The following code reproduces the leak, with memory usage increasing
over time:
```
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let db = Builder::new_local(":memory:").build().await.unwrap();
let conn = db.connect().unwrap();
conn.execute("SELECT load_extension('./target/debug/liblimbo_series');", ())
.await
.unwrap();
loop {
conn.execute("SELECT * FROM generate_series(1,10,2);", ())
.await
.unwrap();
}
}
```
After switching to the system allocator, the leak becomes detectable
with Valgrind:
```
32,000 bytes in 1,000 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 24 of 24
at 0x538580F: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:446)
by 0x62E15FA: alloc::alloc::alloc (alloc.rs:99)
by 0x62E172C: alloc::alloc::Global::alloc_impl (alloc.rs:192)
by 0x62E1530: allocate (alloc.rs:254)
by 0x62E1530: alloc::alloc::exchange_malloc (alloc.rs:349)
by 0x62E0271: new<limbo_series::GenerateSeriesCursor> (boxed.rs:257)
by 0x62E0271: open_GenerateSeriesVTab (lib.rs:19)
by 0x425D8FA: limbo_core::VirtualTable::open (lib.rs:732)
by 0x4285DDA: limbo_core::vdbe::execute::op_vopen (execute.rs:890)
by 0x42351E8: limbo_core::vdbe::Program::step (mod.rs:396)
by 0x425C638: limbo_core::Statement::step (lib.rs:610)
by 0x40DB238: limbo::Statement::execute::{{closure}} (lib.rs:181)
by 0x40D9EAF: limbo::Connection::execute::{{closure}} (lib.rs:109)
by 0x40D54A1: example::main::{{closure}} (example.rs:26)
```
Interestingly, when using mimalloc, neither Valgrind nor mimalloc’s
internal statistics report the leak.
This commit adds suport for DROP INDEX.
Bytecode produced by this commit differs from SQLITE's bytecode, main
reason we don't do autovacuum or repacking of pages like SQLITE does.
systems report x86_64. This change maps the architecture names to ensure the built libraries are placed in the correct directories for Go's embedded loading system (e.g., libs/linux_amd64)
Added the static feature from the extensions crate to core, as it is
needed to write extensions that should be defined and depend in code
from core. Added some docs to account for this.
Reviewed-by: Pere Diaz Bou <pere-altea@homail.com>
Closes#1070
### The problem:
Sqlite displays the column names of the underlying vtab module when
displaying the `.schema`

Previously limbo omitted this, which makes it difficult for the user to
see what/how many columns the module's table has.
This matches sqlite's behavior by fetching the module's schema when the
schema entry is being inserted in translation.

Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#1168
Closes#1413 . Basically, SQLite emits a check in a transaction to see
if it is attempting to write. If the db is in read only mode, it throws
an error, else the statement is executed. Mirroring how Rusqlite does
it, I modified the `OpenFlags` to use bitflags to better configure how
we open our VFS. This modification, will enable us to run tests against
the same database in parallel.
Closes#1433
closes #1417
Man chasing this down was much much harder than it should have been.
We very frequently call `read_page` then push the return value onto the
page stack, or otherwise use it without it necessarily needing to not be
'in progress' of IO, so it was tricky to figure out where this was
happening and it had me thinking that it was something wrong with the
changes to `io_uring` on my branch.
Reviewed-by: Pere Diaz Bou <pere-altea@homail.com>
Closes#1418
`Statement` and `Rows` both have a private Arc, implementing clone
avoids users needing to Arc<Mutex> it again.
Reviewed-by: Preston Thorpe (@PThorpe92)
Closes#1412
we had an incorrect optimization in `eliminate_orderby_like_groupby()`
where it could remove e.g. the first term of the ORDER BY if it matched
the first GROUP BY term and the result set was naturally ordered by that
term. this is invalid. see e.g.:
```sql
main branch - BAD: removes the `ORDER BY id` term because the results are naturally ordered by id.
However, this results in sorting the entire thing by last name only!
limbo> select id, last_name, count(1) from users GROUP BY 1,2 order by id, last_name desc limit 3;
┌──────┬───────────┬───────────┐
│ id │ last_name │ count (1) │
├──────┼───────────┼───────────┤
│ 6235 │ Zuniga │ 1 │
├──────┼───────────┼───────────┤
│ 8043 │ Zuniga │ 1 │
├──────┼───────────┼───────────┤
│ 944 │ Zimmerman │ 1 │
└──────┴───────────┴───────────┘
after fix - GOOD:
limbo> select id, last_name, count(1) from users GROUP BY 1,2 order by id, last_name desc limit 3;
┌────┬───────────┬───────────┐
│ id │ last_name │ count (1) │
├────┼───────────┼───────────┤
│ 1 │ Foster │ 1 │
├────┼───────────┼───────────┤
│ 2 │ Salazar │ 1 │
├────┼───────────┼───────────┤
│ 3 │ Perry │ 1 │
└────┴───────────┴───────────┘
I also refactored sorters to always use the ast `SortOrder` instead of boolean vectors, and use the `compare_immutable()` utility we use inside btrees too.
Closes#1365
Previously columns that were indexed were updated only in the
BtreeTable, but not on Index table. This commit basically enables
updates on indexes too if they are needed.
Reviewed-by: Jussi Saurio <jussi.saurio@gmail.com>
Closes#1428