postgresql/doc/TODO.detail/transactions

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From pgsql-hackers-owner+M215@postgresql.org Fri Nov 3 17:50:40 2000
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To: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
Date: Fri, 03 Nov 2000 17:47:40 -0500
Message-ID: <8382.973291660@sss.pgh.pa.us>
From: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
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Status: ORr
We've expended a lot of worry and discussion in the past about what
happens if the OID generator wraps around. However, there is another
4-byte counter in the system: the transaction ID (XID) generator.
While OID wraparound is survivable, if XIDs wrap around then we really
do have a Ragnarok scenario. The tuple validity checks do ordered
comparisons on XIDs, and will consider tuples with xmin > current xact
to be invalid. Result: after wraparound, your whole database would
instantly vanish from view.
The first thought that comes to mind is that XIDs should be promoted to
eight bytes. However there are several practical problems with this:
* portability --- I don't believe long long int exists on all the
platforms we support.
* performance --- except on true 64-bit platforms, widening Datum to
eight bytes would be a system-wide performance hit, which is a tad
unpleasant to fix a scenario that's not yet been reported from the
field.
* disk space --- letting pg_log grow without bound isn't a pleasant
prospect either.
I believe it is possible to fix these problems without widening XID,
by redefining XIDs in a way that allows for wraparound. Here's my
plan:
1. Allow XIDs to range from 0 to WRAPLIMIT-1 (WRAPLIMIT is not
necessarily 4G, see discussion below). Ordered comparisons on XIDs
are no longer simply "x < y", but need to be expressed as a macro.
We consider x < y if (y - x) % WRAPLIMIT < WRAPLIMIT/2.
This comparison will work as long as the range of interesting XIDs
never exceeds WRAPLIMIT/2. Essentially, we envision the actual value
of XID as being the low-order bits of a logical XID that always
increases, and we assume that no extant XID is more than WRAPLIMIT/2
transactions old, so we needn't keep track of the high-order bits.
2. To keep the system from having to deal with XIDs that are more than
WRAPLIMIT/2 transactions old, VACUUM should "freeze" known-good old
tuples. To do this, we'll reserve a special XID, say 1, that is always
considered committed and is always less than any ordinary XID. (So the
ordered-comparison macro is really a little more complicated than I said
above. Note that there is already a reserved XID just like this in the
system, the "bootstrap" XID. We could simply use the bootstrap XID, but
it seems better to make another one.) When VACUUM finds a tuple that
is committed good and has xmin < XmaxRecent (the oldest XID that might
be considered uncommitted by any open transaction), it will replace that
tuple's xmin by the special always-good XID. Therefore, as long as
VACUUM is run on all tables in the installation more often than once per
WRAPLIMIT/2 transactions, there will be no tuples with ordinary XIDs
older than WRAPLIMIT/2.
3. At wraparound, the XID counter has to be advanced to skip over the
InvalidXID value (zero) and the reserved XIDs, so that no real transaction
is generated with those XIDs. No biggie here.
4. With the wraparound behavior, pg_log will have a bounded size: it
will never exceed WRAPLIMIT*2 bits = WRAPLIMIT/4 bytes. Since we will
recycle pg_log entries every WRAPLIMIT xacts, during transaction start
the xact manager will have to take care to actively clear its pg_log
entry to zeroes (I'm not sure if it does that already, or just assumes
that new pg_log entries will start out zero). As long as that happens
before the xact makes any data changes, it's OK to recycle the entry.
Note we are assuming that no tuples will remain in the database with
xmin or xmax equal to that XID from a prior cycle of the universe.
This scheme allows us to survive XID wraparound at the cost of slight
additional complexity in ordered comparisons of XIDs (which is not a
really performance-critical task AFAIK), and at the cost that the
original insertion XIDs of all but recent tuples will be lost by
VACUUM. The system doesn't particularly care about that, but old XIDs
do sometimes come in handy for debugging purposes. A possible
compromise is to overwrite only XIDs that are older than, say,
WRAPLIMIT/4 instead of doing so as soon as possible. This would mean
the required VACUUM frequency is every WRAPLIMIT/4 xacts instead of
every WRAPLIMIT/2 xacts.
We have a straightforward tradeoff between the maximum size of pg_log
(WRAPLIMIT/4 bytes) and the required frequency of VACUUM (at least
every WRAPLIMIT/2 or WRAPLIMIT/4 transactions). This could be made
configurable in config.h for those who're intent on customization,
but I'd be inclined to set the default value at WRAPLIMIT = 1G.
Comments? Vadim, is any of this about to be superseded by WAL?
If not, I'd like to fix it for 7.1.
regards, tom lane
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M232@postgresql.org Fri Nov 3 20:20:32 2000
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To: "Mikheev, Vadim" <vmikheev@SECTORBASE.COM>
cc: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
In-reply-to: <8F4C99C66D04D4118F580090272A7A234D3146@sectorbase1.sectorbase.com>
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Comments: In-reply-to "Mikheev, Vadim" <vmikheev@SECTORBASE.COM>
message dated "Fri, 03 Nov 2000 16:24:38 -0800"
Date: Fri, 03 Nov 2000 20:12:20 -0500
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From: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
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"Mikheev, Vadim" <vmikheev@SECTORBASE.COM> writes:
> So, we'll have to abort some long running transaction.
Well, yes, some transaction that continues running while ~ 500 million
other transactions come and go might give us trouble. I wasn't really
planning to worry about that case ;-)
> Required frequency of *successful* vacuum over *all* tables.
> We would have to remember something in pg_class/pg_database
> and somehow force vacuum over "too-long-unvacuumed-tables"
> *automatically*.
I don't think this is a problem now; in practice you couldn't possibly
go for half a billion transactions without vacuuming, I'd think.
If your plans to eliminate regular vacuuming become reality, then this
scheme might become less reliable, but at present I think there's plenty
of safety margin.
> If undo would be implemented then we could delete pg_log between
> postmaster startups - startup counter is remembered in pages, so
> seeing old startup id in a page we would know that there are only
> long ago committed xactions (ie only visible changes) there
> and avoid xid comparison. But ... there will be no undo in 7.1.
> And I foresee problems with WAL based BAR implementation if we'll
> follow proposed solution: redo restores original xmin/xmax - how
> to "freeze" xids while restoring DB?
So, we might eventually have a better answer from WAL, but not for 7.1.
I think my idea is reasonably non-invasive and could be removed without
much trouble once WAL offers a better way. I'd really like to have some
answer for 7.1, though. The sort of numbers John Scott was quoting to
me for Verizon's paging network throughput make it clear that we aren't
going to survive at that level with a limit of 4G transactions per
database reload. Having to vacuum everything on at least a
1G-transaction cycle is salable, dump/initdb/reload is not ...
regards, tom lane
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M238@postgresql.org Fri Nov 3 21:30:14 2000
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To: Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au>
cc: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
In-reply-to: <3.0.5.32.20001104130922.045c3410@mail.rhyme.com.au>
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Comments: In-reply-to Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au>
message dated "Sat, 04 Nov 2000 13:09:22 +1100"
Date: Fri, 03 Nov 2000 21:29:04 -0500
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From: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
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Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au> writes:
>> * disk space --- letting pg_log grow without bound isn't a pleasant
>> prospect either.
> Maybe this can be achieved by wrapping XID for the log file only.
How's that going to improve matters? pg_log is ground truth for XIDs;
if you can't distinguish two XIDs in pg_log, there's no point in
distinguishing them elsewhere.
> Maybe I'm really missing the amount of XID manipulation, but I'd be
> surprised if 16-byte XIDs would slow things down much.
It's not so much XIDs themselves, as that I think we'd need to widen
typedef Datum too, and that affects manipulations of *all* data types.
In any case, the prospect of a multi-gigabyte, ever-growing pg_log file,
with no way to recover the space short of dump/initdb/reload, is
awfully unappetizing for a high-traffic installation...
regards, tom lane
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M240@postgresql.org Fri Nov 3 21:42:30 2000
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From: Rod Taylor <rbt@zort.on.ca>
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To: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
CC: Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au>, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
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Tom Lane wrote:
>
> Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au> writes:
> >> * disk space --- letting pg_log grow without bound isn't a pleasant
> >> prospect either.
>
> > Maybe this can be achieved by wrapping XID for the log file only.
>
> How's that going to improve matters? pg_log is ground truth for XIDs;
> if you can't distinguish two XIDs in pg_log, there's no point in
> distinguishing them elsewhere.
>
> > Maybe I'm really missing the amount of XID manipulation, but I'd be
> > surprised if 16-byte XIDs would slow things down much.
>
> It's not so much XIDs themselves, as that I think we'd need to widen
> typedef Datum too, and that affects manipulations of *all* data types.
>
> In any case, the prospect of a multi-gigabyte, ever-growing pg_log file,
> with no way to recover the space short of dump/initdb/reload, is
> awfully unappetizing for a high-traffic installation...
Agreed completely. I'd like to think I could have such an installation
in the next year or so :)
To prevent a performance hit to those who don't want, is there a
possibility of either a compile time option or 'auto-expanding' the
width of the XID's and other items when it becomes appropriate? Start
with int4, when that limit is hit goto int8, and should -- quite
unbelievibly so but there are multi-TB databases -- it be necessary jump
to int12 or int16? Be the first to support Exa-objects in an RDBMS.
Testing not necessary ;)
Compiletime option would be appropriate however if theres a significant
performance hit.
I'm not much of a c coder (obviously), so I don't know of the
limitations. plpgsql is my friend that can do nearly anything :)
Hmm... After reading the above I should have stuck with lurking.
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M264@postgresql.org Sun Nov 5 01:07:08 2000
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From: "Vadim Mikheev" <vmikheev@sectorbase.com>
To: "Tom Lane" <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Cc: <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
References: <8F4C99C66D04D4118F580090272A7A234D3146@sectorbase1.sectorbase.com> <8774.973300340@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2000 21:59:00 -0800
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Status: OR
> > So, we'll have to abort some long running transaction.
>
> Well, yes, some transaction that continues running while ~ 500 million
> other transactions come and go might give us trouble. I wasn't really
> planning to worry about that case ;-)
Agreed, I just don't like to rely on assumptions -:)
> > Required frequency of *successful* vacuum over *all* tables.
> > We would have to remember something in pg_class/pg_database
> > and somehow force vacuum over "too-long-unvacuumed-tables"
> > *automatically*.
>
> I don't think this is a problem now; in practice you couldn't possibly
> go for half a billion transactions without vacuuming, I'd think.
Why not?
And once again - assumptions are not good for transaction area.
> If your plans to eliminate regular vacuuming become reality, then this
> scheme might become less reliable, but at present I think there's plenty
> of safety margin.
>
> > If undo would be implemented then we could delete pg_log between
> > postmaster startups - startup counter is remembered in pages, so
> > seeing old startup id in a page we would know that there are only
> > long ago committed xactions (ie only visible changes) there
> > and avoid xid comparison. But ... there will be no undo in 7.1.
> > And I foresee problems with WAL based BAR implementation if we'll
> > follow proposed solution: redo restores original xmin/xmax - how
> > to "freeze" xids while restoring DB?
>
> So, we might eventually have a better answer from WAL, but not for 7.1.
> I think my idea is reasonably non-invasive and could be removed without
> much trouble once WAL offers a better way. I'd really like to have some
> answer for 7.1, though. The sort of numbers John Scott was quoting to
> me for Verizon's paging network throughput make it clear that we aren't
> going to survive at that level with a limit of 4G transactions per
> database reload. Having to vacuum everything on at least a
> 1G-transaction cycle is salable, dump/initdb/reload is not ...
Understandable. And probably we can get BAR too but require full
backup every WRAPLIMIT/2 (or better /4) transactions.
Vadim
From vmikheev@sectorbase.com Sun Nov 5 03:55:31 2000
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From: "Vadim Mikheev" <vmikheev@sectorbase.com>
To: "Bruce Momjian" <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us>, "Tom Lane" <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Cc: <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
References: <200011041843.NAA28411@candle.pha.pa.us>
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2000 01:02:01 -0800
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> One idea I had from this is actually truncating pg_log at some point if
> we know all the tuples have the special committed xid. It would prevent
> the file from growing without bounds.
Not truncating, but implementing pg_log as set of files - we could remove
files for old xids.
> Vadim, can you explain how WAL will make pg_log unnecessary someday?
First, I mentioned only that having undo we could remove old pg_log after
postmaster startup because of only committed changes would be in data
files and they would be visible to new transactions (small changes in tqual
will be required to take page' startup id into account) which would reuse xids.
While changing a page first time in current startup, server would do exactly
what Tom is going to do at vacuuming - just update xmin/xmax to "1" in all items
(or setting some flag in t_infomask), - and change page' startup id to current.
I understand that this is not complete solution for xids problem, I just wasn't
going to solve it that time. Now after Tom' proposal I see how to reuse xids
without vacuuming (but having undo): we will add XidWrapId (XWI) - xid wrap
counter - to pages and set it when we change page. First time we do this for
page with old XWI we'll mark old items (to know later that they were changed
by xids with old XWI). Each time we change page we can mark old xmin/xmax
with xid <= current xid as committed long ago (basing on xact TTL restrinctions).
All above assumes that there will be no xids from aborted transactions in pages,
so we need not lookup in pg_log to know is a xid committed/aborted, - there will
be only xids from running or committed xactions there.
And we need in undo for this.
Vadim
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M396@postgresql.org Tue Nov 7 20:57:16 2000
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Date: Sun, 05 Nov 2000 15:48:13 +0200
From: Hannu Krosing <hannu@tm.ee>
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To: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
CC: Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au>, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
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Tom Lane wrote:
>
> Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au> writes:
> >> * disk space --- letting pg_log grow without bound isn't a pleasant
> >> prospect either.
>
> > Maybe this can be achieved by wrapping XID for the log file only.
>
> How's that going to improve matters? pg_log is ground truth for XIDs;
> if you can't distinguish two XIDs in pg_log, there's no point in
> distinguishing them elsewhere.
One simple way - start a new pg_log file at each wraparound and encode
the high 4 bytes in the filename (or in first four bytes of file)
> > Maybe I'm really missing the amount of XID manipulation, but I'd be
> > surprised if 16-byte XIDs would slow things down much.
>
> It's not so much XIDs themselves, as that I think we'd need to widen
> typedef Datum too, and that affects manipulations of *all* data types.
Do you mean that each _field_ will take more space, not each _record_ ?
> In any case, the prospect of a multi-gigabyte, ever-growing pg_log file,
> with no way to recover the space short of dump/initdb/reload, is
> awfully unappetizing for a high-traffic installation...
The pg_log should be rotated anyway either with long xids or long-long
xids.
-----------
Hannu
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M284@postgresql.org Sun Nov 5 16:19:47 2000
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Date: Sun, 05 Nov 2000 22:14:24 +0200
From: Hannu Krosing <hannu@tm.ee>
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To: Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net>
CC: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
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Peter Eisentraut wrote:
>
> Hannu Krosing writes:
>
> > > The first thought that comes to mind is that XIDs should be promoted to
> > > eight bytes. However there are several practical problems with this:
> > > * portability --- I don't believe long long int exists on all the
> > > platforms we support.
> >
> > I suspect that gcc at least supports long long on all OS-s we support
>
> Uh, we don't want to depend on gcc, do we?
I suspect that we do on many platforms (like *BSD, Linux and Win32).
What platforms we currently support don't have functional gcc ?
> But we could make the XID a struct of two 4-byte integers, at the obvious
> increase in storage size.
And a (hopefully) small performance hit on operations when defined as
macros,
and some more for less data fitting in cache.
what operations do we need to be defined ?
will >, <, ==, !=, >=, <== and ++ be enough ?
-------------
Hannu
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M325@postgresql.org Mon Nov 6 12:36:49 2000
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Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
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On Sunday 05 November 2000 13:02, Tom Lane wrote:
> OK, 2^64 isn't mathematically unbounded, but let's see you buy a disk
> that will hold it ;-). My point is that if we want to think about
> allowing >4G transactions, part of the answer has to be a way to recycle
> pg_log space. Otherwise it's still not really practical.
I kind of like vadim's idea of segmenting pg_log.
Segments in which all the xacts have been commited could be deleted.
--
Mark Hollomon
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Date: Fri, 10 Nov 2000 12:01:25 -0800
From: Nathan Myers <ncm@zembu.com>
To: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
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On Sun, Nov 05, 2000 at 03:48:13PM +0200, Hannu Krosing wrote:
> Tom Lane wrote:
> >
> > Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au> writes:
> > >> * disk space --- letting pg_log grow without bound isn't a pleasant
> > >> prospect either.
> >
> > > Maybe this can be achieved by wrapping XID for the log file only.
> >
> > How's that going to improve matters? pg_log is ground truth for XIDs;
> > if you can't distinguish two XIDs in pg_log, there's no point in
> > distinguishing them elsewhere.
>
> One simple way - start a new pg_log file at each wraparound and encode
> the high 4 bytes in the filename (or in first four bytes of file)
Proposal:
Annotate each log file with the current XID value at the time the file
is created. Before comparing any two XIDs, subtract that value from
each operand, using unsigned arithmetic.
At a sustained rate of 10,000 transactions/second, any pair of 32-bit
XIDs less than 2.5 days apart compare properly.
Nathan Myers
ncm@zembu.com
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M229@postgresql.org Fri Nov 3 20:17:35 2000
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From: "Mikheev, Vadim" <vmikheev@SECTORBASE.COM>
To: "'Tom Lane'" <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: RE: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed sol
ution
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> This comparison will work as long as the range of interesting XIDs
> never exceeds WRAPLIMIT/2. Essentially, we envision the actual value
> of XID as being the low-order bits of a logical XID that always
> increases, and we assume that no extant XID is more than WRAPLIMIT/2
> transactions old, so we needn't keep track of the high-order bits.
So, we'll have to abort some long running transaction.
And before after-wrap XIDs will be close to aborted xid you'd better
ensure that vacuum *successfully* run over all tables in database
(and shared tables) aborted transaction could touch.
> This scheme allows us to survive XID wraparound at the cost of slight
> additional complexity in ordered comparisons of XIDs (which is not a
> really performance-critical task AFAIK), and at the cost that the
> original insertion XIDs of all but recent tuples will be lost by
> VACUUM. The system doesn't particularly care about that, but old XIDs
> do sometimes come in handy for debugging purposes. A possible
I wouldn't care about this.
> compromise is to overwrite only XIDs that are older than, say,
> WRAPLIMIT/4 instead of doing so as soon as possible. This would mean
> the required VACUUM frequency is every WRAPLIMIT/4 xacts instead of
> every WRAPLIMIT/2 xacts.
>
> We have a straightforward tradeoff between the maximum size of pg_log
> (WRAPLIMIT/4 bytes) and the required frequency of VACUUM (at least
Required frequency of *successful* vacuum over *all* tables.
We would have to remember something in pg_class/pg_database
and somehow force vacuum over "too-long-unvacuumed-tables"
*automatically*.
> every WRAPLIMIT/2 or WRAPLIMIT/4 transactions). This could be made
> configurable in config.h for those who're intent on customization,
> but I'd be inclined to set the default value at WRAPLIMIT = 1G.
>
> Comments? Vadim, is any of this about to be superseded by WAL?
> If not, I'd like to fix it for 7.1.
If undo would be implemented then we could delete pg_log between
postmaster startups - startup counter is remembered in pages, so
seeing old startup id in a page we would know that there are only
long ago committed xactions (ie only visible changes) there
and avoid xid comparison. But ... there will be no undo in 7.1.
And I foresee problems with WAL based BAR implementation if we'll
follow proposed solution: redo restores original xmin/xmax - how
to "freeze" xids while restoring DB?
(Sorry, I have to run away now... and have to think more about issue).
Vadim
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M335@postgresql.org Mon Nov 6 17:29:50 2000
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From: "Mikheev, Vadim" <vmikheev@SECTORBASE.COM>
To: "'mhh@mindspring.com'" <mhh@mindspring.com>,
Tom Lane
<tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Cc: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: RE: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed sol
ution
Date: Mon, 6 Nov 2000 14:12:07 -0800
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> > OK, 2^64 isn't mathematically unbounded, but let's see you
> > buy a disk that will hold it ;-). My point is that if we want
> > to think about allowing >4G transactions, part of the answer
> > has to be a way to recycle pg_log space. Otherwise it's still
> > not really practical.
>
> I kind of like vadim's idea of segmenting pg_log.
>
> Segments in which all the xacts have been commited could be deleted.
Without undo we have to ensure that all tables are vacuumed after
all transactions related to a segment were committed/aborted.
Vadim
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M235@postgresql.org Fri Nov 3 21:11:00 2000
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To: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
From: Philip Warner <pjw@rhyme.com.au>
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed
solution
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At 17:47 3/11/00 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
>* portability --- I don't believe long long int exists on all the
>platforms we support.
Are you sure of this, or is it just a 'last time I looked' statement. If
the latter, it might be worth verifying.
>* performance --- except on true 64-bit platforms, widening Datum to
>eight bytes would be a system-wide performance hit,
Yes, OIDs are used a lot, but it's not that bad, is it? Are there many
tight loops with thousands of OID-only operations? I'd guess it's only one
more instruction & memory fetch.
>* disk space --- letting pg_log grow without bound isn't a pleasant
>prospect either.
Maybe this can be achieved by wrapping XID for the log file only.
>I believe it is possible to fix these problems without widening XID,
>by redefining XIDs in a way that allows for wraparound. Here's my
>plan:
It's a cute idea (elegant, even), but maybe we'd be running through hoops
just for a minor performance gain (which may not exist, since we're adding
extra comparisons via the macro) and for possible unsupported OSs. Perhaps
OS's without 8 byte ints have to suffer a performance hit (ie. we declare a
struct with appropriate macros).
>are no longer simply "x < y", but need to be expressed as a macro.
>We consider x < y if (y - x) % WRAPLIMIT < WRAPLIMIT/2.
You mean you plan to limit PGSQL to only 1G concurrent transactions. Isn't
that a bit short sighted? ;-}
>2. To keep the system from having to deal with XIDs that are more than
>WRAPLIMIT/2 transactions old, VACUUM should "freeze" known-good old
>tuples.
This is a problem for me; it seems to enshrine VACUUM in perpetuity.
>4. With the wraparound behavior, pg_log will have a bounded size: it
>will never exceed WRAPLIMIT*2 bits = WRAPLIMIT/4 bytes. Since we will
>recycle pg_log entries every WRAPLIMIT xacts, during transaction start
Is there any was we can use this recycling technique with 8-byte XIDs?
Also, will there be a problem with backup programs that use XID to
determine newer records and apply/reapply changes?
>This scheme allows us to survive XID wraparound at the cost of slight
>additional complexity in ordered comparisons of XIDs (which is not a
>really performance-critical task AFAIK)
Maybe I'm really missing the amount of XID manipulation, but I'd be
surprised if 16-byte XIDs would slow things down much.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Philip Warner | __---_____
Albatross Consulting Pty. Ltd. |----/ - \
(A.B.N. 75 008 659 498) | /(@) ______---_
Tel: (+61) 0500 83 82 81 | _________ \
Fax: (+61) 0500 83 82 82 | ___________ |
Http://www.rhyme.com.au | / \|
| --________--
PGP key available upon request, | /
and from pgp5.ai.mit.edu:11371 |/
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M3501@postgresql.org Sat Jan 20 03:42:19 2001
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To: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Transaction ID wraparound: problem and proposed solution
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From: ncm@zembu.com (Nathan Myers)
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I think the XID wraparound matter might be handled a bit more simply.
Given a global variable X which is the earliest XID value in use at
some event (e.g. startup) you can compare two XIDs x and y, using
unsigned arithmetic, with just (x-X < y-X). This has the further
advantage that old transaction IDs need be "frozen" only every 4G
transactions, rather than Tom's suggested 256M or 512M transactions.
"Freezing", in this scheme, means to set all older XIDs to equal the
chosen X, rather than setting them to some constant reserved value.
No special cases are required for the comparison, even for folded
values; it is (x-X < y-X) for all valid x and y.
I don't know the role of the "bootstrap" XID, or how it must be
fitted into the above.
Nathan Myers
ncm@zembu.com
------------------------------------------------------------
> We've expended a lot of worry and discussion in the past about what
> happens if the OID generator wraps around. However, there is another
> 4-byte counter in the system: the transaction ID (XID) generator.
> While OID wraparound is survivable, if XIDs wrap around then we really
> do have a Ragnarok scenario. The tuple validity checks do ordered
> comparisons on XIDs, and will consider tuples with xmin > current xact
> to be invalid. Result: after wraparound, your whole database would
> instantly vanish from view.
>
> The first thought that comes to mind is that XIDs should be promoted to
> eight bytes. However there are several practical problems with this:
> * portability --- I don't believe long long int exists on all the
> platforms we support.
> * performance --- except on true 64-bit platforms, widening Datum to
> eight bytes would be a system-wide performance hit, which is a tad
> unpleasant to fix a scenario that's not yet been reported from the
> field.
> * disk space --- letting pg_log grow without bound isn't a pleasant
> prospect either.
>
> I believe it is possible to fix these problems without widening XID,
> by redefining XIDs in a way that allows for wraparound. Here's my
> plan:
>
> 1. Allow XIDs to range from 0 to WRAPLIMIT-1 (WRAPLIMIT is not
> necessarily 4G, see discussion below). Ordered comparisons on XIDs
> are no longer simply "x < y", but need to be expressed as a macro.
> We consider x < y if (y - x) % WRAPLIMIT < WRAPLIMIT/2.
> This comparison will work as long as the range of interesting XIDs
> never exceeds WRAPLIMIT/2. Essentially, we envision the actual value
> of XID as being the low-order bits of a logical XID that always
> increases, and we assume that no extant XID is more than WRAPLIMIT/2
> transactions old, so we needn't keep track of the high-order bits.
>
> 2. To keep the system from having to deal with XIDs that are more than
> WRAPLIMIT/2 transactions old, VACUUM should "freeze" known-good old
> tuples. To do this, we'll reserve a special XID, say 1, that is always
> considered committed and is always less than any ordinary XID. (So the
> ordered-comparison macro is really a little more complicated than I said
> above. Note that there is already a reserved XID just like this in the
> system, the "bootstrap" XID. We could simply use the bootstrap XID, but
> it seems better to make another one.) When VACUUM finds a tuple that
> is committed good and has xmin < XmaxRecent (the oldest XID that might
> be considered uncommitted by any open transaction), it will replace that
> tuple's xmin by the special always-good XID. Therefore, as long as
> VACUUM is run on all tables in the installation more often than once per
> WRAPLIMIT/2 transactions, there will be no tuples with ordinary XIDs
> older than WRAPLIMIT/2.
>
> 3. At wraparound, the XID counter has to be advanced to skip over the
> InvalidXID value (zero) and the reserved XIDs, so that no real transaction
> is generated with those XIDs. No biggie here.
>
> 4. With the wraparound behavior, pg_log will have a bounded size: it
> will never exceed WRAPLIMIT*2 bits = WRAPLIMIT/4 bytes. Since we will
> recycle pg_log entries every WRAPLIMIT xacts, during transaction start
> the xact manager will have to take care to actively clear its pg_log
> entry to zeroes (I'm not sure if it does that already, or just assumes
> that new pg_log entries will start out zero). As long as that happens
> before the xact makes any data changes, it's OK to recycle the entry.
> Note we are assuming that no tuples will remain in the database with
> xmin or xmax equal to that XID from a prior cycle of the universe.
>
> This scheme allows us to survive XID wraparound at the cost of slight
> additional complexity in ordered comparisons of XIDs (which is not a
> really performance-critical task AFAIK), and at the cost that the
> original insertion XIDs of all but recent tuples will be lost by
> VACUUM. The system doesn't particularly care about that, but old XIDs
> do sometimes come in handy for debugging purposes. A possible
> compromise is to overwrite only XIDs that are older than, say,
> WRAPLIMIT/4 instead of doing so as soon as possible. This would mean
> the required VACUUM frequency is every WRAPLIMIT/4 xacts instead of
> every WRAPLIMIT/2 xacts.
>
> We have a straightforward tradeoff between the maximum size of pg_log
> (WRAPLIMIT/4 bytes) and the required frequency of VACUUM (at least
> every WRAPLIMIT/2 or WRAPLIMIT/4 transactions). This could be made
> configurable in config.h for those who're intent on customization,
> but I'd be inclined to set the default value at WRAPLIMIT = 1G.
>
> Comments? Vadim, is any of this about to be superseded by WAL?
> If not, I'd like to fix it for 7.1.
>
> regards, tom lane
From pgsql-hackers-owner+M11649@postgresql.org Wed Aug 1 15:22:46 2001
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From: "Mikheev, Vadim" <vmikheev@SECTORBASE.COM>
To: "'pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org'" <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
Subject: [HACKERS] Using POSIX mutex-es
Date: Wed, 1 Aug 2001 12:04:24 -0700
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Status: OR
1. Just changed
TAS(lock) to pthread_mutex_trylock(lock)
S_LOCK(lock) to pthread_mutex_lock(lock)
S_UNLOCK(lock) to pthread_mutex_unlock(lock)
(and S_INIT_LOCK to share mutex-es between processes).
2. pgbench was initialized with scale 10.
SUN WS 10 (512Mb), Solaris 2.6 (I'm unable to test on E4500 -:()
-B 16384, wal_files 8, wal_buffers 256,
checkpoint_segments 64, checkpoint_timeout 3600
50 clients x 100 transactions
(after initialization DB dir was saved and before each test
copyed back and vacuum-ed).
3. No difference.
Mutex version maybe 0.5-1 % faster (eg: 37.264238 tps vs 37.083339 tps).
So - no gain, but no performance loss "from using pthread library"
(I've also run tests with 1 client), at least on Solaris.
And so - looks like we can use POSIX mutex-es and conditional variables
(not semaphores; man pthread_cond_wait) and should implement light lmgr,
probably with priority locking.
Vadim
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From pgsql-hackers-owner+M11790@postgresql.org Sun Aug 5 14:41:34 2001
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From: Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us>
Message-ID: <200108051830.f75IUhM25071@candle.pha.pa.us>
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Idea for nested transactions / savepoints
In-Reply-To: <8173.997022088@sss.pgh.pa.us> "from Tom Lane at Aug 5, 2001 10:34:48
am"
To: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Date: Sun, 5 Aug 2001 14:30:43 -0400 (EDT)
cc: PostgreSQL-development <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
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> Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> writes:
> > My idea is that we not put UNDO information into WAL but keep a List of
> > rel ids / tuple ids in the memory of each backend and do the undo inside
> > the backend.
>
> The complaints about WAL size amount to "we don't have the disk space
> to keep track of this, for long-running transactions". If it doesn't
> fit on disk, how likely is it that it will fit in memory?
Sure, we can put on the disk if that is better. I thought the problem
with WAL undo is that you have to keep UNDO info around for all
transactions that are older than the earliest transaction. So, if I
start a nested transaction, and then sit at a prompt for 8 hours, all
WAL logs are kept for 8 hours.
We can create a WAL file for every backend, and record just the nested
transaction information. In fact, once a nested transaction finishes,
we don't need the info anymore. Certainly we don't need to flush these
to disk.
--
Bruce Momjian | http://candle.pha.pa.us
pgman@candle.pha.pa.us | (610) 853-3000
+ If your life is a hard drive, | 830 Blythe Avenue
+ Christ can be your backup. | Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania 19026
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From pgman Sun Aug 5 21:16:32 2001
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From: Bruce Momjian <pgman>
Message-ID: <200108060116.f761GWH11356@candle.pha.pa.us>
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Idea for nested transactions / savepoints
In-Reply-To: <200108051938.f75Jchi27522@candle.pha.pa.us> "from Bruce Momjian
at Aug 5, 2001 03:38:43 pm"
To: Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us>
Date: Sun, 5 Aug 2001 21:16:32 -0400 (EDT)
cc: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>,
PostgreSQL-development <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
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Status: OR
> > Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> writes:
> > >> The complaints about WAL size amount to "we don't have the disk space
> > >> to keep track of this, for long-running transactions". If it doesn't
> > >> fit on disk, how likely is it that it will fit in memory?
> >
> > > Sure, we can put on the disk if that is better.
> >
> > I think you missed my point. Unless something can be done to make the
> > log info a lot smaller than it is now, keeping it all around until
> > transaction end is just not pleasant. Waving your hands and saying
> > that we'll keep it in a different place doesn't affect the fundamental
> > problem: if the transaction runs a long time, the log is too darn big.
>
> When you said long running, I thought you were concerned about long
> running in duration, not large transaction. Long duration in one-WAL
> setup would cause all transaction logs to be kept. Large transactions
> are another issue.
>
> One solution may be to store just the relid if many tuples are modified
> in the same table. If you stored the command counter for start/end of
> the nested transaction, it would be possible to sequential scan the
> table and undo all the affected tuples. Does that help? Again, I am
> just throwing out ideas here, hoping something will catch.
Actually, we need to keep around nested transaction UNDO information
only until the nested transaction exits to the main transaction:
BEGIN WORK;
BEGIN WORK;
COMMIT;
-- we can throw away the UNDO here
BEGIN WORK;
BEGIN WORK;
...
COMMIT
COMMIT;
-- we can throw away the UNDO here
COMMIT;
We are using the outside transaction for our ACID capabilities, and just
using UNDO for nested transaction capability.
--
Bruce Momjian | http://candle.pha.pa.us
pgman@candle.pha.pa.us | (610) 853-3000
+ If your life is a hard drive, | 830 Blythe Avenue
+ Christ can be your backup. | Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania 19026