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Author: Brad DeJong Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJnrtnxrA4FqZi0Z6kGPQKMiZkWv2xxgSDQ+hv1jDrf8WCKjjw@mail.gmail.com
145 lines
7.4 KiB
Plaintext
145 lines
7.4 KiB
Plaintext
Locking tuples
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--------------
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Locking tuples is not as easy as locking tables or other database objects.
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The problem is that transactions might want to lock large numbers of tuples at
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any one time, so it's not possible to keep the locks objects in shared memory.
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To work around this limitation, we use a two-level mechanism. The first level
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is implemented by storing locking information in the tuple header: a tuple is
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marked as locked by setting the current transaction's XID as its XMAX, and
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setting additional infomask bits to distinguish this case from the more normal
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case of having deleted the tuple. When multiple transactions concurrently
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lock a tuple, a MultiXact is used; see below. This mechanism can accommodate
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arbitrarily large numbers of tuples being locked simultaneously.
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When it is necessary to wait for a tuple-level lock to be released, the basic
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delay is provided by XactLockTableWait or MultiXactIdWait on the contents of
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the tuple's XMAX. However, that mechanism will release all waiters
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concurrently, so there would be a race condition as to which waiter gets the
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tuple, potentially leading to indefinite starvation of some waiters. The
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possibility of share-locking makes the problem much worse --- a steady stream
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of share-lockers can easily block an exclusive locker forever. To provide
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more reliable semantics about who gets a tuple-level lock first, we use the
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standard lock manager, which implements the second level mentioned above. The
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protocol for waiting for a tuple-level lock is really
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LockTuple()
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XactLockTableWait()
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mark tuple as locked by me
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UnlockTuple()
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When there are multiple waiters, arbitration of who is to get the lock next
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is provided by LockTuple(). However, at most one tuple-level lock will
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be held or awaited per backend at any time, so we don't risk overflow
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of the lock table. Note that incoming share-lockers are required to
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do LockTuple as well, if there is any conflict, to ensure that they don't
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starve out waiting exclusive-lockers. However, if there is not any active
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conflict for a tuple, we don't incur any extra overhead.
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We provide four levels of tuple locking strength: SELECT FOR UPDATE obtains an
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exclusive lock which prevents any kind of modification of the tuple. This is
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the lock level that is implicitly taken by DELETE operations, and also by
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UPDATE operations if they modify any of the tuple's key fields. SELECT FOR NO
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KEY UPDATE likewise obtains an exclusive lock, but only prevents tuple removal
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and modifications which might alter the tuple's key. This is the lock that is
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implicitly taken by UPDATE operations which leave all key fields unchanged.
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SELECT FOR SHARE obtains a shared lock which prevents any kind of tuple
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modification. Finally, SELECT FOR KEY SHARE obtains a shared lock which only
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prevents tuple removal and modifications of key fields. This lock level is
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just strong enough to implement RI checks, i.e. it ensures that tuples do not
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go away from under a check, without blocking transactions that want to update
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the tuple without changing its key.
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The conflict table is:
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UPDATE NO KEY UPDATE SHARE KEY SHARE
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UPDATE conflict conflict conflict conflict
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NO KEY UPDATE conflict conflict conflict
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SHARE conflict conflict
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KEY SHARE conflict
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When there is a single locker in a tuple, we can just store the locking info
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in the tuple itself. We do this by storing the locker's Xid in XMAX, and
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setting infomask bits specifying the locking strength. There is one exception
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here: since infomask space is limited, we do not provide a separate bit
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for SELECT FOR SHARE, so we have to use the extended info in a MultiXact in
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that case. (The other cases, SELECT FOR UPDATE and SELECT FOR KEY SHARE, are
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presumably more commonly used due to being the standards-mandated locking
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mechanism, or heavily used by the RI code, so we want to provide fast paths
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for those.)
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MultiXacts
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----------
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A tuple header provides very limited space for storing information about tuple
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locking and updates: there is room only for a single Xid and a small number of
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infomask bits. Whenever we need to store more than one lock, we replace the
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first locker's Xid with a new MultiXactId. Each MultiXact provides extended
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locking data; it comprises an array of Xids plus some flags bits for each one.
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The flags are currently used to store the locking strength of each member
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transaction. (The flags also distinguish a pure locker from an updater.)
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In earlier PostgreSQL releases, a MultiXact always meant that the tuple was
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locked in shared mode by multiple transactions. This is no longer the case; a
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MultiXact may contain an update or delete Xid. (Keep in mind that tuple locks
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in a transaction do not conflict with other tuple locks in the same
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transaction, so it's possible to have otherwise conflicting locks in a
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MultiXact if they belong to the same transaction).
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Note that each lock is attributed to the subtransaction that acquires it.
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This means that a subtransaction that aborts is seen as though it releases the
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locks it acquired; concurrent transactions can then proceed without having to
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wait for the main transaction to finish. It also means that a subtransaction
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can upgrade to a stronger lock level than an earlier transaction had, and if
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the subxact aborts, the earlier, weaker lock is kept.
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The possibility of having an update within a MultiXact means that they must
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persist across crashes and restarts: a future reader of the tuple needs to
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figure out whether the update committed or aborted. So we have a requirement
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that pg_multixact needs to retain pages of its data until we're certain that
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the MultiXacts in them are no longer of interest.
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VACUUM is in charge of removing old MultiXacts at the time of tuple freezing.
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The lower bound used by vacuum (that is, the value below which all multixacts
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are removed) is stored as pg_class.relminmxid for each table; the minimum of
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all such values is stored in pg_database.datminmxid. The minimum across
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all databases, in turn, is recorded in checkpoint records, and CHECKPOINT
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removes pg_multixact/ segments older than that value once the checkpoint
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record has been flushed.
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Infomask Bits
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-------------
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The following infomask bits are applicable:
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- HEAP_XMAX_INVALID
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Any tuple with this bit set does not have a valid value stored in XMAX.
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- HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI
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This bit is set if the tuple's Xmax is a MultiXactId (as opposed to a
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regular TransactionId).
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- HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY
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This bit is set when the XMAX is a locker only; that is, if it's a
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multixact, it does not contain an update among its members. It's set when
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the XMAX is a plain Xid that locked the tuple, as well.
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- HEAP_XMAX_KEYSHR_LOCK
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- HEAP_XMAX_SHR_LOCK
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- HEAP_XMAX_EXCL_LOCK
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These bits indicate the strength of the lock acquired; they are useful when
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the XMAX is not a MultiXactId. If it's a multi, the info is to be found in
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the member flags. If HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI is not set and HEAP_XMAX_LOCK_ONLY
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is set, then one of these *must* be set as well.
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Note that HEAP_XMAX_EXCL_LOCK does not distinguish FOR NO KEY UPDATE from
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FOR UPDATE; this is implemented by the HEAP_KEYS_UPDATED bit.
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- HEAP_KEYS_UPDATED
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This bit lives in t_infomask2. If set, indicates that the XMAX updated
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this tuple and changed the key values, or it deleted the tuple.
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It's set regardless of whether the XMAX is a TransactionId or a MultiXactId.
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We currently never set the HEAP_XMAX_COMMITTED when the HEAP_XMAX_IS_MULTI bit
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is set.
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