Re: Why release index relation lock - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Tom Lane
Subject Re: Why release index relation lock
Date
Msg-id 9042.1383403350@sss.pgh.pa.us
Whole thread Raw
In response to Why release index relation lock  (DT <kurt023@hotmail.com>)
List pgsql-general
DT <kurt023@hotmail.com> writes:
> 1. What's the rule of index relation locking?
> 2. Releasing lock is for higher concurrency, but for INSERT/UPDATE, i did not find
>    any operation that could get benefit from releasing index relation lock? Or to
>    say : what will happen if we treat index relation lock like heap relation lock?

The reason we hold relation locks till end of transaction is mainly to
avoid transactional behavior surprises, eg an in-progress transaction
finding that a relation's schema has changed underneath it.  There is
no corresponding risk for indexes, because there is no such thing as
a schema-definition change for an index --- short of dropping it,
which we disallow without having AccessExclusiveLock on the parent rel.
However, there are *physical* changes to indexes, such as REINDEX or
ALTER INDEX TABLESPACE, which require locking out other accesses till
they finish.  So the point of locking indexes in use by a query is
just to interlock against those types of operations, and there's no
need to continue holding the lock once the query is done.

VACUUM might look like an exception, but it's not since it can't
run inside a transaction block.  There's no meaningful difference
between statement end and transaction end for it.

            regards, tom lane


pgsql-general by date:

Previous
From: Adrian Klaver
Date:
Subject: Re: Table with Field Serial - Problem
Next
From: Rowan Collins
Date:
Subject: Re: changing port numbers so pgbouncer can read geoserver and postgres