New cluster-like command which writes to a new index than swaps,
much like is done for the data table, and only acquires
exclusive locks for said swap. This trades off disk usage for
lower contention: we hold locks for a much lower period of time,
allowing reads to work concurrently, but we have both the old
and new versions of the table existing at once, approximately
doubling storage usage while reorder is running.
Currently only works on chunks.
Add support for:
* ALTER TABLE ... CLUSTER ON
* ALTER TABLE ... SET WITHOUT CLUSTER
on both hypertables and chunks. Commands on hypertables get
passed down to chunks.
Clustering a table means reordering it according to an index.
This operation requires an exclusive lock and extensive
processing time. On large hypertables with many chunks, CLUSTER
risks blocking a lot of operations by holding locks for a long time.
This is alleviated by processing each chunk in a new transaction,
ensuring locks are only held on one chunk at a time.
Setting up single node is now:
```
CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS iobeamdb CASCADE;
select setup_single_node();
```
To setup a cluster do (on meta node):
```
CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS iobeamdb CASCADE;
select set_meta();
```
on data node:
```
CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS iobeamdb CASCADE;
select join_cluster('metadb', 'metahost');
```
This assumes that the commands are issued by the same user on both the
meta node and the data node. Otherwise the data node also has to
specify the user name to use when connecting to the meta node.
- Directory structure now matches common practices
- Regression tests now run with pg_regress via the PGXS infrastructure.
- Unit tests do not integrate well with pg_regress and have to be run
separately.
- Docker functionality is separate from main Makefile. Run with
`make -f docker.mk` to build and `make -f docker.mk run` to run
the database in a container.