Exemple #1
0
// Send implements the client.Sender interface. The store is looked up from the
// store map if specified by the request; otherwise, the command is being
// executed locally, and the replica is determined via lookup through each
// store's LookupRange method. The latter path is taken only by unit tests.
func (ls *Stores) Send(
	ctx context.Context, ba roachpb.BatchRequest,
) (*roachpb.BatchResponse, *roachpb.Error) {
	// If we aren't given a Replica, then a little bending over
	// backwards here. This case applies exclusively to unittests.
	if ba.RangeID == 0 || ba.Replica.StoreID == 0 {
		rs, err := keys.Range(ba)
		if err != nil {
			return nil, roachpb.NewError(err)
		}
		rangeID, repDesc, err := ls.LookupReplica(rs.Key, rs.EndKey)
		if err != nil {
			return nil, roachpb.NewError(err)
		}
		ba.RangeID = rangeID
		ba.Replica = repDesc
	}

	store, err := ls.GetStore(ba.Replica.StoreID)
	if err != nil {
		return nil, roachpb.NewError(err)
	}

	if ba.Txn != nil {
		// For calls that read data within a txn, we keep track of timestamps
		// observed from the various participating nodes' HLC clocks. If we have
		// a timestamp on file for this Node which is smaller than MaxTimestamp,
		// we can lower MaxTimestamp accordingly. If MaxTimestamp drops below
		// OrigTimestamp, we effectively can't see uncertainty restarts any
		// more.
		// Note that it's not an issue if MaxTimestamp propagates back out to
		// the client via a returned Transaction update - when updating a Txn
		// from another, the larger MaxTimestamp wins.
		if maxTS, ok := ba.Txn.GetObservedTimestamp(ba.Replica.NodeID); ok && maxTS.Less(ba.Txn.MaxTimestamp) {
			// Copy-on-write to protect others we might be sharing the Txn with.
			shallowTxn := *ba.Txn
			// The uncertainty window is [OrigTimestamp, maxTS), so if that window
			// is empty, there won't be any uncertainty restarts.
			if !ba.Txn.OrigTimestamp.Less(maxTS) {
				log.Event(ctx, "read has no clock uncertainty")
			}
			shallowTxn.MaxTimestamp.Backward(maxTS)
			ba.Txn = &shallowTxn
		}
	}
	br, pErr := store.Send(ctx, ba)
	if br != nil && br.Error != nil {
		panic(roachpb.ErrorUnexpectedlySet(store, br))
	}
	return br, pErr
}
Exemple #2
0
// Send implements the batch.Sender interface. It subdivides the Batch
// into batches admissible for sending (preventing certain illegal
// mixtures of requests), executes each individual part (which may
// span multiple ranges), and recombines the response.
//
// When the request spans ranges, it is split by range and a partial
// subset of the batch request is sent to affected ranges in parallel.
//
// The first write in a transaction may not arrive before writes to
// other ranges. This is relevant in the case of a BeginTransaction
// request. Intents written to other ranges before the transaction
// record is created will cause the transaction to abort early.
func (ds *DistSender) Send(
	ctx context.Context, ba roachpb.BatchRequest,
) (*roachpb.BatchResponse, *roachpb.Error) {
	tracing.AnnotateTrace()

	if pErr := ds.initAndVerifyBatch(ctx, &ba); pErr != nil {
		return nil, pErr
	}

	ctx = ds.AnnotateCtx(ctx)
	ctx, cleanup := tracing.EnsureContext(ctx, ds.AmbientContext.Tracer)
	defer cleanup()

	var rplChunks []*roachpb.BatchResponse
	parts := ba.Split(false /* don't split ET */)
	if len(parts) > 1 && ba.MaxSpanRequestKeys != 0 {
		// We already verified above that the batch contains only scan requests of the same type.
		// Such a batch should never need splitting.
		panic("batch with MaxSpanRequestKeys needs splitting")
	}
	for len(parts) > 0 {
		part := parts[0]
		ba.Requests = part
		// The minimal key range encompassing all requests contained within.
		// Local addressing has already been resolved.
		// TODO(tschottdorf): consider rudimentary validation of the batch here
		// (for example, non-range requests with EndKey, or empty key ranges).
		rs, err := keys.Range(ba)
		if err != nil {
			return nil, roachpb.NewError(err)
		}
		rpl, pErr := ds.divideAndSendBatchToRanges(ctx, ba, rs, true /* isFirst */)

		if pErr == errNo1PCTxn {
			// If we tried to send a single round-trip EndTransaction but
			// it looks like it's going to hit multiple ranges, split it
			// here and try again.
			if len(parts) != 1 {
				panic("EndTransaction not in last chunk of batch")
			}
			parts = ba.Split(true /* split ET */)
			if len(parts) != 2 {
				panic("split of final EndTransaction chunk resulted in != 2 parts")
			}
			continue
		}
		if pErr != nil {
			return nil, pErr
		}
		// Propagate transaction from last reply to next request. The final
		// update is taken and put into the response's main header.
		ba.UpdateTxn(rpl.Txn)
		rplChunks = append(rplChunks, rpl)
		parts = parts[1:]
	}

	reply := rplChunks[0]
	for _, rpl := range rplChunks[1:] {
		reply.Responses = append(reply.Responses, rpl.Responses...)
		reply.CollectedSpans = append(reply.CollectedSpans, rpl.CollectedSpans...)
	}
	reply.BatchResponse_Header = rplChunks[len(rplChunks)-1].BatchResponse_Header
	return reply, nil
}