Re: [HACKERS] Re: [GENERAL] drop/rename table and transactions
От | Tom Lane |
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Тема | Re: [HACKERS] Re: [GENERAL] drop/rename table and transactions |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 15860.943632824@sss.pgh.pa.us обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: [HACKERS] Re: [GENERAL] drop/rename table and transactions (Mike Mascari <mascarm@mascari.com>) |
Список | pgsql-general |
Mike Mascari <mascarm@mascari.com> writes: > Well, I agree that it would be GREAT to be able to rollback DDL > statements. However, at the moment, failures during a transaction while > DDL statements occur usually require direct intervention by the user (in > the case of having to drop/recreate indexes) and often require the services > of the DBA, if filesystem intervention is necessary (i.e., getting rid of > partially dropped/created tables and their associated fileystem > files). And forced commit after the DDL statement completes will improve that how? > I see 3 scenarios: > (1) Disallow DDL statements in transactions > (2) Send NOTICE's asking for the user to not trigger the bug until the bugs > can be fixed -or- > (3) Have all DDL statements implicity commit any running transactions. > 1, of course, stinks. 2 is the current state and would probably take > several releases before all DDL statement rollback bugs could be crushed It's not an overnight project, for sure. > 3, it seems to me, could be implemented in a day's > time, would prevent the various forms of data corruption people often post > to this list (GENERAL) about, I don't believe either of those assumptions. We've had problems with VACUUM's internal commit, and I don't think it'd be either quick or inherently more reliable to apply the same model to all DDL commands. A more significant point is that implicit commit is not a transparent change; it will break applications. People use transaction blocks for two reasons: (1) to define where to roll back to after an error, (2) to ensure that the results of logically related updates become visible to other backends atomically. Implicit commit destroys both of those guarantees, even though only the first one is really related to the implementation problem we are trying to solve. As a user I'd be pretty unhappy if "SELECT ... INTO" suddenly became "COMMIT; SELECT; BEGIN". Not only would that mean that updates made by my transaction would become visible prematurely, but it might also mean that the SELECT retrieves results it should not (ie, results from xacts that were not committed when my xact started). Both of these things could make my application logic fail in hard-to-find, hard-to- reproduce-except-under-load ways. So, although implicit commit might look like a convenient workaround at the level of Postgres itself, it'd be a horrible loss of reliability at the application level. I'd rather go with #1 (hard error) than risk introducing transactional bugs into applications that use Postgres. > Since ORACLE has 70% of the RDBMS market, it is the de facto standard Yes, and Windows is the de facto standard operating system. I don't use Windows, and I'm not willing to follow Oracle's lead when they make a bad decision... regards, tom lane
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