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Is there a way to select rows in Postgresql that aren't locked? I have a multi-threaded app that will do:

Select... order by id desc limit 1 for update

on a table.

If multiple threads run this query, they both try to pull back the same row.

One gets the row lock, the other blocks and then fails after the first one updates the row. What I'd really like is for the second thread to get the first row that matches the WHERE clause and isn't already locked.

To clarify, I want each thread to immediately update the first available row after doing the select.

So if there are rows with ID: 1,2,3,4 , the first thread would come in, select the row with ID=4 and immediately update it.

If during that transaction a second thread comes it, I'd like it to get row with ID=3 and immediately update that row.

For Share won't accomplish this nor with nowait as the WHERE clause will match the locked row (ID=4 in my example). Basically what I'd like is something like "AND NOT LOCKED" in the WHERE clause.

Users

-----------------------------------------
ID        | Name       |      flags
-----------------------------------------
1         |  bob       |        0
2         |  fred      |        1
3         |  tom       |        0
4         |  ed        |        0

If the query is "Select ID from users where flags = 0 order by ID desc limit 1" and when a row is returned the next thing is "Update Users set flags = 1 where ID = 0" then I'd like the first thread in to grab the row with ID 4 and the next one in to grab the row with ID 3.

If I append "For Update" to the select then the first thread gets the row, the second one blocks and then returns nothing because once the first transaction commits the WHERE clause is no longer satisfied.

If I don't use "For Update" then I need to add a WHERE clause on the subsequent update (WHERE flags = 0) so only one thread can update the row.

The second thread will select the same row as the first but the second thread's update will fail.

Either way the second thread fails to get a row and update because I can't get the database to give row 4 to the first thread and row 3 to the second thread the the transactions overlap.

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9 Answers

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^^ that works. consider having an "immediate" status of "locked".

Let's say your table is like that:

id | name | surname | status

And possible statuses for example are: 1=pending, 2=locked, 3=processed, 4=fail, 5=rejected

Every new record gets inserted with status pending(1)

Your program does: "update mytable set status = 2 where id = (select id from mytable where name like '%John%' and status = 1 limit 1) returning id, name, surname"

Then your program does its thing and if it cames up with the conclusion that this thread shouldn't had processed that row at all, it does: "update mytable set status = 1 where id = ?"

Otherside it updates to the other statuses.

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I faced the same problem in our application and came up with a solution that is very similar to Grant Johnson's approach. A FIFO or LIFO pipe was not an option because we have a cluster of application servers accessing one DB. What we do is a

SELECT ... WHERE FLAG=0 ... FOR UPDATE
immediately followed by a
UPDATE ... SET FLAG=1 WHERE ID=:id
as soon as possible in order to keep the lock time as low as possible. Depending on the table column count and sizes it might help to only fetch the ID in the first select and once you've marked the row to fetch the remaining data. A stored procedure can reduce the amount of round-trips even more.

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It appears that you are trying to do something like grab the highest priority item in a queue that is not already being taken care of by another process.

A likely solution is to add a where clause limiting it to unhandled requests:

select * from queue where flag=0 order by id desc for update;
update queue set flag=1 where id=:id;
--if you really want the lock:
select * from queue where id=:id for update;
...

Hopefully, the second transaction will block while the update to the flag happens, then it will be able to continue, but the flag will limit it to the next in line.

It is also likely that using the serializable isolation level, you can get the result you want without all of this insanity.

Depending on the nature of your application, there may be better ways of implementing this than in the database, such as a FIFO or LIFO pipe. Additionally, it may be possible to reverse the order that you need them in, and use a sequence to ensure that they are processed sequentially.

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How about the following? It might be treated more atomically than the other examples but should still be tested to make sure my assumptions aren't wrong.

UPDATE users SET flags = 1 WHERE id = ( SELECT id FROM users WHERE flags = 0 ORDER BY id DESC LIMIT 1 ) RETURNING ...;

You'll probably still be stuck with whatever locking scheme postgres uses internally to supply consistent SELECT results in the face of a simultaneous UPDATEs.

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Since I haven't found a better answer yet, I've decided to use locking within my app to synchronize access to the code that does this query.

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I posted a more detailed explanation of the issue above. I don't see how to do what I want without having a bunch of retries due to failed selects and/or updates.

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What are you trying to accomplish? Can you better explain why neither unlocked row updates nor full transactions will do what you want?

Better yet, can you prevent contention and simply have each thread use a different offset? This won't work well if the relevant portion of the table is being updated frequently; you'll still have collisions but only during heavy insert load.

Select... order by id desc offset THREAD_NUMBER limit 1 for update
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The order by in the WHERE clause can't really be replicated in an update, can it? I don't think so, which leaves me doing a select followed by an update. Basically any way I do the select the second thread will end up with a failed query because it selects the same row as the first. – idontwanttortfm Dec 23 '08 at 18:15
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This can be accomplished by SELECT ... NOWAIT; an example is here.

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Looks like you're looking for a SELECT FOR SHARE.

http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/sql-select.html#SQL-FOR-UPDATE-SHARE

FOR SHARE behaves similarly, except that it acquires a shared rather than exclusive lock on each retrieved row. A shared lock blocks other transactions from performing UPDATE, DELETE, or SELECT FOR UPDATE on these rows, but it does not prevent them from performing SELECT FOR SHARE.

If specific tables are named in FOR UPDATE or FOR SHARE, then only rows coming from those tables are locked; any other tables used in the SELECT are simply read as usual. A FOR UPDATE or FOR SHARE clause without a table list affects all tables used in the command. If FOR UPDATE or FOR SHARE is applied to a view or sub-query, it affects all tables used in the view or sub-query.

Multiple FOR UPDATE and FOR SHARE clauses can be written if it is necessary to specify different locking behavior for different tables. If the same table is mentioned (or implicitly affected) by both FOR UPDATE and FOR SHARE clauses, then it is processed as FOR UPDATE. Similarly, a table is processed as NOWAIT if that is specified in any of the clauses affecting it.

FOR UPDATE and FOR SHARE cannot be used in contexts where returned rows cannot be clearly identified with individual table rows; for example they cannot be used with aggregation.

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I don't think this solves my problem, which I may not have clearly stated above. Each thread wants to get the first row that it is able to update, and then update that row. [Continued below] – idontwanttortfm Dec 23 '08 at 18:00
So if there are rows with IDs 1,2,3, and 4 in the table that match the WHERE clause conditions, the first thread would update the row with ID 4, the next thread would update the row with ID 3, etc. – idontwanttortfm Dec 23 '08 at 18:00
Hmm, sorry I don't know then. – Steven Behnke Dec 23 '08 at 19:51

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