• Mattias Jonsson's avatar
    Bug#14521864: MYSQL 5.1 TO 5.5 BUGS PARTITIONING · d92a7cb7
    Mattias Jonsson authored
    Due to an internal change in the server code in between 5.1 and 5.5
    (wl#2649) the hash function used in KEY partitioning changed
    for numeric and date/time columns (from binary hash calculation
    to character based hash calculation).
    
    Also enum/set changed from latin1 ci based hash calculation to
    binary hash between 5.1 and 5.5. (bug#11759782).
    
    These changes makes KEY [sub]partitioned tables on any of
    the affected column types incompatible with 5.5 and above,
    since the calculation of partition id differs.
    
    Also since InnoDB asserts that a deleted row was previously
    read (positioned), the server asserts on delete of a row that
    is in the wrong partition.
    
    The solution for this situation is:
    
    1) The partitioning engine will check that delete/update will go to the
    partition the row was read from and give an error otherwise, consisting
    of the rows partitioning fields. This will avoid asserts in InnoDB and
    also alert the user that there is a misplaced row. A detailed error
    message will be given, including an entry to the error log consisting
    of both table name, partition and row content (PK if exists, otherwise
    all partitioning columns).
    
    
    2) A new optional syntax for KEY () partitioning in 5.5 is allowed:
    [SUB]PARTITION BY KEY [ALGORITHM = N] (list_of_cols)
    Where N = 1 uses the same hashing as 5.1 (Numeric/date/time fields uses
    binary hashing, ENUM/SET uses charset hashing) N = 2 uses the same
    hashing as 5.5 (Numeric/date/time fields uses charset hashing,
    ENUM/SET uses binary hashing). If not set on CREATE/ALTER it will
    default to 2.
    
    This new syntax should probably be ignored by NDB.
    
    
    3) Since there is a demand for avoiding scanning through the full
    table, during upgrade the ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY ... command is
    considered a no-op (only .frm change) if everything except ALGORITHM
    is the same and ALGORITHM was not set before, which allows manually
    upgrading such table by something like:
    ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 1 () or
    ALTER TABLE t PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 2 ()
    
    
    4) Enhanced partitioning with CHECK/REPAIR to also check for/repair
    misplaced rows. (Also works for ALTER TABLE t CHECK/REPAIR PARTITION)
    
    CHECK FOR UPGRADE:
    If the .frm version is < 5.5.3
    and uses KEY [sub]partitioning
    and an affected column type
    then it will fail with an message:
    KEY () partitioning changed, please run:
    ALTER TABLE `test`.`t1`  PARTITION BY KEY ALGORITHM = 1 (a)
    PARTITIONS 12
    (i.e. current partitioning clause, with the addition of
    ALGORITHM = 1)
    
    CHECK without FOR UPGRADE:
    if MEDIUM (default) or EXTENDED options are given:
    Scan all rows and verify that it is in the correct partition.
    Fail for the first misplaced row.
    
    REPAIR:
    if default or EXTENDED (i.e. not QUICK/USE_FRM):
    Scan all rows and every misplaced row is moved into its correct
    partitions.
    
    
    5) Updated mysqlcheck (called by mysql_upgrade) to handle the
    new output from CHECK FOR UPGRADE, to run the ALTER statement
    instead of running REPAIR.
    
    This will allow mysql_upgrade (or CHECK TABLE t FOR UPGRADE) to upgrade
    a KEY [sub]partitioned table that has any affected field type
    and a .frm version < 5.5.3 to ALGORITHM = 1 without rebuild.
    
    
    Also notice that if the .frm has a version of >= 5.5.3 and ALGORITHM
    is not set, it is not possible to know if it consists of rows from
    5.1 or 5.5! In these cases I suggest that the user does:
    (optional)
    LOCK TABLE t WRITE;
    SHOW CREATE TABLE t;
    (verify that it has no ALGORITHM = N, and to be safe, I would suggest
    backing up the .frm file, to be used if one need to change to another
    ALGORITHM = N, without needing to rebuild/repair)
    ALTER TABLE t <old partitioning clause, but with ALGORITHM = N>;
    which should set the ALGORITHM to N (if the table has rows from
    5.1 I would suggest N = 1, otherwise N = 2)
    CHECK TABLE t;
    (here one could use the backed up .frm instead and change to a new N
    and run CHECK again and see if it passes)
    and if there are misplaced rows:
    REPAIR TABLE t;
    (optional)
    UNLOCK TABLES;
    d92a7cb7
key.h 1.74 KB