In the previous
blogpost we saw about non blocking updates introduces in Oracle 23c, now
lets explore what’s going on with this feature
To get this
non-blocking updates to work, we have this new syntax in Oracle 23c to define
the column involved in concurrent updates (column Y) as “reservable”
alter table t
modify y reservable;
“reservable” is
there to tell the database that rather than locking the rows/data immediately
-when the transaction begins- we would like to lock the row/data at some point
in time in future.
Lets now repeat
the demo – first session do this
demo@FREEPDB1> @sid
INST_ SESSION_ID
----- ----------
1 48
demo@FREEPDB1> create
table t(x int primary key, y number reservable);
demo@FREEPDB1> insert into t(x,y) values(1,1);
demo@FREEPDB1> commit;
demo@FREEPDB1> select * from t;
X Y
---------- ----------
1 1
I am going to
run this update from session #1
demo@FREEPDB1> update t
set y = y+1 where x = 1;
1 row updated.
demo@FREEPDB1>
from session #2
do a similar update
demo@FREEPDB1> @sid
INST_ SESSION_ID
----- ----------
1 61
demo@FREEPDB1> select *
from t;
X Y
---------- ----------
1 1
demo@FREEPDB1> update t
set y = y+1 where x = 1;
1 row updated.
demo@FREEPDB1>
this session
also updates the same row as the session #1 and it went fine without any
blocking, lets continue and commit changes in session #2 and view the changes
demo@FREEPDB1> commit;
Commit complete.
demo@FREEPDB1> select *
from t;
X Y
---------- ----------
1 2
demo@FREEPDB1>
we can see that
the value of the column Y got incremented by one – due to the update command – now
go back to session #1 and do commit and see the changes.
demo@FREEPDB1> @sid
INST_ SESSION_ID
----- ----------
1 48
demo@FREEPDB1> select *
from t;
X Y
---------- ----------
1 2
demo@FREEPDB1> commit;
Commit complete.
demo@FREEPDB1> select *
from t;
X Y
---------- ----------
1 3
demo@FREEPDB1>
we can see
these all can work, so the real question is how this works? Do we have multiple
lock on the same row? No not really. If we look into the data dictionary after
a column defined as RESERVABLE, an interesting internal Journal table created
by the database will be created to keep track of changes to that reservable
columns.
demo@FREEPDB1> select
table_name
2 from user_tables
3 where table_name like '%'||(
4 select object_id
5 from user_objects
6 where object_name ='T'
7 and object_type ='TABLE') ;
TABLE_NAME
------------------------------
SYS_RESERVJRNL_118070
This journal
table is like a Queue table, if any database transactions are there to update
the “reservable” column in the table, let’s not update those values instead put
all these changes into the queue table and when commit happens, we will reply
the changes in order from the queue to make sure we now serialize the changes
without locking issues. If we describe this journal table, here is the list of
columns it has
demo@FREEPDB1> desc
SYS_RESERVJRNL_118070
Name Null? Type
----------------------------------- -------- -------------------------
ORA_SAGA_ID$ RAW(16)
ORA_TXN_ID$ RAW(8)
ORA_STATUS$ CHAR(12)
ORA_STMT_TYPE$ CHAR(16)
X NOT NULL NUMBER(38)
Y_OP CHAR(7)
Y_RESERVED NUMBER
To see what is
going on with these journal table, lets do some transaction and look into the
entries of these journal tables.
demo@FREEPDB1> @sid
INST_ SESSION_ID
----- ----------
1 48
demo@FREEPDB1> update t
set y = y+1 where x = 1;
1 row updated.
demo@FREEPDB1> select *
from SYS_RESERVJRNL_118070 ;
ORA_SAGA_ID$ ORA_TXN_ID$ ORA_STATUS$ ORA_STMT_TYPE$ X Y_OP Y_RESERVED
-------------- ---------------- ------------ ---------------- -- ---- ----------
030020004B060000 ACTIVE UPDATE 1 + 1
demo@FREEPDB1>
we haven’t
committed those transaction, but what happens is we didn’t updated those values
or even locked them, instead we took those changes and got inserted into
Journal tables. So when we commit we go through this Journal table and we roll
these changes to the real tables, and that is how it works.
So when we say
multiple transactions locking the same row in Oracle 23c onwards it means we
are really deferring the locks until commit time and roll them in sensible
order, so it not really a concurrent locks, instead this feature was a kind of
deferrable locks and replay them from a journal table and apply them in correct
order.
----- ----------
1 48
demo@FREEPDB1> insert into t(x,y) values(1,1);
demo@FREEPDB1> commit;
demo@FREEPDB1> select * from t;
---------- ----------
1 1
----- ----------
1 61
---------- ----------
1 1
---------- ----------
1 2
----- ----------
1 48
---------- ----------
1 2
---------- ----------
1 3
2 from user_tables
3 where table_name like '%'||(
4 select object_id
5 from user_objects
6 where object_name ='T'
7 and object_type ='TABLE') ;
------------------------------
SYS_RESERVJRNL_118070
Name Null? Type
----------------------------------- -------- -------------------------
ORA_SAGA_ID$ RAW(16)
ORA_TXN_ID$ RAW(8)
ORA_STATUS$ CHAR(12)
ORA_STMT_TYPE$ CHAR(16)
X NOT NULL NUMBER(38)
Y_OP CHAR(7)
Y_RESERVED NUMBER
----- ----------
1 48
-------------- ---------------- ------------ ---------------- -- ---- ----------
030020004B060000 ACTIVE UPDATE 1 + 1
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