Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Schulze
3b18eb4f17
Fix clang-tidy in some headers 2024-02-28 22:47:34 +00:00
Maksim Kita
2a327107b6 Updated implementation 2024-01-25 14:31:49 +03:00
vdimir
cf1deb7bd5
Fix 'Invalid cursor state' in odbc interacting with MS SQL Server 2023-10-16 10:43:33 +00:00
Alexander Tokmakov
70d1adfe4b
Better formatting for exception messages (#45449)
* 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
2023-01-24 00:13:58 +03:00
kssenii
dc73042d62 Better error messafe 2022-06-24 01:05:33 +02:00
Robert Schulze
5a4f21c50f
Support for Clang Thread Safety Analysis (TSA)
- TSA is a static analyzer build by Google which finds race conditions
  and deadlocks at compile time.

- It works by associating a shared member variable with a
  synchronization primitive that protects it. The compiler can then
  check at each access if proper locking happened before. A good
  introduction are [0] and [1].

- TSA requires some help by the programmer via annotations. Luckily,
  LLVM's libcxx already has annotations for std::mutex, std::lock_guard,
  std::shared_mutex and std::scoped_lock. This commit enables them
  (--> contrib/libcxx-cmake/CMakeLists.txt).

- Further, this commit adds convenience macros for the low-level
  annotations for use in ClickHouse (--> base/defines.h). For
  demonstration, they are leveraged in a few places.

- As we compile with "-Wall -Wextra -Weverything", the required compiler
  flag "-Wthread-safety-analysis" was already enabled. Negative checks
  are an experimental feature of TSA and disabled
  (--> cmake/warnings.cmake). Compile times did not increase noticeably.

- TSA is used in a few places with simple locking. I tried TSA also
  where locking is more complex. The problem was usually that it is
  unclear which data is protected by which lock :-(. But there was
  definitely some weird code where locking looked broken. So there is
  some potential to find bugs.

*** Limitations of TSA besides the ones listed in [1]:

- The programmer needs to know which lock protects which piece of shared
  data. This is not always easy for large classes.

- Two synchronization primitives used in ClickHouse are not annotated in
  libcxx:
  (1) std::unique_lock: A releaseable lock handle often together with
      std::condition_variable, e.g. in solve producer-consumer problems.
  (2) std::recursive_mutex: A re-entrant mutex variant. Its usage can be
      considered a design flaw + typically it is slower than a standard
      mutex. In this commit, one std::recursive_mutex was converted to
      std::mutex and annotated with TSA.

- For free-standing functions (e.g. helper functions) which are passed
  shared data members, it can be tricky to specify the associated lock.
  This is because the annotations use the normal C++ rules for symbol
  resolution.

[0] https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThreadSafetyAnalysis.html
[1] https://static.googleusercontent.com/media/research.google.com/en//pubs/archive/42958.pdf
2022-06-20 16:13:25 +02:00
Anton Kozlov
e9d645168e Renamed ODBCConnectionFactory to ODBCPooledConntionFactory 2022-06-01 09:00:39 +00:00