On Wed, Nov 10, 2021 at 4:47 PM Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote:
> On 2021-11-10 13:04:43 -0800, Peter Geoghegan wrote:
> > On Wed, Nov 10, 2021 at 11:20 AM Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote:
> > > The way this definitely breaks - I have been able to reproduce this in
> > > isolation - is when one tuple is processed twice by heap_prune_chain(), and
> > > the result of HeapTupleSatisfiesVacuum() changes from
> > > HEAPTUPLE_DELETE_IN_PROGRESS to DEAD.
> >
> > I had no idea that that was now possible. I really think that this
> > ought to be documented centrally.
>
> Where would you suggest?
Offhand I'd say that it would be a good idea to add comments over the
call to vacuum_set_xid_limits() made from vacuumlazy.c.
You might also move the call to GlobalVisTestFor() out of
lazy_scan_heap(), so that it gets called right after
vacuum_set_xid_limits(). That would make the new explanation easier to
follow, since you are after all explaining the relationship between
OldestXmin (or the vacuum_set_xid_limits() call itself) and vistest
(or the GlobalVisTestFor() call itself).
Why do they have to be called in that order? Or do they? I noticed
that "make check-world" won't break if you switch the order.
I assume that you're going to want to say something about what needs
to happen in lazy_scan_prune() in these new comments -- since that is
where the relationship between these two things is most crucial.
Thanks
--
Peter Geoghegan