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I've read many of the gory details of write consistency and I understand how it works in the simple cases. What I'm not clear on is what this means for nested sub-queries.

Here's a concrete example:

A table with PK id, and other columns state, temp and date.

UPDATE table SET state = DECODE(state, 'rainy', 'snowy', 'sunny', 'frosty') WHERE id IN (
  SELECT id FROM (
    SELECT id,state,temp from table WHERE date > 50      
  ) WHERE (state='rainy' OR state='sunny') AND temp < 0
)

The real thing was more convoluted (in the innermost query), but this captures the essence.

If we assume the state column is not nullable, can this update ever fail due to concurrent modification (i.e., the DECODE function doesn't find a match, a value of 'rainy' or 'sunny', and so tries to insert null into a non-nullable column)?

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3 Answers 3

2

Oracle supports "statement level read and write consistency" (as all other serious DBMS)

This means that the statement as a whole will not see any changes to the database that occurred after the statement started.

As your UPDATE is one single statement there shouldn't be a case where the decode returns null.

Btw: the statement can be simplified, you don't need the outer SELECT in the sub-query:

UPDATE table SET state = DECODE(state, 'rainy', 'snowy', 'sunny', 'frosty') 
WHERE id IN (
    SELECT id
    FROM table 
    WHERE date > 50      
    AND (state='rainy' OR state='sunny') 
    AND temp < 0
)
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  • Yup, the simplication is possible in my simplified example, but not in the original query where the inner predicate was more complicated and involved aggregation over rows which didn't satisfy the outer predicate.
    – BeeOnRope
    Sep 28, 2011 at 19:52
2

I don't see any reason to be concerned. The subquery explicitly retrieves only IDs of rows with state 'rainy' or 'sunny' and that's what outer DECODE is going to get. Thole thing is one statement, and is going to be executed within transaction boundaries.

1
  • Looks like you are right about the by design behavior, but turns out that it might work differently in practice (see my answer below).
    – BeeOnRope
    Oct 24, 2011 at 6:11
1

Answering my own question: turns out there is a bug in Oracle which can cause this query to fail. Details confirmed by Tom Kyte, in the discussion starting here.

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