JDBC should break out of the deadlock in the same way as psql. I'll run
some tests, as it might be that the protected method ExecSQL() is
waiting for a normal response, and is ignoring the notify. That's the
only place I can think it is hanging.
Peter
--
Peter Mount
Enterprise Support
Maidstone Borough Council
Any views stated are my own, and not those of Maidstone Borough Council.
-----Original Message-----
From: Tom Lane [mailto:tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us]
Sent: Thursday, December 09, 1999 1:01 AM
To: Assaf Arkin
Cc: Peter Mount; pgsql-interfaces@hub.org
Subject: Re: [INTERFACES] Transaction support in 6.5.3/JDBC
Assaf Arkin <arkin@exoffice.com> writes:
> I have a very simple test. I start two threads, both of them attempt
to
> do an update on the exact same row in the table, both connections keep
> hanging.
Hmm. The backend doesn't have any trouble detecting this; I checked
both current sources and 6.5.3:
play=> select * from z1;
f1
--12
(2 rows)
play=> begin;
BEGIN
play=> update z1 set f1 = 3 where f1 = 1;
UPDATE 1
<now in a second psql do>
play=> begin;
BEGIN
play=> update z1 set f1 = 4 where f1 = 2;
UPDATE 1
play=> update z1 set f1 = 3 where f1 = 1;
<second psql is now waiting for first one to commit or abort>
<back in first psql do>
play=> update z1 set f1 = 4 where f1 = 2;
After a second or so, one psql will say
NOTICE: Deadlock detected -- See the lock(l) manual page for a possible
cause.
ERROR: WaitOnLock: error on wakeup - Aborting this transaction
and the other will say
UPDATE 1
If you're not getting this behavior, then either your test code is wrong
or there's something broken in the JDBC driver...
regards, tom lane