6 PostgreSQL's transaction system is a three-layer system. The bottom layer
7 implements low-level transactions and subtransactions, on top of which rests
8 the mainloop's control code, which in turn implements user-visible
9 transactions and savepoints.
11 The middle layer of code is called by postgres.c before and after the
12 processing of each query, or after detecting an error:
14 StartTransactionCommand
15 CommitTransactionCommand
16 AbortCurrentTransaction
18 Meanwhile, the user can alter the system's state by issuing the SQL commands
19 BEGIN, COMMIT, ROLLBACK, SAVEPOINT, ROLLBACK TO or RELEASE. The traffic cop
20 redirects these calls to the toplevel routines
24 UserAbortTransactionBlock
29 respectively. Depending on the current state of the system, these functions
30 call low level functions to activate the real transaction system:
41 Additionally, within a transaction, CommandCounterIncrement is called to
42 increment the command counter, which allows future commands to "see" the
43 effects of previous commands within the same transaction. Note that this is
44 done automatically by CommitTransactionCommand after each query inside a
45 transaction block, but some utility functions also do it internally to allow
46 some operations (usually in the system catalogs) to be seen by future
47 operations in the same utility command. (For example, in DefineRelation it is
48 done after creating the heap so the pg_class row is visible, to be able to
52 For example, consider the following sequence of user commands:
56 3) INSERT INTO foo VALUES (...)
59 In the main processing loop, this results in the following function call
62 / StartTransactionCommand;
64 1) < ProcessUtility; << BEGIN
65 \ BeginTransactionBlock;
66 \ CommitTransactionCommand;
68 / StartTransactionCommand;
69 2) / ProcessQuery; << SELECT ...
70 \ CommitTransactionCommand;
71 \ CommandCounterIncrement;
73 / StartTransactionCommand;
74 3) / ProcessQuery; << INSERT ...
75 \ CommitTransactionCommand;
76 \ CommandCounterIncrement;
78 / StartTransactionCommand;
79 / ProcessUtility; << COMMIT
80 4) < EndTransactionBlock;
81 \ CommitTransactionCommand;
84 The point of this example is to demonstrate the need for
85 StartTransactionCommand and CommitTransactionCommand to be state smart -- they
86 should call CommandCounterIncrement between the calls to BeginTransactionBlock
87 and EndTransactionBlock and outside these calls they need to do normal start,
88 commit or abort processing.
90 Furthermore, suppose the "SELECT * FROM foo" caused an abort condition. In
91 this case AbortCurrentTransaction is called, and the transaction is put in
92 aborted state. In this state, any user input is ignored except for
93 transaction-termination statements, or ROLLBACK TO <savepoint> commands.
95 Transaction aborts can occur in two ways:
97 1) system dies from some internal cause (syntax error, etc)
98 2) user types ROLLBACK
100 The reason we have to distinguish them is illustrated by the following two
105 1) user types BEGIN 1) user types BEGIN
106 2) user does something 2) user does something
107 3) user does not like what 3) system aborts for some reason
108 she sees and types ABORT (syntax error, etc)
110 In case 1, we want to abort the transaction and return to the default state.
111 In case 2, there may be more commands coming our way which are part of the
112 same transaction block; we have to ignore these commands until we see a COMMIT
115 Internal aborts are handled by AbortCurrentTransaction, while user aborts are
116 handled by UserAbortTransactionBlock. Both of them rely on AbortTransaction
117 to do all the real work. The only difference is what state we enter after
118 AbortTransaction does its work:
120 * AbortCurrentTransaction leaves us in TBLOCK_ABORT,
121 * UserAbortTransactionBlock leaves us in TBLOCK_ABORT_END
123 Low-level transaction abort handling is divided in two phases:
124 * AbortTransaction executes as soon as we realize the transaction has
125 failed. It should release all shared resources (locks etc) so that we do
126 not delay other backends unnecessarily.
127 * CleanupTransaction executes when we finally see a user COMMIT
128 or ROLLBACK command; it cleans things up and gets us out of the transaction
129 completely. In particular, we mustn't destroy TopTransactionContext until
132 Also, note that when a transaction is committed, we don't close it right away.
133 Rather it's put in TBLOCK_END state, which means that when
134 CommitTransactionCommand is called after the query has finished processing,
135 the transaction has to be closed. The distinction is subtle but important,
136 because it means that control will leave the xact.c code with the transaction
137 open, and the main loop will be able to keep processing inside the same
138 transaction. So, in a sense, transaction commit is also handled in two
139 phases, the first at EndTransactionBlock and the second at
140 CommitTransactionCommand (which is where CommitTransaction is actually
143 The rest of the code in xact.c are routines to support the creation and
144 finishing of transactions and subtransactions. For example, AtStart_Memory
145 takes care of initializing the memory subsystem at main transaction start.
148 Subtransaction Handling
149 -----------------------
151 Subtransactions are implemented using a stack of TransactionState structures,
152 each of which has a pointer to its parent transaction's struct. When a new
153 subtransaction is to be opened, PushTransaction is called, which creates a new
154 TransactionState, with its parent link pointing to the current transaction.
155 StartSubTransaction is in charge of initializing the new TransactionState to
156 sane values, and properly initializing other subsystems (AtSubStart routines).
158 When closing a subtransaction, either CommitSubTransaction has to be called
159 (if the subtransaction is committing), or AbortSubTransaction and
160 CleanupSubTransaction (if it's aborting). In either case, PopTransaction is
161 called so the system returns to the parent transaction.
163 One important point regarding subtransaction handling is that several may need
164 to be closed in response to a single user command. That's because savepoints
165 have names, and we allow to commit or rollback a savepoint by name, which is
166 not necessarily the one that was last opened. Also a COMMIT or ROLLBACK
167 command must be able to close out the entire stack. We handle this by having
168 the utility command subroutine mark all the state stack entries as commit-
169 pending or abort-pending, and then when the main loop reaches
170 CommitTransactionCommand, the real work is done. The main point of doing
171 things this way is that if we get an error while popping state stack entries,
172 the remaining stack entries still show what we need to do to finish up.
174 In the case of ROLLBACK TO <savepoint>, we abort all the subtransactions up
175 through the one identified by the savepoint name, and then re-create that
176 subtransaction level with the same name. So it's a completely new
177 subtransaction as far as the internals are concerned.
179 Other subsystems are allowed to start "internal" subtransactions, which are
180 handled by BeginInternalSubtransaction. This is to allow implementing
181 exception handling, e.g. in PL/pgSQL. ReleaseCurrentSubTransaction and
182 RollbackAndReleaseCurrentSubTransaction allows the subsystem to close said
183 subtransactions. The main difference between this and the savepoint/release
184 path is that we execute the complete state transition immediately in each
185 subroutine, rather than deferring some work until CommitTransactionCommand.
186 Another difference is that BeginInternalSubtransaction is allowed when no
187 explicit transaction block has been established, while DefineSavepoint is not.
190 Transaction and Subtransaction Numbering
191 ----------------------------------------
193 Transactions and subtransactions are assigned permanent XIDs only when/if
194 they first do something that requires one --- typically, insert/update/delete
195 a tuple, though there are a few other places that need an XID assigned.
196 If a subtransaction requires an XID, we always first assign one to its
197 parent. This maintains the invariant that child transactions have XIDs later
198 than their parents, which is assumed in a number of places.
200 The subsidiary actions of obtaining a lock on the XID and and entering it into
201 pg_subtrans and PG_PROC are done at the time it is assigned.
203 A transaction that has no XID still needs to be identified for various
204 purposes, notably holding locks. For this purpose we assign a "virtual
205 transaction ID" or VXID to each top-level transaction. VXIDs are formed from
206 two fields, the backendID and a backend-local counter; this arrangement allows
207 assignment of a new VXID at transaction start without any contention for
208 shared memory. To ensure that a VXID isn't re-used too soon after backend
209 exit, we store the last local counter value into shared memory at backend
210 exit, and initialize it from the previous value for the same backendID slot
211 at backend start. All these counters go back to zero at shared memory
212 re-initialization, but that's OK because VXIDs never appear anywhere on-disk.
214 Internally, a backend needs a way to identify subtransactions whether or not
215 they have XIDs; but this need only lasts as long as the parent top transaction
216 endures. Therefore, we have SubTransactionId, which is somewhat like
217 CommandId in that it's generated from a counter that we reset at the start of
218 each top transaction. The top-level transaction itself has SubTransactionId 1,
219 and subtransactions have IDs 2 and up. (Zero is reserved for
220 InvalidSubTransactionId.) Note that subtransactions do not have their
221 own VXIDs; they use the parent top transaction's VXID.
224 Interlocking Transaction Begin, Transaction End, and Snapshots
225 --------------------------------------------------------------
227 We try hard to minimize the amount of overhead and lock contention involved
228 in the frequent activities of beginning/ending a transaction and taking a
229 snapshot. Unfortunately, we must have some interlocking for this, because
230 we must ensure consistency about the commit order of transactions.
231 For example, suppose an UPDATE in xact A is blocked by xact B's prior
232 update of the same row, and xact B is doing commit while xact C gets a
233 snapshot. Xact A can complete and commit as soon as B releases its locks.
234 If xact C's GetSnapshotData sees xact B as still running, then it had
235 better see xact A as still running as well, or it will be able to see two
236 tuple versions - one deleted by xact B and one inserted by xact A. Another
237 reason why this would be bad is that C would see (in the row inserted by A)
238 earlier changes by B, and it would be inconsistent for C not to see any
239 of B's changes elsewhere in the database.
241 Formally, the correctness requirement is "if a snapshot A considers
242 transaction X as committed, and any of transaction X's snapshots considered
243 transaction Y as committed, then snapshot A must consider transaction Y as
246 What we actually enforce is strict serialization of commits and rollbacks
247 with snapshot-taking: we do not allow any transaction to exit the set of
248 running transactions while a snapshot is being taken. (This rule is
249 stronger than necessary for consistency, but is relatively simple to
250 enforce, and it assists with some other issues as explained below.) The
251 implementation of this is that GetSnapshotData takes the ProcArrayLock in
252 shared mode (so that multiple backends can take snapshots in parallel),
253 but ProcArrayEndTransaction must take the ProcArrayLock in exclusive mode
254 while clearing MyProc->xid at transaction end (either commit or abort).
256 ProcArrayEndTransaction also holds the lock while advancing the shared
257 latestCompletedXid variable. This allows GetSnapshotData to use
258 latestCompletedXid + 1 as xmax for its snapshot: there can be no
259 transaction >= this xid value that the snapshot needs to consider as
262 In short, then, the rule is that no transaction may exit the set of
263 currently-running transactions between the time we fetch latestCompletedXid
264 and the time we finish building our snapshot. However, this restriction
265 only applies to transactions that have an XID --- read-only transactions
266 can end without acquiring ProcArrayLock, since they don't affect anyone
267 else's snapshot nor latestCompletedXid.
269 Transaction start, per se, doesn't have any interlocking with these
270 considerations, since we no longer assign an XID immediately at transaction
271 start. But when we do decide to allocate an XID, GetNewTransactionId must
272 store the new XID into the shared ProcArray before releasing XidGenLock.
273 This ensures that all top-level XIDs <= latestCompletedXid are either
274 present in the ProcArray, or not running anymore. (This guarantee doesn't
275 apply to subtransaction XIDs, because of the possibility that there's not
276 room for them in the subxid array; instead we guarantee that they are
277 present or the overflow flag is set.) If a backend released XidGenLock
278 before storing its XID into MyProc, then it would be possible for another
279 backend to allocate and commit a later XID, causing latestCompletedXid to
280 pass the first backend's XID, before that value became visible in the
281 ProcArray. That would break GetOldestXmin, as discussed below.
283 We allow GetNewTransactionId to store the XID into MyProc->xid (or the
284 subxid array) without taking ProcArrayLock. This was once necessary to
285 avoid deadlock; while that is no longer the case, it's still beneficial for
286 performance. We are thereby relying on fetch/store of an XID to be atomic,
287 else other backends might see a partially-set XID. This also means that
288 readers of the ProcArray xid fields must be careful to fetch a value only
289 once, rather than assume they can read it multiple times and get the same
290 answer each time. (Use volatile-qualified pointers when doing this, to
291 ensure that the C compiler does exactly what you tell it to.)
293 Another important activity that uses the shared ProcArray is GetOldestXmin,
294 which must determine a lower bound for the oldest xmin of any active MVCC
295 snapshot, system-wide. Each individual backend advertises the smallest
296 xmin of its own snapshots in MyProc->xmin, or zero if it currently has no
297 live snapshots (eg, if it's between transactions or hasn't yet set a
298 snapshot for a new transaction). GetOldestXmin takes the MIN() of the
299 valid xmin fields. It does this with only shared lock on ProcArrayLock,
300 which means there is a potential race condition against other backends
301 doing GetSnapshotData concurrently: we must be certain that a concurrent
302 backend that is about to set its xmin does not compute an xmin less than
303 what GetOldestXmin returns. We ensure that by including all the active
304 XIDs into the MIN() calculation, along with the valid xmins. The rule that
305 transactions can't exit without taking exclusive ProcArrayLock ensures that
306 concurrent holders of shared ProcArrayLock will compute the same minimum of
307 currently-active XIDs: no xact, in particular not the oldest, can exit
308 while we hold shared ProcArrayLock. So GetOldestXmin's view of the minimum
309 active XID will be the same as that of any concurrent GetSnapshotData, and
310 so it can't produce an overestimate. If there is no active transaction at
311 all, GetOldestXmin returns latestCompletedXid + 1, which is a lower bound
312 for the xmin that might be computed by concurrent or later GetSnapshotData
313 calls. (We know that no XID less than this could be about to appear in
314 the ProcArray, because of the XidGenLock interlock discussed above.)
316 GetSnapshotData also performs an oldest-xmin calculation (which had better
317 match GetOldestXmin's) and stores that into RecentGlobalXmin, which is used
318 for some tuple age cutoff checks where a fresh call of GetOldestXmin seems
319 too expensive. Note that while it is certain that two concurrent
320 executions of GetSnapshotData will compute the same xmin for their own
321 snapshots, as argued above, it is not certain that they will arrive at the
322 same estimate of RecentGlobalXmin. This is because we allow XID-less
323 transactions to clear their MyProc->xmin asynchronously (without taking
324 ProcArrayLock), so one execution might see what had been the oldest xmin,
325 and another not. This is OK since RecentGlobalXmin need only be a valid
326 lower bound. As noted above, we are already assuming that fetch/store
327 of the xid fields is atomic, so assuming it for xmin as well is no extra
331 pg_clog and pg_subtrans
332 -----------------------
334 pg_clog and pg_subtrans are permanent (on-disk) storage of transaction related
335 information. There is a limited number of pages of each kept in memory, so
336 in many cases there is no need to actually read from disk. However, if
337 there's a long running transaction or a backend sitting idle with an open
338 transaction, it may be necessary to be able to read and write this information
339 from disk. They also allow information to be permanent across server restarts.
341 pg_clog records the commit status for each transaction that has been assigned
342 an XID. A transaction can be in progress, committed, aborted, or
343 "sub-committed". This last state means that it's a subtransaction that's no
344 longer running, but its parent has not updated its state yet. It is not
345 necessary to update a subtransaction's transaction status to subcommit, so we
346 can just defer it until main transaction commit. The main role of marking
347 transactions as sub-committed is to provide an atomic commit protocol when
348 transaction status is spread across multiple clog pages. As a result, whenever
349 transaction status spreads across multiple pages we must use a two-phase commit
350 protocol: the first phase is to mark the subtransactions as sub-committed, then
351 we mark the top level transaction and all its subtransactions committed (in
352 that order). Thus, subtransactions that have not aborted appear as in-progress
353 even when they have already finished, and the subcommit status appears as a
354 very short transitory state during main transaction commit. Subtransaction
355 abort is always marked in clog as soon as it occurs. When the transaction
356 status all fit in a single CLOG page, we atomically mark them all as committed
357 without bothering with the intermediate sub-commit state.
359 Savepoints are implemented using subtransactions. A subtransaction is a
360 transaction inside a transaction; its commit or abort status is not only
361 dependent on whether it committed itself, but also whether its parent
362 transaction committed. To implement multiple savepoints in a transaction we
363 allow unlimited transaction nesting depth, so any particular subtransaction's
364 commit state is dependent on the commit status of each and every ancestor
367 The "subtransaction parent" (pg_subtrans) mechanism records, for each
368 transaction with an XID, the TransactionId of its parent transaction. This
369 information is stored as soon as the subtransaction is assigned an XID.
370 Top-level transactions do not have a parent, so they leave their pg_subtrans
371 entries set to the default value of zero (InvalidTransactionId).
373 pg_subtrans is used to check whether the transaction in question is still
374 running --- the main Xid of a transaction is recorded in the PGPROC struct,
375 but since we allow arbitrary nesting of subtransactions, we can't fit all Xids
376 in shared memory, so we have to store them on disk. Note, however, that for
377 each transaction we keep a "cache" of Xids that are known to be part of the
378 transaction tree, so we can skip looking at pg_subtrans unless we know the
379 cache has been overflowed. See storage/ipc/procarray.c for the gory details.
381 slru.c is the supporting mechanism for both pg_clog and pg_subtrans. It
382 implements the LRU policy for in-memory buffer pages. The high-level routines
383 for pg_clog are implemented in transam.c, while the low-level functions are in
384 clog.c. pg_subtrans is contained completely in subtrans.c.
387 Write-Ahead Log Coding
388 ----------------------
390 The WAL subsystem (also called XLOG in the code) exists to guarantee crash
391 recovery. It can also be used to provide point-in-time recovery, as well as
392 hot-standby replication via log shipping. Here are some notes about
393 non-obvious aspects of its design.
395 A basic assumption of a write AHEAD log is that log entries must reach stable
396 storage before the data-page changes they describe. This ensures that
397 replaying the log to its end will bring us to a consistent state where there
398 are no partially-performed transactions. To guarantee this, each data page
399 (either heap or index) is marked with the LSN (log sequence number --- in
400 practice, a WAL file location) of the latest XLOG record affecting the page.
401 Before the bufmgr can write out a dirty page, it must ensure that xlog has
402 been flushed to disk at least up to the page's LSN. This low-level
403 interaction improves performance by not waiting for XLOG I/O until necessary.
404 The LSN check exists only in the shared-buffer manager, not in the local
405 buffer manager used for temp tables; hence operations on temp tables must not
408 During WAL replay, we can check the LSN of a page to detect whether the change
409 recorded by the current log entry is already applied (it has been, if the page
410 LSN is >= the log entry's WAL location).
412 Usually, log entries contain just enough information to redo a single
413 incremental update on a page (or small group of pages). This will work only
414 if the filesystem and hardware implement data page writes as atomic actions,
415 so that a page is never left in a corrupt partly-written state. Since that's
416 often an untenable assumption in practice, we log additional information to
417 allow complete reconstruction of modified pages. The first WAL record
418 affecting a given page after a checkpoint is made to contain a copy of the
419 entire page, and we implement replay by restoring that page copy instead of
420 redoing the update. (This is more reliable than the data storage itself would
421 be because we can check the validity of the WAL record's CRC.) We can detect
422 the "first change after checkpoint" by noting whether the page's old LSN
423 precedes the end of WAL as of the last checkpoint (the RedoRecPtr).
425 The general schema for executing a WAL-logged action is
427 1. Pin and exclusive-lock the shared buffer(s) containing the data page(s)
430 2. START_CRIT_SECTION() (Any error during the next three steps must cause a
431 PANIC because the shared buffers will contain unlogged changes, which we
432 have to ensure don't get to disk. Obviously, you should check conditions
433 such as whether there's enough free space on the page before you start the
436 3. Apply the required changes to the shared buffer(s).
438 4. Mark the shared buffer(s) as dirty with MarkBufferDirty(). (This must
439 happen before the WAL record is inserted; see notes in SyncOneBuffer().)
441 5. Build a WAL log record and pass it to XLogInsert(); then update the page's
442 LSN and TLI using the returned XLOG location. For instance,
444 recptr = XLogInsert(rmgr_id, info, rdata);
446 PageSetLSN(dp, recptr);
447 PageSetTLI(dp, ThisTimeLineID);
449 6. END_CRIT_SECTION()
451 7. Unlock and unpin the buffer(s).
453 XLogInsert's "rdata" argument is an array of pointer/size items identifying
454 chunks of data to be written in the XLOG record, plus optional shared-buffer
455 IDs for chunks that are in shared buffers rather than temporary variables.
456 The "rdata" array must mention (at least once) each of the shared buffers
457 being modified, unless the action is such that the WAL replay routine can
458 reconstruct the entire page contents. XLogInsert includes the logic that
459 tests to see whether a shared buffer has been modified since the last
460 checkpoint. If not, the entire page contents are logged rather than just the
461 portion(s) pointed to by "rdata".
463 Because XLogInsert drops the rdata components associated with buffers it
464 chooses to log in full, the WAL replay routines normally need to test to see
465 which buffers were handled that way --- otherwise they may be misled about
466 what the XLOG record actually contains. XLOG records that describe multi-page
467 changes therefore require some care to design: you must be certain that you
468 know what data is indicated by each "BKP" bit. An example of the trickiness
469 is that in a HEAP_UPDATE record, BKP(1) normally is associated with the source
470 page and BKP(2) is associated with the destination page --- but if these are
471 the same page, only BKP(1) would have been set.
473 For this reason as well as the risk of deadlocking on buffer locks, it's best
474 to design WAL records so that they reflect small atomic actions involving just
475 one or a few pages. The current XLOG infrastructure cannot handle WAL records
476 involving references to more than three shared buffers, anyway.
478 In the case where the WAL record contains enough information to re-generate
479 the entire contents of a page, do *not* show that page's buffer ID in the
480 rdata array, even if some of the rdata items point into the buffer. This is
481 because you don't want XLogInsert to log the whole page contents. The
482 standard replay-routine pattern for this case is
484 reln = XLogOpenRelation(rnode);
485 buffer = XLogReadBuffer(reln, blkno, true);
486 Assert(BufferIsValid(buffer));
487 page = (Page) BufferGetPage(buffer);
489 ... initialize the page ...
491 PageSetLSN(page, lsn);
492 PageSetTLI(page, ThisTimeLineID);
493 MarkBufferDirty(buffer);
494 UnlockReleaseBuffer(buffer);
496 In the case where the WAL record provides only enough information to
497 incrementally update the page, the rdata array *must* mention the buffer
498 ID at least once; otherwise there is no defense against torn-page problems.
499 The standard replay-routine pattern for this case is
501 if (record->xl_info & XLR_BKP_BLOCK_n)
502 << do nothing, page was rewritten from logged copy >>;
504 reln = XLogOpenRelation(rnode);
505 buffer = XLogReadBuffer(reln, blkno, false);
506 if (!BufferIsValid(buffer))
507 << do nothing, page has been deleted >>;
508 page = (Page) BufferGetPage(buffer);
510 if (XLByteLE(lsn, PageGetLSN(page)))
512 /* changes are already applied */
513 UnlockReleaseBuffer(buffer);
517 ... apply the change ...
519 PageSetLSN(page, lsn);
520 PageSetTLI(page, ThisTimeLineID);
521 MarkBufferDirty(buffer);
522 UnlockReleaseBuffer(buffer);
524 As noted above, for a multi-page update you need to be able to determine
525 which XLR_BKP_BLOCK_n flag applies to each page. If a WAL record reflects
526 a combination of fully-rewritable and incremental updates, then the rewritable
527 pages don't count for the XLR_BKP_BLOCK_n numbering. (XLR_BKP_BLOCK_n is
528 associated with the n'th distinct buffer ID seen in the "rdata" array, and
529 per the above discussion, fully-rewritable buffers shouldn't be mentioned in
532 Due to all these constraints, complex changes (such as a multilevel index
533 insertion) normally need to be described by a series of atomic-action WAL
534 records. What do you do if the intermediate states are not self-consistent?
535 The answer is that the WAL replay logic has to be able to fix things up.
536 In btree indexes, for example, a page split requires insertion of a new key in
537 the parent btree level, but for locking reasons this has to be reflected by
538 two separate WAL records. The replay code has to remember "unfinished" split
539 operations, and match them up to subsequent insertions in the parent level.
540 If no matching insert has been found by the time the WAL replay ends, the
541 replay code has to do the insertion on its own to restore the index to
542 consistency. Such insertions occur after WAL is operational, so they can
543 and should write WAL records for the additional generated actions.
549 As of PostgreSQL 8.3 it is possible to perform asynchronous commits - i.e.,
550 we don't wait while the WAL record for the commit is fsync'ed.
551 We perform an asynchronous commit when synchronous_commit = off. Instead
552 of performing an XLogFlush() up to the LSN of the commit, we merely note
553 the LSN in shared memory. The backend then continues with other work.
554 We record the LSN only for an asynchronous commit, not an abort; there's
555 never any need to flush an abort record, since the presumption after a
556 crash would be that the transaction aborted anyway.
558 We always force synchronous commit when the transaction is deleting
559 relations, to ensure the commit record is down to disk before the relations
560 are removed from the filesystem. Also, certain utility commands that have
561 non-roll-backable side effects (such as filesystem changes) force sync
562 commit to minimize the window in which the filesystem change has been made
563 but the transaction isn't guaranteed committed.
565 Every wal_writer_delay milliseconds, the walwriter process performs an
566 XLogBackgroundFlush(). This checks the location of the last completely
567 filled WAL page. If that has moved forwards, then we write all the changed
568 buffers up to that point, so that under full load we write only whole
569 buffers. If there has been a break in activity and the current WAL page is
570 the same as before, then we find out the LSN of the most recent
571 asynchronous commit, and flush up to that point, if required (i.e.,
572 if it's in the current WAL page). This arrangement in itself would
573 guarantee that an async commit record reaches disk during at worst the
574 second walwriter cycle after the transaction completes. However, we also
575 allow XLogFlush to flush full buffers "flexibly" (ie, not wrapping around
576 at the end of the circular WAL buffer area), so as to minimize the number
577 of writes issued under high load when multiple WAL pages are filled per
578 walwriter cycle. This makes the worst-case delay three walwriter cycles.
580 There are some other subtle points to consider with asynchronous commits.
581 First, for each page of CLOG we must remember the LSN of the latest commit
582 affecting the page, so that we can enforce the same flush-WAL-before-write
583 rule that we do for ordinary relation pages. Otherwise the record of the
584 commit might reach disk before the WAL record does. Again, abort records
585 need not factor into this consideration.
587 In fact, we store more than one LSN for each clog page. This relates to
588 the way we set transaction status hint bits during visibility tests.
589 We must not set a transaction-committed hint bit on a relation page and
590 have that record make it to disk prior to the WAL record of the commit.
591 Since visibility tests are normally made while holding buffer share locks,
592 we do not have the option of changing the page's LSN to guarantee WAL
593 synchronization. Instead, we defer the setting of the hint bit if we have
594 not yet flushed WAL as far as the LSN associated with the transaction.
595 This requires tracking the LSN of each unflushed async commit. It is
596 convenient to associate this data with clog buffers: because we will flush
597 WAL before writing a clog page, we know that we do not need to remember a
598 transaction's LSN longer than the clog page holding its commit status
599 remains in memory. However, the naive approach of storing an LSN for each
600 clog position is unattractive: the LSNs are 32x bigger than the two-bit
601 commit status fields, and so we'd need 256K of additional shared memory for
602 each 8K clog buffer page. We choose instead to store a smaller number of
603 LSNs per page, where each LSN is the highest LSN associated with any
604 transaction commit in a contiguous range of transaction IDs on that page.
605 This saves storage at the price of some possibly-unnecessary delay in
606 setting transaction hint bits.
608 How many transactions should share the same cached LSN (N)? If the
609 system's workload consists only of small async-commit transactions, then
610 it's reasonable to have N similar to the number of transactions per
611 walwriter cycle, since that is the granularity with which transactions will
612 become truly committed (and thus hintable) anyway. The worst case is where
613 a sync-commit xact shares a cached LSN with an async-commit xact that
614 commits a bit later; even though we paid to sync the first xact to disk,
615 we won't be able to hint its outputs until the second xact is sync'd, up to
616 three walwriter cycles later. This argues for keeping N (the group size)
617 as small as possible. For the moment we are setting the group size to 32,
618 which makes the LSN cache space the same size as the actual clog buffer
619 space (independently of BLCKSZ).
621 It is useful that we can run both synchronous and asynchronous commit
622 transactions concurrently, but the safety of this is perhaps not
623 immediately obvious. Assume we have two transactions, T1 and T2. The Log
624 Sequence Number (LSN) is the point in the WAL sequence where a transaction
625 commit is recorded, so LSN1 and LSN2 are the commit records of those
626 transactions. If T2 can see changes made by T1 then when T2 commits it
627 must be true that LSN2 follows LSN1. Thus when T2 commits it is certain
628 that all of the changes made by T1 are also now recorded in the WAL. This
629 is true whether T1 was asynchronous or synchronous. As a result, it is
630 safe for asynchronous commits and synchronous commits to work concurrently
631 without endangering data written by synchronous commits. Sub-transactions
632 are not important here since the final write to disk only occurs at the
633 commit of the top level transaction.
635 Changes to data blocks cannot reach disk unless WAL is flushed up to the
636 point of the LSN of the data blocks. Any attempt to write unsafe data to
637 disk will trigger a write which ensures the safety of all data written by
638 that and prior transactions. Data blocks and clog pages are both protected
641 Changes to a temp table are not WAL-logged, hence could reach disk in
642 advance of T1's commit, but we don't care since temp table contents don't
643 survive crashes anyway.
645 Database writes made via any of the paths we have introduced to avoid WAL
646 overhead for bulk updates are also safe. In these cases it's entirely
647 possible for the data to reach disk before T1's commit, because T1 will
648 fsync it down to disk without any sort of interlock, as soon as it finishes
649 the bulk update. However, all these paths are designed to write data that
650 no other transaction can see until after T1 commits. The situation is thus
651 not different from ordinary WAL-logged updates.