postgresql/src/backend/access/heap/pruneheap.c

1214 lines
37 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* pruneheap.c
* heap page pruning and HOT-chain management code
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2023, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* src/backend/access/heap/pruneheap.c
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include "access/heapam.h"
#include "access/heapam_xlog.h"
#include "access/htup_details.h"
#include "access/transam.h"
#include "access/xlog.h"
#include "access/xloginsert.h"
#include "catalog/catalog.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "pgstat.h"
#include "storage/bufmgr.h"
#include "utils/snapmgr.h"
#include "utils/rel.h"
#include "utils/snapmgr.h"
/* Working data for heap_page_prune and subroutines */
typedef struct
{
Relation rel;
/* tuple visibility test, initialized for the relation */
GlobalVisState *vistest;
/*
* Thresholds set by TransactionIdLimitedForOldSnapshots() if they have
* been computed (done on demand, and only if
* OldSnapshotThresholdActive()). The first time a tuple is about to be
* removed based on the limited horizon, old_snap_used is set to true, and
* SetOldSnapshotThresholdTimestamp() is called. See
* heap_prune_satisfies_vacuum().
*/
TimestampTz old_snap_ts;
TransactionId old_snap_xmin;
bool old_snap_used;
TransactionId new_prune_xid; /* new prune hint value for page */
TransactionId snapshotConflictHorizon; /* latest xid removed */
int nredirected; /* numbers of entries in arrays below */
int ndead;
int nunused;
/* arrays that accumulate indexes of items to be changed */
OffsetNumber redirected[MaxHeapTuplesPerPage * 2];
OffsetNumber nowdead[MaxHeapTuplesPerPage];
OffsetNumber nowunused[MaxHeapTuplesPerPage];
/*
* marked[i] is true if item i is entered in one of the above arrays.
*
* This needs to be MaxHeapTuplesPerPage + 1 long as FirstOffsetNumber is
* 1. Otherwise every access would need to subtract 1.
*/
bool marked[MaxHeapTuplesPerPage + 1];
/*
* Tuple visibility is only computed once for each tuple, for correctness
* and efficiency reasons; see comment in heap_page_prune() for details.
* This is of type int8[], instead of HTSV_Result[], so we can use -1 to
* indicate no visibility has been computed, e.g. for LP_DEAD items.
*
* Same indexing as ->marked.
*/
int8 htsv[MaxHeapTuplesPerPage + 1];
} PruneState;
/* Local functions */
static HTSV_Result heap_prune_satisfies_vacuum(PruneState *prstate,
HeapTuple tup,
Buffer buffer);
static int heap_prune_chain(Buffer buffer,
OffsetNumber rootoffnum,
PruneState *prstate);
static void heap_prune_record_prunable(PruneState *prstate, TransactionId xid);
static void heap_prune_record_redirect(PruneState *prstate,
OffsetNumber offnum, OffsetNumber rdoffnum);
static void heap_prune_record_dead(PruneState *prstate, OffsetNumber offnum);
static void heap_prune_record_unused(PruneState *prstate, OffsetNumber offnum);
static void page_verify_redirects(Page page);
/*
* Optionally prune and repair fragmentation in the specified page.
*
* This is an opportunistic function. It will perform housekeeping
* only if the page heuristically looks like a candidate for pruning and we
* can acquire buffer cleanup lock without blocking.
*
* Note: this is called quite often. It's important that it fall out quickly
* if there's not any use in pruning.
*
* Caller must have pin on the buffer, and must *not* have a lock on it.
*/
void
heap_page_prune_opt(Relation relation, Buffer buffer)
{
Page page = BufferGetPage(buffer);
TransactionId prune_xid;
GlobalVisState *vistest;
TransactionId limited_xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
TimestampTz limited_ts = 0;
Size minfree;
/*
* We can't write WAL in recovery mode, so there's no point trying to
* clean the page. The primary will likely issue a cleaning WAL record
* soon anyway, so this is no particular loss.
*/
if (RecoveryInProgress())
return;
/*
* XXX: Magic to keep old_snapshot_threshold tests appear "working". They
* currently are broken, and discussion of what to do about them is
* ongoing. See
* https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/20200403001235.e6jfdll3gh2ygbuc%40alap3.anarazel.de
*/
if (old_snapshot_threshold == 0)
SnapshotTooOldMagicForTest();
/*
* First check whether there's any chance there's something to prune,
* determining the appropriate horizon is a waste if there's no prune_xid
* (i.e. no updates/deletes left potentially dead tuples around).
*/
prune_xid = ((PageHeader) page)->pd_prune_xid;
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(prune_xid))
return;
/*
* Check whether prune_xid indicates that there may be dead rows that can
* be cleaned up.
*
* It is OK to check the old snapshot limit before acquiring the cleanup
* lock because the worst that can happen is that we are not quite as
* aggressive about the cleanup (by however many transaction IDs are
* consumed between this point and acquiring the lock). This allows us to
* save significant overhead in the case where the page is found not to be
* prunable.
*
* Even if old_snapshot_threshold is set, we first check whether the page
* can be pruned without. Both because
* TransactionIdLimitedForOldSnapshots() is not cheap, and because not
* unnecessarily relying on old_snapshot_threshold avoids causing
* conflicts.
*/
vistest = GlobalVisTestFor(relation);
if (!GlobalVisTestIsRemovableXid(vistest, prune_xid))
{
if (!OldSnapshotThresholdActive())
return;
if (!TransactionIdLimitedForOldSnapshots(GlobalVisTestNonRemovableHorizon(vistest),
relation,
&limited_xmin, &limited_ts))
return;
if (!TransactionIdPrecedes(prune_xid, limited_xmin))
return;
}
/*
* We prune when a previous UPDATE failed to find enough space on the page
* for a new tuple version, or when free space falls below the relation's
* fill-factor target (but not less than 10%).
*
* Checking free space here is questionable since we aren't holding any
* lock on the buffer; in the worst case we could get a bogus answer. It's
* unlikely to be *seriously* wrong, though, since reading either pd_lower
* or pd_upper is probably atomic. Avoiding taking a lock seems more
* important than sometimes getting a wrong answer in what is after all
* just a heuristic estimate.
*/
minfree = RelationGetTargetPageFreeSpace(relation,
HEAP_DEFAULT_FILLFACTOR);
minfree = Max(minfree, BLCKSZ / 10);
if (PageIsFull(page) || PageGetHeapFreeSpace(page) < minfree)
{
/* OK, try to get exclusive buffer lock */
if (!ConditionalLockBufferForCleanup(buffer))
return;
/*
* Now that we have buffer lock, get accurate information about the
* page's free space, and recheck the heuristic about whether to
* prune.
*/
if (PageIsFull(page) || PageGetHeapFreeSpace(page) < minfree)
{
int ndeleted,
nnewlpdead;
ndeleted = heap_page_prune(relation, buffer, vistest, limited_xmin,
limited_ts, &nnewlpdead, NULL);
/*
* Report the number of tuples reclaimed to pgstats. This is
* ndeleted minus the number of newly-LP_DEAD-set items.
*
* We derive the number of dead tuples like this to avoid totally
* forgetting about items that were set to LP_DEAD, since they
* still need to be cleaned up by VACUUM. We only want to count
* heap-only tuples that just became LP_UNUSED in our report,
* which don't.
*
* VACUUM doesn't have to compensate in the same way when it
* tracks ndeleted, since it will set the same LP_DEAD items to
* LP_UNUSED separately.
*/
if (ndeleted > nnewlpdead)
pgstat_update_heap_dead_tuples(relation,
ndeleted - nnewlpdead);
}
/* And release buffer lock */
LockBuffer(buffer, BUFFER_LOCK_UNLOCK);
/*
* We avoid reuse of any free space created on the page by unrelated
* UPDATEs/INSERTs by opting to not update the FSM at this point. The
* free space should be reused by UPDATEs to *this* page.
*/
}
}
/*
* Prune and repair fragmentation in the specified page.
*
* Caller must have pin and buffer cleanup lock on the page. Note that we
* don't update the FSM information for page on caller's behalf. Caller might
* also need to account for a reduction in the length of the line pointer
* array following array truncation by us.
*
* vistest is used to distinguish whether tuples are DEAD or RECENTLY_DEAD
* (see heap_prune_satisfies_vacuum and
* HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum). old_snap_xmin / old_snap_ts need to
* either have been set by TransactionIdLimitedForOldSnapshots, or
* InvalidTransactionId/0 respectively.
*
* Sets *nnewlpdead for caller, indicating the number of items that were
* newly set LP_DEAD during prune operation.
*
* off_loc is the offset location required by the caller to use in error
* callback.
*
* Returns the number of tuples deleted from the page during this call.
*/
int
heap_page_prune(Relation relation, Buffer buffer,
GlobalVisState *vistest,
TransactionId old_snap_xmin,
TimestampTz old_snap_ts,
int *nnewlpdead,
OffsetNumber *off_loc)
{
int ndeleted = 0;
Page page = BufferGetPage(buffer);
BlockNumber blockno = BufferGetBlockNumber(buffer);
OffsetNumber offnum,
maxoff;
PruneState prstate;
HeapTupleData tup;
/*
* Our strategy is to scan the page and make lists of items to change,
* then apply the changes within a critical section. This keeps as much
* logic as possible out of the critical section, and also ensures that
* WAL replay will work the same as the normal case.
*
* First, initialize the new pd_prune_xid value to zero (indicating no
* prunable tuples). If we find any tuples which may soon become
* prunable, we will save the lowest relevant XID in new_prune_xid. Also
* initialize the rest of our working state.
*/
prstate.new_prune_xid = InvalidTransactionId;
prstate.rel = relation;
prstate.vistest = vistest;
prstate.old_snap_xmin = old_snap_xmin;
prstate.old_snap_ts = old_snap_ts;
prstate.old_snap_used = false;
prstate.snapshotConflictHorizon = InvalidTransactionId;
prstate.nredirected = prstate.ndead = prstate.nunused = 0;
memset(prstate.marked, 0, sizeof(prstate.marked));
maxoff = PageGetMaxOffsetNumber(page);
tup.t_tableOid = RelationGetRelid(prstate.rel);
/*
* Determine HTSV for all tuples.
*
* This is required for correctness to deal with cases where running HTSV
* twice could result in different results (e.g. RECENTLY_DEAD can turn to
* DEAD if another checked item causes GlobalVisTestIsRemovableFullXid()
* to update the horizon, INSERT_IN_PROGRESS can change to DEAD if the
* inserting transaction aborts, ...). That in turn could cause
* heap_prune_chain() to behave incorrectly if a tuple is reached twice,
* once directly via a heap_prune_chain() and once following a HOT chain.
*
* It's also good for performance. Most commonly tuples within a page are
* stored at decreasing offsets (while the items are stored at increasing
* offsets). When processing all tuples on a page this leads to reading
* memory at decreasing offsets within a page, with a variable stride.
* That's hard for CPU prefetchers to deal with. Processing the items in
* reverse order (and thus the tuples in increasing order) increases
* prefetching efficiency significantly / decreases the number of cache
* misses.
*/
for (offnum = maxoff;
offnum >= FirstOffsetNumber;
offnum = OffsetNumberPrev(offnum))
{
ItemId itemid = PageGetItemId(page, offnum);
HeapTupleHeader htup;
/* Nothing to do if slot doesn't contain a tuple */
if (!ItemIdIsNormal(itemid))
{
prstate.htsv[offnum] = -1;
continue;
}
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(page, itemid);
tup.t_data = htup;
tup.t_len = ItemIdGetLength(itemid);
ItemPointerSet(&(tup.t_self), blockno, offnum);
/*
* Set the offset number so that we can display it along with any
* error that occurred while processing this tuple.
*/
if (off_loc)
*off_loc = offnum;
prstate.htsv[offnum] = heap_prune_satisfies_vacuum(&prstate, &tup,
buffer);
}
/* Scan the page */
for (offnum = FirstOffsetNumber;
offnum <= maxoff;
offnum = OffsetNumberNext(offnum))
{
ItemId itemid;
/* Ignore items already processed as part of an earlier chain */
if (prstate.marked[offnum])
continue;
/* see preceding loop */
if (off_loc)
*off_loc = offnum;
/* Nothing to do if slot is empty or already dead */
itemid = PageGetItemId(page, offnum);
if (!ItemIdIsUsed(itemid) || ItemIdIsDead(itemid))
continue;
/* Process this item or chain of items */
ndeleted += heap_prune_chain(buffer, offnum, &prstate);
}
/* Clear the offset information once we have processed the given page. */
if (off_loc)
*off_loc = InvalidOffsetNumber;
/* Any error while applying the changes is critical */
START_CRIT_SECTION();
/* Have we found any prunable items? */
if (prstate.nredirected > 0 || prstate.ndead > 0 || prstate.nunused > 0)
{
/*
* Apply the planned item changes, then repair page fragmentation, and
* update the page's hint bit about whether it has free line pointers.
*/
heap_page_prune_execute(buffer,
prstate.redirected, prstate.nredirected,
prstate.nowdead, prstate.ndead,
prstate.nowunused, prstate.nunused);
/*
* Update the page's pd_prune_xid field to either zero, or the lowest
* XID of any soon-prunable tuple.
*/
((PageHeader) page)->pd_prune_xid = prstate.new_prune_xid;
/*
* Also clear the "page is full" flag, since there's no point in
* repeating the prune/defrag process until something else happens to
* the page.
*/
PageClearFull(page);
MarkBufferDirty(buffer);
/*
* Emit a WAL XLOG_HEAP2_PRUNE record showing what we did
*/
if (RelationNeedsWAL(relation))
{
xl_heap_prune xlrec;
XLogRecPtr recptr;
xlrec.isCatalogRel = RelationIsAccessibleInLogicalDecoding(relation);
xlrec.snapshotConflictHorizon = prstate.snapshotConflictHorizon;
xlrec.nredirected = prstate.nredirected;
xlrec.ndead = prstate.ndead;
XLogBeginInsert();
XLogRegisterData((char *) &xlrec, SizeOfHeapPrune);
XLogRegisterBuffer(0, buffer, REGBUF_STANDARD);
/*
* The OffsetNumber arrays are not actually in the buffer, but we
* pretend that they are. When XLogInsert stores the whole
* buffer, the offset arrays need not be stored too.
*/
if (prstate.nredirected > 0)
XLogRegisterBufData(0, (char *) prstate.redirected,
prstate.nredirected *
sizeof(OffsetNumber) * 2);
if (prstate.ndead > 0)
XLogRegisterBufData(0, (char *) prstate.nowdead,
prstate.ndead * sizeof(OffsetNumber));
if (prstate.nunused > 0)
XLogRegisterBufData(0, (char *) prstate.nowunused,
prstate.nunused * sizeof(OffsetNumber));
recptr = XLogInsert(RM_HEAP2_ID, XLOG_HEAP2_PRUNE);
PageSetLSN(BufferGetPage(buffer), recptr);
}
}
else
{
/*
* If we didn't prune anything, but have found a new value for the
* pd_prune_xid field, update it and mark the buffer dirty. This is
* treated as a non-WAL-logged hint.
*
* Also clear the "page is full" flag if it is set, since there's no
* point in repeating the prune/defrag process until something else
* happens to the page.
*/
if (((PageHeader) page)->pd_prune_xid != prstate.new_prune_xid ||
PageIsFull(page))
{
((PageHeader) page)->pd_prune_xid = prstate.new_prune_xid;
PageClearFull(page);
MarkBufferDirtyHint(buffer, true);
}
}
END_CRIT_SECTION();
/* Record number of newly-set-LP_DEAD items for caller */
*nnewlpdead = prstate.ndead;
return ndeleted;
}
/*
* Perform visibility checks for heap pruning.
*
* This is more complicated than just using GlobalVisTestIsRemovableXid()
* because of old_snapshot_threshold. We only want to increase the threshold
* that triggers errors for old snapshots when we actually decide to remove a
* row based on the limited horizon.
*
* Due to its cost we also only want to call
* TransactionIdLimitedForOldSnapshots() if necessary, i.e. we might not have
* done so in heap_page_prune_opt() if pd_prune_xid was old enough. But we
* still want to be able to remove rows that are too new to be removed
* according to prstate->vistest, but that can be removed based on
* old_snapshot_threshold. So we call TransactionIdLimitedForOldSnapshots() on
* demand in here, if appropriate.
*/
static HTSV_Result
heap_prune_satisfies_vacuum(PruneState *prstate, HeapTuple tup, Buffer buffer)
{
HTSV_Result res;
TransactionId dead_after;
res = HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuumHorizon(tup, buffer, &dead_after);
if (res != HEAPTUPLE_RECENTLY_DEAD)
return res;
/*
* If we are already relying on the limited xmin, there is no need to
* delay doing so anymore.
*/
if (prstate->old_snap_used)
{
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(prstate->old_snap_xmin));
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(dead_after, prstate->old_snap_xmin))
res = HEAPTUPLE_DEAD;
return res;
}
/*
* First check if GlobalVisTestIsRemovableXid() is sufficient to find the
* row dead. If not, and old_snapshot_threshold is enabled, try to use the
* lowered horizon.
*/
if (GlobalVisTestIsRemovableXid(prstate->vistest, dead_after))
res = HEAPTUPLE_DEAD;
else if (OldSnapshotThresholdActive())
{
/* haven't determined limited horizon yet, requests */
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(prstate->old_snap_xmin))
{
TransactionId horizon =
GlobalVisTestNonRemovableHorizon(prstate->vistest);
TransactionIdLimitedForOldSnapshots(horizon, prstate->rel,
&prstate->old_snap_xmin,
&prstate->old_snap_ts);
}
if (TransactionIdIsValid(prstate->old_snap_xmin) &&
TransactionIdPrecedes(dead_after, prstate->old_snap_xmin))
{
/*
* About to remove row based on snapshot_too_old. Need to raise
* the threshold so problematic accesses would error.
*/
Assert(!prstate->old_snap_used);
SetOldSnapshotThresholdTimestamp(prstate->old_snap_ts,
prstate->old_snap_xmin);
prstate->old_snap_used = true;
res = HEAPTUPLE_DEAD;
}
}
return res;
}
/*
* Prune specified line pointer or a HOT chain originating at line pointer.
*
* If the item is an index-referenced tuple (i.e. not a heap-only tuple),
* the HOT chain is pruned by removing all DEAD tuples at the start of the HOT
* chain. We also prune any RECENTLY_DEAD tuples preceding a DEAD tuple.
* This is OK because a RECENTLY_DEAD tuple preceding a DEAD tuple is really
* DEAD, our visibility test is just too coarse to detect it.
*
* In general, pruning must never leave behind a DEAD tuple that still has
* tuple storage. VACUUM isn't prepared to deal with that case. That's why
* VACUUM prunes the same heap page a second time (without dropping its lock
* in the interim) when it sees a newly DEAD tuple that we initially saw as
* in-progress. Retrying pruning like this can only happen when an inserting
* transaction concurrently aborts.
*
* The root line pointer is redirected to the tuple immediately after the
* latest DEAD tuple. If all tuples in the chain are DEAD, the root line
* pointer is marked LP_DEAD. (This includes the case of a DEAD simple
* tuple, which we treat as a chain of length 1.)
*
* We don't actually change the page here. We just add entries to the arrays in
* prstate showing the changes to be made. Items to be redirected are added
* to the redirected[] array (two entries per redirection); items to be set to
* LP_DEAD state are added to nowdead[]; and items to be set to LP_UNUSED
* state are added to nowunused[].
*
* Returns the number of tuples (to be) deleted from the page.
*/
static int
heap_prune_chain(Buffer buffer, OffsetNumber rootoffnum, PruneState *prstate)
{
int ndeleted = 0;
Page dp = (Page) BufferGetPage(buffer);
TransactionId priorXmax = InvalidTransactionId;
ItemId rootlp;
HeapTupleHeader htup;
OffsetNumber latestdead = InvalidOffsetNumber,
maxoff = PageGetMaxOffsetNumber(dp),
offnum;
OffsetNumber chainitems[MaxHeapTuplesPerPage];
int nchain = 0,
i;
rootlp = PageGetItemId(dp, rootoffnum);
/*
* If it's a heap-only tuple, then it is not the start of a HOT chain.
*/
if (ItemIdIsNormal(rootlp))
{
Assert(prstate->htsv[rootoffnum] != -1);
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(dp, rootlp);
if (HeapTupleHeaderIsHeapOnly(htup))
{
/*
* If the tuple is DEAD and doesn't chain to anything else, mark
* it unused immediately. (If it does chain, we can only remove
* it as part of pruning its chain.)
*
* We need this primarily to handle aborted HOT updates, that is,
* XMIN_INVALID heap-only tuples. Those might not be linked to by
* any chain, since the parent tuple might be re-updated before
* any pruning occurs. So we have to be able to reap them
* separately from chain-pruning. (Note that
* HeapTupleHeaderIsHotUpdated will never return true for an
* XMIN_INVALID tuple, so this code will work even when there were
* sequential updates within the aborted transaction.)
*
* Note that we might first arrive at a dead heap-only tuple
* either here or while following a chain below. Whichever path
* gets there first will mark the tuple unused.
*/
if (prstate->htsv[rootoffnum] == HEAPTUPLE_DEAD &&
!HeapTupleHeaderIsHotUpdated(htup))
{
heap_prune_record_unused(prstate, rootoffnum);
HeapTupleHeaderAdvanceConflictHorizon(htup,
&prstate->snapshotConflictHorizon);
ndeleted++;
}
/* Nothing more to do */
return ndeleted;
}
}
/* Start from the root tuple */
offnum = rootoffnum;
/* while not end of the chain */
for (;;)
{
ItemId lp;
bool tupdead,
recent_dead;
/* Sanity check (pure paranoia) */
if (offnum < FirstOffsetNumber)
break;
/*
* An offset past the end of page's line pointer array is possible
* when the array was truncated (original item must have been unused)
*/
if (offnum > maxoff)
break;
/* If item is already processed, stop --- it must not be same chain */
if (prstate->marked[offnum])
break;
lp = PageGetItemId(dp, offnum);
/* Unused item obviously isn't part of the chain */
if (!ItemIdIsUsed(lp))
break;
/*
* If we are looking at the redirected root line pointer, jump to the
* first normal tuple in the chain. If we find a redirect somewhere
* else, stop --- it must not be same chain.
*/
if (ItemIdIsRedirected(lp))
{
if (nchain > 0)
break; /* not at start of chain */
chainitems[nchain++] = offnum;
offnum = ItemIdGetRedirect(rootlp);
continue;
}
/*
* Likewise, a dead line pointer can't be part of the chain. (We
* already eliminated the case of dead root tuple outside this
* function.)
*/
if (ItemIdIsDead(lp))
break;
Assert(ItemIdIsNormal(lp));
Assert(prstate->htsv[offnum] != -1);
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(dp, lp);
/*
* Check the tuple XMIN against prior XMAX, if any
*/
if (TransactionIdIsValid(priorXmax) &&
!TransactionIdEquals(HeapTupleHeaderGetXmin(htup), priorXmax))
break;
/*
* OK, this tuple is indeed a member of the chain.
*/
chainitems[nchain++] = offnum;
/*
* Check tuple's visibility status.
*/
tupdead = recent_dead = false;
switch ((HTSV_Result) prstate->htsv[offnum])
{
case HEAPTUPLE_DEAD:
tupdead = true;
break;
case HEAPTUPLE_RECENTLY_DEAD:
recent_dead = true;
/*
* This tuple may soon become DEAD. Update the hint field so
* that the page is reconsidered for pruning in future.
*/
heap_prune_record_prunable(prstate,
HeapTupleHeaderGetUpdateXid(htup));
break;
case HEAPTUPLE_DELETE_IN_PROGRESS:
/*
* This tuple may soon become DEAD. Update the hint field so
* that the page is reconsidered for pruning in future.
*/
heap_prune_record_prunable(prstate,
HeapTupleHeaderGetUpdateXid(htup));
break;
case HEAPTUPLE_LIVE:
case HEAPTUPLE_INSERT_IN_PROGRESS:
/*
* If we wanted to optimize for aborts, we might consider
* marking the page prunable when we see INSERT_IN_PROGRESS.
* But we don't. See related decisions about when to mark the
* page prunable in heapam.c.
*/
break;
default:
elog(ERROR, "unexpected HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum result");
break;
}
/*
* Remember the last DEAD tuple seen. We will advance past
* RECENTLY_DEAD tuples just in case there's a DEAD one after them;
* but we can't advance past anything else. We have to make sure that
* we don't miss any DEAD tuples, since DEAD tuples that still have
* tuple storage after pruning will confuse VACUUM.
*/
if (tupdead)
{
latestdead = offnum;
HeapTupleHeaderAdvanceConflictHorizon(htup,
&prstate->snapshotConflictHorizon);
}
else if (!recent_dead)
break;
/*
* If the tuple is not HOT-updated, then we are at the end of this
* HOT-update chain.
*/
if (!HeapTupleHeaderIsHotUpdated(htup))
break;
/* HOT implies it can't have moved to different partition */
Assert(!HeapTupleHeaderIndicatesMovedPartitions(htup));
/*
* Advance to next chain member.
*/
Assert(ItemPointerGetBlockNumber(&htup->t_ctid) ==
BufferGetBlockNumber(buffer));
offnum = ItemPointerGetOffsetNumber(&htup->t_ctid);
priorXmax = HeapTupleHeaderGetUpdateXid(htup);
}
/*
* If we found a DEAD tuple in the chain, adjust the HOT chain so that all
* the DEAD tuples at the start of the chain are removed and the root line
* pointer is appropriately redirected.
*/
if (OffsetNumberIsValid(latestdead))
{
/*
* Mark as unused each intermediate item that we are able to remove
* from the chain.
*
* When the previous item is the last dead tuple seen, we are at the
* right candidate for redirection.
*/
for (i = 1; (i < nchain) && (chainitems[i - 1] != latestdead); i++)
{
heap_prune_record_unused(prstate, chainitems[i]);
ndeleted++;
}
/*
* If the root entry had been a normal tuple, we are deleting it, so
* count it in the result. But changing a redirect (even to DEAD
* state) doesn't count.
*/
if (ItemIdIsNormal(rootlp))
ndeleted++;
/*
* If the DEAD tuple is at the end of the chain, the entire chain is
* dead and the root line pointer can be marked dead. Otherwise just
* redirect the root to the correct chain member.
*/
if (i >= nchain)
heap_prune_record_dead(prstate, rootoffnum);
else
heap_prune_record_redirect(prstate, rootoffnum, chainitems[i]);
}
else if (nchain < 2 && ItemIdIsRedirected(rootlp))
{
/*
* We found a redirect item that doesn't point to a valid follow-on
* item. This can happen if the loop in heap_page_prune caused us to
* visit the dead successor of a redirect item before visiting the
* redirect item. We can clean up by setting the redirect item to
* DEAD state.
*/
heap_prune_record_dead(prstate, rootoffnum);
}
return ndeleted;
}
/* Record lowest soon-prunable XID */
static void
heap_prune_record_prunable(PruneState *prstate, TransactionId xid)
{
/*
* This should exactly match the PageSetPrunable macro. We can't store
* directly into the page header yet, so we update working state.
*/
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(xid));
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(prstate->new_prune_xid) ||
TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, prstate->new_prune_xid))
prstate->new_prune_xid = xid;
}
/* Record line pointer to be redirected */
static void
heap_prune_record_redirect(PruneState *prstate,
OffsetNumber offnum, OffsetNumber rdoffnum)
{
Assert(prstate->nredirected < MaxHeapTuplesPerPage);
prstate->redirected[prstate->nredirected * 2] = offnum;
prstate->redirected[prstate->nredirected * 2 + 1] = rdoffnum;
prstate->nredirected++;
Assert(!prstate->marked[offnum]);
prstate->marked[offnum] = true;
Assert(!prstate->marked[rdoffnum]);
prstate->marked[rdoffnum] = true;
}
/* Record line pointer to be marked dead */
static void
heap_prune_record_dead(PruneState *prstate, OffsetNumber offnum)
{
Assert(prstate->ndead < MaxHeapTuplesPerPage);
prstate->nowdead[prstate->ndead] = offnum;
prstate->ndead++;
Assert(!prstate->marked[offnum]);
prstate->marked[offnum] = true;
}
/* Record line pointer to be marked unused */
static void
heap_prune_record_unused(PruneState *prstate, OffsetNumber offnum)
{
Assert(prstate->nunused < MaxHeapTuplesPerPage);
prstate->nowunused[prstate->nunused] = offnum;
prstate->nunused++;
Assert(!prstate->marked[offnum]);
prstate->marked[offnum] = true;
}
/*
* Perform the actual page changes needed by heap_page_prune.
* It is expected that the caller has a full cleanup lock on the
* buffer.
*/
void
heap_page_prune_execute(Buffer buffer,
OffsetNumber *redirected, int nredirected,
OffsetNumber *nowdead, int ndead,
OffsetNumber *nowunused, int nunused)
{
Page page = (Page) BufferGetPage(buffer);
OffsetNumber *offnum;
HeapTupleHeader htup PG_USED_FOR_ASSERTS_ONLY;
/* Shouldn't be called unless there's something to do */
Assert(nredirected > 0 || ndead > 0 || nunused > 0);
/* Update all redirected line pointers */
offnum = redirected;
for (int i = 0; i < nredirected; i++)
{
OffsetNumber fromoff = *offnum++;
OffsetNumber tooff = *offnum++;
ItemId fromlp = PageGetItemId(page, fromoff);
ItemId tolp PG_USED_FOR_ASSERTS_ONLY;
#ifdef USE_ASSERT_CHECKING
/*
* Any existing item that we set as an LP_REDIRECT (any 'from' item)
* must be the first item from a HOT chain. If the item has tuple
* storage then it can't be a heap-only tuple. Otherwise we are just
* maintaining an existing LP_REDIRECT from an existing HOT chain that
* has been pruned at least once before now.
*/
if (!ItemIdIsRedirected(fromlp))
{
Assert(ItemIdHasStorage(fromlp) && ItemIdIsNormal(fromlp));
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(page, fromlp);
Assert(!HeapTupleHeaderIsHeapOnly(htup));
}
else
{
/* We shouldn't need to redundantly set the redirect */
Assert(ItemIdGetRedirect(fromlp) != tooff);
}
/*
* The item that we're about to set as an LP_REDIRECT (the 'from'
* item) will point to an existing item (the 'to' item) that is
* already a heap-only tuple. There can be at most one LP_REDIRECT
* item per HOT chain.
*
* We need to keep around an LP_REDIRECT item (after original
* non-heap-only root tuple gets pruned away) so that it's always
* possible for VACUUM to easily figure out what TID to delete from
* indexes when an entire HOT chain becomes dead. A heap-only tuple
* can never become LP_DEAD; an LP_REDIRECT item or a regular heap
* tuple can.
*
* This check may miss problems, e.g. the target of a redirect could
* be marked as unused subsequently. The page_verify_redirects() check
* below will catch such problems.
*/
tolp = PageGetItemId(page, tooff);
Assert(ItemIdHasStorage(tolp) && ItemIdIsNormal(tolp));
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(page, tolp);
Assert(HeapTupleHeaderIsHeapOnly(htup));
#endif
ItemIdSetRedirect(fromlp, tooff);
}
/* Update all now-dead line pointers */
offnum = nowdead;
for (int i = 0; i < ndead; i++)
{
OffsetNumber off = *offnum++;
ItemId lp = PageGetItemId(page, off);
#ifdef USE_ASSERT_CHECKING
/*
* An LP_DEAD line pointer must be left behind when the original item
* (which is dead to everybody) could still be referenced by a TID in
* an index. This should never be necessary with any individual
* heap-only tuple item, though. (It's not clear how much of a problem
* that would be, but there is no reason to allow it.)
*/
if (ItemIdHasStorage(lp))
{
Assert(ItemIdIsNormal(lp));
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(page, lp);
Assert(!HeapTupleHeaderIsHeapOnly(htup));
}
else
{
/* Whole HOT chain becomes dead */
Assert(ItemIdIsRedirected(lp));
}
#endif
ItemIdSetDead(lp);
}
/* Update all now-unused line pointers */
offnum = nowunused;
for (int i = 0; i < nunused; i++)
{
OffsetNumber off = *offnum++;
ItemId lp = PageGetItemId(page, off);
#ifdef USE_ASSERT_CHECKING
/*
* Only heap-only tuples can become LP_UNUSED during pruning. They
* don't need to be left in place as LP_DEAD items until VACUUM gets
* around to doing index vacuuming.
*/
Assert(ItemIdHasStorage(lp) && ItemIdIsNormal(lp));
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(page, lp);
Assert(HeapTupleHeaderIsHeapOnly(htup));
#endif
ItemIdSetUnused(lp);
}
/*
* Finally, repair any fragmentation, and update the page's hint bit about
* whether it has free pointers.
*/
PageRepairFragmentation(page);
/*
* Now that the page has been modified, assert that redirect items still
* point to valid targets.
*/
page_verify_redirects(page);
}
/*
* If built with assertions, verify that all LP_REDIRECT items point to a
* valid item.
*
* One way that bugs related to HOT pruning show is redirect items pointing to
* removed tuples. It's not trivial to reliably check that marking an item
* unused will not orphan a redirect item during heap_prune_chain() /
* heap_page_prune_execute(), so we additionally check the whole page after
* pruning. Without this check such bugs would typically only cause asserts
* later, potentially well after the corruption has been introduced.
*
* Also check comments in heap_page_prune_execute()'s redirection loop.
*/
static void
page_verify_redirects(Page page)
{
#ifdef USE_ASSERT_CHECKING
OffsetNumber offnum;
OffsetNumber maxoff;
maxoff = PageGetMaxOffsetNumber(page);
for (offnum = FirstOffsetNumber;
offnum <= maxoff;
offnum = OffsetNumberNext(offnum))
{
ItemId itemid = PageGetItemId(page, offnum);
OffsetNumber targoff;
ItemId targitem;
HeapTupleHeader htup;
if (!ItemIdIsRedirected(itemid))
continue;
targoff = ItemIdGetRedirect(itemid);
targitem = PageGetItemId(page, targoff);
Assert(ItemIdIsUsed(targitem));
Assert(ItemIdIsNormal(targitem));
Assert(ItemIdHasStorage(targitem));
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(page, targitem);
Assert(HeapTupleHeaderIsHeapOnly(htup));
}
#endif
}
/*
* For all items in this page, find their respective root line pointers.
* If item k is part of a HOT-chain with root at item j, then we set
* root_offsets[k - 1] = j.
*
* The passed-in root_offsets array must have MaxHeapTuplesPerPage entries.
* Unused entries are filled with InvalidOffsetNumber (zero).
*
* The function must be called with at least share lock on the buffer, to
* prevent concurrent prune operations.
*
* Note: The information collected here is valid only as long as the caller
* holds a pin on the buffer. Once pin is released, a tuple might be pruned
* and reused by a completely unrelated tuple.
*/
void
heap_get_root_tuples(Page page, OffsetNumber *root_offsets)
{
OffsetNumber offnum,
maxoff;
MemSet(root_offsets, InvalidOffsetNumber,
MaxHeapTuplesPerPage * sizeof(OffsetNumber));
maxoff = PageGetMaxOffsetNumber(page);
for (offnum = FirstOffsetNumber; offnum <= maxoff; offnum = OffsetNumberNext(offnum))
{
ItemId lp = PageGetItemId(page, offnum);
HeapTupleHeader htup;
OffsetNumber nextoffnum;
TransactionId priorXmax;
/* skip unused and dead items */
if (!ItemIdIsUsed(lp) || ItemIdIsDead(lp))
continue;
if (ItemIdIsNormal(lp))
{
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(page, lp);
/*
* Check if this tuple is part of a HOT-chain rooted at some other
* tuple. If so, skip it for now; we'll process it when we find
* its root.
*/
if (HeapTupleHeaderIsHeapOnly(htup))
continue;
/*
* This is either a plain tuple or the root of a HOT-chain.
* Remember it in the mapping.
*/
root_offsets[offnum - 1] = offnum;
/* If it's not the start of a HOT-chain, we're done with it */
if (!HeapTupleHeaderIsHotUpdated(htup))
continue;
/* Set up to scan the HOT-chain */
nextoffnum = ItemPointerGetOffsetNumber(&htup->t_ctid);
priorXmax = HeapTupleHeaderGetUpdateXid(htup);
}
else
{
/* Must be a redirect item. We do not set its root_offsets entry */
Assert(ItemIdIsRedirected(lp));
/* Set up to scan the HOT-chain */
nextoffnum = ItemIdGetRedirect(lp);
priorXmax = InvalidTransactionId;
}
/*
* Now follow the HOT-chain and collect other tuples in the chain.
*
* Note: Even though this is a nested loop, the complexity of the
* function is O(N) because a tuple in the page should be visited not
* more than twice, once in the outer loop and once in HOT-chain
* chases.
*/
for (;;)
{
/* Sanity check (pure paranoia) */
if (offnum < FirstOffsetNumber)
break;
/*
* An offset past the end of page's line pointer array is possible
* when the array was truncated
*/
if (offnum > maxoff)
break;
lp = PageGetItemId(page, nextoffnum);
/* Check for broken chains */
if (!ItemIdIsNormal(lp))
break;
htup = (HeapTupleHeader) PageGetItem(page, lp);
if (TransactionIdIsValid(priorXmax) &&
!TransactionIdEquals(priorXmax, HeapTupleHeaderGetXmin(htup)))
break;
/* Remember the root line pointer for this item */
root_offsets[nextoffnum - 1] = offnum;
/* Advance to next chain member, if any */
if (!HeapTupleHeaderIsHotUpdated(htup))
break;
/* HOT implies it can't have moved to different partition */
Assert(!HeapTupleHeaderIndicatesMovedPartitions(htup));
nextoffnum = ItemPointerGetOffsetNumber(&htup->t_ctid);
priorXmax = HeapTupleHeaderGetUpdateXid(htup);
}
}
}