From: | Ron Johnson <ron(dot)l(dot)johnson(at)cox(dot)net> |
---|---|
To: | pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Locking entire database |
Date: | 2007-09-16 01:27:48 |
Message-ID: | 46EC8694.5030509@cox.net |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-general |
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On 09/15/07 19:59, Panagiwths Pediadiths wrote:
>
> On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Ron Johnson wrote:
>
> On 09/15/07 03:28, Panagiwths Pediadiths wrote:
>>>> Thats the fun part, I actually need to allow duplicates in specific cases
>>>> but not in this one :)
> Same table?
>> Yup
>
>>>> Shouldn't the serializable level prevent these duplicates? As I understand
>>>> it serializable
>>>> should give the same result as if the transactions were performed the one
>>>> after the other.
> (Please don't top-post.)
>
> Seems to me that you are confused as to the "essence" of relational
> databases. In other words, the best (heck, even the acceptable) way
> to design schemas, and how to control the flow of data in order to
> achieve your ultimate "data" goal.
>
>
>> I dont see why the case i suggest is so obscene
Then you have not explained it to us clearly.
(English language difficulties *are* an acceptable excuse...)
>> More specifically consider a table with to columns where the unique index
>> is the two columns together
>
>> However at some stage of the application I want to insert into the
>> database only if there is no element
>> with a value at column 1 equal to that that i intend to insert.
>
>> Oddly, in serializable isolation mode, two transactions performing such an
>> insertion in parallel one of the
>> two transaction hits the phantom read case, whereas it should be protected
>> by the isolation level.
It should, *if* you do it properly.
IOW, is your program structured like:
BEGIN
SELECT COUNT(*) INTO :cnt
FROM rdf WHERE segment_1 = :some_val;
IF :cnt == 1 THEN
do one thing
ELSE
do another
END IF;
COMMIT;
or is it structured:
BEGIN
SELECT COUNT(*) INTO :cnt
FROM rdf WHERE segment_1 = :some_val;
COMMIT;
BEGIN
IF :cnt == 1 THEN
do one thing
ELSE
do another
END IF;
COMMIT;
>>>> On Fri, 14 Sep 2007, Scott Marlowe wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On 9/14/07, Panagiotis Pediaditis <pped(at)ics(dot)forth(dot)gr> wrote:
>>>>>> A simpler example,
>>>>>> In the context of one transaction i do many queries of the form
>>>>>> INSERT INTO table value WHERE value NOT IN TABLE;
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If i have 2 processes running the same 100s of these at the same time i
>>>>>> end up with duplicates.
>>>>>> Even with isolation set to serializable
>>>>>> any ideas?
>>>>> Unique index?
- --
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferson LA USA
Give a man a fish, and he eats for a day.
Hit him with a fish, and he goes away for good!
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