postgresql/contrib/userlock
Tom Lane 8563ccae2c Simplify shared-memory lock data structures as per recent discussion:
it is sufficient to track whether a backend holds a lock or not, and
store information about transaction vs. session locks only in the
inside-the-backend LocalLockTable.  Since there can now be but one
PROCLOCK per lock per backend, LockCountMyLocks() is no longer needed,
thus eliminating some O(N^2) behavior when a backend holds many locks.
Also simplify the LockAcquire/LockRelease API by passing just a
'sessionLock' boolean instead of a transaction ID.  The previous API
was designed with the idea that per-transaction lock holding would be
important for subtransactions, but now that we have subtransactions we
know that this is unwanted.  While at it, add an 'isTempObject' parameter
to LockAcquire to indicate whether the lock is being taken on a temp
table.  This is not used just yet, but will be needed shortly for
two-phase commit.
2005-06-14 22:15:33 +00:00
..
Makefile
README.user_locks Restructure LOCKTAG as per discussions of a couple months ago. 2005-04-29 22:28:24 +00:00
user_locks.c Simplify shared-memory lock data structures as per recent discussion: 2005-06-14 22:15:33 +00:00
user_locks.h Restructure LOCKTAG as per discussions of a couple months ago. 2005-04-29 22:28:24 +00:00
user_locks.sql.in

User locks, by Massimo Dal Zotto <dz@cs.unitn.it>
Copyright (C) 1999, Massimo Dal Zotto <dz@cs.unitn.it>

This software is distributed under the GNU General Public License
either version 2, or (at your option) any later version.


This loadable module provides support for user-level long-term cooperative
locks.  For example one can write:

  select some_fields, user_write_lock_oid(oid) from table where id='key';

Now if the returned user_write_lock_oid field is 1 you have acquired an
user lock on the oid of the selected tuple and can now do some long operation
on it, like let the data being edited by the user.
If it is 0 it means that the lock has been already acquired by some other
process and you should not use that item until the other has finished.
Note that in this case the query returns 0 immediately without waiting on
the lock. This is good if the lock is held for long time.
After you have finished your work on that item you can do:

  update table set some_fields where id='key';
  select user_write_unlock_oid(oid) from table where id='key';

You can also ignore the failure and go ahead but this could produce conflicts
or inconsistent data in your application. User locks require a cooperative
behavior between users. User locks don't interfere with the normal locks
used by Postgres for transaction processing.

This could also be done by setting a flag in the record itself but in
this case you have the overhead of the updates to the records and there
could be some locks not released if the backend or the application crashes
before resetting the lock flag.
It could also be done with a begin/end block but in this case the entire
table would be locked by Postgres and it is not acceptable to do this for
a long period because other transactions would block completely.

The generic user locks use two values, group and id, to identify a lock.
Each of these are 32-bit integers.

The oid user lock functions, which take only an OID as argument, store the
OID as "id" with a group equal to 0.

The meaning of group and id is defined by the application. The user
lock code just takes two numbers and tells you if the corresponding
entity has been successfully locked. What this means is up to you.

My suggestion is that you use the group to identify an area of your
application and the id to identify an object in this area.

In all cases, user locks are local to individual databases within an
installation.

Note also that a process can acquire more than one lock on the same entity
and it must release the lock the corresponding number of times. This can
be done by calling the unlock function until it returns 0.