Re: Transactions involving multiple postgres foreign servers, take 2 - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Masahiko Sawada |
---|---|
Subject | Re: Transactions involving multiple postgres foreign servers, take 2 |
Date | |
Msg-id | CAD21AoC=kyR4TOmU7Bsq1ohoUQ9yKWuNav9hPQrecTymK-gqGQ@mail.gmail.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: Transactions involving multiple postgres foreign servers, take 2 ("ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com" <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com>) |
Responses |
Re: Transactions involving multiple postgres foreign servers, take 2
Re: Transactions involving multiple postgres foreign servers, take 2 |
List | pgsql-hackers |
On Fri, Jun 4, 2021 at 3:58 PM ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> wrote: > > > > 2021/06/04 12:28、Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com>のメール: > > > Thank you for pointing it out. This idea has been proposed several > times and there were discussions. I'd like to summarize the proposed > ideas and those pros and cons before replying to your other comments. > > There are 3 ideas. After backend both prepares all foreign transaction > and commit the local transaction, > > 1. the backend continues attempting to commit all prepared foreign > transactions until all of them are committed. > 2. the backend attempts to commit all prepared foreign transactions > once. If an error happens, leave them for the resolver. > 3. the backend asks the resolver that launched per foreign server to > commit the prepared foreign transactions (and backend waits or doesn't > wait for the commit completion depending on the setting). > > With ideas 1 and 2, since the backend itself commits all foreign > transactions the resolver process cannot be a bottleneck, and probably > the code can get more simple as backends don't need to communicate > with resolver processes. > > However, those have two problems we need to deal with: > > > Thanks for sharing the summarize. I understood there are problems related to > FDW implementation. > > First, users could get an error if an error happens during the backend > committing prepared foreign transaction but the local transaction is > already committed and some foreign transactions could also be > committed, confusing users. There were two opinions to this problem: > FDW developers should be responsible for writing FDW code such that > any error doesn't happen during committing foreign transactions, and > users can accept that confusion since an error could happen after > writing the commit WAL even today without this 2PC feature. For the > former point, I'm not sure it's always doable since even palloc() > could raise an error and it seems hard to require all FDW developers > to understand all possible paths of raising an error. And for the > latter point, that's true but I think those cases are > should-not-happen cases (i.g., rare cases) whereas the likelihood of > an error during committing prepared transactions is not low (e.g., by > network connectivity problem). I think we need to assume that that is > not a rare case. > > > Hmm… Sorry, I don’t have any good ideas now. > > If anything, I’m on second side which users accept the confusion though > let users know a error happens before local commit is done or not is necessary > because if the former case, users will execute the same query again. Yeah, users will need to remember the XID of the last executed transaction and check if it has been committed by pg_xact_status(). > > > The second problem is whether we can cancel committing foreign > transactions by pg_cancel_backend() (or pressing Ctl-c). If the > backend process commits prepared foreign transactions, it's FDW > developers' responsibility to write code that is interruptible. I’m > not sure it’s feasible for drivers for other databases. > > > Sorry, my understanding is not clear. > > After all prepares are done, the foreign transactions will be committed. > So, does this mean that FDW must leave the unresolved transaction to the transaction > resolver and show some messages like “Since the transaction is already committed, > the transaction will be resolved in background" ? I think this would happen after the backend cancels COMMIT PREPARED. To be able to cancel an in-progress query the backend needs to accept the interruption and send the cancel request. postgres_fdw can do that since libpq supports sending a query and waiting for the result but I’m not sure about other drivers. Regards, -- Masahiko Sawada EDB: https://www.enterprisedb.com/
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