Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kefu Chai
f5b05cf981 treewide: use defaulted operator!=() and operator==()
in C++20, compiler generate operator!=() if the corresponding
operator==() is already defined, the language now understands
that the comparison is symmetric in the new standard.

fortunately, our operator!=() is always equivalent to
`! operator==()`, this matches the behavior of the default
generated operator!=(). so, in this change, all `operator!=`
are removed.

in addition to the defaulted operator!=, C++20 also brings to us
the defaulted operator==() -- it is able to generated the
operator==() if the member-wise lexicographical comparison.
under some circumstances, this is exactly what we need. so,
in this change, if the operator==() is also implemented as
a lexicographical comparison of all memeber variables of the
class/struct in question, it is implemented using the default
generated one by removing its body and mark the function as
`default`. moreover, if the class happen to have other comparison
operators which are implemented using lexicographical comparison,
the default generated `operator<=>` is used in place of
the defaulted `operator==`.

sometimes, we fail to mark the operator== with the `const`
specifier, in this change, to fulfil the need of C++ standard,
and to be more correct, the `const` specifier is added.

also, to generate the defaulted operator==, the operand should
be `const class_name&`, but it is not always the case, in the
class of `version`, we use `version` as the parameter type, to
fulfill the need of the C++ standard, the parameter type is
changed to `const version&` instead. this does not change
the semantic of the comparison operator. and is a more idiomatic
way to pass non-trivial struct as function parameters.

please note, because in C++20, both operator= and operator<=> are
symmetric, some of the operators in `multiprecision` are removed.
they are the symmetric form of the another variant. if they were
not removed, compiler would, for instance, find ambiguous
overloaded operator '=='.

this change is a cleanup to modernize the code base with C++20
features.

Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>

Closes #13687
2023-04-27 10:24:46 +03:00
Avi Kivity
fcb8d040e8 treewide: use Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) license identifiers
Instead of lengthy blurbs, switch to single-line, machine-readable
standardized (https://spdx.dev) license identifiers. The Linux kernel
switched long ago, so there is strong precedent.

Three cases are handled: AGPL-only, Apache-only, and dual licensed.
For the latter case, I chose (AGPL-3.0-or-later and Apache-2.0),
reasoning that our changes are extensive enough to apply our license.

The changes we applied mechanically with a script, except to
licenses/README.md.

Closes #9937
2022-01-18 12:15:18 +01:00
Asias He
a8ad385ecd repair: Get rid of the gc_grace_seconds
The gc_grace_seconds is a very fragile and broken design inherited from
Cassandra. Deleted data can be resurrected if cluster wide repair is not
performed within gc_grace_seconds. This design pushes the job of making
the database consistency to the user. In practice, it is very hard to
guarantee repair is performed within gc_grace_seconds all the time. For
example, repair workload has the lowest priority in the system which can
be slowed down by the higher priority workload, so that there is no
guarantee when a repair can finish. A gc_grace_seconds value that is
used to work might not work after data volume grows in a cluster. Users
might want to avoid running repair during a specific period where
latency is the top priority for their business.

To solve this problem, an automatic mechanism to protect data
resurrection is proposed and implemented. The main idea is to remove the
tombstone only after the range that covers the tombstone is repaired.

In this patch, a new table option tombstone_gc is added. The option is
used to configure tombstone gc mode. For example:

1) GC a tombstone after gc_grace_seconds

cqlsh> ALTER TABLE ks.cf WITH tombstone_gc = {'mode':'timeout'} ;

This is the default mode. If no tombstone_gc option is specified by the
user. The old gc_grace_seconds based gc will be used.

2) Never GC a tombstone

cqlsh> ALTER TABLE ks.cf WITH tombstone_gc = {'mode':'disabled'};

3) GC a tombstone immediately

cqlsh> ALTER TABLE ks.cf WITH tombstone_gc = {'mode':'immediate'};

4) GC a tombstone after repair

cqlsh> ALTER TABLE ks.cf WITH tombstone_gc = {'mode':'repair'};

In addition to the 'mode' option, another option 'propagation_delay_in_seconds'
is added. It defines the max time a write could possibly delay before it
eventually arrives at a node.

A new gossip feature TOMBSTONE_GC_OPTIONS is added. The new tombstone_gc
option can only be used after the whole cluster supports the new
feature. A mixed cluster works with no problem.

Tests: compaction_test.py, ninja test

Fixes #3560

[avi: resolve conflicts vs data_dictionary]
2022-01-04 19:48:14 +02:00