On Wed, Feb 10, 2016 at 1:32 AM, Amit Kapila <amit.kapila16@gmail.com> wrote:
> The reason for using centralized way is that we need to request
> named tranches before initialization of shared memory and as far as
> I can see, currently there is no way in the subsystems where they can
> issue such a request, so one possibility is that we introduce new API's
> like InitBufferLWLocks(), InitLmgrLWLocks(), InitPredicateLWLocks()
> in respective subsystem and call them in
> CreateSharedMemoryAndSemaphores() before shared memory
> initialization. Does by doing that way addresses your concern?
Well, if we're going to have new functions like that, I think the
place to call them from is PostmasterMain() just before
process_shared_preload_libraries(). After all, if extensions were
requesting tranches, they'd do it from
process_shared_preload_libraries(), so it seems like the right place.
However, since the number of locks we need for each of these
subsystems is fixed at compile time, it seems a bit of a shame to have
to do something about them at runtime. I wonder if we should just
hard-code this in CreateLWLocks() instead of trying to use the
named-tranche facility. That is, where that function does this:
MainLWLockTranche.name = "main"; MainLWLockTranche.array_base = MainLWLockArray; MainLWLockTranche.array_stride
=sizeof(LWLockPadded); LWLockRegisterTranche(LWTRANCHE_MAIN, &MainLWLockTranche);
...register four tranches instead. And where it does this:
/* Initialize all fixed LWLocks in main array */ for (id = 0, lock = MainLWLockArray; id < numLocks; id++,
lock++) LWLockInitialize(&lock->lock, LWTRANCHE_MAIN);
...have four loops instead, each initializing with a different tranche
ID. Then the current method of computing the location of those locks
would still work just fine; the code changes would be a lot more
isolated, and we wouldn't have to do runtime save-and-restore of more
variables on Windows.
--
Robert Haas
EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company