From: | Simon Riggs <simon(at)2ndQuadrant(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | Noah Misch <noah(at)leadboat(dot)com> |
Cc: | pgsql-hackers <pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: ALTER TABLE lock strength reduction patch is unsafe |
Date: | 2014-01-15 14:57:53 |
Message-ID: | CA+U5nMJ_noDR-YZMVuXb5NaXf=GeYyMUkhDj+dGhOA1E7XvPjQ@mail.gmail.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
On 1 August 2013 01:53, Noah Misch <noah(at)leadboat(dot)com> wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 05:50:40PM +0100, Simon Riggs wrote:
>> On 15 July 2013 15:06, Robert Haas <robertmhaas(at)gmail(dot)com> wrote:
>> > Generally, the question on the table is: to what extent do MVCC
>> > catalog scans make the world safe for concurrent DDL, or put
>> > negatively, what hazards remain?
>>
>> On Tom's test I've been unable to find a single problem.
>>
>> > Noah discovered an interesting one recently: apparently, the relcache
>> > machinery has some logic in it that depends on the use of
>> > AccessExclusiveLock in subtle ways. I'm going to attempt to explain
>> > it, and maybe he can jump in and explain it better. Essentially, the
>> > problem is that when a relcache reload occurs, certain data structures
>> > (like the tuple descriptor, but there are others) are compared against
>> > the old version of the same data structure. If there are no changes,
>> > we do nothing; else, we free the old one and install the new one. The
>> > reason why we don't free the old one and install the new one
>> > unconditionally is because other parts of the backend might have
>> > pointers to the old data structure, so just replacing it all the time
>> > would result in crashes. Since DDL requires AccessExclusiveLock +
>> > CheckTableNotInUse(), any actual change to the data structure will
>> > happen when we haven't got any pointers anyway.
>
>> If you look at this as a generalised problem you probably can find
>> some issues, but that doesn't mean they apply in the specific cases
>> we're addressing.
>>
>> The lock reductions we are discussing in all cases have nothing at all
>> to do with structure and only relate to various options. Except in the
>> case of constraints, though even there I see no issues as yet.
>
> I was able to distill the above hypothesis into an actual crash with
> reduce_lock_levels.v13.patch. Test recipe:
>
> 1. Build with --enable-cassert and with -DCATCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE=1. An
> AcceptInvalidationMessages() will then happen at nearly every syscache lookup,
> making it far easier to hit a problem of this sort.
>
> 2. Run these commands as setup:
> create table root (c int);
> create table part (check (c > 0), check (c > 0)) inherits (root);
>
> 3. Attach a debugger to your session and set a breakpoint at plancat.c:660 (as
> of commit 16f38f72ab2b8a3b2d45ba727d213bb31111cea4).
>
> 4. Run this in your session; the breakpoint will trip:
> select * from root where c = -1;
>
> 5. Start another session and run:
> alter table part add check (c > 0);
>
> 6. Exit the debugger to release the first session. It will crash.
>
> plancache.c:657 stashes a pointer to memory belonging to the rd_att of a
> relcache entry. It then proceeds to call eval_const_expressions(), which
> performs a syscache lookup in its simplify_function() subroutine. Under
> CATCACHE_FORCE_RELEASE, the syscache lookup reliably prompts an
> AcceptInvalidationMessages(). The ensuing RelationClearRelation() against
> "part" notices the new constraint, decides keep_tupdesc = false, and frees the
> existing tupdesc. plancache.c is now left holding a pointer into freed
> memory. The next loop iteration will crash when it dereferences a pointer
> stored within that freed memory at plancat.c:671.
>
>
> A remediation strategy that seemed attractive when I last contemplated this
> problem is to repoint rd_att immediately but arrange to free the obsolete
> TupleDesc in AtEOXact_RelationCache().
v15 to fix the above problem.
Looking at other potential problems around plancache but nothing found as yet.
--
Simon Riggs http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services
Attachment | Content-Type | Size |
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reduce_lock_levels.v15.patch | application/octet-stream | 25.9 KB |
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