There are lots of thread pools and simple local-vs-global is not enough
already, it is good to know which one in particular uses threads.
Signed-off-by: Azat Khuzhin <a.khuzhin@semrush.com>
Implementation:
* Updated to wait for current last entry to be processed (after pulling shared log) instead of queue size becoming 0.
* Updated Subscriber to notify both queue size and removed log_entry_id.
* save format string for NetException
* format exceptions
* format exceptions 2
* format exceptions 3
* format exceptions 4
* format exceptions 5
* format exceptions 6
* fix
* format exceptions 7
* format exceptions 8
* Update MergeTreeIndexGin.cpp
* Update AggregateFunctionMap.cpp
* Update AggregateFunctionMap.cpp
* fix
* Remove disk restart proxy and disk decorator
* Automatic style fix
* Returned some trash back
* Fix build again
* Fix failing test
Co-authored-by: robot-clickhouse <robot-clickhouse@users.noreply.github.com>
- This commit restores statements "SYSTEM RELOAD MODEL(S)" which provide
a mechanism to update a model explicitly. It also saves potentially
unnecessary reloads of a model from disk after it's initial load.
To keep the complexity low, the semantics of "SYSTEM RELOAD MODEL(S)
was changed from eager to lazy. This means that both statements
previously immedately reloaded the specified/all models, whereas now
the statements only trigger an unload and the first call to
catboostEvaluate() does the actual load.
- Monitoring view SYSTEM.MODELS is also restored but with some obsolete
fields removed. The view was not documented in the past and for now it
remains undocumented. The commit is thus not considered a breach of
ClickHouse's public interface.
- The deleted function modelEvaluate() was superseded by
catboostEvaluate().
- Also delete the external model repository, as modelEvaluate() was it's
last user. Additionally remove the system view SYSTEM.MODELS for
inspecting the repository.
- SYSTEM RELOAD MODELS is also obsolete. HOWEVER, it was retained and
made a no-op instead of deleted.
Why?
The reason is that RBAC in distributed setups works by storing
privileges (granted and revoked) as plain SQL statements in Keeper.
Nodes read these statements at startup and parse them. If a privilege
for SYSTEM RELOAD MODELS exists but parser doesn't recognize it
nodes would fail to come up.
Considered but rejected alternatives:
- Ignore SYSTEM RELOAD MODELS during parsing RBAC privileges and
return an error for regular SYSTEM RELOAD MODELS SQL. Special-case
of no-op behavior, too brittle.
- Remove SYSTEM RELOAD MODELS manually from Keeper via command-line
manipulation of Keeper nodes or via SQL by dropping the privileges.
Needs user intervention during upgrade.
cmake/target.cmake defines macros for the supported platforms, this
commit changes predefined system macros to our own macros.
__linux__ --> OS_LINUX
__APPLE__ --> OS_DARWIN
__FreeBSD__ --> OS_FREEBSD
The check is currently *not* part of .clang-tidy. It complains about:
(1) "switch has multiple consecutive identical branches"
(2) "repeated branch in conditional chain"
About (1): Lots of findings in switches were about redundant
"[[fallthrough]]" in places where the compiler would not warn anyways. I
have cleaned these up.
About (2): In if-else_if-else chains, fixing the warning would usually
mean concatenating multiple if-conditions. As this would reduce
readability in most cases, I did not fix these places.
Because of (2), I also refrained from adding "bugprone-branch-clone" to
.clang-tidy.
When I tried to add cool new clang-tidy 14 warnings, I noticed that the
current clang-tidy settings already produce a ton of warnings. This
commit addresses many of these. Almost all of them were non-critical,
i.e. C vs. C++ style casts.