Re: Performance Implications of Using Exceptions
| От | James Mansion |
|---|---|
| Тема | Re: Performance Implications of Using Exceptions |
| Дата | |
| Msg-id | 47F930D5.5030607@mansionfamily.plus.com обсуждение |
| Ответ на | Re: Performance Implications of Using Exceptions ("Robins Tharakan" <tharakan@gmail.com>) |
| Список | pgsql-performance |
Robins Tharakan wrote: > > I think James was talking about Sybase. Postgresql on the other hand > has a slightly better way to do this. > > SELECT ... FOR UPDATE allows you to lock a given row (based on the > SELECT ... WHERE clause) and update it... without worrying about a > concurrent modification. Of course, if the SELECT ... WHERE didn't > bring up any rows, you would need to do an INSERT anyway. How does that help? If the matching row doesn't exist at that point - what is there to get locked? The problem is that you need to effectively assert a lock on the primary key so that you can update the row (if it exists) or insert a row with that key (if it doesn't) without checking and then inserting and finding that some other guy you were racing performed the insert and you get a duplicate key error. How does Postgresql protect against this? James
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