::RWBackend\*/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/mxs::SRWBackend/mxs::RWBackend\*/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/SRWBackend\(\)/nullptr/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/mxs::SRWBackend\&/mxs::RWBackend\*/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/mxs::SRWBackend/mxs::RWBackend\*/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/SRWBackend\&/RWBackend\*/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/SRWBackend\b/RWBackend\*/g'
list-src -x build | xargs sed -ri 's/prwbackends/PRWBackends/g'
When a listener was created at runtime but it failed to start, it would
not be automatically removed from the system. This caused the MaxCtrl
cluster sync test to fail.