valkey/tests/modules/propagate.c

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/* This module is used to test the propagation (replication + AOF) of
* commands, via the ValkeyModule_Replicate() interface, in asynchronous
* contexts, such as callbacks not implementing commands, and thread safe
* contexts.
*
* We create a timer callback and a threads using a thread safe context.
* Using both we try to propagate counters increments, and later we check
* if the replica contains the changes as expected.
*
* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* Copyright (c) 2019, Salvatore Sanfilippo <antirez at gmail dot com>
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
*
* * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
* this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* * Neither the name of Redis nor the names of its contributors may be used
* to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
* specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
* AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
* LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
* CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
* SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
* INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
* CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
* ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
* POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include "valkeymodule.h"
#include <pthread.h>
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
#include <errno.h>
#define UNUSED(V) ((void) V)
ValkeyModuleCtx *detached_ctx = NULL;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
static int KeySpace_NotificationGeneric(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, int type, const char *event, ValkeyModuleString *key) {
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(type);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(event);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(key);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
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ValkeyModuleCallReply* rep = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", "c!", "notifications");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(rep);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
}
/* Timer callback. */
void timerHandler(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, void *data) {
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(ctx);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(data);
static int times = 0;
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","timer");
times++;
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
if (times < 3)
ValkeyModule_CreateTimer(ctx,100,timerHandler,NULL);
else
times = 0;
}
int propagateTestTimerCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
ValkeyModuleTimerID timer_id =
ValkeyModule_CreateTimer(ctx,100,timerHandler,NULL);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(timer_id);
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
}
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
/* Timer callback. */
void timerNestedHandler(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, void *data) {
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
int repl = (long long)data;
/* The goal is the trigger a module command that calls RM_Replicate
* in order to test MULTI/EXEC structure */
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCRBY","cc","timer-nested-start","1");
ValkeyModuleCallReply *reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx,"propagate-test.nested", repl? "!" : "");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", repl? "c!" : "c", "timer-nested-middle");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCRBY","cc","timer-nested-end","1");
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
}
int propagateTestTimerNestedCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
ValkeyModuleTimerID timer_id =
ValkeyModule_CreateTimer(ctx,100,timerNestedHandler,(void*)0);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(timer_id);
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
}
int propagateTestTimerNestedReplCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
ValkeyModuleTimerID timer_id =
ValkeyModule_CreateTimer(ctx,100,timerNestedHandler,(void*)1);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(timer_id);
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
}
void timerHandlerMaxmemory(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, void *data) {
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(ctx);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(data);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModuleCallReply *reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx,"SETEX","ccc!","timer-maxmemory-volatile-start","100","1");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "CONFIG", "ccc!", "SET", "maxmemory", "1");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx, "INCR", "c", "timer-maxmemory-middle");
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx,"SETEX","ccc!","timer-maxmemory-volatile-end","100","1");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
}
int propagateTestTimerMaxmemoryCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModuleTimerID timer_id =
ValkeyModule_CreateTimer(ctx,100,timerHandlerMaxmemory,(void*)1);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(timer_id);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
}
void timerHandlerEval(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, void *data) {
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(ctx);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(data);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModuleCallReply *reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx,"INCRBY","cc!","timer-eval-start","1");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "EVAL", "cccc!", "redis.call('set',KEYS[1],ARGV[1])", "1", "foo", "bar");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx, "INCR", "c", "timer-eval-middle");
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx,"INCRBY","cc!","timer-eval-end","1");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
}
int propagateTestTimerEvalCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModuleTimerID timer_id =
ValkeyModule_CreateTimer(ctx,100,timerHandlerEval,(void*)1);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(timer_id);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
}
/* The thread entry point. */
void *threadMain(void *arg) {
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(arg);
ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx = ValkeyModule_GetThreadSafeContext(NULL);
ValkeyModule_SelectDb(ctx,9); /* Tests ran in database number 9. */
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
ValkeyModule_ThreadSafeContextLock(ctx);
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","a-from-thread");
ValkeyModuleCallReply *reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx,"INCR","c!","thread-call");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","b-from-thread");
ValkeyModule_ThreadSafeContextUnlock(ctx);
}
ValkeyModule_FreeThreadSafeContext(ctx);
return NULL;
}
int propagateTestThreadCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
pthread_t tid;
if (pthread_create(&tid,NULL,threadMain,NULL) != 0)
return ValkeyModule_ReplyWithError(ctx,"-ERR Can't start thread");
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(tid);
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
}
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
/* The thread entry point. */
void *threadDetachedMain(void *arg) {
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(arg);
ValkeyModule_SelectDb(detached_ctx,9); /* Tests ran in database number 9. */
ValkeyModule_ThreadSafeContextLock(detached_ctx);
ValkeyModule_Replicate(detached_ctx,"INCR","c","thread-detached-before");
ValkeyModuleCallReply *reply = ValkeyModule_Call(detached_ctx,"INCR","c!","thread-detached-1");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(detached_ctx,"INCR","c!","thread-detached-2");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
ValkeyModule_Replicate(detached_ctx,"INCR","c","thread-detached-after");
ValkeyModule_ThreadSafeContextUnlock(detached_ctx);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
return NULL;
}
int propagateTestDetachedThreadCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
pthread_t tid;
if (pthread_create(&tid,NULL,threadDetachedMain,NULL) != 0)
return ValkeyModule_ReplyWithError(ctx,"-ERR Can't start thread");
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(tid);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
}
int propagateTestSimpleCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
/* Replicate two commands to test MULTI/EXEC wrapping. */
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","counter-1");
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","counter-2");
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
}
int propagateTestMixedCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
ValkeyModuleCallReply *reply;
/* This test mixes multiple propagation systems. */
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", "c!", "using-call");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","counter-1");
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","counter-2");
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", "c!", "after-call");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
}
int propagateTestNestedCommand(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
ValkeyModuleCallReply *reply;
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
/* This test mixes multiple propagation systems. */
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", "c!", "using-call");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx,"propagate-test.simple", "!");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","counter-3");
ValkeyModule_Replicate(ctx,"INCR","c","counter-4");
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", "c!", "after-call");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", "c!", "before-call-2");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "keyspace.incr_case1", "c!", "asdf"); /* Propagates INCR */
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "keyspace.del_key_copy", "c!", "asdf"); /* Propagates DEL */
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", "c!", "after-call-2");
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithSimpleString(ctx,"OK");
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
}
int propagateTestIncr(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc)
{
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
ValkeyModuleCallReply *reply;
/* This test propagates the module command, not the INCR it executes. */
reply = ValkeyModule_Call(ctx, "INCR", "s", argv[1]);
ValkeyModule_ReplyWithCallReply(ctx,reply);
ValkeyModule_FreeCallReply(reply);
ValkeyModule_ReplicateVerbatim(ctx);
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
}
int ValkeyModule_OnLoad(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx, ValkeyModuleString **argv, int argc) {
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argv);
VALKEYMODULE_NOT_USED(argc);
if (ValkeyModule_Init(ctx,"propagate-test",1,VALKEYMODULE_APIVER_1)
== VALKEYMODULE_ERR) return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
detached_ctx = ValkeyModule_GetDetachedThreadSafeContext(ctx);
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_SubscribeToKeyspaceEvents(ctx, VALKEYMODULE_NOTIFY_ALL, KeySpace_NotificationGeneric) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.timer",
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
propagateTestTimerCommand,
"",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.timer-nested",
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
propagateTestTimerNestedCommand,
"",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.timer-nested-repl",
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
propagateTestTimerNestedReplCommand,
"",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.timer-maxmemory",
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
propagateTestTimerMaxmemoryCommand,
"",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.timer-eval",
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
propagateTestTimerEvalCommand,
"",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.thread",
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
propagateTestThreadCommand,
"",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.detached-thread",
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
propagateTestDetachedThreadCommand,
"",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890) The mess: Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()), causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function, propagatePendingCommands. Callers to propagatePendingCommands: 1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand` 2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate the deletion explicitly. 4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff 5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications, threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module context may cause propagation. 6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when releasing the GIL. A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl): When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order: first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant. not anymore. This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs. propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function. Optimizations: 1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas 2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove Bugfixes: 1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules. we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas 2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario: - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE 3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-22 22:03:48 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.simple",
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
propagateTestSimpleCommand,
"",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.mixed",
Remove read-only flag from non-keyspace cmds, different approach for EXEC to propagate MULTI (#8216) In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever command that didn't have the read flag was a write one. Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read flag. Changes in this commit: 1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE 2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at the command flags (!read & !admin). When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation. So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when needed rather than depending on the command flags at all. The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and other commands which are neither read nor write. 3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag. This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read or write. This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit. the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty multi-exec block, and no longer does.
2020-12-22 10:03:49 +00:00
propagateTestMixedCommand,
"write",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.nested",
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
propagateTestNestedCommand,
"write",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
Fix some issues with modules and MULTI/EXEC (#8617) Bug 1: When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example: 1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3) 2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte 3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx. 4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket), setting server.in_trnsaction = 0 5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3 We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction. REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose. Bug 2: Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't. Example: 1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!') 2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!' 3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified) Other changes: Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec just for better readability
2021-03-10 16:02:17 +00:00
if (ValkeyModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"propagate-test.incr",
propagateTestIncr,
"write",1,1,1) == VALKEYMODULE_ERR)
return VALKEYMODULE_ERR;
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
}
int ValkeyModule_OnUnload(ValkeyModuleCtx *ctx) {
UNUSED(ctx);
if (detached_ctx)
ValkeyModule_FreeThreadSafeContext(detached_ctx);
return VALKEYMODULE_OK;
}