closes#1419
When submitting a `pwritev` for flushing dirty pages, in the case that
it's a commit frame, we use a new completion type which tells io_uring
to add a flag, which ensures the following:
1. If any operation in the chain fails, subsequent operations get
cancelled with -ECANCELED
2. All operations in the chain complete in order
If there is an ongoing chain of `IO_LINK`, it ends at the `fsync`
barrier, and ensures everything submitted before it has completed.
for 99% of the cases, the syscall that immediately proceeds the
`pwritev` is going to be the fsync, but just in case, this
implementation links everything that comes between the final commit
`pwritev` and the next `fsync`
In the event that we get a partial write, if it was linked, then we
submit an additional fsync after the partial write completes, with an
`IO_DRAIN` flag after forcing a `submit`, which will mean durability is
maintained, as that fsync will flush/drain everything in the squeue
before submission.
The other option in the event of partial writes on commit frames/linked
writes is to error.. not sure which is the right move here. I guess it's
possible that since the fsync completion fired, than the commit could be
over without us being durable ondisk. So maybe it's an assertion
instead? Thoughts?
Closes#2909
Create one WalFileShared for a Database and update its state
accordingly. Also support case where the WAL is disabled.
Reviewed-by: Pere Diaz Bou <pere-altea@homail.com>
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe <preston@turso.tech>
Closes#2918
SQLite does not allow us to modify system tables, but we do. Let's fix
it.
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe <preston@turso.tech>
Reviewed-by: Avinash Sajjanshetty (@avinassh)
Closes#2855
- otherwise, in multi-threading environment, other thread can think that
completion is finished and start execution
- this can lead to violated assertions (for example, page must be
loaded, but as callback is not executed yet assert will be fired)
Failing scenario:
1. main thread wants to execute pread - so it schedule IO and return
control to the caller
2. IO thread read data from the disk
3. IO thread executes complete(result)
4. complete func set result of the completion to Ok
5. main thread enter into the step loop again and check completion
status
6. completion marked as finished/is_completed - so main thread continue
execution
7. main thread check that page is loaded and fails with assertion -
because it's not loaded yet
8. IO thread executed the callback and finished the completion
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe <preston@turso.tech>
Closes#2922
- otherwise, in multi-threading environment, other thread can think that completion is finished
and start execution
- this can lead to violated assertions (for example, page must be loaded, but as callback is not executed yet
assert will be fired)
`commit_txn` in MVCC was hacking its way through I/O until now. After
adding this and the test for concurrent writers we now see `busy` errors
returning as expected because there is no `commit` queueing happening
yet until next PR I open.
Closes#2895
When we create an ImmutableRow::from_value(), we are always adding a
null padding at the end. We didn't notice this before, because a SQLite
file with an extra column is as valid as any. But that column of course
should not be there.
I traced this to column_count(), which is off by one. My understanding
is that we should be returning based on serial_types, not offset.
Closes#2862
Add expression support for `LIMIT` and `OFFSET` by storing them as
`Expr` instead of fixed integers. Constant expressions are folded with
`try_fold_to_i64`, while dynamic ones emit runtime checks, including the
new `IfNeg` opcode to clamp negative or `NULL` values to zero. The
current `build_limit_offset_expr` implementation is still naive and will
be refined in future work.
Fixes#2913Closes#2720
Now supported:
- AEGIS variants: 256, 256X2, 256X4, 128L, 128X2, 128X4
- AES-GCM variants: AES-128-GCM, AES-256-GCM
With minor changes in order to make it easy to add new ciphers later
regardless of their key size.
Reviewed-by: Avinash Sajjanshetty (@avinassh)
Closes#2899
This PR introduces separate `package.browser.json` file for `*-browser`
npm packages (`@tursodatabase/sync-browser` and
`@tursodatabase/database-browser`).
The packages are nearly identical and the only change is `package.json`
content (browser package mentions only WASM optional dependency which
shouldn't confuse NPM and force it to download WASM dep package instead
of native one).
Due to that, innocent "hack" is implemented which swap `package.json`
with `package.browser.json` before publish of `browser` package.
Closes#2906
This PR unifies the logic for resolving aggregate functions. Previously,
bare aggregates (e.g. `SELECT max(a) FROM t1`) and aggregates wrapped in
expressions (e.g. `SELECT max(a) + 1 FROM t1`) were handled differently,
which led to duplicated code. Now both cases are resolved consistently.
The added benchmark shows a small improvement:
```
Prepare `SELECT first_name, last_name, state, city, age + 10, LENGTH(email), UPPER(first_name), LOWE...
time: [59.791 µs 59.898 µs 60.006 µs]
change: [-7.7090% -7.2760% -6.8242%] (p = 0.00 < 0.05)
Performance has improved.
Found 10 outliers among 100 measurements (10.00%)
8 (8.00%) high mild
2 (2.00%) high severe
```
For an existing benchmark, no change:
```
Prepare `SELECT first_name, count(1) FROM users GROUP BY first_name HAVING count(1) > 1 ORDER BY cou...
time: [11.895 µs 11.913 µs 11.931 µs]
change: [-0.2545% +0.2426% +0.6960%] (p = 0.34 > 0.05)
No change in performance detected.
Found 8 outliers among 100 measurements (8.00%)
1 (1.00%) low severe
2 (2.00%) high mild
5 (5.00%) high severe
```
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe <preston@turso.tech>
Closes#2884
Now supported:
- AEGIS variants: 256, 256X2, 256X4, 128L, 128X2, 128X4
- AES-GCM variants: AES-128-GCM, AES-256-GCM
With minor changes in order to make it easy to add new
ciphers later regardless of their key size.
@penberg this PR try to clean up `turso_parser`'s`fmt` code.
- `get_table_name` and `get_column_name` should return None when
table/column does not exist.
```rust
/// Context to be used in ToSqlString
pub trait ToSqlContext {
/// Given an id, get the table name
/// First Option indicates whether the table exists
///
/// Currently not considering aliases
fn get_table_name(&self, _id: TableInternalId) -> Option<&str> {
None
}
/// Given a table id and a column index, get the column name
/// First Option indicates whether the column exists
/// Second Option indicates whether the column has a name
fn get_column_name(&self, _table_id: TableInternalId, _col_idx: usize) -> Option<Option<&str>> {
None
}
// help function to handle missing table/column names
fn get_table_and_column_names(
&self,
table_id: TableInternalId,
col_idx: usize,
) -> (String, String) {
let table_name = self
.get_table_name(table_id)
.map(|s| s.to_owned())
.unwrap_or_else(|| format!("t{}", table_id.0));
let column_name = self
.get_column_name(table_id, col_idx)
.map(|opt| {
opt.map(|s| s.to_owned())
.unwrap_or_else(|| format!("c{col_idx}"))
})
.unwrap_or_else(|| format!("c{col_idx}"));
(table_name, column_name)
}
}
```
- remove `FmtTokenStream` because it is same as `WriteTokenStream `
- remove useless functions and simplify `ToTokens`
```rust
/// Generate token(s) from AST node
/// Also implements Display to make sure devs won't forget Display
pub trait ToTokens: Display {
/// Send token(s) to the specified stream with context
fn to_tokens<S: TokenStream + ?Sized, C: ToSqlContext>(
&self,
s: &mut S,
context: &C,
) -> Result<(), S::Error>;
// Return displayer representation with context
fn displayer<'a, 'b, C: ToSqlContext>(&'b self, ctx: &'a C) -> SqlDisplayer<'a, 'b, C, Self>
where
Self: Sized,
{
SqlDisplayer::new(ctx, self)
}
}
```
Closes#2748