Thread
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <grimkg@gmail.com> — 2010-09-18T18:52:29Z
[Apologies for not reply-linking this; work email is down so I'm sending from gmail.] Based on feedback from Heikki and Tom I've reworked how I find the top-level transaction. This is in the git repo, and the changes can be viewed at: http://git.postgresql.org/gitweb?p=users/kgrittn/postgres.git;a=commitdiff;h=e29927c7966adba2443fdc4f64da9d282f95a05b -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> — 2010-09-18T19:38:45Z
On 18/09/10 21:52, Kevin Grittner wrote: > [Apologies for not reply-linking this; work email is down so I'm > sending from gmail.] > > Based on feedback from Heikki and Tom I've reworked how I find the > top-level transaction. This is in the git repo, and the changes can > be viewed at: > > http://git.postgresql.org/gitweb?p=users/kgrittn/postgres.git;a=commitdiff;h=e29927c7966adba2443fdc4f64da9d282f95a05b Thanks, much simpler. Now let's simplify it some more ;-) ISTM you never search the SerializableXactHash table using a hash key, except the one call in CheckForSerializableConflictOut, but there you already have a pointer to the SERIALIZABLEXACT struct. You only re-find it to make sure it hasn't gone away while you trade the shared lock for an exclusive one. If we find another way to ensure that, ISTM we don't need SerializableXactHash at all. My first thought was to forget about VirtualTransactionId and use TransactionId directly as the hash key for SERIALIZABLEXACT. The problem is that a transaction doesn't have a transaction ID when RegisterSerializableTransaction is called. We could leave the TransactionId blank and only add the SERIALIZABLEXACT struct to the hash table when an XID is assigned, but there's no provision to insert an existing struct to a hash table in the current hash table API. So, I'm not sure of the details yet, but it seems like it could be made simpler somehow.. -- Heikki Linnakangas EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <grimkg@gmail.com> — 2010-09-19T13:48:42Z
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > ISTM you never search the SerializableXactHash table using a hash > key, except the one call in CheckForSerializableConflictOut, but > there you already have a pointer to the SERIALIZABLEXACT struct. > You only re-find it to make sure it hasn't gone away while you > trade the shared lock for an exclusive one. If we find another way > to ensure that, ISTM we don't need SerializableXactHash at all. My > first thought was to forget about VirtualTransactionId and use > TransactionId directly as the hash key for SERIALIZABLEXACT. The > problem is that a transaction doesn't have a transaction ID when > RegisterSerializableTransaction is called. We could leave the > TransactionId blank and only add the SERIALIZABLEXACT struct to the > hash table when an XID is assigned, but there's no provision to > insert an existing struct to a hash table in the current hash table > API. > > So, I'm not sure of the details yet, but it seems like it could be > made simpler somehow.. After tossing it around in my head for a bit, the only thing that I see (so far) which might work is to maintain a *list* of SERIALIZABLEXACT objects in memory rather than a using a hash table. The recheck after releasing the shared lock and acquiring an exclusive lock would then go through SerializableXidHash. I think that can work, although I'm not 100% sure that it's an improvement. I'll look it over in more detail. I'd be happy to hear your thoughts on this or any other suggestions. -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> — 2010-09-19T18:57:23Z
On 19/09/10 16:48, Kevin Grittner wrote: > After tossing it around in my head for a bit, the only thing that I > see (so far) which might work is to maintain a *list* of > SERIALIZABLEXACT objects in memory rather than a using a hash table. > The recheck after releasing the shared lock and acquiring an > exclusive lock would then go through SerializableXidHash. I think > that can work, although I'm not 100% sure that it's an improvement. Yeah, also keep in mind that a linked list with only a few items is faster to scan through than sequentially scanning an almost empty hash table. Putting that aside for now, we have one very serious problem with this algorithm: > While they [SIREAD locks] are associated with a transaction, they must survive > a successful COMMIT of that transaction, and remain until all overlapping > transactions complete. Long-running transactions are already nasty because they prevent VACUUM from cleaning up old tuple versions, but this escalates the problem to a whole new level. If you have one old transaction sitting idle, every transaction that follows consumes a little bit of shared memory, until that old transaction commits. Eventually you will run out of shared memory, and will not be able to start new transactions anymore. Is there anything we can do about that? Just a thought, but could you somehow coalesce the information about multiple already-committed transactions to keep down the shared memory usage? For example, if you have this: 1. Transaction <slow> begins 2. 100 other transactions begin and commit Could you somehow group together the 100 committed transactions and represent them with just one SERIALIZABLEXACT struct? -- Heikki Linnakangas EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <kevin.grittner@wicourts.gov> — 2010-09-20T14:09:51Z
I wrote: > Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > >> ISTM you never search the SerializableXactHash table using a hash >> key, except the one call in CheckForSerializableConflictOut, but >> there you already have a pointer to the SERIALIZABLEXACT struct. >> You only re-find it to make sure it hasn't gone away while you >> trade the shared lock for an exclusive one. If we find another >> way to ensure that, ISTM we don't need SerializableXactHash at >> all. My first thought was to forget about VirtualTransactionId >> and use TransactionId directly as the hash key for >> SERIALIZABLEXACT. The problem is that a transaction doesn't have >> a transaction ID when RegisterSerializableTransaction is called. >> We could leave the TransactionId blank and only add the >> SERIALIZABLEXACT struct to the hash table when an XID is >> assigned, but there's no provision to insert an existing struct >> to a hash table in the current hash table API. >> >> So, I'm not sure of the details yet, but it seems like it could >> be made simpler somehow.. > > After tossing it around in my head for a bit, the only thing that > I see (so far) which might work is to maintain a *list* of > SERIALIZABLEXACT objects in memory rather than a using a hash > table. The recheck after releasing the shared lock and acquiring > an exclusive lock would then go through SerializableXidHash. I > think that can work, although I'm not 100% sure that it's an > improvement. I'll look it over in more detail. I'd be happy to > hear your thoughts on this or any other suggestions. I haven't come up with any better ideas. Pondering this one, it seems to me that a list would be better than a hash table if we had a list which would automatically allocate and link new entries, and would maintain a list of available entries for (re)use. I wouldn't want to sprinkle such an implementation in with predicate locking and SSI code, but if there is a feeling that such a thing would be worth having in shmqueue.c or some new file which uses the SHM_QUEUE structure to provide an API for such functionality, I'd be willing to write that and use it in the SSI code. Without something like that, I have so far been unable to envision an improvement along the lines Heikki is suggesting here. Thoughts? -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <kevin.grittner@wicourts.gov> — 2010-09-22T18:42:34Z
I wrote: > Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > >> ISTM you never search the SerializableXactHash table using a hash >> key, except the one call in CheckForSerializableConflictOut, but >> there you already have a pointer to the SERIALIZABLEXACT struct. >> You only re-find it to make sure it hasn't gone away while you >> trade the shared lock for an exclusive one. If we find another >> way to ensure that, ISTM we don't need SerializableXactHash at >> all. >> it seems like it could be made simpler somehow.. > > After tossing it around in my head for a bit, the only thing that > I see (so far) which might work is to maintain a *list* of > SERIALIZABLEXACT objects in memory rather than a using a hash > table. The recheck after releasing the shared lock and acquiring > an exclusive lock would then go through SerializableXidHash. After discussion on a separate thread, I replaced that hash table with a home-grown shared memory list. I had to create a patch at that point due to the git migration, so I figured I might as well post it, too. There have been some non-trivial changes due to feedback on the prior posting. -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> — 2010-09-22T18:54:20Z
On 19/09/10 21:57, I wrote: > Putting that aside for now, we have one very serious problem with this > algorithm: > >> While they [SIREAD locks] are associated with a transaction, they must >> survive >> a successful COMMIT of that transaction, and remain until all overlapping > > transactions complete. > > Long-running transactions are already nasty because they prevent VACUUM > from cleaning up old tuple versions, but this escalates the problem to a > whole new level. If you have one old transaction sitting idle, every > transaction that follows consumes a little bit of shared memory, until > that old transaction commits. Eventually you will run out of shared > memory, and will not be able to start new transactions anymore. > > Is there anything we can do about that? Just a thought, but could you > somehow coalesce the information about multiple already-committed > transactions to keep down the shared memory usage? For example, if you > have this: > > 1. Transaction <slow> begins > 2. 100 other transactions begin and commit > > Could you somehow group together the 100 committed transactions and > represent them with just one SERIALIZABLEXACT struct? Ok, I think I've come up with a scheme that puts an upper bound on the amount of shared memory used, wrt. number of transactions. You can still run out of shared memory if you lock a lot of objects, but that doesn't worry me as much. When a transaction is commits, its predicate locks must be held, but it's not important anymore *who* holds them, as long as they're hold for long enough. Let's move the finishedBefore field from SERIALIZABLEXACT to PREDICATELOCK. When a transaction commits, set the finishedBefore field in all the PREDICATELOCKs it holds, and then release the SERIALIZABLEXACT struct. The predicate locks stay without an associated SERIALIZABLEXACT entry until finishedBefore expires. Whenever there are two predicate locks on the same target that both belonged to an already-committed transaction, the one with a smaller finishedBefore can be dropped, because the one with higher finishedBefore value covers it already. There. That was surprisingly simple, I must be missing something. -- Heikki Linnakangas EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <grimkg@gmail.com> — 2010-09-22T23:14:06Z
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > When a transaction is commits, its predicate locks must be held, > but it's not important anymore *who* holds them, as long as > they're hold for long enough. > > Let's move the finishedBefore field from SERIALIZABLEXACT to > PREDICATELOCK. When a transaction commits, set the finishedBefore > field in all the PREDICATELOCKs it holds, and then release the > SERIALIZABLEXACT struct. The predicate locks stay without an > associated SERIALIZABLEXACT entry until finishedBefore expires. > > Whenever there are two predicate locks on the same target that > both belonged to an already-committed transaction, the one with a > smaller finishedBefore can be dropped, because the one with higher > finishedBefore value covers it already. I don't think this works. Gory details follow. The predicate locks only matter when a tuple is being written which might conflict with one. In the notation often used for the dangerous structures, the conflict only occurs if TN writes something which T1 can't read or T1 writes something which T0 can't read. When you combine this with the fact that you don't have a problem unless TN commits *first*, then you can't have a problem with TN looking up a predicate lock of a committed transaction; if it's still writing tuples after T1's commit, the conflict can't matter and really should be ignored. If T1 is looking up a predicate lock for T0 and finds it committed, there are two things which must be true for this to generate a real conflict: TN must have committed before T0, and T0 must have overlapped T1 -- T0 must not have been able to see T1's write. If we have a way to establish these two facts without keeping transaction level data for committed transactions, predicate lock *lookup* wouldn't stand in the way of your proposal. Since the writing transaction is active, if the xmin of its starting transaction comes before the finishedBefore value, they must have overlapped; so I think we have that part covered, and I can't see a problem with your proposed use of the earliest finishedBefore value. There is a rub on the other point, though. Without transaction information you have no way of telling whether TN committed before T0, so you would need to assume that it did. So on this count, there is bound to be some increase in false positives leading to transaction rollback. Without more study, and maybe some tests, I'm not sure how significant it is. (Actually, we might want to track commit sequence somehow, so we can determine this with greater accuracy.) But wait, the bigger problems are yet to come. The other way we can detect conflicts is a read by a serializable transaction noticing that a different and overlapping serializable transaction wrote the tuple we're trying to read. How do you propose to know that the other transaction was serializable without keeping the SERIALIZABLEXACT information? And how do you propose to record the conflict without it? The wheels pretty much fall off the idea entirely here, as far as I can see. Finally, this would preclude some optimizations which I *think* will pay off, which trade a few hundred kB more of shared memory, and some additional CPU to maintain more detailed conflict data, for a lower false positive rate -- meaning fewer transactions rolled back for hard-to-explain reasons. This more detailed information is also what seems to be desired by Dan S (on another thread) to be able to log the information needed to be able to reduce rollbacks. -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> — 2010-09-23T05:21:01Z
On 23/09/10 02:14, Kevin Grittner wrote: > There is a rub on the other point, though. Without transaction > information you have no way of telling whether TN committed before > T0, so you would need to assume that it did. So on this count, > there is bound to be some increase in false positives leading to > transaction rollback. Without more study, and maybe some tests, I'm > not sure how significant it is. (Actually, we might want to track > commit sequence somehow, so we can determine this with greater > accuracy.) I'm confused. AFAICS there is no way to tell if TN committed before T0 in the current patch either. > But wait, the bigger problems are yet to come. > > The other way we can detect conflicts is a read by a serializable > transaction noticing that a different and overlapping serializable > transaction wrote the tuple we're trying to read. How do you > propose to know that the other transaction was serializable without > keeping the SERIALIZABLEXACT information? Hmm, I see. We could record which transactions were serializable in a new clog-like structure that wouldn't exhaust shared memory. > And how do you propose to record the conflict without it? I thought you just abort the transaction that would cause the conflict right there. The other transaction is committed already, so you can't do anything about it anymore. > Finally, this would preclude some optimizations which I *think* will > pay off, which trade a few hundred kB more of shared memory, and > some additional CPU to maintain more detailed conflict data, for a > lower false positive rate -- meaning fewer transactions rolled back > for hard-to-explain reasons. This more detailed information is also > what seems to be desired by Dan S (on another thread) to be able to > log the information needed to be able to reduce rollbacks. Ok, I think I'm ready to hear about those optimizations now :-). -- Heikki Linnakangas EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <kevin.grittner@wicourts.gov> — 2010-09-23T15:08:34Z
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > On 23/09/10 02:14, Kevin Grittner wrote: >> There is a rub on the other point, though. Without transaction >> information you have no way of telling whether TN committed >> before T0, so you would need to assume that it did. So on this >> count, there is bound to be some increase in false positives >> leading to transaction rollback. Without more study, and maybe >> some tests, I'm not sure how significant it is. (Actually, we >> might want to track commit sequence somehow, so we can determine >> this with greater accuracy.) > > I'm confused. AFAICS there is no way to tell if TN committed > before T0 in the current patch either. Well, we can certainly infer it if the finishedBefore values differ. And, as I said, if we don't eliminate this structure for committed transactions, we could add a commitId or some such, with "precedes" and "follows" tests similar to TransactionId. >> The other way we can detect conflicts is a read by a serializable >> transaction noticing that a different and overlapping >> serializable transaction wrote the tuple we're trying to read. >> How do you propose to know that the other transaction was >> serializable without keeping the SERIALIZABLEXACT information? > > Hmm, I see. We could record which transactions were serializable > in a new clog-like structure that wouldn't exhaust shared memory. > >> And how do you propose to record the conflict without it? > > I thought you just abort the transaction that would cause the > conflict right there. The other transaction is committed already, > so you can't do anything about it anymore. No, it always requires a rw-conflict from T0 to T1 and a rw-conflict from T1 to TN, as well as TN committing first and (T0 not being READ ONLY or TN not overlapping T0). The number and complexity of the conditions which must be met to cause a serialization failure are what keep the failure rate reasonable. If we start rolling back transactions every time one transaction simply reads a row modified by a concurrent transaction I suspect that we'd have such a storm of serialization failures in most workloads that nobody would want to use it. >> Finally, this would preclude some optimizations which I *think* >> will pay off, which trade a few hundred kB more of shared memory, >> and some additional CPU to maintain more detailed conflict data, >> for a lower false positive rate -- meaning fewer transactions >> rolled back for hard-to-explain reasons. This more detailed >> information is also what seems to be desired by Dan S (on another >> thread) to be able to log the information needed to be able to >> reduce rollbacks. > > Ok, I think I'm ready to hear about those optimizations now :-). Dan Ports is eager to implement "next key" predicate locking for indexes, but wants more benchmarks to confirm the benefit. (Most of the remaining potential optimizations carry some risk of being counter-productive, so we want to go in with something conservative and justify each optimization separately.) That one only affects your proposal to the extent that the chance to consolidate locks on the same target by committed transactions would likely have fewer matches to collapse. One that I find interesting is the idea that we could set a SERIALIZABLE READ ONLY transaction with some additional property (perhaps DEFERRED or DEFERRABLE) which would cause it to take a snapshot and then wait until there were no overlapping serializable transactions which are not READ ONLY which overlap a running SERIALIZABLE transaction which is not READ ONLY. At this point it could make a valid snapshot which would allow it to run without taking predicate locks or checking for conflicts. It would have no chance of being rolled back with a serialization failure *or* of contributing to the failure of any other transaction, yet it would be guaranteed to see a view of the database consistent with the actions of all other serializable transactions. One place I'm particularly interested in using such a feature is in pg_dump. Without it we have the choice of using a SERIALIZABLE transaction, which might fail or cause failures (which doesn't seem good for a backup program) or using REPEATABLE READ (to get current snapshot isolation behavior), which might capture a view of the data which contains serialization anomalies. The notion of capturing a backup which doesn't comply with business rules enforced by serializable transactions gives me the willies, but it would be better than not getting a backup reliably, so in the absence of this feature, I think we need to change pg_dump to use REPEATABLE READ. I can't see how to do this without keeping information on committed transactions. This next paragraph is copied straight from the Wiki page: It appears that when a pivot is formed where T0 is a flagged as a READ ONLY transaction, and it is concurrent with TN, we can wait to see whether anything really needs to roll back. If T1 commits before developing a rw-dependency to another transaction with a commit early enough to make it visible to T0, the rw-dependency between T0 and T1 can be removed or ignored. It might even be worthwhile to track whether a serializable transaction *has* written to any permanent table, so that this optimization can be applied to de facto READ ONLY transactions (i.e., not flagged as such, but not having done any writes). Again, copying from the Wiki "for the record" here: It seems that we could guarantee that the retry of a transaction rolled back due to a dangerous structure could never immediately roll back on the very same conflicts if we always ensure that there is a successful commit of one of the participating transactions before we roll back. Is it worth it? It seems like it might be, because it would ensure that some progress is being made and prevent the possibility of endless flailing on any set of transactions. We could be sure of this if we: * use lists for inConflict and outConflict * never roll back until we have a pivot with a commit of the transaction on the "out" side * never roll back the transaction being committed in the PreCommit check * have some way to cause another, potentially idle, transaction to roll back with a serialization failure SQLSTATE I'm afraid this would further boost shared memory usage, but the payoff may well be worth it. At one point I did some "back of an envelope" calculations, and I think I found that with 200 connections an additional 640kB of shared memory would allow this. On top of the above optimization, just having the lists would allow more precise recognition of dangerous structures in heavy load, leading to fewer false positives even before you get to the above. Right now, if you have two conflicts with different transactions in the same direction it collapses to a self-reference, which precludes use of optimizations involving TN committing first or T0 being READ ONLY. Also, if we go to these lists, I think we can provide more of the information Dan S. has been requesting for the error detail. We could list all transactions which participated in any failure and I *think* we could show the statement which triggered the failure with confidence that some relation accessed by that statement was involved in the conflicts leading to the failure. Less important than any of the above, but still significant in my book, I fear that conflict recording and dangerous structure detection could become very convoluted and fragile if we eliminate this structure for committed transactions. Conflicts among specific sets of transactions are the linchpin of this whole approach, and I think that without an object to represent each one for the duration for which it is significant is dangerous. Inferring information from a variety of sources "feels" wrong to me. -Kevin -
Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> — 2010-09-23T19:30:24Z
On 23/09/10 18:08, Kevin Grittner wrote: > Less important than any of the above, but still significant in my > book, I fear that conflict recording and dangerous structure > detection could become very convoluted and fragile if we eliminate > this structure for committed transactions. Conflicts among specific > sets of transactions are the linchpin of this whole approach, and I > think that without an object to represent each one for the duration > for which it is significant is dangerous. Inferring information > from a variety of sources "feels" wrong to me. Ok, so if we assume that we must keep all the information we have now, let me try again with that requirement. My aim is still to put an upper bound on the amount of shared memory required, regardless of the number of committed but still interesting transactions. Cahill's thesis mentions that the per-transaction information can be kept in a table like this: txnID beginTime commitTime inConf outConf 100 1000 1100 N Y 101 1000 1500 N N 102 1200 N/A Y N That maps nicely to a SLRU table, truncated from the top as entries become old enough, and appended to the end. In addition to that, we need to keep track of locks held by each transaction, in a finite amount of shared memory. For each predicate lock, we need to store the lock tag, and the list of transactions holding the lock. The list of transactions is where the problem is, there is no limit on its size. Conveniently, we already have a way of representing an arbitrary set of transactions with a single integer: multi-transactions, in multixact.c. Now, we have a little issue in that read-only transactions don't have xids, and can't therefore be part of a multixid, but it could be used as a model to implement something similar for virtual transaction ids. Just a thought, not sure what the performance would be like or how much work such a multixid-like structure would be to implement.. -- Heikki Linnakangas EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <kevin.grittner@wicourts.gov> — 2010-09-23T20:19:32Z
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > On 23/09/10 18:08, Kevin Grittner wrote: >> Less important than any of the above, but still significant in my >> book, I fear that conflict recording and dangerous structure >> detection could become very convoluted and fragile if we >> eliminate this structure for committed transactions. Conflicts >> among specific sets of transactions are the linchpin of this >> whole approach, and I think that without an object to represent >> each one for the duration for which it is significant is >> dangerous. Inferring information from a variety of sources >>"feels" wrong to me. > > Ok, so if we assume that we must keep all the information we have > now, let me try again with that requirement. My aim is still to > put an upper bound on the amount of shared memory required, > regardless of the number of committed but still interesting > transactions. > > Cahill's thesis mentions that the per-transaction information can > be kept in a table like this: > > txnID beginTime commitTime inConf outConf > 100 1000 1100 N Y > 101 1000 1500 N N > 102 1200 N/A Y N > > That maps nicely to a SLRU table, truncated from the top as > entries become old enough, and appended to the end. Well, the inConf and outConf were later converted to pointers in Cahill's work, and our MVCC implementation doesn't let us use times quite that way -- we're using xmins and such, but I assume the point holds regardless of such differences. (I mostly mention it to avoid confusion for more casual followers of the thread.) > In addition to that, we need to keep track of locks held by each > transaction, in a finite amount of shared memory. For each > predicate lock, we need to store the lock tag, and the list of > transactions holding the lock. The list of transactions is where > the problem is, there is no limit on its size. > > Conveniently, we already have a way of representing an arbitrary > set of transactions with a single integer: multi-transactions, in > multixact.c. > > Now, we have a little issue in that read-only transactions don't > have xids, and can't therefore be part of a multixid, but it could > be used as a model to implement something similar for virtual > transaction ids. > > Just a thought, not sure what the performance would be like or how > much work such a multixid-like structure would be to implement.. You're pointing toward some code I haven't yet laid eyes on, so it will probably take me a few days to really digest your suggestion and formulate an opinion. This is just to let you know I'm working on it. I really appreciate your attention to this. Thanks! -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <kevin.grittner@wicourts.gov> — 2010-09-24T16:17:55Z
Heikki Linnakangas <heikki.linnakangas@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > My aim is still to put an upper bound on the amount of shared > memory required, regardless of the number of committed but still > interesting transactions. > That maps nicely to a SLRU table Well, that didn't take as long to get my head around as I feared. I think SLRU would totally tank performance if used for this, and would really not put much of a cap on the memory taken out of circulation for purposes of caching. Transactions are not referenced more heavily at the front of the list nor are they necessarily discarded more or less in order of acquisition. In transaction mixes where all transaction last about the same length of time, the upper limit of interesting transactions is about twice the number of active transactions, so memory demands are pretty light. The problems come in where you have at least one long-lived transaction and a lot of concurrent short-lived transactions. Since all transactions are scanned for cleanup every time a transaction completes, either they would all be taking up cache space or performance would drop to completely abysmal levels as it pounded disk. So SLRU in this case would be a sneaky way to effectively dynamically allocate shared memory, but about two orders of magnitude slower, at best. Here are the things which I think might be done, in some combination, to address your concern without killing performance: (1) Mitigate memory demand through more aggressive cleanup. As an example, a transaction which is READ ONLY (or which hasn't written to a relevant table as tracked by a flag in the transaction structure) is not of interest after commit, and can be immediately cleaned up, unless there is an overlapping non-read-only transaction which overlaps a committed transaction which wrote data. This is clearly not a solution to your concern in itself, but it combines with the other suggestions to make them more effective. (2) Similar to SLRU, allocate pages from shared buffers for lists, but pin them in memory without ever writing them to disk. A buffer could be freed when the last list item in it was freed and the buffer count for the list was above some minimum. This could deal with the episodic need for larger than typical amounts of RAM without permanently taking large quantities our of circulation. Obviously, we would still need some absolute cap, so this by itself doesn't answer your concern, either -- it just the impact to scale to the need dynamically and within bounds. It has the same effective impact on memory usage as SLRU for this application without the same performance penalty. (3) Here's the meat of it. When the lists hit their maximum, have some way to gracefully degrade the accuracy of the conflict tracking. This is similar to your initial suggestion that once a transaction committed we would not track it in detail, but implemented "at need" when memory resources for tracking the detail become exhausted. I haven't worked out all the details, but I have a rough outline in my head. I wanted to run this set of ideas past you before I put the work in to fully develop it. This would be an alternative to just canceling the oldest running serializable transaction, which is the solution we could use right now to live within some set limit, possibly with (1) or (2) to help push back the point at which that's necessary. Rather than deterministically canceling the oldest active transaction, it would increase the probability of transactions being canceled because of false positives, with the chance we'd get through the peak without any such cancellations. Thoughts? -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2010-09-24T17:06:35Z
On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Kevin Grittner <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote: > Thoughts? Premature optimization is the root of all evil. I'm not convinced that we should tinker with any of this before committing it and getting some real-world experience. It's not going to be perfect in the first version, just like any other major feature. -- Robert Haas EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise Postgres Company
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <kevin.grittner@wicourts.gov> — 2010-09-24T17:35:44Z
Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote: > On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Kevin Grittner > <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote: >> Thoughts? > > Premature optimization is the root of all evil. I'm not convinced > that we should tinker with any of this before committing it and > getting some real-world experience. It's not going to be perfect > in the first version, just like any other major feature. In terms of pure optimization, I totally agree -- that's why I'm submitting early without a number of potential optimizations. I think we're better off getting a solid base and then attempting to prove the merits of each optimization separately. The point Heikki is on about, however, gets into user-facing behavior issues. The current implementation will give users an "out of shared memory" error if they attempt to start a SERIALIZABLE transaction when our preallocated shared memory for tracking such transactions reaches its limit. A fairly easy alternative would be to kill running SERIALIZABLE transactions, starting with the oldest, until a new request can proceed. The question is whether either of these is acceptable behavior for an initial implementation, or whether something fancier is needed up front. Personally, I'd be fine with "out of shared memory" for an excess of SERIALIZABLE transactions for now, and leave refinement for later -- I just want to be clear that there is user-visible behavior involved here. -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2010-09-24T17:48:53Z
On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 1:35 PM, Kevin Grittner <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote: > Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Kevin Grittner >> <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote: >>> Thoughts? >> >> Premature optimization is the root of all evil. I'm not convinced >> that we should tinker with any of this before committing it and >> getting some real-world experience. It's not going to be perfect >> in the first version, just like any other major feature. > > In terms of pure optimization, I totally agree -- that's why I'm > submitting early without a number of potential optimizations. I > think we're better off getting a solid base and then attempting to > prove the merits of each optimization separately. The point Heikki > is on about, however, gets into user-facing behavior issues. The > current implementation will give users an "out of shared memory" > error if they attempt to start a SERIALIZABLE transaction when our > preallocated shared memory for tracking such transactions reaches > its limit. A fairly easy alternative would be to kill running > SERIALIZABLE transactions, starting with the oldest, until a new > request can proceed. The question is whether either of these is > acceptable behavior for an initial implementation, or whether > something fancier is needed up front. > > Personally, I'd be fine with "out of shared memory" for an excess of > SERIALIZABLE transactions for now, and leave refinement for later -- > I just want to be clear that there is user-visible behavior involved > here. Yeah, I understand, but I think the only changes we should make now are things that we're sure are improvements. I haven't read the code, but based on reading the thread so far, we're off into the realm of speculating about trade-offs, and I'm not sure that's a good place for us to be. -- Robert Haas EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise Postgres Company
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Kevin Grittner <kevin.grittner@wicourts.gov> — 2010-09-24T19:22:48Z
Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote: > I think the only changes we should make now are things that we're > sure are improvements. In that vein, anyone who is considering reviewing the patch should check the latest from the git repo or request an incremental patch. I've committed a few things since the last patch post, but it doesn't seem to make sense to repost the whole thing for them. I fixed a bug in the new shared memory list code, fixed a misleading hint, and fixed some whitespace and comment issues. The changes I've committed to the repo so far based on Heikki's comments are, I feel, clear improvements. It was actually fairly embarrassing that I didn't notice some of that myself. > based on reading the thread so far, we're off into the realm of > speculating about trade-offs This latest issue seems that way to me. We're talking about somewhere around 100 kB of shared memory in a 64 bit build with the default number of connections, with a behavior on exhaustion which matches what we do on normal locks. This limit is easier to hit, and we should probably revisit it, but I am eager to get the feature as a whole in front of people, to see how well it works for them in other respects. I'll be quite surprised if we've found all the corner cases, but it is working, and working well, in a variety of tests. It has been for months, really; I've been holding back, as requested, to avoid distracting people from the 9.0 release. -Kevin
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu> — 2010-09-25T12:05:17Z
On Thu, Sep 23, 2010 at 4:08 PM, Kevin Grittner <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote: > One place I'm particularly interested in using such a feature is in > pg_dump. Without it we have the choice of using a SERIALIZABLE > transaction, which might fail or cause failures (which doesn't seem > good for a backup program) or using REPEATABLE READ (to get current > snapshot isolation behavior), which might capture a view of the data > which contains serialization anomalies. I'm puzzled how pg_dump could possibly have serialization anomalies. Snapshot isolation gives pg_dump a view of the database containing all modifications committed before it started and no modifications which committed after it started. Since pg_dump makes no database modifications itself it can always just be taken to occur instantaneously before any transaction which committed after it started. -- greg
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Nicolas Barbier <nicolas.barbier@gmail.com> — 2010-09-25T13:31:17Z
[ Forgot the list, resending. ] 2010/9/25 Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu>: > On Thu, Sep 23, 2010 at 4:08 PM, Kevin Grittner > <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote: > >> One place I'm particularly interested in using such a feature is in >> pg_dump. Without it we have the choice of using a SERIALIZABLE >> transaction, which might fail or cause failures (which doesn't seem >> good for a backup program) or using REPEATABLE READ (to get current >> snapshot isolation behavior), which might capture a view of the data >> which contains serialization anomalies. > > I'm puzzled how pg_dump could possibly have serialization anomalies. > Snapshot isolation gives pg_dump a view of the database containing all > modifications committed before it started and no modifications which > committed after it started. Since pg_dump makes no database > modifications itself it can always just be taken to occur > instantaneously before any transaction which committed after it > started. I guess that Kevin is referring to [1], where the dump would take the role of T3. That would mean that the dump itself must be aborted because it read inconsistent data. AFAICS, whether that reasoning means that a dump can produce an "inconsistent" backup is debatable. After restoring, all transactions that would have been in-flight at the moment the dump took its snapshot are gone, so none of their effects "happened". We would be in exactly the same situation as if all running transactions would be forcibly aborted at the moment that the dump would have started. OTOH, if one would compare the backup with what really happened, things may look inconsistent. The dump would show what T3 witnessed (i.e., the current date is incremented and the receipts table is empty), although the current state of the database system shows otherwise (i.e., the current date is incremented and the receipts table has an entry for the previous date). IOW, one could say that the backup is consistent only if it were never compared against the system as it continued running after the dump took place. This stuff will probably confuse the hell out of most DBAs :-). Nicolas [1] <URL:http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2010-05/msg01360.php>
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-09-25T14:45:28Z
Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu> writes: > On Thu, Sep 23, 2010 at 4:08 PM, Kevin Grittner > <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote: >> One place I'm particularly interested in using such a feature is in >> pg_dump. Without it we have the choice of using a SERIALIZABLE >> transaction, which might fail or cause failures (which doesn't seem >> good for a backup program) or using REPEATABLE READ (to get current >> snapshot isolation behavior), which might capture a view of the data >> which contains serialization anomalies. > I'm puzzled how pg_dump could possibly have serialization anomalies. At the moment, it can't. If this patch means that it can, that's going to be a mighty good reason not to apply the patch. regards, tom lane
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Re: Serializable Snapshot Isolation
Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> — 2010-09-26T03:15:40Z
On Sat, Sep 25, 2010 at 10:45 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu> writes: >> On Thu, Sep 23, 2010 at 4:08 PM, Kevin Grittner >> <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov> wrote: >>> One place I'm particularly interested in using such a feature is in >>> pg_dump. Without it we have the choice of using a SERIALIZABLE >>> transaction, which might fail or cause failures (which doesn't seem >>> good for a backup program) or using REPEATABLE READ (to get current >>> snapshot isolation behavior), which might capture a view of the data >>> which contains serialization anomalies. > >> I'm puzzled how pg_dump could possibly have serialization anomalies. > > At the moment, it can't. If this patch means that it can, that's going > to be a mighty good reason not to apply the patch. It certainly can, as can any other read-only transaction. This has been discussed many times here before with detailed examples, mostly by Kevin. T0 reads A and writes B. T1 then reads B and writes C. T0 commits. pg_dump runs. T1 commits. What is the fully serial order of execution consistent with this chronology? Clearly, T1 must be run before T0, since it doesn't see T0's update to B. But pg_dump sees the effects of T0 but not T1, so T0 must be run before T1. Oops. Now you might say that this won't be a problem for most people in practice, and I think that's true, but it's still unserializable. And pg_dump is the reason, because otherwise T1 then T0 would be a valid serialization. -- Robert Haas EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise Postgres Company