postgresql/src/backend/access/transam/varsup.c

371 lines
13 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* varsup.c
* postgres OID & XID variables support routines
*
* Copyright (c) 2000-2007, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/access/transam/varsup.c,v 1.77 2007/01/05 22:19:23 momjian Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include "access/clog.h"
#include "access/subtrans.h"
#include "access/transam.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "postmaster/autovacuum.h"
#include "storage/pmsignal.h"
#include "storage/proc.h"
#include "utils/builtins.h"
/* Number of OIDs to prefetch (preallocate) per XLOG write */
#define VAR_OID_PREFETCH 8192
/* pointer to "variable cache" in shared memory (set up by shmem.c) */
VariableCache ShmemVariableCache = NULL;
/*
* Allocate the next XID for my new transaction.
*/
TransactionId
GetNewTransactionId(bool isSubXact)
{
TransactionId xid;
/*
* During bootstrap initialization, we return the special bootstrap
* transaction id.
*/
if (IsBootstrapProcessingMode())
return BootstrapTransactionId;
LWLockAcquire(XidGenLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
xid = ShmemVariableCache->nextXid;
/*----------
* Check to see if it's safe to assign another XID. This protects against
* catastrophic data loss due to XID wraparound. The basic rules are:
*
* If we're past xidVacLimit, start trying to force autovacuum cycles.
* If we're past xidWarnLimit, start issuing warnings.
* If we're past xidStopLimit, refuse to execute transactions, unless
* we are running in a standalone backend (which gives an escape hatch
* to the DBA who somehow got past the earlier defenses).
*
* Test is coded to fall out as fast as possible during normal operation,
* ie, when the vac limit is set and we haven't violated it.
*----------
*/
if (TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(xid, ShmemVariableCache->xidVacLimit) &&
TransactionIdIsValid(ShmemVariableCache->xidVacLimit))
{
/*
* To avoid swamping the postmaster with signals, we issue the
* autovac request only once per 64K transaction starts. This
* still gives plenty of chances before we get into real trouble.
*/
if (IsUnderPostmaster && (xid % 65536) == 0)
SendPostmasterSignal(PMSIGNAL_START_AUTOVAC);
if (IsUnderPostmaster &&
TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(xid, ShmemVariableCache->xidStopLimit))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_PROGRAM_LIMIT_EXCEEDED),
errmsg("database is not accepting commands to avoid wraparound data loss in database \"%s\"",
NameStr(ShmemVariableCache->limit_datname)),
errhint("Stop the postmaster and use a standalone backend to vacuum database \"%s\".",
NameStr(ShmemVariableCache->limit_datname))));
else if (TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(xid, ShmemVariableCache->xidWarnLimit))
ereport(WARNING,
(errmsg("database \"%s\" must be vacuumed within %u transactions",
NameStr(ShmemVariableCache->limit_datname),
ShmemVariableCache->xidWrapLimit - xid),
errhint("To avoid a database shutdown, execute a full-database VACUUM in \"%s\".",
NameStr(ShmemVariableCache->limit_datname))));
}
/*
* If we are allocating the first XID of a new page of the commit log,
* zero out that commit-log page before returning. We must do this while
* holding XidGenLock, else another xact could acquire and commit a later
* XID before we zero the page. Fortunately, a page of the commit log
* holds 32K or more transactions, so we don't have to do this very often.
*
* Extend pg_subtrans too.
*/
ExtendCLOG(xid);
ExtendSUBTRANS(xid);
/*
* Now advance the nextXid counter. This must not happen until after we
* have successfully completed ExtendCLOG() --- if that routine fails, we
* want the next incoming transaction to try it again. We cannot assign
* more XIDs until there is CLOG space for them.
*/
TransactionIdAdvance(ShmemVariableCache->nextXid);
/*
* We must store the new XID into the shared PGPROC array before releasing
* XidGenLock. This ensures that when GetSnapshotData calls
* ReadNewTransactionId, all active XIDs before the returned value of
* nextXid are already present in PGPROC. Else we have a race condition.
*
* XXX by storing xid into MyProc without acquiring ProcArrayLock, we are
* relying on fetch/store of an xid to be atomic, else other backends
* might see a partially-set xid here. But holding both locks at once
* would be a nasty concurrency hit (and in fact could cause a deadlock
* against GetSnapshotData). So for now, assume atomicity. Note that
* readers of PGPROC xid field should be careful to fetch the value only
* once, rather than assume they can read it multiple times and get the
* same answer each time.
*
* The same comments apply to the subxact xid count and overflow fields.
*
* A solution to the atomic-store problem would be to give each PGPROC its
* own spinlock used only for fetching/storing that PGPROC's xid and
* related fields.
*
* If there's no room to fit a subtransaction XID into PGPROC, set the
* cache-overflowed flag instead. This forces readers to look in
* pg_subtrans to map subtransaction XIDs up to top-level XIDs. There is a
* race-condition window, in that the new XID will not appear as running
* until its parent link has been placed into pg_subtrans. However, that
* will happen before anyone could possibly have a reason to inquire about
* the status of the XID, so it seems OK. (Snapshots taken during this
* window *will* include the parent XID, so they will deliver the correct
* answer later on when someone does have a reason to inquire.)
*/
if (MyProc != NULL)
{
/*
* Use volatile pointer to prevent code rearrangement; other backends
* could be examining my subxids info concurrently, and we don't want
* them to see an invalid intermediate state, such as incrementing
* nxids before filling the array entry. Note we are assuming that
* TransactionId and int fetch/store are atomic.
*/
volatile PGPROC *myproc = MyProc;
if (!isSubXact)
myproc->xid = xid;
else
{
int nxids = myproc->subxids.nxids;
if (nxids < PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS)
{
myproc->subxids.xids[nxids] = xid;
myproc->subxids.nxids = nxids + 1;
}
else
myproc->subxids.overflowed = true;
}
}
LWLockRelease(XidGenLock);
return xid;
}
/*
* Read nextXid but don't allocate it.
*/
TransactionId
ReadNewTransactionId(void)
{
TransactionId xid;
LWLockAcquire(XidGenLock, LW_SHARED);
xid = ShmemVariableCache->nextXid;
LWLockRelease(XidGenLock);
return xid;
}
/*
* Determine the last safe XID to allocate given the currently oldest
* datfrozenxid (ie, the oldest XID that might exist in any database
* of our cluster).
*/
void
SetTransactionIdLimit(TransactionId oldest_datfrozenxid,
Name oldest_datname)
{
TransactionId xidVacLimit;
TransactionId xidWarnLimit;
TransactionId xidStopLimit;
TransactionId xidWrapLimit;
TransactionId curXid;
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(oldest_datfrozenxid));
/*
* The place where we actually get into deep trouble is halfway around
* from the oldest potentially-existing XID. (This calculation is
* probably off by one or two counts, because the special XIDs reduce the
* size of the loop a little bit. But we throw in plenty of slop below,
* so it doesn't matter.)
*/
xidWrapLimit = oldest_datfrozenxid + (MaxTransactionId >> 1);
if (xidWrapLimit < FirstNormalTransactionId)
xidWrapLimit += FirstNormalTransactionId;
/*
* We'll refuse to continue assigning XIDs in interactive mode once we get
* within 1M transactions of data loss. This leaves lots of room for the
* DBA to fool around fixing things in a standalone backend, while not
* being significant compared to total XID space. (Note that since
* vacuuming requires one transaction per table cleaned, we had better be
* sure there's lots of XIDs left...)
*/
xidStopLimit = xidWrapLimit - 1000000;
if (xidStopLimit < FirstNormalTransactionId)
xidStopLimit -= FirstNormalTransactionId;
/*
* We'll start complaining loudly when we get within 10M transactions of
* the stop point. This is kind of arbitrary, but if you let your gas
* gauge get down to 1% of full, would you be looking for the next gas
* station? We need to be fairly liberal about this number because there
* are lots of scenarios where most transactions are done by automatic
* clients that won't pay attention to warnings. (No, we're not gonna make
* this configurable. If you know enough to configure it, you know enough
* to not get in this kind of trouble in the first place.)
*/
xidWarnLimit = xidStopLimit - 10000000;
if (xidWarnLimit < FirstNormalTransactionId)
xidWarnLimit -= FirstNormalTransactionId;
/*
* We'll start trying to force autovacuums when oldest_datfrozenxid
* gets to be more than autovacuum_freeze_max_age transactions old.
*
* Note: guc.c ensures that autovacuum_freeze_max_age is in a sane
* range, so that xidVacLimit will be well before xidWarnLimit.
*
* Note: autovacuum_freeze_max_age is a PGC_POSTMASTER parameter so that
* we don't have to worry about dealing with on-the-fly changes in its
* value. It doesn't look practical to update shared state from a GUC
* assign hook (too many processes would try to execute the hook,
* resulting in race conditions as well as crashes of those not
* connected to shared memory). Perhaps this can be improved someday.
*/
xidVacLimit = oldest_datfrozenxid + autovacuum_freeze_max_age;
if (xidVacLimit < FirstNormalTransactionId)
xidVacLimit += FirstNormalTransactionId;
/* Grab lock for just long enough to set the new limit values */
LWLockAcquire(XidGenLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
ShmemVariableCache->oldestXid = oldest_datfrozenxid;
ShmemVariableCache->xidVacLimit = xidVacLimit;
ShmemVariableCache->xidWarnLimit = xidWarnLimit;
ShmemVariableCache->xidStopLimit = xidStopLimit;
ShmemVariableCache->xidWrapLimit = xidWrapLimit;
namecpy(&ShmemVariableCache->limit_datname, oldest_datname);
curXid = ShmemVariableCache->nextXid;
LWLockRelease(XidGenLock);
/* Log the info */
ereport(DEBUG1,
(errmsg("transaction ID wrap limit is %u, limited by database \"%s\"",
xidWrapLimit, NameStr(*oldest_datname))));
/*
* If past the autovacuum force point, immediately signal an autovac
* request. The reason for this is that autovac only processes one
* database per invocation. Once it's finished cleaning up the oldest
* database, it'll call here, and we'll signal the postmaster to start
* another iteration immediately if there are still any old databases.
*/
if (TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(curXid, xidVacLimit) &&
IsUnderPostmaster)
SendPostmasterSignal(PMSIGNAL_START_AUTOVAC);
/* Give an immediate warning if past the wrap warn point */
if (TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(curXid, xidWarnLimit))
ereport(WARNING,
(errmsg("database \"%s\" must be vacuumed within %u transactions",
NameStr(*oldest_datname),
xidWrapLimit - curXid),
errhint("To avoid a database shutdown, execute a full-database VACUUM in \"%s\".",
NameStr(*oldest_datname))));
}
/*
* GetNewObjectId -- allocate a new OID
*
* OIDs are generated by a cluster-wide counter. Since they are only 32 bits
* wide, counter wraparound will occur eventually, and therefore it is unwise
* to assume they are unique unless precautions are taken to make them so.
* Hence, this routine should generally not be used directly. The only
* direct callers should be GetNewOid() and GetNewRelFileNode() in
* catalog/catalog.c.
*/
Oid
GetNewObjectId(void)
{
Oid result;
LWLockAcquire(OidGenLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
/*
* Check for wraparound of the OID counter. We *must* not return 0
* (InvalidOid); and as long as we have to check that, it seems a good
* idea to skip over everything below FirstNormalObjectId too. (This
* basically just avoids lots of collisions with bootstrap-assigned OIDs
* right after a wrap occurs, so as to avoid a possibly large number of
* iterations in GetNewOid.) Note we are relying on unsigned comparison.
*
* During initdb, we start the OID generator at FirstBootstrapObjectId, so
* we only enforce wrapping to that point when in bootstrap or standalone
* mode. The first time through this routine after normal postmaster
* start, the counter will be forced up to FirstNormalObjectId. This
* mechanism leaves the OIDs between FirstBootstrapObjectId and
* FirstNormalObjectId available for automatic assignment during initdb,
* while ensuring they will never conflict with user-assigned OIDs.
*/
if (ShmemVariableCache->nextOid < ((Oid) FirstNormalObjectId))
{
if (IsPostmasterEnvironment)
{
/* wraparound in normal environment */
ShmemVariableCache->nextOid = FirstNormalObjectId;
ShmemVariableCache->oidCount = 0;
}
else
{
/* we may be bootstrapping, so don't enforce the full range */
if (ShmemVariableCache->nextOid < ((Oid) FirstBootstrapObjectId))
{
/* wraparound in standalone environment? */
ShmemVariableCache->nextOid = FirstBootstrapObjectId;
ShmemVariableCache->oidCount = 0;
}
}
}
/* If we run out of logged for use oids then we must log more */
if (ShmemVariableCache->oidCount == 0)
{
XLogPutNextOid(ShmemVariableCache->nextOid + VAR_OID_PREFETCH);
ShmemVariableCache->oidCount = VAR_OID_PREFETCH;
}
result = ShmemVariableCache->nextOid;
(ShmemVariableCache->nextOid)++;
(ShmemVariableCache->oidCount)--;
LWLockRelease(OidGenLock);
return result;
}