From: | Rural Hunter <ruralhunter(at)gmail(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | Kevin Grittner <kevin(dot)grittner(at)wicourts(dot)gov> |
Cc: | Jerry Sievers <gsievers19(at)comcast(dot)net>, pgsql-admin(at)postgresql(dot)org, berto(dot)d(dot)sera(at)gmail(dot)com |
Subject: | Re: lock problem |
Date: | 2011-12-22 01:44:42 |
Message-ID: | 4EF28B8A.1060602@gmail.com |
Views: | Raw Message | Whole Thread | Download mbox | Resend email |
Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-admin |
hmm....no I didn't do anything. is the lock priority decided by OS not
the DB? I'm confused here. B/C/D started several mins later than A here
while the update statement takes no more than 1 second. of coz there
are hundreds of connections trying to acquire the lock during that
time.
于2011年12月22日 0:09:17,Kevin Grittner写到:
> Rural Hunter<ruralhunter(at)gmail(dot)com> wrote:
>
>> I still have this question:
>> same statement A,B,C,D update same row. The start order is
>> A->B->C-D. From what I've gotten, B/C/D got the lock before A.
>> Why did that happen?
>
> Did you do anything to prevent it from happening? If not, the OS
> scheduler is going to give time to one process or another in a
> fairly unpredictable way.
>
> -Kevin
>
From | Date | Subject | |
---|---|---|---|
Next Message | Kevin Grittner | 2011-12-22 03:26:26 | Re: lock problem |
Previous Message | Craig James | 2011-12-22 00:33:37 | Re: Can't Insert from Staging Table to Production Table |