I am reading this article - http://wiki.postgresql.org/images/7/7f/Adam-lowry-postgresopen2011.pdf and I noticed that an ugly part of mongoDB is the global lock.
Is it true that MongoDB has a global lock for read/write operations? what about the latest versions? Is there a plan to change that?
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1This is not a properly constructed question. You should be more specific, and maybe include the relevant portions of the link you included.– PerceptionSep 21, 2011 at 20:29
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1I'm pretty sure it's a per-database lock. So if you are writing to multiple databases, as I am in one project, you can write concurrently to them all.– jeffsaraccoSep 21, 2011 at 21:56
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1 Answer
yes. it's true: http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/How+does+concurrency+work
but they are working on it, if you look at the change log of the 2.0, they started to deal with it: http://blog.mongodb.org/post/10126837729/mongodb-2-0-released
The read/write lock is currently global, but collection-level locking is coming soon
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5Global lock is gone in Mongodb 2.2 blog.serverdensity.com/goodbye-global-lock-mongodb-2-0-vs-2-2 Aug 14, 2012 at 7:08
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3@Brian - But we still have DB level locking, which for many people is the same thing. Jul 9, 2013 at 11:46
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in mongo 2.4 there implemented other ways to yield the DB level locking in some case and the direction (probably 2.6 or later) is to have collection level locking.– ALoRJul 9, 2013 at 12:22
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Coming soon eh? It has been over 2 years and the collection-level locking issue is Open, Unresolved, and unassigned...sigh. Dec 16, 2013 at 15:44
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