Re: Issue with the PRNG used by Postgres
От | Tom Lane |
---|---|
Тема | Re: Issue with the PRNG used by Postgres |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 4042696.1712766490@sss.pgh.pa.us обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Issue with the PRNG used by Postgres (Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>) |
Ответы |
Re: Issue with the PRNG used by Postgres
Re: Issue with the PRNG used by Postgres Re: Issue with the PRNG used by Postgres |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
Actually ... Parag mentioned that this was specifically about lwlock.c's usage of spinlocks. It doesn't really use a spinlock, but it does use s_lock.c's delay logic, and I think it's got the usage pattern wrong: while (true) { /* always try once to acquire lock directly */ old_state = pg_atomic_fetch_or_u32(&lock->state, LW_FLAG_LOCKED); if (!(old_state & LW_FLAG_LOCKED)) break; /* got lock */ /* and then spin without atomic operations until lock is released */ { SpinDelayStatus delayStatus; init_local_spin_delay(&delayStatus); while (old_state & LW_FLAG_LOCKED) { perform_spin_delay(&delayStatus); old_state = pg_atomic_read_u32(&lock->state); } #ifdef LWLOCK_STATS delays += delayStatus.delays; #endif finish_spin_delay(&delayStatus); } /* * Retry. The lock might obviously already be re-acquired by the time * we're attempting to get it again. */ } I don't think it's correct to re-initialize the SpinDelayStatus each time around the outer loop. That state should persist through the entire acquire operation, as it does in a regular spinlock acquire. As this stands, it resets the delay to minimum each time around the outer loop, and I bet it is that behavior not the RNG that's to blame for what he's seeing. (One should still wonder what is the LWLock usage pattern that is causing this spot to become so heavily contended.) regards, tom lane
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