postgresql/src/backend/storage/ipc/procarray.c

3978 lines
121 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* procarray.c
* POSTGRES process array code.
*
*
* This module maintains arrays of the PGPROC and PGXACT structures for all
* active backends. Although there are several uses for this, the principal
* one is as a means of determining the set of currently running transactions.
*
* Because of various subtle race conditions it is critical that a backend
* hold the correct locks while setting or clearing its MyPgXact->xid field.
* See notes in src/backend/access/transam/README.
*
* The process arrays now also include structures representing prepared
* transactions. The xid and subxids fields of these are valid, as are the
* myProcLocks lists. They can be distinguished from regular backend PGPROCs
* at need by checking for pid == 0.
*
* During hot standby, we also keep a list of XIDs representing transactions
* that are known to be running in the master (or more precisely, were running
* as of the current point in the WAL stream). This list is kept in the
* KnownAssignedXids array, and is updated by watching the sequence of
* arriving XIDs. This is necessary because if we leave those XIDs out of
* snapshots taken for standby queries, then they will appear to be already
* complete, leading to MVCC failures. Note that in hot standby, the PGPROC
* array represents standby processes, which by definition are not running
* transactions that have XIDs.
*
* It is perhaps possible for a backend on the master to terminate without
* writing an abort record for its transaction. While that shouldn't really
* happen, it would tie up KnownAssignedXids indefinitely, so we protect
* ourselves by pruning the array when a valid list of running XIDs arrives.
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2019, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* src/backend/storage/ipc/procarray.c
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include <signal.h>
#include "access/clog.h"
#include "access/subtrans.h"
#include "access/transam.h"
#include "access/twophase.h"
#include "access/xact.h"
#include "access/xlog.h"
#include "catalog/catalog.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "pgstat.h"
#include "storage/proc.h"
#include "storage/procarray.h"
#include "storage/spin.h"
#include "utils/builtins.h"
#include "utils/rel.h"
#include "utils/snapmgr.h"
#define UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(var) ((uint32)(*((volatile uint32 *)&(var))))
/* Our shared memory area */
typedef struct ProcArrayStruct
{
int numProcs; /* number of valid procs entries */
int maxProcs; /* allocated size of procs array */
/*
* Known assigned XIDs handling
*/
int maxKnownAssignedXids; /* allocated size of array */
int numKnownAssignedXids; /* current # of valid entries */
int tailKnownAssignedXids; /* index of oldest valid element */
int headKnownAssignedXids; /* index of newest element, + 1 */
slock_t known_assigned_xids_lck; /* protects head/tail pointers */
/*
* Highest subxid that has been removed from KnownAssignedXids array to
* prevent overflow; or InvalidTransactionId if none. We track this for
* similar reasons to tracking overflowing cached subxids in PGXACT
* entries. Must hold exclusive ProcArrayLock to change this, and shared
* lock to read it.
*/
TransactionId lastOverflowedXid;
/* oldest xmin of any replication slot */
TransactionId replication_slot_xmin;
/* oldest catalog xmin of any replication slot */
TransactionId replication_slot_catalog_xmin;
/* indexes into allPgXact[], has PROCARRAY_MAXPROCS entries */
int pgprocnos[FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER];
} ProcArrayStruct;
static ProcArrayStruct *procArray;
static PGPROC *allProcs;
static PGXACT *allPgXact;
/*
* Bookkeeping for tracking emulated transactions in recovery
*/
static TransactionId *KnownAssignedXids;
static bool *KnownAssignedXidsValid;
static TransactionId latestObservedXid = InvalidTransactionId;
/*
* If we're in STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING state, standbySnapshotPendingXmin is
* the highest xid that might still be running that we don't have in
* KnownAssignedXids.
*/
static TransactionId standbySnapshotPendingXmin;
#ifdef XIDCACHE_DEBUG
/* counters for XidCache measurement */
static long xc_by_recent_xmin = 0;
static long xc_by_known_xact = 0;
static long xc_by_my_xact = 0;
static long xc_by_latest_xid = 0;
static long xc_by_main_xid = 0;
static long xc_by_child_xid = 0;
static long xc_by_known_assigned = 0;
static long xc_no_overflow = 0;
static long xc_slow_answer = 0;
#define xc_by_recent_xmin_inc() (xc_by_recent_xmin++)
#define xc_by_known_xact_inc() (xc_by_known_xact++)
#define xc_by_my_xact_inc() (xc_by_my_xact++)
#define xc_by_latest_xid_inc() (xc_by_latest_xid++)
#define xc_by_main_xid_inc() (xc_by_main_xid++)
#define xc_by_child_xid_inc() (xc_by_child_xid++)
#define xc_by_known_assigned_inc() (xc_by_known_assigned++)
#define xc_no_overflow_inc() (xc_no_overflow++)
#define xc_slow_answer_inc() (xc_slow_answer++)
static void DisplayXidCache(void);
#else /* !XIDCACHE_DEBUG */
#define xc_by_recent_xmin_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_by_known_xact_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_by_my_xact_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_by_latest_xid_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_by_main_xid_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_by_child_xid_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_by_known_assigned_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_no_overflow_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_slow_answer_inc() ((void) 0)
#endif /* XIDCACHE_DEBUG */
/* Primitives for KnownAssignedXids array handling for standby */
static void KnownAssignedXidsCompress(bool force);
static void KnownAssignedXidsAdd(TransactionId from_xid, TransactionId to_xid,
bool exclusive_lock);
static bool KnownAssignedXidsSearch(TransactionId xid, bool remove);
static bool KnownAssignedXidExists(TransactionId xid);
static void KnownAssignedXidsRemove(TransactionId xid);
static void KnownAssignedXidsRemoveTree(TransactionId xid, int nsubxids,
TransactionId *subxids);
static void KnownAssignedXidsRemovePreceding(TransactionId xid);
static int KnownAssignedXidsGet(TransactionId *xarray, TransactionId xmax);
static int KnownAssignedXidsGetAndSetXmin(TransactionId *xarray,
TransactionId *xmin,
TransactionId xmax);
static TransactionId KnownAssignedXidsGetOldestXmin(void);
static void KnownAssignedXidsDisplay(int trace_level);
static void KnownAssignedXidsReset(void);
static inline void ProcArrayEndTransactionInternal(PGPROC *proc,
PGXACT *pgxact, TransactionId latestXid);
static void ProcArrayGroupClearXid(PGPROC *proc, TransactionId latestXid);
/*
* Report shared-memory space needed by CreateSharedProcArray.
*/
Size
ProcArrayShmemSize(void)
{
Size size;
/* Size of the ProcArray structure itself */
#define PROCARRAY_MAXPROCS (MaxBackends + max_prepared_xacts)
size = offsetof(ProcArrayStruct, pgprocnos);
size = add_size(size, mul_size(sizeof(int), PROCARRAY_MAXPROCS));
/*
* During Hot Standby processing we have a data structure called
* KnownAssignedXids, created in shared memory. Local data structures are
* also created in various backends during GetSnapshotData(),
* TransactionIdIsInProgress() and GetRunningTransactionData(). All of the
* main structures created in those functions must be identically sized,
* since we may at times copy the whole of the data structures around. We
* refer to this size as TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS.
*
* Ideally we'd only create this structure if we were actually doing hot
* standby in the current run, but we don't know that yet at the time
* shared memory is being set up.
*/
#define TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS \
((PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS + 1) * PROCARRAY_MAXPROCS)
if (EnableHotStandby)
{
size = add_size(size,
mul_size(sizeof(TransactionId),
TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS));
size = add_size(size,
mul_size(sizeof(bool), TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS));
}
return size;
}
/*
* Initialize the shared PGPROC array during postmaster startup.
*/
void
CreateSharedProcArray(void)
{
bool found;
/* Create or attach to the ProcArray shared structure */
procArray = (ProcArrayStruct *)
ShmemInitStruct("Proc Array",
add_size(offsetof(ProcArrayStruct, pgprocnos),
mul_size(sizeof(int),
PROCARRAY_MAXPROCS)),
&found);
if (!found)
{
/*
* We're the first - initialize.
*/
procArray->numProcs = 0;
procArray->maxProcs = PROCARRAY_MAXPROCS;
procArray->maxKnownAssignedXids = TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS;
procArray->numKnownAssignedXids = 0;
procArray->tailKnownAssignedXids = 0;
procArray->headKnownAssignedXids = 0;
SpinLockInit(&procArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
procArray->lastOverflowedXid = InvalidTransactionId;
procArray->replication_slot_xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
procArray->replication_slot_catalog_xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
}
allProcs = ProcGlobal->allProcs;
allPgXact = ProcGlobal->allPgXact;
/* Create or attach to the KnownAssignedXids arrays too, if needed */
if (EnableHotStandby)
{
KnownAssignedXids = (TransactionId *)
ShmemInitStruct("KnownAssignedXids",
mul_size(sizeof(TransactionId),
TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS),
&found);
KnownAssignedXidsValid = (bool *)
ShmemInitStruct("KnownAssignedXidsValid",
mul_size(sizeof(bool), TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS),
&found);
}
LWLockRegisterTranche(LWTRANCHE_PROC, "proc");
}
/*
* Add the specified PGPROC to the shared array.
*/
void
ProcArrayAdd(PGPROC *proc)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
if (arrayP->numProcs >= arrayP->maxProcs)
{
/*
* Oops, no room. (This really shouldn't happen, since there is a
* fixed supply of PGPROC structs too, and so we should have failed
* earlier.)
*/
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
ereport(FATAL,
(errcode(ERRCODE_TOO_MANY_CONNECTIONS),
errmsg("sorry, too many clients already")));
}
/*
* Keep the procs array sorted by (PGPROC *) so that we can utilize
* locality of references much better. This is useful while traversing the
* ProcArray because there is an increased likelihood of finding the next
* PGPROC structure in the cache.
*
* Since the occurrence of adding/removing a proc is much lower than the
* access to the ProcArray itself, the overhead should be marginal
*/
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
/*
* If we are the first PGPROC or if we have found our right position
* in the array, break
*/
if ((arrayP->pgprocnos[index] == -1) || (arrayP->pgprocnos[index] > proc->pgprocno))
break;
}
memmove(&arrayP->pgprocnos[index + 1], &arrayP->pgprocnos[index],
(arrayP->numProcs - index) * sizeof(int));
arrayP->pgprocnos[index] = proc->pgprocno;
arrayP->numProcs++;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
/*
* Remove the specified PGPROC from the shared array.
*
* When latestXid is a valid XID, we are removing a live 2PC gxact from the
* array, and thus causing it to appear as "not running" anymore. In this
* case we must advance latestCompletedXid. (This is essentially the same
* as ProcArrayEndTransaction followed by removal of the PGPROC, but we take
* the ProcArrayLock only once, and don't damage the content of the PGPROC;
* twophase.c depends on the latter.)
*/
void
ProcArrayRemove(PGPROC *proc, TransactionId latestXid)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
#ifdef XIDCACHE_DEBUG
/* dump stats at backend shutdown, but not prepared-xact end */
if (proc->pid != 0)
DisplayXidCache();
#endif
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
if (TransactionIdIsValid(latestXid))
{
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(allPgXact[proc->pgprocno].xid));
/* Advance global latestCompletedXid while holding the lock */
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid,
latestXid))
ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid = latestXid;
}
else
{
/* Shouldn't be trying to remove a live transaction here */
Assert(!TransactionIdIsValid(allPgXact[proc->pgprocno].xid));
}
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
if (arrayP->pgprocnos[index] == proc->pgprocno)
{
/* Keep the PGPROC array sorted. See notes above */
memmove(&arrayP->pgprocnos[index], &arrayP->pgprocnos[index + 1],
(arrayP->numProcs - index - 1) * sizeof(int));
arrayP->pgprocnos[arrayP->numProcs - 1] = -1; /* for debugging */
arrayP->numProcs--;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return;
}
}
/* Oops */
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
elog(LOG, "failed to find proc %p in ProcArray", proc);
}
/*
* ProcArrayEndTransaction -- mark a transaction as no longer running
*
* This is used interchangeably for commit and abort cases. The transaction
* commit/abort must already be reported to WAL and pg_xact.
*
* proc is currently always MyProc, but we pass it explicitly for flexibility.
* latestXid is the latest Xid among the transaction's main XID and
* subtransactions, or InvalidTransactionId if it has no XID. (We must ask
* the caller to pass latestXid, instead of computing it from the PGPROC's
* contents, because the subxid information in the PGPROC might be
* incomplete.)
*/
void
ProcArrayEndTransaction(PGPROC *proc, TransactionId latestXid)
{
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[proc->pgprocno];
if (TransactionIdIsValid(latestXid))
{
/*
* We must lock ProcArrayLock while clearing our advertised XID, so
* that we do not exit the set of "running" transactions while someone
* else is taking a snapshot. See discussion in
* src/backend/access/transam/README.
*/
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(allPgXact[proc->pgprocno].xid));
/*
* If we can immediately acquire ProcArrayLock, we clear our own XID
* and release the lock. If not, use group XID clearing to improve
* efficiency.
*/
if (LWLockConditionalAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE))
{
ProcArrayEndTransactionInternal(proc, pgxact, latestXid);
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
else
ProcArrayGroupClearXid(proc, latestXid);
}
else
{
/*
* If we have no XID, we don't need to lock, since we won't affect
* anyone else's calculation of a snapshot. We might change their
* estimate of global xmin, but that's OK.
*/
Assert(!TransactionIdIsValid(allPgXact[proc->pgprocno].xid));
proc->lxid = InvalidLocalTransactionId;
pgxact->xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
/* must be cleared with xid/xmin: */
pgxact->vacuumFlags &= ~PROC_VACUUM_STATE_MASK;
pgxact->delayChkpt = false; /* be sure this is cleared in abort */
proc->recoveryConflictPending = false;
Assert(pgxact->nxids == 0);
Assert(pgxact->overflowed == false);
}
}
/*
* Mark a write transaction as no longer running.
*
* We don't do any locking here; caller must handle that.
*/
static inline void
ProcArrayEndTransactionInternal(PGPROC *proc, PGXACT *pgxact,
TransactionId latestXid)
{
pgxact->xid = InvalidTransactionId;
proc->lxid = InvalidLocalTransactionId;
pgxact->xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
/* must be cleared with xid/xmin: */
pgxact->vacuumFlags &= ~PROC_VACUUM_STATE_MASK;
pgxact->delayChkpt = false; /* be sure this is cleared in abort */
proc->recoveryConflictPending = false;
/* Clear the subtransaction-XID cache too while holding the lock */
pgxact->nxids = 0;
pgxact->overflowed = false;
/* Also advance global latestCompletedXid while holding the lock */
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid,
latestXid))
ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid = latestXid;
}
/*
* ProcArrayGroupClearXid -- group XID clearing
*
* When we cannot immediately acquire ProcArrayLock in exclusive mode at
* commit time, add ourselves to a list of processes that need their XIDs
* cleared. The first process to add itself to the list will acquire
* ProcArrayLock in exclusive mode and perform ProcArrayEndTransactionInternal
* on behalf of all group members. This avoids a great deal of contention
* around ProcArrayLock when many processes are trying to commit at once,
* since the lock need not be repeatedly handed off from one committing
* process to the next.
*/
static void
ProcArrayGroupClearXid(PGPROC *proc, TransactionId latestXid)
{
PROC_HDR *procglobal = ProcGlobal;
uint32 nextidx;
uint32 wakeidx;
/* We should definitely have an XID to clear. */
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(allPgXact[proc->pgprocno].xid));
/* Add ourselves to the list of processes needing a group XID clear. */
proc->procArrayGroupMember = true;
proc->procArrayGroupMemberXid = latestXid;
while (true)
{
nextidx = pg_atomic_read_u32(&procglobal->procArrayGroupFirst);
pg_atomic_write_u32(&proc->procArrayGroupNext, nextidx);
if (pg_atomic_compare_exchange_u32(&procglobal->procArrayGroupFirst,
&nextidx,
(uint32) proc->pgprocno))
break;
}
/*
* If the list was not empty, the leader will clear our XID. It is
* impossible to have followers without a leader because the first process
* that has added itself to the list will always have nextidx as
* INVALID_PGPROCNO.
*/
if (nextidx != INVALID_PGPROCNO)
{
int extraWaits = 0;
/* Sleep until the leader clears our XID. */
pgstat_report_wait_start(WAIT_EVENT_PROCARRAY_GROUP_UPDATE);
for (;;)
{
/* acts as a read barrier */
PGSemaphoreLock(proc->sem);
if (!proc->procArrayGroupMember)
break;
extraWaits++;
}
pgstat_report_wait_end();
Assert(pg_atomic_read_u32(&proc->procArrayGroupNext) == INVALID_PGPROCNO);
/* Fix semaphore count for any absorbed wakeups */
while (extraWaits-- > 0)
PGSemaphoreUnlock(proc->sem);
return;
}
/* We are the leader. Acquire the lock on behalf of everyone. */
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
/*
* Now that we've got the lock, clear the list of processes waiting for
* group XID clearing, saving a pointer to the head of the list. Trying
* to pop elements one at a time could lead to an ABA problem.
*/
nextidx = pg_atomic_exchange_u32(&procglobal->procArrayGroupFirst,
INVALID_PGPROCNO);
/* Remember head of list so we can perform wakeups after dropping lock. */
wakeidx = nextidx;
/* Walk the list and clear all XIDs. */
while (nextidx != INVALID_PGPROCNO)
{
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[nextidx];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[nextidx];
ProcArrayEndTransactionInternal(proc, pgxact, proc->procArrayGroupMemberXid);
/* Move to next proc in list. */
nextidx = pg_atomic_read_u32(&proc->procArrayGroupNext);
}
/* We're done with the lock now. */
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
/*
* Now that we've released the lock, go back and wake everybody up. We
* don't do this under the lock so as to keep lock hold times to a
* minimum. The system calls we need to perform to wake other processes
* up are probably much slower than the simple memory writes we did while
* holding the lock.
*/
while (wakeidx != INVALID_PGPROCNO)
{
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[wakeidx];
wakeidx = pg_atomic_read_u32(&proc->procArrayGroupNext);
pg_atomic_write_u32(&proc->procArrayGroupNext, INVALID_PGPROCNO);
/* ensure all previous writes are visible before follower continues. */
pg_write_barrier();
proc->procArrayGroupMember = false;
if (proc != MyProc)
PGSemaphoreUnlock(proc->sem);
}
}
/*
* ProcArrayClearTransaction -- clear the transaction fields
*
* This is used after successfully preparing a 2-phase transaction. We are
* not actually reporting the transaction's XID as no longer running --- it
* will still appear as running because the 2PC's gxact is in the ProcArray
* too. We just have to clear out our own PGXACT.
*/
void
ProcArrayClearTransaction(PGPROC *proc)
{
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[proc->pgprocno];
/*
* We can skip locking ProcArrayLock here, because this action does not
* actually change anyone's view of the set of running XIDs: our entry is
* duplicate with the gxact that has already been inserted into the
* ProcArray.
*/
pgxact->xid = InvalidTransactionId;
proc->lxid = InvalidLocalTransactionId;
pgxact->xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
proc->recoveryConflictPending = false;
/* redundant, but just in case */
pgxact->vacuumFlags &= ~PROC_VACUUM_STATE_MASK;
pgxact->delayChkpt = false;
/* Clear the subtransaction-XID cache too */
pgxact->nxids = 0;
pgxact->overflowed = false;
}
/*
* ProcArrayInitRecovery -- initialize recovery xid mgmt environment
*
* Remember up to where the startup process initialized the CLOG and subtrans
* so we can ensure it's initialized gaplessly up to the point where necessary
* while in recovery.
*/
void
ProcArrayInitRecovery(TransactionId initializedUptoXID)
{
Assert(standbyState == STANDBY_INITIALIZED);
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(initializedUptoXID));
/*
* we set latestObservedXid to the xid SUBTRANS has been initialized up
* to, so we can extend it from that point onwards in
* RecordKnownAssignedTransactionIds, and when we get consistent in
* ProcArrayApplyRecoveryInfo().
*/
latestObservedXid = initializedUptoXID;
TransactionIdRetreat(latestObservedXid);
}
/*
* ProcArrayApplyRecoveryInfo -- apply recovery info about xids
*
* Takes us through 3 states: Initialized, Pending and Ready.
* Normal case is to go all the way to Ready straight away, though there
* are atypical cases where we need to take it in steps.
*
* Use the data about running transactions on master to create the initial
* state of KnownAssignedXids. We also use these records to regularly prune
* KnownAssignedXids because we know it is possible that some transactions
* with FATAL errors fail to write abort records, which could cause eventual
* overflow.
*
* See comments for LogStandbySnapshot().
*/
void
ProcArrayApplyRecoveryInfo(RunningTransactions running)
{
TransactionId *xids;
int nxids;
int i;
Assert(standbyState >= STANDBY_INITIALIZED);
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(running->nextXid));
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(running->oldestRunningXid));
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(running->latestCompletedXid));
/*
* Remove stale transactions, if any.
*/
ExpireOldKnownAssignedTransactionIds(running->oldestRunningXid);
/*
* Remove stale locks, if any.
*/
StandbyReleaseOldLocks(running->oldestRunningXid);
/*
* If our snapshot is already valid, nothing else to do...
*/
if (standbyState == STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_READY)
return;
/*
* If our initial RunningTransactionsData had an overflowed snapshot then
* we knew we were missing some subxids from our snapshot. If we continue
* to see overflowed snapshots then we might never be able to start up, so
* we make another test to see if our snapshot is now valid. We know that
* the missing subxids are equal to or earlier than nextXid. After we
* initialise we continue to apply changes during recovery, so once the
* oldestRunningXid is later than the nextXid from the initial snapshot we
* know that we no longer have missing information and can mark the
* snapshot as valid.
*/
if (standbyState == STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING)
{
/*
* If the snapshot isn't overflowed or if its empty we can reset our
* pending state and use this snapshot instead.
*/
if (!running->subxid_overflow || running->xcnt == 0)
{
/*
* If we have already collected known assigned xids, we need to
* throw them away before we apply the recovery snapshot.
*/
KnownAssignedXidsReset();
standbyState = STANDBY_INITIALIZED;
}
else
{
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(standbySnapshotPendingXmin,
running->oldestRunningXid))
{
standbyState = STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_READY;
elog(trace_recovery(DEBUG1),
"recovery snapshots are now enabled");
}
else
elog(trace_recovery(DEBUG1),
"recovery snapshot waiting for non-overflowed snapshot or "
"until oldest active xid on standby is at least %u (now %u)",
standbySnapshotPendingXmin,
running->oldestRunningXid);
return;
}
}
Assert(standbyState == STANDBY_INITIALIZED);
/*
* OK, we need to initialise from the RunningTransactionsData record.
*
* NB: this can be reached at least twice, so make sure new code can deal
* with that.
*/
/*
* Nobody else is running yet, but take locks anyhow
*/
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
/*
* KnownAssignedXids is sorted so we cannot just add the xids, we have to
* sort them first.
*
* Some of the new xids are top-level xids and some are subtransactions.
* We don't call SubtransSetParent because it doesn't matter yet. If we
* aren't overflowed then all xids will fit in snapshot and so we don't
* need subtrans. If we later overflow, an xid assignment record will add
* xids to subtrans. If RunningXacts is overflowed then we don't have
* enough information to correctly update subtrans anyway.
*/
/*
* Allocate a temporary array to avoid modifying the array passed as
* argument.
*/
xids = palloc(sizeof(TransactionId) * (running->xcnt + running->subxcnt));
/*
* Add to the temp array any xids which have not already completed.
*/
nxids = 0;
for (i = 0; i < running->xcnt + running->subxcnt; i++)
{
TransactionId xid = running->xids[i];
/*
* The running-xacts snapshot can contain xids that were still visible
* in the procarray when the snapshot was taken, but were already
* WAL-logged as completed. They're not running anymore, so ignore
* them.
*/
if (TransactionIdDidCommit(xid) || TransactionIdDidAbort(xid))
continue;
xids[nxids++] = xid;
}
if (nxids > 0)
{
if (procArray->numKnownAssignedXids != 0)
{
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
elog(ERROR, "KnownAssignedXids is not empty");
}
/*
* Sort the array so that we can add them safely into
* KnownAssignedXids.
*/
qsort(xids, nxids, sizeof(TransactionId), xidComparator);
/*
* Add the sorted snapshot into KnownAssignedXids. The running-xacts
* snapshot may include duplicated xids because of prepared
* transactions, so ignore them.
*/
for (i = 0; i < nxids; i++)
{
if (i > 0 && TransactionIdEquals(xids[i - 1], xids[i]))
{
elog(DEBUG1,
"found duplicated transaction %u for KnownAssignedXids insertion",
xids[i]);
continue;
}
KnownAssignedXidsAdd(xids[i], xids[i], true);
}
KnownAssignedXidsDisplay(trace_recovery(DEBUG3));
}
pfree(xids);
/*
* latestObservedXid is at least set to the point where SUBTRANS was
* started up to (cf. ProcArrayInitRecovery()) or to the biggest xid
* RecordKnownAssignedTransactionIds() was called for. Initialize
* subtrans from thereon, up to nextXid - 1.
*
* We need to duplicate parts of RecordKnownAssignedTransactionId() here,
* because we've just added xids to the known assigned xids machinery that
* haven't gone through RecordKnownAssignedTransactionId().
*/
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(latestObservedXid));
TransactionIdAdvance(latestObservedXid);
while (TransactionIdPrecedes(latestObservedXid, running->nextXid))
{
ExtendSUBTRANS(latestObservedXid);
TransactionIdAdvance(latestObservedXid);
}
TransactionIdRetreat(latestObservedXid); /* = running->nextXid - 1 */
/* ----------
* Now we've got the running xids we need to set the global values that
* are used to track snapshots as they evolve further.
*
* - latestCompletedXid which will be the xmax for snapshots
* - lastOverflowedXid which shows whether snapshots overflow
* - nextXid
*
* If the snapshot overflowed, then we still initialise with what we know,
* but the recovery snapshot isn't fully valid yet because we know there
* are some subxids missing. We don't know the specific subxids that are
* missing, so conservatively assume the last one is latestObservedXid.
* ----------
*/
if (running->subxid_overflow)
{
standbyState = STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_PENDING;
standbySnapshotPendingXmin = latestObservedXid;
procArray->lastOverflowedXid = latestObservedXid;
}
else
{
standbyState = STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_READY;
standbySnapshotPendingXmin = InvalidTransactionId;
}
/*
* If a transaction wrote a commit record in the gap between taking and
* logging the snapshot then latestCompletedXid may already be higher than
* the value from the snapshot, so check before we use the incoming value.
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid,
running->latestCompletedXid))
ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid = running->latestCompletedXid;
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid));
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
/* ShmemVariableCache->nextFullXid must be beyond any observed xid. */
AdvanceNextFullTransactionIdPastXid(latestObservedXid);
Assert(FullTransactionIdIsValid(ShmemVariableCache->nextFullXid));
KnownAssignedXidsDisplay(trace_recovery(DEBUG3));
if (standbyState == STANDBY_SNAPSHOT_READY)
elog(trace_recovery(DEBUG1), "recovery snapshots are now enabled");
else
elog(trace_recovery(DEBUG1),
"recovery snapshot waiting for non-overflowed snapshot or "
"until oldest active xid on standby is at least %u (now %u)",
standbySnapshotPendingXmin,
running->oldestRunningXid);
}
/*
* ProcArrayApplyXidAssignment
* Process an XLOG_XACT_ASSIGNMENT WAL record
*/
void
ProcArrayApplyXidAssignment(TransactionId topxid,
int nsubxids, TransactionId *subxids)
{
TransactionId max_xid;
int i;
Assert(standbyState >= STANDBY_INITIALIZED);
max_xid = TransactionIdLatest(topxid, nsubxids, subxids);
/*
* Mark all the subtransactions as observed.
*
* NOTE: This will fail if the subxid contains too many previously
* unobserved xids to fit into known-assigned-xids. That shouldn't happen
* as the code stands, because xid-assignment records should never contain
* more than PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS entries.
*/
RecordKnownAssignedTransactionIds(max_xid);
/*
* Notice that we update pg_subtrans with the top-level xid, rather than
* the parent xid. This is a difference between normal processing and
* recovery, yet is still correct in all cases. The reason is that
* subtransaction commit is not marked in clog until commit processing, so
* all aborted subtransactions have already been clearly marked in clog.
* As a result we are able to refer directly to the top-level
* transaction's state rather than skipping through all the intermediate
* states in the subtransaction tree. This should be the first time we
* have attempted to SubTransSetParent().
*/
for (i = 0; i < nsubxids; i++)
SubTransSetParent(subxids[i], topxid);
/* KnownAssignedXids isn't maintained yet, so we're done for now */
if (standbyState == STANDBY_INITIALIZED)
return;
/*
* Uses same locking as transaction commit
*/
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
/*
* Remove subxids from known-assigned-xacts.
*/
KnownAssignedXidsRemoveTree(InvalidTransactionId, nsubxids, subxids);
/*
* Advance lastOverflowedXid to be at least the last of these subxids.
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(procArray->lastOverflowedXid, max_xid))
procArray->lastOverflowedXid = max_xid;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
/*
* TransactionIdIsInProgress -- is given transaction running in some backend
*
* Aside from some shortcuts such as checking RecentXmin and our own Xid,
* there are four possibilities for finding a running transaction:
*
* 1. The given Xid is a main transaction Id. We will find this out cheaply
* by looking at the PGXACT struct for each backend.
*
* 2. The given Xid is one of the cached subxact Xids in the PGPROC array.
* We can find this out cheaply too.
*
* 3. In Hot Standby mode, we must search the KnownAssignedXids list to see
* if the Xid is running on the master.
*
* 4. Search the SubTrans tree to find the Xid's topmost parent, and then see
* if that is running according to PGXACT or KnownAssignedXids. This is the
* slowest way, but sadly it has to be done always if the others failed,
* unless we see that the cached subxact sets are complete (none have
* overflowed).
*
* ProcArrayLock has to be held while we do 1, 2, 3. If we save the top Xids
* while doing 1 and 3, we can release the ProcArrayLock while we do 4.
* This buys back some concurrency (and we can't retrieve the main Xids from
* PGXACT again anyway; see GetNewTransactionId).
*/
bool
TransactionIdIsInProgress(TransactionId xid)
{
static TransactionId *xids = NULL;
int nxids = 0;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
TransactionId topxid;
int i,
j;
/*
* Don't bother checking a transaction older than RecentXmin; it could not
* possibly still be running. (Note: in particular, this guarantees that
* we reject InvalidTransactionId, FrozenTransactionId, etc as not
* running.)
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, RecentXmin))
{
xc_by_recent_xmin_inc();
return false;
}
/*
* We may have just checked the status of this transaction, so if it is
* already known to be completed, we can fall out without any access to
* shared memory.
*/
if (TransactionIdIsKnownCompleted(xid))
{
xc_by_known_xact_inc();
return false;
}
/*
* Also, we can handle our own transaction (and subtransactions) without
* any access to shared memory.
*/
if (TransactionIdIsCurrentTransactionId(xid))
{
xc_by_my_xact_inc();
return true;
}
/*
* If first time through, get workspace to remember main XIDs in. We
* malloc it permanently to avoid repeated palloc/pfree overhead.
*/
if (xids == NULL)
{
/*
* In hot standby mode, reserve enough space to hold all xids in the
* known-assigned list. If we later finish recovery, we no longer need
* the bigger array, but we don't bother to shrink it.
*/
int maxxids = RecoveryInProgress() ? TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS : arrayP->maxProcs;
xids = (TransactionId *) malloc(maxxids * sizeof(TransactionId));
if (xids == NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_OUT_OF_MEMORY),
errmsg("out of memory")));
}
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
/*
* Now that we have the lock, we can check latestCompletedXid; if the
* target Xid is after that, it's surely still running.
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid, xid))
{
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
xc_by_latest_xid_inc();
return true;
}
/* No shortcuts, gotta grovel through the array */
for (i = 0; i < arrayP->numProcs; i++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[i];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
TransactionId pxid;
int pxids;
/* Ignore my own proc --- dealt with it above */
if (proc == MyProc)
continue;
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
pxid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xid);
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(pxid))
continue;
/*
* Step 1: check the main Xid
*/
if (TransactionIdEquals(pxid, xid))
{
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
xc_by_main_xid_inc();
return true;
}
/*
* We can ignore main Xids that are younger than the target Xid, since
* the target could not possibly be their child.
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, pxid))
continue;
/*
* Step 2: check the cached child-Xids arrays
*/
pxids = pgxact->nxids;
pg_read_barrier(); /* pairs with barrier in GetNewTransactionId() */
for (j = pxids - 1; j >= 0; j--)
{
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
TransactionId cxid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(proc->subxids.xids[j]);
if (TransactionIdEquals(cxid, xid))
{
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
xc_by_child_xid_inc();
return true;
}
}
/*
* Save the main Xid for step 4. We only need to remember main Xids
* that have uncached children. (Note: there is no race condition
* here because the overflowed flag cannot be cleared, only set, while
* we hold ProcArrayLock. So we can't miss an Xid that we need to
* worry about.)
*/
if (pgxact->overflowed)
xids[nxids++] = pxid;
}
/*
* Step 3: in hot standby mode, check the known-assigned-xids list. XIDs
* in the list must be treated as running.
*/
if (RecoveryInProgress())
{
/* none of the PGXACT entries should have XIDs in hot standby mode */
Assert(nxids == 0);
if (KnownAssignedXidExists(xid))
{
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
xc_by_known_assigned_inc();
return true;
}
/*
* If the KnownAssignedXids overflowed, we have to check pg_subtrans
* too. Fetch all xids from KnownAssignedXids that are lower than
* xid, since if xid is a subtransaction its parent will always have a
* lower value. Note we will collect both main and subXIDs here, but
* there's no help for it.
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedesOrEquals(xid, procArray->lastOverflowedXid))
nxids = KnownAssignedXidsGet(xids, xid);
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
/*
* If none of the relevant caches overflowed, we know the Xid is not
* running without even looking at pg_subtrans.
*/
if (nxids == 0)
{
xc_no_overflow_inc();
return false;
}
/*
* Step 4: have to check pg_subtrans.
*
* At this point, we know it's either a subtransaction of one of the Xids
* in xids[], or it's not running. If it's an already-failed
* subtransaction, we want to say "not running" even though its parent may
* still be running. So first, check pg_xact to see if it's been aborted.
*/
xc_slow_answer_inc();
if (TransactionIdDidAbort(xid))
return false;
/*
* It isn't aborted, so check whether the transaction tree it belongs to
* is still running (or, more precisely, whether it was running when we
* held ProcArrayLock).
*/
topxid = SubTransGetTopmostTransaction(xid);
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(topxid));
if (!TransactionIdEquals(topxid, xid))
{
for (i = 0; i < nxids; i++)
{
if (TransactionIdEquals(xids[i], topxid))
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
/*
* TransactionIdIsActive -- is xid the top-level XID of an active backend?
*
* This differs from TransactionIdIsInProgress in that it ignores prepared
* transactions, as well as transactions running on the master if we're in
* hot standby. Also, we ignore subtransactions since that's not needed
* for current uses.
*/
bool
TransactionIdIsActive(TransactionId xid)
{
bool result = false;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int i;
/*
* Don't bother checking a transaction older than RecentXmin; it could not
* possibly still be running.
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, RecentXmin))
return false;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (i = 0; i < arrayP->numProcs; i++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[i];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
TransactionId pxid;
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
pxid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xid);
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(pxid))
continue;
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue; /* ignore prepared transactions */
if (TransactionIdEquals(pxid, xid))
{
result = true;
break;
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return result;
}
/*
* GetOldestXmin -- returns oldest transaction that was running
* when any current transaction was started.
*
* If rel is NULL or a shared relation, all backends are considered, otherwise
* only backends running in this database are considered.
*
* The flags are used to ignore the backends in calculation when any of the
* corresponding flags is set. Typically, if you want to ignore ones with
* PROC_IN_VACUUM flag, you can use PROCARRAY_FLAGS_VACUUM.
*
* PROCARRAY_SLOTS_XMIN causes GetOldestXmin to ignore the xmin and
* catalog_xmin of any replication slots that exist in the system when
* calculating the oldest xmin.
*
* This is used by VACUUM to decide which deleted tuples must be preserved in
* the passed in table. For shared relations backends in all databases must be
* considered, but for non-shared relations that's not required, since only
* backends in my own database could ever see the tuples in them. Also, we can
* ignore concurrently running lazy VACUUMs because (a) they must be working
* on other tables, and (b) they don't need to do snapshot-based lookups.
*
* This is also used to determine where to truncate pg_subtrans. For that
* backends in all databases have to be considered, so rel = NULL has to be
* passed in.
*
* Note: we include all currently running xids in the set of considered xids.
* This ensures that if a just-started xact has not yet set its snapshot,
* when it does set the snapshot it cannot set xmin less than what we compute.
* See notes in src/backend/access/transam/README.
*
* Note: despite the above, it's possible for the calculated value to move
* backwards on repeated calls. The calculated value is conservative, so that
* anything older is definitely not considered as running by anyone anymore,
* but the exact value calculated depends on a number of things. For example,
* if rel = NULL and there are no transactions running in the current
* database, GetOldestXmin() returns latestCompletedXid. If a transaction
* begins after that, its xmin will include in-progress transactions in other
* databases that started earlier, so another call will return a lower value.
* Nonetheless it is safe to vacuum a table in the current database with the
* first result. There are also replication-related effects: a walsender
* process can set its xmin based on transactions that are no longer running
* in the master but are still being replayed on the standby, thus possibly
* making the GetOldestXmin reading go backwards. In this case there is a
* possibility that we lose data that the standby would like to have, but
* unless the standby uses a replication slot to make its xmin persistent
* there is little we can do about that --- data is only protected if the
* walsender runs continuously while queries are executed on the standby.
* (The Hot Standby code deals with such cases by failing standby queries
* that needed to access already-removed data, so there's no integrity bug.)
* The return value is also adjusted with vacuum_defer_cleanup_age, so
* increasing that setting on the fly is another easy way to make
* GetOldestXmin() move backwards, with no consequences for data integrity.
*/
TransactionId
GetOldestXmin(Relation rel, int flags)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
TransactionId result;
int index;
bool allDbs;
TransactionId replication_slot_xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
TransactionId replication_slot_catalog_xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
/*
* If we're not computing a relation specific limit, or if a shared
* relation has been passed in, backends in all databases have to be
* considered.
*/
allDbs = rel == NULL || rel->rd_rel->relisshared;
/* Cannot look for individual databases during recovery */
Assert(allDbs || !RecoveryInProgress());
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
/*
* We initialize the MIN() calculation with latestCompletedXid + 1. This
* is a lower bound for the XIDs that might appear in the ProcArray later,
* and so protects us against overestimating the result due to future
* additions.
*/
result = ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid;
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(result));
TransactionIdAdvance(result);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
if (pgxact->vacuumFlags & (flags & PROCARRAY_PROC_FLAGS_MASK))
continue;
if (allDbs ||
proc->databaseId == MyDatabaseId ||
proc->databaseId == 0) /* always include WalSender */
{
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
TransactionId xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xid);
/* First consider the transaction's own Xid, if any */
if (TransactionIdIsNormal(xid) &&
TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, result))
result = xid;
/*
* Also consider the transaction's Xmin, if set.
*
* We must check both Xid and Xmin because a transaction might
* have an Xmin but not (yet) an Xid; conversely, if it has an
* Xid, that could determine some not-yet-set Xmin.
*/
xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xmin);
if (TransactionIdIsNormal(xid) &&
TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, result))
result = xid;
}
}
/*
* Fetch into local variable while ProcArrayLock is held - the
* LWLockRelease below is a barrier, ensuring this happens inside the
* lock.
*/
replication_slot_xmin = procArray->replication_slot_xmin;
replication_slot_catalog_xmin = procArray->replication_slot_catalog_xmin;
if (RecoveryInProgress())
{
/*
* Check to see whether KnownAssignedXids contains an xid value older
* than the main procarray.
*/
TransactionId kaxmin = KnownAssignedXidsGetOldestXmin();
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
if (TransactionIdIsNormal(kaxmin) &&
TransactionIdPrecedes(kaxmin, result))
result = kaxmin;
}
else
{
/*
* No other information needed, so release the lock immediately.
*/
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
/*
* Compute the cutoff XID by subtracting vacuum_defer_cleanup_age,
* being careful not to generate a "permanent" XID.
*
* vacuum_defer_cleanup_age provides some additional "slop" for the
* benefit of hot standby queries on standby servers. This is quick
* and dirty, and perhaps not all that useful unless the master has a
* predictable transaction rate, but it offers some protection when
* there's no walsender connection. Note that we are assuming
* vacuum_defer_cleanup_age isn't large enough to cause wraparound ---
* so guc.c should limit it to no more than the xidStopLimit threshold
* in varsup.c. Also note that we intentionally don't apply
* vacuum_defer_cleanup_age on standby servers.
*/
result -= vacuum_defer_cleanup_age;
if (!TransactionIdIsNormal(result))
result = FirstNormalTransactionId;
}
/*
* Check whether there are replication slots requiring an older xmin.
*/
if (!(flags & PROCARRAY_SLOTS_XMIN) &&
TransactionIdIsValid(replication_slot_xmin) &&
NormalTransactionIdPrecedes(replication_slot_xmin, result))
result = replication_slot_xmin;
/*
* After locks have been released and vacuum_defer_cleanup_age has been
* applied, check whether we need to back up further to make logical
* decoding possible. We need to do so if we're computing the global limit
* (rel = NULL) or if the passed relation is a catalog relation of some
* kind.
*/
if (!(flags & PROCARRAY_SLOTS_XMIN) &&
(rel == NULL ||
RelationIsAccessibleInLogicalDecoding(rel)) &&
TransactionIdIsValid(replication_slot_catalog_xmin) &&
NormalTransactionIdPrecedes(replication_slot_catalog_xmin, result))
result = replication_slot_catalog_xmin;
return result;
}
/*
* GetMaxSnapshotXidCount -- get max size for snapshot XID array
*
* We have to export this for use by snapmgr.c.
*/
int
GetMaxSnapshotXidCount(void)
{
return procArray->maxProcs;
}
/*
* GetMaxSnapshotSubxidCount -- get max size for snapshot sub-XID array
*
* We have to export this for use by snapmgr.c.
*/
int
GetMaxSnapshotSubxidCount(void)
{
return TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS;
}
/*
* GetSnapshotData -- returns information about running transactions.
*
* The returned snapshot includes xmin (lowest still-running xact ID),
* xmax (highest completed xact ID + 1), and a list of running xact IDs
* in the range xmin <= xid < xmax. It is used as follows:
* All xact IDs < xmin are considered finished.
* All xact IDs >= xmax are considered still running.
* For an xact ID xmin <= xid < xmax, consult list to see whether
* it is considered running or not.
* This ensures that the set of transactions seen as "running" by the
* current xact will not change after it takes the snapshot.
*
* All running top-level XIDs are included in the snapshot, except for lazy
* VACUUM processes. We also try to include running subtransaction XIDs,
* but since PGPROC has only a limited cache area for subxact XIDs, full
* information may not be available. If we find any overflowed subxid arrays,
* we have to mark the snapshot's subxid data as overflowed, and extra work
* *may* need to be done to determine what's running (see XidInMVCCSnapshot()
* in heapam_visibility.c).
*
* We also update the following backend-global variables:
* TransactionXmin: the oldest xmin of any snapshot in use in the
* current transaction (this is the same as MyPgXact->xmin).
* RecentXmin: the xmin computed for the most recent snapshot. XIDs
* older than this are known not running any more.
* RecentGlobalXmin: the global xmin (oldest TransactionXmin across all
* running transactions, except those running LAZY VACUUM). This is
* the same computation done by
* GetOldestXmin(NULL, PROCARRAY_FLAGS_VACUUM).
* RecentGlobalDataXmin: the global xmin for non-catalog tables
* >= RecentGlobalXmin
*
* Note: this function should probably not be called with an argument that's
* not statically allocated (see xip allocation below).
*/
Snapshot
GetSnapshotData(Snapshot snapshot)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
TransactionId xmin;
TransactionId xmax;
TransactionId globalxmin;
int index;
int count = 0;
int subcount = 0;
bool suboverflowed = false;
TransactionId replication_slot_xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
TransactionId replication_slot_catalog_xmin = InvalidTransactionId;
Assert(snapshot != NULL);
/*
* Allocating space for maxProcs xids is usually overkill; numProcs would
* be sufficient. But it seems better to do the malloc while not holding
* the lock, so we can't look at numProcs. Likewise, we allocate much
* more subxip storage than is probably needed.
*
* This does open a possibility for avoiding repeated malloc/free: since
* maxProcs does not change at runtime, we can simply reuse the previous
* xip arrays if any. (This relies on the fact that all callers pass
* static SnapshotData structs.)
*/
if (snapshot->xip == NULL)
{
/*
* First call for this snapshot. Snapshot is same size whether or not
* we are in recovery, see later comments.
*/
snapshot->xip = (TransactionId *)
malloc(GetMaxSnapshotXidCount() * sizeof(TransactionId));
if (snapshot->xip == NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_OUT_OF_MEMORY),
errmsg("out of memory")));
Assert(snapshot->subxip == NULL);
snapshot->subxip = (TransactionId *)
malloc(GetMaxSnapshotSubxidCount() * sizeof(TransactionId));
if (snapshot->subxip == NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_OUT_OF_MEMORY),
errmsg("out of memory")));
}
/*
* It is sufficient to get shared lock on ProcArrayLock, even if we are
* going to set MyPgXact->xmin.
*/
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
/* xmax is always latestCompletedXid + 1 */
xmax = ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid;
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(xmax));
TransactionIdAdvance(xmax);
/* initialize xmin calculation with xmax */
globalxmin = xmin = xmax;
snapshot->takenDuringRecovery = RecoveryInProgress();
if (!snapshot->takenDuringRecovery)
{
int *pgprocnos = arrayP->pgprocnos;
int numProcs;
/*
* Spin over procArray checking xid, xmin, and subxids. The goal is
* to gather all active xids, find the lowest xmin, and try to record
* subxids.
*/
numProcs = arrayP->numProcs;
for (index = 0; index < numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = pgprocnos[index];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
TransactionId xid;
/*
* Skip over backends doing logical decoding which manages xmin
* separately (check below) and ones running LAZY VACUUM.
*/
if (pgxact->vacuumFlags &
(PROC_IN_LOGICAL_DECODING | PROC_IN_VACUUM))
continue;
/* Update globalxmin to be the smallest valid xmin */
xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xmin);
if (TransactionIdIsNormal(xid) &&
NormalTransactionIdPrecedes(xid, globalxmin))
globalxmin = xid;
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xid);
/*
* If the transaction has no XID assigned, we can skip it; it
* won't have sub-XIDs either. If the XID is >= xmax, we can also
* skip it; such transactions will be treated as running anyway
* (and any sub-XIDs will also be >= xmax).
*/
if (!TransactionIdIsNormal(xid)
|| !NormalTransactionIdPrecedes(xid, xmax))
continue;
/*
* We don't include our own XIDs (if any) in the snapshot, but we
* must include them in xmin.
*/
if (NormalTransactionIdPrecedes(xid, xmin))
xmin = xid;
if (pgxact == MyPgXact)
continue;
/* Add XID to snapshot. */
snapshot->xip[count++] = xid;
/*
* Save subtransaction XIDs if possible (if we've already
* overflowed, there's no point). Note that the subxact XIDs must
* be later than their parent, so no need to check them against
* xmin. We could filter against xmax, but it seems better not to
* do that much work while holding the ProcArrayLock.
*
* The other backend can add more subxids concurrently, but cannot
* remove any. Hence it's important to fetch nxids just once.
* Should be safe to use memcpy, though. (We needn't worry about
* missing any xids added concurrently, because they must postdate
* xmax.)
*
* Again, our own XIDs are not included in the snapshot.
*/
if (!suboverflowed)
{
if (pgxact->overflowed)
suboverflowed = true;
else
{
int nxids = pgxact->nxids;
if (nxids > 0)
{
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
pg_read_barrier(); /* pairs with GetNewTransactionId */
memcpy(snapshot->subxip + subcount,
(void *) proc->subxids.xids,
nxids * sizeof(TransactionId));
subcount += nxids;
}
}
}
}
}
else
{
/*
* We're in hot standby, so get XIDs from KnownAssignedXids.
*
* We store all xids directly into subxip[]. Here's why:
*
* In recovery we don't know which xids are top-level and which are
* subxacts, a design choice that greatly simplifies xid processing.
*
* It seems like we would want to try to put xids into xip[] only, but
* that is fairly small. We would either need to make that bigger or
* to increase the rate at which we WAL-log xid assignment; neither is
* an appealing choice.
*
* We could try to store xids into xip[] first and then into subxip[]
* if there are too many xids. That only works if the snapshot doesn't
* overflow because we do not search subxip[] in that case. A simpler
* way is to just store all xids in the subxact array because this is
* by far the bigger array. We just leave the xip array empty.
*
* Either way we need to change the way XidInMVCCSnapshot() works
* depending upon when the snapshot was taken, or change normal
* snapshot processing so it matches.
*
* Note: It is possible for recovery to end before we finish taking
* the snapshot, and for newly assigned transaction ids to be added to
* the ProcArray. xmax cannot change while we hold ProcArrayLock, so
* those newly added transaction ids would be filtered away, so we
* need not be concerned about them.
*/
subcount = KnownAssignedXidsGetAndSetXmin(snapshot->subxip, &xmin,
xmax);
if (TransactionIdPrecedesOrEquals(xmin, procArray->lastOverflowedXid))
suboverflowed = true;
}
/*
* Fetch into local variable while ProcArrayLock is held - the
* LWLockRelease below is a barrier, ensuring this happens inside the
* lock.
*/
replication_slot_xmin = procArray->replication_slot_xmin;
replication_slot_catalog_xmin = procArray->replication_slot_catalog_xmin;
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(MyPgXact->xmin))
MyPgXact->xmin = TransactionXmin = xmin;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
/*
* Update globalxmin to include actual process xids. This is a slightly
* different way of computing it than GetOldestXmin uses, but should give
* the same result.
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xmin, globalxmin))
globalxmin = xmin;
/* Update global variables too */
RecentGlobalXmin = globalxmin - vacuum_defer_cleanup_age;
if (!TransactionIdIsNormal(RecentGlobalXmin))
RecentGlobalXmin = FirstNormalTransactionId;
/* Check whether there's a replication slot requiring an older xmin. */
if (TransactionIdIsValid(replication_slot_xmin) &&
NormalTransactionIdPrecedes(replication_slot_xmin, RecentGlobalXmin))
RecentGlobalXmin = replication_slot_xmin;
/* Non-catalog tables can be vacuumed if older than this xid */
RecentGlobalDataXmin = RecentGlobalXmin;
/*
* Check whether there's a replication slot requiring an older catalog
* xmin.
*/
if (TransactionIdIsNormal(replication_slot_catalog_xmin) &&
NormalTransactionIdPrecedes(replication_slot_catalog_xmin, RecentGlobalXmin))
RecentGlobalXmin = replication_slot_catalog_xmin;
RecentXmin = xmin;
snapshot->xmin = xmin;
snapshot->xmax = xmax;
snapshot->xcnt = count;
snapshot->subxcnt = subcount;
snapshot->suboverflowed = suboverflowed;
snapshot->curcid = GetCurrentCommandId(false);
/*
* This is a new snapshot, so set both refcounts are zero, and mark it as
* not copied in persistent memory.
*/
snapshot->active_count = 0;
snapshot->regd_count = 0;
snapshot->copied = false;
if (old_snapshot_threshold < 0)
{
/*
* If not using "snapshot too old" feature, fill related fields with
* dummy values that don't require any locking.
*/
snapshot->lsn = InvalidXLogRecPtr;
snapshot->whenTaken = 0;
}
else
{
/*
* Capture the current time and WAL stream location in case this
* snapshot becomes old enough to need to fall back on the special
* "old snapshot" logic.
*/
snapshot->lsn = GetXLogInsertRecPtr();
snapshot->whenTaken = GetSnapshotCurrentTimestamp();
MaintainOldSnapshotTimeMapping(snapshot->whenTaken, xmin);
}
return snapshot;
}
/*
* ProcArrayInstallImportedXmin -- install imported xmin into MyPgXact->xmin
*
* This is called when installing a snapshot imported from another
* transaction. To ensure that OldestXmin doesn't go backwards, we must
* check that the source transaction is still running, and we'd better do
* that atomically with installing the new xmin.
*
* Returns true if successful, false if source xact is no longer running.
*/
bool
ProcArrayInstallImportedXmin(TransactionId xmin,
VirtualTransactionId *sourcevxid)
{
bool result = false;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(xmin));
if (!sourcevxid)
return false;
/* Get lock so source xact can't end while we're doing this */
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
TransactionId xid;
/* Ignore procs running LAZY VACUUM */
if (pgxact->vacuumFlags & PROC_IN_VACUUM)
continue;
/* We are only interested in the specific virtual transaction. */
if (proc->backendId != sourcevxid->backendId)
continue;
if (proc->lxid != sourcevxid->localTransactionId)
continue;
/*
* We check the transaction's database ID for paranoia's sake: if it's
* in another DB then its xmin does not cover us. Caller should have
* detected this already, so we just treat any funny cases as
* "transaction not found".
*/
if (proc->databaseId != MyDatabaseId)
continue;
/*
* Likewise, let's just make real sure its xmin does cover us.
*/
xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xmin);
if (!TransactionIdIsNormal(xid) ||
!TransactionIdPrecedesOrEquals(xid, xmin))
continue;
/*
* We're good. Install the new xmin. As in GetSnapshotData, set
* TransactionXmin too. (Note that because snapmgr.c called
* GetSnapshotData first, we'll be overwriting a valid xmin here, so
* we don't check that.)
*/
MyPgXact->xmin = TransactionXmin = xmin;
result = true;
break;
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return result;
}
/*
* ProcArrayInstallRestoredXmin -- install restored xmin into MyPgXact->xmin
*
* This is like ProcArrayInstallImportedXmin, but we have a pointer to the
* PGPROC of the transaction from which we imported the snapshot, rather than
* an XID.
*
* Returns true if successful, false if source xact is no longer running.
*/
bool
ProcArrayInstallRestoredXmin(TransactionId xmin, PGPROC *proc)
{
bool result = false;
TransactionId xid;
PGXACT *pgxact;
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(xmin));
Assert(proc != NULL);
/* Get lock so source xact can't end while we're doing this */
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
pgxact = &allPgXact[proc->pgprocno];
/*
* Be certain that the referenced PGPROC has an advertised xmin which is
* no later than the one we're installing, so that the system-wide xmin
* can't go backwards. Also, make sure it's running in the same database,
* so that the per-database xmin cannot go backwards.
*/
xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xmin);
if (proc->databaseId == MyDatabaseId &&
TransactionIdIsNormal(xid) &&
TransactionIdPrecedesOrEquals(xid, xmin))
{
MyPgXact->xmin = TransactionXmin = xmin;
result = true;
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return result;
}
/*
* GetRunningTransactionData -- returns information about running transactions.
*
* Similar to GetSnapshotData but returns more information. We include
* all PGXACTs with an assigned TransactionId, even VACUUM processes and
* prepared transactions.
*
* We acquire XidGenLock and ProcArrayLock, but the caller is responsible for
* releasing them. Acquiring XidGenLock ensures that no new XIDs enter the proc
* array until the caller has WAL-logged this snapshot, and releases the
* lock. Acquiring ProcArrayLock ensures that no transactions commit until the
* lock is released.
*
* The returned data structure is statically allocated; caller should not
* modify it, and must not assume it is valid past the next call.
*
* This is never executed during recovery so there is no need to look at
* KnownAssignedXids.
*
* Dummy PGXACTs from prepared transaction are included, meaning that this
* may return entries with duplicated TransactionId values coming from
* transaction finishing to prepare. Nothing is done about duplicated
* entries here to not hold on ProcArrayLock more than necessary.
*
* We don't worry about updating other counters, we want to keep this as
* simple as possible and leave GetSnapshotData() as the primary code for
* that bookkeeping.
*
* Note that if any transaction has overflowed its cached subtransactions
* then there is no real need include any subtransactions.
*/
RunningTransactions
GetRunningTransactionData(void)
{
/* result workspace */
static RunningTransactionsData CurrentRunningXactsData;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
RunningTransactions CurrentRunningXacts = &CurrentRunningXactsData;
TransactionId latestCompletedXid;
TransactionId oldestRunningXid;
TransactionId *xids;
int index;
int count;
int subcount;
bool suboverflowed;
Assert(!RecoveryInProgress());
/*
* Allocating space for maxProcs xids is usually overkill; numProcs would
* be sufficient. But it seems better to do the malloc while not holding
* the lock, so we can't look at numProcs. Likewise, we allocate much
* more subxip storage than is probably needed.
*
* Should only be allocated in bgwriter, since only ever executed during
* checkpoints.
*/
if (CurrentRunningXacts->xids == NULL)
{
/*
* First call
*/
CurrentRunningXacts->xids = (TransactionId *)
malloc(TOTAL_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS * sizeof(TransactionId));
if (CurrentRunningXacts->xids == NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_OUT_OF_MEMORY),
errmsg("out of memory")));
}
xids = CurrentRunningXacts->xids;
count = subcount = 0;
suboverflowed = false;
/*
* Ensure that no xids enter or leave the procarray while we obtain
* snapshot.
*/
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
LWLockAcquire(XidGenLock, LW_SHARED);
latestCompletedXid = ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid;
oldestRunningXid = XidFromFullTransactionId(ShmemVariableCache->nextFullXid);
/*
* Spin over procArray collecting all xids
*/
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
TransactionId xid;
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xid);
/*
* We don't need to store transactions that don't have a TransactionId
* yet because they will not show as running on a standby server.
*/
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(xid))
continue;
/*
* Be careful not to exclude any xids before calculating the values of
* oldestRunningXid and suboverflowed, since these are used to clean
* up transaction information held on standbys.
*/
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, oldestRunningXid))
oldestRunningXid = xid;
if (pgxact->overflowed)
suboverflowed = true;
/*
* If we wished to exclude xids this would be the right place for it.
* Procs with the PROC_IN_VACUUM flag set don't usually assign xids,
* but they do during truncation at the end when they get the lock and
* truncate, so it is not much of a problem to include them if they
* are seen and it is cleaner to include them.
*/
xids[count++] = xid;
}
/*
* Spin over procArray collecting all subxids, but only if there hasn't
* been a suboverflow.
*/
if (!suboverflowed)
{
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
int nxids;
/*
* Save subtransaction XIDs. Other backends can't add or remove
* entries while we're holding XidGenLock.
*/
nxids = pgxact->nxids;
if (nxids > 0)
{
/* barrier not really required, as XidGenLock is held, but ... */
pg_read_barrier(); /* pairs with GetNewTransactionId */
memcpy(&xids[count], (void *) proc->subxids.xids,
nxids * sizeof(TransactionId));
count += nxids;
subcount += nxids;
/*
* Top-level XID of a transaction is always less than any of
* its subxids, so we don't need to check if any of the
* subxids are smaller than oldestRunningXid
*/
}
}
}
/*
* It's important *not* to include the limits set by slots here because
* snapbuild.c uses oldestRunningXid to manage its xmin horizon. If those
* were to be included here the initial value could never increase because
* of a circular dependency where slots only increase their limits when
* running xacts increases oldestRunningXid and running xacts only
* increases if slots do.
*/
CurrentRunningXacts->xcnt = count - subcount;
CurrentRunningXacts->subxcnt = subcount;
CurrentRunningXacts->subxid_overflow = suboverflowed;
CurrentRunningXacts->nextXid = XidFromFullTransactionId(ShmemVariableCache->nextFullXid);
CurrentRunningXacts->oldestRunningXid = oldestRunningXid;
CurrentRunningXacts->latestCompletedXid = latestCompletedXid;
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(CurrentRunningXacts->nextXid));
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(CurrentRunningXacts->oldestRunningXid));
Assert(TransactionIdIsNormal(CurrentRunningXacts->latestCompletedXid));
/* We don't release the locks here, the caller is responsible for that */
return CurrentRunningXacts;
}
/*
* GetOldestActiveTransactionId()
*
* Similar to GetSnapshotData but returns just oldestActiveXid. We include
* all PGXACTs with an assigned TransactionId, even VACUUM processes.
* We look at all databases, though there is no need to include WALSender
* since this has no effect on hot standby conflicts.
*
* This is never executed during recovery so there is no need to look at
* KnownAssignedXids.
*
* We don't worry about updating other counters, we want to keep this as
* simple as possible and leave GetSnapshotData() as the primary code for
* that bookkeeping.
*/
TransactionId
GetOldestActiveTransactionId(void)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
TransactionId oldestRunningXid;
int index;
Assert(!RecoveryInProgress());
/*
* Read nextXid, as the upper bound of what's still active.
*
* Reading a TransactionId is atomic, but we must grab the lock to make
* sure that all XIDs < nextXid are already present in the proc array (or
* have already completed), when we spin over it.
*/
LWLockAcquire(XidGenLock, LW_SHARED);
oldestRunningXid = XidFromFullTransactionId(ShmemVariableCache->nextFullXid);
LWLockRelease(XidGenLock);
/*
* Spin over procArray collecting all xids and subxids.
*/
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
TransactionId xid;
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xid);
if (!TransactionIdIsNormal(xid))
continue;
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, oldestRunningXid))
oldestRunningXid = xid;
/*
* Top-level XID of a transaction is always less than any of its
* subxids, so we don't need to check if any of the subxids are
* smaller than oldestRunningXid
*/
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return oldestRunningXid;
}
/*
* GetOldestSafeDecodingTransactionId -- lowest xid not affected by vacuum
*
* Returns the oldest xid that we can guarantee not to have been affected by
* vacuum, i.e. no rows >= that xid have been vacuumed away unless the
* transaction aborted. Note that the value can (and most of the time will) be
* much more conservative than what really has been affected by vacuum, but we
* currently don't have better data available.
*
* This is useful to initialize the cutoff xid after which a new changeset
* extraction replication slot can start decoding changes.
*
* Must be called with ProcArrayLock held either shared or exclusively,
* although most callers will want to use exclusive mode since it is expected
* that the caller will immediately use the xid to peg the xmin horizon.
*/
TransactionId
GetOldestSafeDecodingTransactionId(bool catalogOnly)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
TransactionId oldestSafeXid;
int index;
bool recovery_in_progress = RecoveryInProgress();
Assert(LWLockHeldByMe(ProcArrayLock));
/*
* Acquire XidGenLock, so no transactions can acquire an xid while we're
* running. If no transaction with xid were running concurrently a new xid
* could influence the RecentXmin et al.
*
* We initialize the computation to nextXid since that's guaranteed to be
* a safe, albeit pessimal, value.
*/
LWLockAcquire(XidGenLock, LW_SHARED);
oldestSafeXid = XidFromFullTransactionId(ShmemVariableCache->nextFullXid);
/*
* If there's already a slot pegging the xmin horizon, we can start with
* that value, it's guaranteed to be safe since it's computed by this
* routine initially and has been enforced since. We can always use the
* slot's general xmin horizon, but the catalog horizon is only usable
* when only catalog data is going to be looked at.
*/
if (TransactionIdIsValid(procArray->replication_slot_xmin) &&
TransactionIdPrecedes(procArray->replication_slot_xmin,
oldestSafeXid))
oldestSafeXid = procArray->replication_slot_xmin;
if (catalogOnly &&
TransactionIdIsValid(procArray->replication_slot_catalog_xmin) &&
TransactionIdPrecedes(procArray->replication_slot_catalog_xmin,
oldestSafeXid))
oldestSafeXid = procArray->replication_slot_catalog_xmin;
/*
* If we're not in recovery, we walk over the procarray and collect the
* lowest xid. Since we're called with ProcArrayLock held and have
* acquired XidGenLock, no entries can vanish concurrently, since
* PGXACT->xid is only set with XidGenLock held and only cleared with
* ProcArrayLock held.
*
* In recovery we can't lower the safe value besides what we've computed
* above, so we'll have to wait a bit longer there. We unfortunately can
* *not* use KnownAssignedXidsGetOldestXmin() since the KnownAssignedXids
* machinery can miss values and return an older value than is safe.
*/
if (!recovery_in_progress)
{
/*
* Spin over procArray collecting all min(PGXACT->xid)
*/
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
TransactionId xid;
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
xid = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xid);
if (!TransactionIdIsNormal(xid))
continue;
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, oldestSafeXid))
oldestSafeXid = xid;
}
}
LWLockRelease(XidGenLock);
return oldestSafeXid;
}
/*
* GetVirtualXIDsDelayingChkpt -- Get the VXIDs of transactions that are
* delaying checkpoint because they have critical actions in progress.
*
* Constructs an array of VXIDs of transactions that are currently in commit
* critical sections, as shown by having delayChkpt set in their PGXACT.
*
* Returns a palloc'd array that should be freed by the caller.
* *nvxids is the number of valid entries.
*
* Note that because backends set or clear delayChkpt without holding any lock,
* the result is somewhat indeterminate, but we don't really care. Even in
* a multiprocessor with delayed writes to shared memory, it should be certain
* that setting of delayChkpt will propagate to shared memory when the backend
* takes a lock, so we cannot fail to see a virtual xact as delayChkpt if
* it's already inserted its commit record. Whether it takes a little while
* for clearing of delayChkpt to propagate is unimportant for correctness.
*/
VirtualTransactionId *
GetVirtualXIDsDelayingChkpt(int *nvxids)
{
VirtualTransactionId *vxids;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int count = 0;
int index;
/* allocate what's certainly enough result space */
vxids = (VirtualTransactionId *)
palloc(sizeof(VirtualTransactionId) * arrayP->maxProcs);
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
if (pgxact->delayChkpt)
{
VirtualTransactionId vxid;
GET_VXID_FROM_PGPROC(vxid, *proc);
if (VirtualTransactionIdIsValid(vxid))
vxids[count++] = vxid;
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
*nvxids = count;
return vxids;
}
/*
* HaveVirtualXIDsDelayingChkpt -- Are any of the specified VXIDs delaying?
*
* This is used with the results of GetVirtualXIDsDelayingChkpt to see if any
* of the specified VXIDs are still in critical sections of code.
*
* Note: this is O(N^2) in the number of vxacts that are/were delaying, but
* those numbers should be small enough for it not to be a problem.
*/
bool
HaveVirtualXIDsDelayingChkpt(VirtualTransactionId *vxids, int nvxids)
{
bool result = false;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
VirtualTransactionId vxid;
GET_VXID_FROM_PGPROC(vxid, *proc);
if (pgxact->delayChkpt && VirtualTransactionIdIsValid(vxid))
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < nvxids; i++)
{
if (VirtualTransactionIdEquals(vxid, vxids[i]))
{
result = true;
break;
}
}
if (result)
break;
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return result;
}
/*
* BackendPidGetProc -- get a backend's PGPROC given its PID
*
* Returns NULL if not found. Note that it is up to the caller to be
* sure that the question remains meaningful for long enough for the
* answer to be used ...
*/
PGPROC *
BackendPidGetProc(int pid)
{
PGPROC *result;
if (pid == 0) /* never match dummy PGPROCs */
return NULL;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
result = BackendPidGetProcWithLock(pid);
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return result;
}
/*
* BackendPidGetProcWithLock -- get a backend's PGPROC given its PID
*
* Same as above, except caller must be holding ProcArrayLock. The found
* entry, if any, can be assumed to be valid as long as the lock remains held.
*/
PGPROC *
BackendPidGetProcWithLock(int pid)
{
PGPROC *result = NULL;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
if (pid == 0) /* never match dummy PGPROCs */
return NULL;
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[arrayP->pgprocnos[index]];
if (proc->pid == pid)
{
result = proc;
break;
}
}
return result;
}
/*
* BackendXidGetPid -- get a backend's pid given its XID
*
* Returns 0 if not found or it's a prepared transaction. Note that
* it is up to the caller to be sure that the question remains
* meaningful for long enough for the answer to be used ...
*
* Only main transaction Ids are considered. This function is mainly
* useful for determining what backend owns a lock.
*
* Beware that not every xact has an XID assigned. However, as long as you
* only call this using an XID found on disk, you're safe.
*/
int
BackendXidGetPid(TransactionId xid)
{
int result = 0;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
if (xid == InvalidTransactionId) /* never match invalid xid */
return 0;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
if (pgxact->xid == xid)
{
result = proc->pid;
break;
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return result;
}
/*
* IsBackendPid -- is a given pid a running backend
*
* This is not called by the backend, but is called by external modules.
*/
bool
IsBackendPid(int pid)
{
return (BackendPidGetProc(pid) != NULL);
}
/*
* GetCurrentVirtualXIDs -- returns an array of currently active VXIDs.
*
* The array is palloc'd. The number of valid entries is returned into *nvxids.
*
* The arguments allow filtering the set of VXIDs returned. Our own process
* is always skipped. In addition:
* If limitXmin is not InvalidTransactionId, skip processes with
* xmin > limitXmin.
* If excludeXmin0 is true, skip processes with xmin = 0.
* If allDbs is false, skip processes attached to other databases.
* If excludeVacuum isn't zero, skip processes for which
* (vacuumFlags & excludeVacuum) is not zero.
*
* Note: the purpose of the limitXmin and excludeXmin0 parameters is to
* allow skipping backends whose oldest live snapshot is no older than
* some snapshot we have. Since we examine the procarray with only shared
* lock, there are race conditions: a backend could set its xmin just after
* we look. Indeed, on multiprocessors with weak memory ordering, the
* other backend could have set its xmin *before* we look. We know however
* that such a backend must have held shared ProcArrayLock overlapping our
* own hold of ProcArrayLock, else we would see its xmin update. Therefore,
* any snapshot the other backend is taking concurrently with our scan cannot
* consider any transactions as still running that we think are committed
* (since backends must hold ProcArrayLock exclusive to commit).
*/
VirtualTransactionId *
GetCurrentVirtualXIDs(TransactionId limitXmin, bool excludeXmin0,
bool allDbs, int excludeVacuum,
int *nvxids)
{
VirtualTransactionId *vxids;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int count = 0;
int index;
/* allocate what's certainly enough result space */
vxids = (VirtualTransactionId *)
palloc(sizeof(VirtualTransactionId) * arrayP->maxProcs);
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
if (proc == MyProc)
continue;
if (excludeVacuum & pgxact->vacuumFlags)
continue;
if (allDbs || proc->databaseId == MyDatabaseId)
{
/* Fetch xmin just once - might change on us */
TransactionId pxmin = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xmin);
if (excludeXmin0 && !TransactionIdIsValid(pxmin))
continue;
/*
* InvalidTransactionId precedes all other XIDs, so a proc that
* hasn't set xmin yet will not be rejected by this test.
*/
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(limitXmin) ||
TransactionIdPrecedesOrEquals(pxmin, limitXmin))
{
VirtualTransactionId vxid;
GET_VXID_FROM_PGPROC(vxid, *proc);
if (VirtualTransactionIdIsValid(vxid))
vxids[count++] = vxid;
}
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
*nvxids = count;
return vxids;
}
/*
* GetConflictingVirtualXIDs -- returns an array of currently active VXIDs.
*
* Usage is limited to conflict resolution during recovery on standby servers.
* limitXmin is supplied as either latestRemovedXid, or InvalidTransactionId
* in cases where we cannot accurately determine a value for latestRemovedXid.
*
* If limitXmin is InvalidTransactionId then we want to kill everybody,
* so we're not worried if they have a snapshot or not, nor does it really
* matter what type of lock we hold.
*
* All callers that are checking xmins always now supply a valid and useful
* value for limitXmin. The limitXmin is always lower than the lowest
* numbered KnownAssignedXid that is not already a FATAL error. This is
* because we only care about cleanup records that are cleaning up tuple
* versions from committed transactions. In that case they will only occur
* at the point where the record is less than the lowest running xid. That
* allows us to say that if any backend takes a snapshot concurrently with
* us then the conflict assessment made here would never include the snapshot
* that is being derived. So we take LW_SHARED on the ProcArray and allow
* concurrent snapshots when limitXmin is valid. We might think about adding
* Assert(limitXmin < lowest(KnownAssignedXids))
* but that would not be true in the case of FATAL errors lagging in array,
* but we already know those are bogus anyway, so we skip that test.
*
* If dbOid is valid we skip backends attached to other databases.
*
* Be careful to *not* pfree the result from this function. We reuse
* this array sufficiently often that we use malloc for the result.
*/
VirtualTransactionId *
GetConflictingVirtualXIDs(TransactionId limitXmin, Oid dbOid)
{
static VirtualTransactionId *vxids;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int count = 0;
int index;
/*
* If first time through, get workspace to remember main XIDs in. We
* malloc it permanently to avoid repeated palloc/pfree overhead. Allow
* result space, remembering room for a terminator.
*/
if (vxids == NULL)
{
vxids = (VirtualTransactionId *)
malloc(sizeof(VirtualTransactionId) * (arrayP->maxProcs + 1));
if (vxids == NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_OUT_OF_MEMORY),
errmsg("out of memory")));
}
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
/* Exclude prepared transactions */
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue;
if (!OidIsValid(dbOid) ||
proc->databaseId == dbOid)
{
/* Fetch xmin just once - can't change on us, but good coding */
TransactionId pxmin = UINT32_ACCESS_ONCE(pgxact->xmin);
/*
* We ignore an invalid pxmin because this means that backend has
* no snapshot currently. We hold a Share lock to avoid contention
* with users taking snapshots. That is not a problem because the
* current xmin is always at least one higher than the latest
* removed xid, so any new snapshot would never conflict with the
* test here.
*/
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(limitXmin) ||
(TransactionIdIsValid(pxmin) && !TransactionIdFollows(pxmin, limitXmin)))
{
VirtualTransactionId vxid;
GET_VXID_FROM_PGPROC(vxid, *proc);
if (VirtualTransactionIdIsValid(vxid))
vxids[count++] = vxid;
}
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
/* add the terminator */
vxids[count].backendId = InvalidBackendId;
vxids[count].localTransactionId = InvalidLocalTransactionId;
return vxids;
}
/*
* CancelVirtualTransaction - used in recovery conflict processing
*
* Returns pid of the process signaled, or 0 if not found.
*/
pid_t
CancelVirtualTransaction(VirtualTransactionId vxid, ProcSignalReason sigmode)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
pid_t pid = 0;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
VirtualTransactionId procvxid;
GET_VXID_FROM_PGPROC(procvxid, *proc);
if (procvxid.backendId == vxid.backendId &&
procvxid.localTransactionId == vxid.localTransactionId)
{
proc->recoveryConflictPending = true;
pid = proc->pid;
if (pid != 0)
{
/*
* Kill the pid if it's still here. If not, that's what we
* wanted so ignore any errors.
*/
(void) SendProcSignal(pid, sigmode, vxid.backendId);
}
break;
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return pid;
}
/*
* MinimumActiveBackends --- count backends (other than myself) that are
* in active transactions. Return true if the count exceeds the
* minimum threshold passed. This is used as a heuristic to decide if
* a pre-XLOG-flush delay is worthwhile during commit.
*
* Do not count backends that are blocked waiting for locks, since they are
* not going to get to run until someone else commits.
*/
bool
MinimumActiveBackends(int min)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int count = 0;
int index;
/* Quick short-circuit if no minimum is specified */
if (min == 0)
return true;
/*
* Note: for speed, we don't acquire ProcArrayLock. This is a little bit
* bogus, but since we are only testing fields for zero or nonzero, it
* should be OK. The result is only used for heuristic purposes anyway...
*/
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
/*
* Since we're not holding a lock, need to be prepared to deal with
* garbage, as someone could have incremented numProcs but not yet
* filled the structure.
*
* If someone just decremented numProcs, 'proc' could also point to a
* PGPROC entry that's no longer in the array. It still points to a
* PGPROC struct, though, because freed PGPROC entries just go to the
* free list and are recycled. Its contents are nonsense in that case,
* but that's acceptable for this function.
*/
if (pgprocno == -1)
continue; /* do not count deleted entries */
if (proc == MyProc)
continue; /* do not count myself */
if (pgxact->xid == InvalidTransactionId)
continue; /* do not count if no XID assigned */
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue; /* do not count prepared xacts */
if (proc->waitLock != NULL)
continue; /* do not count if blocked on a lock */
count++;
if (count >= min)
break;
}
return count >= min;
}
/*
* CountDBBackends --- count backends that are using specified database
*/
int
CountDBBackends(Oid databaseid)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int count = 0;
int index;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue; /* do not count prepared xacts */
if (!OidIsValid(databaseid) ||
proc->databaseId == databaseid)
count++;
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return count;
}
/*
* CountDBConnections --- counts database backends ignoring any background
* worker processes
*/
int
CountDBConnections(Oid databaseid)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int count = 0;
int index;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue; /* do not count prepared xacts */
if (proc->isBackgroundWorker)
continue; /* do not count background workers */
if (!OidIsValid(databaseid) ||
proc->databaseId == databaseid)
count++;
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return count;
}
/*
* CancelDBBackends --- cancel backends that are using specified database
*/
void
CancelDBBackends(Oid databaseid, ProcSignalReason sigmode, bool conflictPending)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
pid_t pid = 0;
/* tell all backends to die */
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
if (databaseid == InvalidOid || proc->databaseId == databaseid)
{
VirtualTransactionId procvxid;
GET_VXID_FROM_PGPROC(procvxid, *proc);
proc->recoveryConflictPending = conflictPending;
pid = proc->pid;
if (pid != 0)
{
/*
* Kill the pid if it's still here. If not, that's what we
* wanted so ignore any errors.
*/
(void) SendProcSignal(pid, sigmode, procvxid.backendId);
}
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
/*
* CountUserBackends --- count backends that are used by specified user
*/
int
CountUserBackends(Oid roleid)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int count = 0;
int index;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue; /* do not count prepared xacts */
if (proc->isBackgroundWorker)
continue; /* do not count background workers */
if (proc->roleId == roleid)
count++;
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return count;
}
/*
* CountOtherDBBackends -- check for other backends running in the given DB
*
* If there are other backends in the DB, we will wait a maximum of 5 seconds
* for them to exit. Autovacuum backends are encouraged to exit early by
* sending them SIGTERM, but normal user backends are just waited for.
*
* The current backend is always ignored; it is caller's responsibility to
* check whether the current backend uses the given DB, if it's important.
*
* Returns true if there are (still) other backends in the DB, false if not.
* Also, *nbackends and *nprepared are set to the number of other backends
* and prepared transactions in the DB, respectively.
*
* This function is used to interlock DROP DATABASE and related commands
* against there being any active backends in the target DB --- dropping the
* DB while active backends remain would be a Bad Thing. Note that we cannot
* detect here the possibility of a newly-started backend that is trying to
* connect to the doomed database, so additional interlocking is needed during
* backend startup. The caller should normally hold an exclusive lock on the
* target DB before calling this, which is one reason we mustn't wait
* indefinitely.
*/
bool
CountOtherDBBackends(Oid databaseId, int *nbackends, int *nprepared)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
#define MAXAUTOVACPIDS 10 /* max autovacs to SIGTERM per iteration */
int autovac_pids[MAXAUTOVACPIDS];
int tries;
/* 50 tries with 100ms sleep between tries makes 5 sec total wait */
for (tries = 0; tries < 50; tries++)
{
int nautovacs = 0;
bool found = false;
int index;
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS();
*nbackends = *nprepared = 0;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
int pgprocno = arrayP->pgprocnos[index];
PGPROC *proc = &allProcs[pgprocno];
PGXACT *pgxact = &allPgXact[pgprocno];
if (proc->databaseId != databaseId)
continue;
if (proc == MyProc)
continue;
found = true;
if (proc->pid == 0)
(*nprepared)++;
else
{
(*nbackends)++;
if ((pgxact->vacuumFlags & PROC_IS_AUTOVACUUM) &&
nautovacs < MAXAUTOVACPIDS)
autovac_pids[nautovacs++] = proc->pid;
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
if (!found)
return false; /* no conflicting backends, so done */
/*
* Send SIGTERM to any conflicting autovacuums before sleeping. We
* postpone this step until after the loop because we don't want to
* hold ProcArrayLock while issuing kill(). We have no idea what might
* block kill() inside the kernel...
*/
for (index = 0; index < nautovacs; index++)
(void) kill(autovac_pids[index], SIGTERM); /* ignore any error */
/* sleep, then try again */
pg_usleep(100 * 1000L); /* 100ms */
}
return true; /* timed out, still conflicts */
}
/*
* ProcArraySetReplicationSlotXmin
*
* Install limits to future computations of the xmin horizon to prevent vacuum
* and HOT pruning from removing affected rows still needed by clients with
* replication slots.
*/
void
ProcArraySetReplicationSlotXmin(TransactionId xmin, TransactionId catalog_xmin,
bool already_locked)
{
Assert(!already_locked || LWLockHeldByMe(ProcArrayLock));
if (!already_locked)
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
procArray->replication_slot_xmin = xmin;
procArray->replication_slot_catalog_xmin = catalog_xmin;
if (!already_locked)
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
/*
* ProcArrayGetReplicationSlotXmin
*
* Return the current slot xmin limits. That's useful to be able to remove
* data that's older than those limits.
*/
void
ProcArrayGetReplicationSlotXmin(TransactionId *xmin,
TransactionId *catalog_xmin)
{
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
if (xmin != NULL)
*xmin = procArray->replication_slot_xmin;
if (catalog_xmin != NULL)
*catalog_xmin = procArray->replication_slot_catalog_xmin;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
#define XidCacheRemove(i) \
do { \
MyProc->subxids.xids[i] = MyProc->subxids.xids[MyPgXact->nxids - 1]; \
pg_write_barrier(); \
MyPgXact->nxids--; \
} while (0)
/*
* XidCacheRemoveRunningXids
*
* Remove a bunch of TransactionIds from the list of known-running
* subtransactions for my backend. Both the specified xid and those in
* the xids[] array (of length nxids) are removed from the subxids cache.
* latestXid must be the latest XID among the group.
*/
void
XidCacheRemoveRunningXids(TransactionId xid,
int nxids, const TransactionId *xids,
TransactionId latestXid)
{
int i,
j;
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(xid));
/*
* We must hold ProcArrayLock exclusively in order to remove transactions
* from the PGPROC array. (See src/backend/access/transam/README.) It's
* possible this could be relaxed since we know this routine is only used
* to abort subtransactions, but pending closer analysis we'd best be
* conservative.
*
* Note that we do not have to be careful about memory ordering of our own
* reads wrt. GetNewTransactionId() here - only this process can modify
* relevant fields of MyProc/MyPgXact. But we do have to be careful about
* our own writes being well ordered.
*/
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
/*
* Under normal circumstances xid and xids[] will be in increasing order,
* as will be the entries in subxids. Scan backwards to avoid O(N^2)
* behavior when removing a lot of xids.
*/
for (i = nxids - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
TransactionId anxid = xids[i];
for (j = MyPgXact->nxids - 1; j >= 0; j--)
{
if (TransactionIdEquals(MyProc->subxids.xids[j], anxid))
{
XidCacheRemove(j);
break;
}
}
/*
* Ordinarily we should have found it, unless the cache has
* overflowed. However it's also possible for this routine to be
* invoked multiple times for the same subtransaction, in case of an
* error during AbortSubTransaction. So instead of Assert, emit a
* debug warning.
*/
if (j < 0 && !MyPgXact->overflowed)
elog(WARNING, "did not find subXID %u in MyProc", anxid);
}
for (j = MyPgXact->nxids - 1; j >= 0; j--)
{
if (TransactionIdEquals(MyProc->subxids.xids[j], xid))
{
XidCacheRemove(j);
break;
}
}
/* Ordinarily we should have found it, unless the cache has overflowed */
if (j < 0 && !MyPgXact->overflowed)
elog(WARNING, "did not find subXID %u in MyProc", xid);
/* Also advance global latestCompletedXid while holding the lock */
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid,
latestXid))
ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid = latestXid;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
#ifdef XIDCACHE_DEBUG
/*
* Print stats about effectiveness of XID cache
*/
static void
DisplayXidCache(void)
{
fprintf(stderr,
"XidCache: xmin: %ld, known: %ld, myxact: %ld, latest: %ld, mainxid: %ld, childxid: %ld, knownassigned: %ld, nooflo: %ld, slow: %ld\n",
xc_by_recent_xmin,
xc_by_known_xact,
xc_by_my_xact,
xc_by_latest_xid,
xc_by_main_xid,
xc_by_child_xid,
xc_by_known_assigned,
xc_no_overflow,
xc_slow_answer);
}
#endif /* XIDCACHE_DEBUG */
/* ----------------------------------------------
* KnownAssignedTransactionIds sub-module
* ----------------------------------------------
*/
/*
* In Hot Standby mode, we maintain a list of transactions that are (or were)
* running in the master at the current point in WAL. These XIDs must be
* treated as running by standby transactions, even though they are not in
* the standby server's PGXACT array.
*
* We record all XIDs that we know have been assigned. That includes all the
* XIDs seen in WAL records, plus all unobserved XIDs that we can deduce have
* been assigned. We can deduce the existence of unobserved XIDs because we
* know XIDs are assigned in sequence, with no gaps. The KnownAssignedXids
* list expands as new XIDs are observed or inferred, and contracts when
* transaction completion records arrive.
*
* During hot standby we do not fret too much about the distinction between
* top-level XIDs and subtransaction XIDs. We store both together in the
* KnownAssignedXids list. In backends, this is copied into snapshots in
* GetSnapshotData(), taking advantage of the fact that XidInMVCCSnapshot()
* doesn't care about the distinction either. Subtransaction XIDs are
* effectively treated as top-level XIDs and in the typical case pg_subtrans
* links are *not* maintained (which does not affect visibility).
*
* We have room in KnownAssignedXids and in snapshots to hold maxProcs *
* (1 + PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS) XIDs, so every master transaction must
* report its subtransaction XIDs in a WAL XLOG_XACT_ASSIGNMENT record at
* least every PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS. When we receive one of these
* records, we mark the subXIDs as children of the top XID in pg_subtrans,
* and then remove them from KnownAssignedXids. This prevents overflow of
* KnownAssignedXids and snapshots, at the cost that status checks for these
* subXIDs will take a slower path through TransactionIdIsInProgress().
* This means that KnownAssignedXids is not necessarily complete for subXIDs,
* though it should be complete for top-level XIDs; this is the same situation
* that holds with respect to the PGPROC entries in normal running.
*
* When we throw away subXIDs from KnownAssignedXids, we need to keep track of
* that, similarly to tracking overflow of a PGPROC's subxids array. We do
* that by remembering the lastOverflowedXid, ie the last thrown-away subXID.
* As long as that is within the range of interesting XIDs, we have to assume
* that subXIDs are missing from snapshots. (Note that subXID overflow occurs
* on primary when 65th subXID arrives, whereas on standby it occurs when 64th
* subXID arrives - that is not an error.)
*
* Should a backend on primary somehow disappear before it can write an abort
* record, then we just leave those XIDs in KnownAssignedXids. They actually
* aborted but we think they were running; the distinction is irrelevant
* because either way any changes done by the transaction are not visible to
* backends in the standby. We prune KnownAssignedXids when
* XLOG_RUNNING_XACTS arrives, to forestall possible overflow of the
* array due to such dead XIDs.
*/
/*
* RecordKnownAssignedTransactionIds
* Record the given XID in KnownAssignedXids, as well as any preceding
* unobserved XIDs.
*
* RecordKnownAssignedTransactionIds() should be run for *every* WAL record
* associated with a transaction. Must be called for each record after we
* have executed StartupCLOG() et al, since we must ExtendCLOG() etc..
*
* Called during recovery in analogy with and in place of GetNewTransactionId()
*/
void
RecordKnownAssignedTransactionIds(TransactionId xid)
{
Assert(standbyState >= STANDBY_INITIALIZED);
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(xid));
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(latestObservedXid));
elog(trace_recovery(DEBUG4), "record known xact %u latestObservedXid %u",
xid, latestObservedXid);
/*
* When a newly observed xid arrives, it is frequently the case that it is
* *not* the next xid in sequence. When this occurs, we must treat the
* intervening xids as running also.
*/
if (TransactionIdFollows(xid, latestObservedXid))
{
TransactionId next_expected_xid;
/*
* Extend subtrans like we do in GetNewTransactionId() during normal
* operation using individual extend steps. Note that we do not need
* to extend clog since its extensions are WAL logged.
*
* This part has to be done regardless of standbyState since we
* immediately start assigning subtransactions to their toplevel
* transactions.
*/
next_expected_xid = latestObservedXid;
while (TransactionIdPrecedes(next_expected_xid, xid))
{
TransactionIdAdvance(next_expected_xid);
ExtendSUBTRANS(next_expected_xid);
}
Assert(next_expected_xid == xid);
/*
* If the KnownAssignedXids machinery isn't up yet, there's nothing
* more to do since we don't track assigned xids yet.
*/
if (standbyState <= STANDBY_INITIALIZED)
{
latestObservedXid = xid;
return;
}
/*
* Add (latestObservedXid, xid] onto the KnownAssignedXids array.
*/
next_expected_xid = latestObservedXid;
TransactionIdAdvance(next_expected_xid);
KnownAssignedXidsAdd(next_expected_xid, xid, false);
/*
* Now we can advance latestObservedXid
*/
latestObservedXid = xid;
/* ShmemVariableCache->nextFullXid must be beyond any observed xid */
AdvanceNextFullTransactionIdPastXid(latestObservedXid);
next_expected_xid = latestObservedXid;
TransactionIdAdvance(next_expected_xid);
}
}
/*
* ExpireTreeKnownAssignedTransactionIds
* Remove the given XIDs from KnownAssignedXids.
*
* Called during recovery in analogy with and in place of ProcArrayEndTransaction()
*/
void
ExpireTreeKnownAssignedTransactionIds(TransactionId xid, int nsubxids,
TransactionId *subxids, TransactionId max_xid)
{
Assert(standbyState >= STANDBY_INITIALIZED);
/*
* Uses same locking as transaction commit
*/
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
KnownAssignedXidsRemoveTree(xid, nsubxids, subxids);
/* As in ProcArrayEndTransaction, advance latestCompletedXid */
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid,
max_xid))
ShmemVariableCache->latestCompletedXid = max_xid;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
/*
* ExpireAllKnownAssignedTransactionIds
* Remove all entries in KnownAssignedXids
*/
void
ExpireAllKnownAssignedTransactionIds(void)
{
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
KnownAssignedXidsRemovePreceding(InvalidTransactionId);
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
/*
* ExpireOldKnownAssignedTransactionIds
* Remove KnownAssignedXids entries preceding the given XID
*/
void
ExpireOldKnownAssignedTransactionIds(TransactionId xid)
{
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
KnownAssignedXidsRemovePreceding(xid);
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
/*
* Private module functions to manipulate KnownAssignedXids
*
* There are 5 main uses of the KnownAssignedXids data structure:
*
* * backends taking snapshots - all valid XIDs need to be copied out
* * backends seeking to determine presence of a specific XID
* * startup process adding new known-assigned XIDs
* * startup process removing specific XIDs as transactions end
* * startup process pruning array when special WAL records arrive
*
* This data structure is known to be a hot spot during Hot Standby, so we
* go to some lengths to make these operations as efficient and as concurrent
* as possible.
*
* The XIDs are stored in an array in sorted order --- TransactionIdPrecedes
* order, to be exact --- to allow binary search for specific XIDs. Note:
* in general TransactionIdPrecedes would not provide a total order, but
* we know that the entries present at any instant should not extend across
* a large enough fraction of XID space to wrap around (the master would
* shut down for fear of XID wrap long before that happens). So it's OK to
* use TransactionIdPrecedes as a binary-search comparator.
*
* It's cheap to maintain the sortedness during insertions, since new known
* XIDs are always reported in XID order; we just append them at the right.
*
* To keep individual deletions cheap, we need to allow gaps in the array.
* This is implemented by marking array elements as valid or invalid using
* the parallel boolean array KnownAssignedXidsValid[]. A deletion is done
* by setting KnownAssignedXidsValid[i] to false, *without* clearing the
* XID entry itself. This preserves the property that the XID entries are
* sorted, so we can do binary searches easily. Periodically we compress
* out the unused entries; that's much cheaper than having to compress the
* array immediately on every deletion.
*
* The actually valid items in KnownAssignedXids[] and KnownAssignedXidsValid[]
* are those with indexes tail <= i < head; items outside this subscript range
* have unspecified contents. When head reaches the end of the array, we
* force compression of unused entries rather than wrapping around, since
* allowing wraparound would greatly complicate the search logic. We maintain
* an explicit tail pointer so that pruning of old XIDs can be done without
* immediately moving the array contents. In most cases only a small fraction
* of the array contains valid entries at any instant.
*
* Although only the startup process can ever change the KnownAssignedXids
* data structure, we still need interlocking so that standby backends will
* not observe invalid intermediate states. The convention is that backends
* must hold shared ProcArrayLock to examine the array. To remove XIDs from
* the array, the startup process must hold ProcArrayLock exclusively, for
* the usual transactional reasons (compare commit/abort of a transaction
* during normal running). Compressing unused entries out of the array
* likewise requires exclusive lock. To add XIDs to the array, we just insert
* them into slots to the right of the head pointer and then advance the head
* pointer. This wouldn't require any lock at all, except that on machines
* with weak memory ordering we need to be careful that other processors
* see the array element changes before they see the head pointer change.
* We handle this by using a spinlock to protect reads and writes of the
* head/tail pointers. (We could dispense with the spinlock if we were to
* create suitable memory access barrier primitives and use those instead.)
* The spinlock must be taken to read or write the head/tail pointers unless
* the caller holds ProcArrayLock exclusively.
*
* Algorithmic analysis:
*
* If we have a maximum of M slots, with N XIDs currently spread across
* S elements then we have N <= S <= M always.
*
* * Adding a new XID is O(1) and needs little locking (unless compression
* must happen)
* * Compressing the array is O(S) and requires exclusive lock
* * Removing an XID is O(logS) and requires exclusive lock
* * Taking a snapshot is O(S) and requires shared lock
* * Checking for an XID is O(logS) and requires shared lock
*
* In comparison, using a hash table for KnownAssignedXids would mean that
* taking snapshots would be O(M). If we can maintain S << M then the
* sorted array technique will deliver significantly faster snapshots.
* If we try to keep S too small then we will spend too much time compressing,
* so there is an optimal point for any workload mix. We use a heuristic to
* decide when to compress the array, though trimming also helps reduce
* frequency of compressing. The heuristic requires us to track the number of
* currently valid XIDs in the array.
*/
/*
* Compress KnownAssignedXids by shifting valid data down to the start of the
* array, removing any gaps.
*
* A compression step is forced if "force" is true, otherwise we do it
* only if a heuristic indicates it's a good time to do it.
*
* Caller must hold ProcArrayLock in exclusive mode.
*/
static void
KnownAssignedXidsCompress(bool force)
{
ProcArrayStruct *pArray = procArray;
int head,
tail;
int compress_index;
int i;
/* no spinlock required since we hold ProcArrayLock exclusively */
head = pArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
tail = pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids;
if (!force)
{
/*
* If we can choose how much to compress, use a heuristic to avoid
* compressing too often or not often enough.
*
* Heuristic is if we have a large enough current spread and less than
* 50% of the elements are currently in use, then compress. This
* should ensure we compress fairly infrequently. We could compress
* less often though the virtual array would spread out more and
* snapshots would become more expensive.
*/
int nelements = head - tail;
if (nelements < 4 * PROCARRAY_MAXPROCS ||
nelements < 2 * pArray->numKnownAssignedXids)
return;
}
/*
* We compress the array by reading the valid values from tail to head,
* re-aligning data to 0th element.
*/
compress_index = 0;
for (i = tail; i < head; i++)
{
if (KnownAssignedXidsValid[i])
{
KnownAssignedXids[compress_index] = KnownAssignedXids[i];
KnownAssignedXidsValid[compress_index] = true;
compress_index++;
}
}
pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids = 0;
pArray->headKnownAssignedXids = compress_index;
}
/*
* Add xids into KnownAssignedXids at the head of the array.
*
* xids from from_xid to to_xid, inclusive, are added to the array.
*
* If exclusive_lock is true then caller already holds ProcArrayLock in
* exclusive mode, so we need no extra locking here. Else caller holds no
* lock, so we need to be sure we maintain sufficient interlocks against
* concurrent readers. (Only the startup process ever calls this, so no need
* to worry about concurrent writers.)
*/
static void
KnownAssignedXidsAdd(TransactionId from_xid, TransactionId to_xid,
bool exclusive_lock)
{
ProcArrayStruct *pArray = procArray;
TransactionId next_xid;
int head,
tail;
int nxids;
int i;
Assert(TransactionIdPrecedesOrEquals(from_xid, to_xid));
/*
* Calculate how many array slots we'll need. Normally this is cheap; in
* the unusual case where the XIDs cross the wrap point, we do it the hard
* way.
*/
if (to_xid >= from_xid)
nxids = to_xid - from_xid + 1;
else
{
nxids = 1;
next_xid = from_xid;
while (TransactionIdPrecedes(next_xid, to_xid))
{
nxids++;
TransactionIdAdvance(next_xid);
}
}
/*
* Since only the startup process modifies the head/tail pointers, we
* don't need a lock to read them here.
*/
head = pArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
tail = pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids;
Assert(head >= 0 && head <= pArray->maxKnownAssignedXids);
Assert(tail >= 0 && tail < pArray->maxKnownAssignedXids);
/*
* Verify that insertions occur in TransactionId sequence. Note that even
* if the last existing element is marked invalid, it must still have a
* correctly sequenced XID value.
*/
if (head > tail &&
TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(KnownAssignedXids[head - 1], from_xid))
{
KnownAssignedXidsDisplay(LOG);
elog(ERROR, "out-of-order XID insertion in KnownAssignedXids");
}
/*
* If our xids won't fit in the remaining space, compress out free space
*/
if (head + nxids > pArray->maxKnownAssignedXids)
{
/* must hold lock to compress */
if (!exclusive_lock)
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
KnownAssignedXidsCompress(true);
head = pArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
/* note: we no longer care about the tail pointer */
if (!exclusive_lock)
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
/*
* If it still won't fit then we're out of memory
*/
if (head + nxids > pArray->maxKnownAssignedXids)
elog(ERROR, "too many KnownAssignedXids");
}
/* Now we can insert the xids into the space starting at head */
next_xid = from_xid;
for (i = 0; i < nxids; i++)
{
KnownAssignedXids[head] = next_xid;
KnownAssignedXidsValid[head] = true;
TransactionIdAdvance(next_xid);
head++;
}
/* Adjust count of number of valid entries */
pArray->numKnownAssignedXids += nxids;
/*
* Now update the head pointer. We use a spinlock to protect this
* pointer, not because the update is likely to be non-atomic, but to
* ensure that other processors see the above array updates before they
* see the head pointer change.
*
* If we're holding ProcArrayLock exclusively, there's no need to take the
* spinlock.
*/
if (exclusive_lock)
pArray->headKnownAssignedXids = head;
else
{
SpinLockAcquire(&pArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
pArray->headKnownAssignedXids = head;
SpinLockRelease(&pArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
}
}
/*
* KnownAssignedXidsSearch
*
* Searches KnownAssignedXids for a specific xid and optionally removes it.
* Returns true if it was found, false if not.
*
* Caller must hold ProcArrayLock in shared or exclusive mode.
* Exclusive lock must be held for remove = true.
*/
static bool
KnownAssignedXidsSearch(TransactionId xid, bool remove)
{
ProcArrayStruct *pArray = procArray;
int first,
last;
int head;
int tail;
int result_index = -1;
if (remove)
{
/* we hold ProcArrayLock exclusively, so no need for spinlock */
tail = pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids;
head = pArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
}
else
{
/* take spinlock to ensure we see up-to-date array contents */
SpinLockAcquire(&pArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
tail = pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids;
head = pArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
SpinLockRelease(&pArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
}
/*
* Standard binary search. Note we can ignore the KnownAssignedXidsValid
* array here, since even invalid entries will contain sorted XIDs.
*/
first = tail;
last = head - 1;
while (first <= last)
{
int mid_index;
TransactionId mid_xid;
mid_index = (first + last) / 2;
mid_xid = KnownAssignedXids[mid_index];
if (xid == mid_xid)
{
result_index = mid_index;
break;
}
else if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, mid_xid))
last = mid_index - 1;
else
first = mid_index + 1;
}
if (result_index < 0)
return false; /* not in array */
if (!KnownAssignedXidsValid[result_index])
return false; /* in array, but invalid */
if (remove)
{
KnownAssignedXidsValid[result_index] = false;
pArray->numKnownAssignedXids--;
Assert(pArray->numKnownAssignedXids >= 0);
/*
* If we're removing the tail element then advance tail pointer over
* any invalid elements. This will speed future searches.
*/
if (result_index == tail)
{
tail++;
while (tail < head && !KnownAssignedXidsValid[tail])
tail++;
if (tail >= head)
{
/* Array is empty, so we can reset both pointers */
pArray->headKnownAssignedXids = 0;
pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids = 0;
}
else
{
pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids = tail;
}
}
}
return true;
}
/*
* Is the specified XID present in KnownAssignedXids[]?
*
* Caller must hold ProcArrayLock in shared or exclusive mode.
*/
static bool
KnownAssignedXidExists(TransactionId xid)
{
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(xid));
return KnownAssignedXidsSearch(xid, false);
}
/*
* Remove the specified XID from KnownAssignedXids[].
*
* Caller must hold ProcArrayLock in exclusive mode.
*/
static void
KnownAssignedXidsRemove(TransactionId xid)
{
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(xid));
elog(trace_recovery(DEBUG4), "remove KnownAssignedXid %u", xid);
/*
* Note: we cannot consider it an error to remove an XID that's not
* present. We intentionally remove subxact IDs while processing
* XLOG_XACT_ASSIGNMENT, to avoid array overflow. Then those XIDs will be
* removed again when the top-level xact commits or aborts.
*
* It might be possible to track such XIDs to distinguish this case from
* actual errors, but it would be complicated and probably not worth it.
* So, just ignore the search result.
*/
(void) KnownAssignedXidsSearch(xid, true);
}
/*
* KnownAssignedXidsRemoveTree
* Remove xid (if it's not InvalidTransactionId) and all the subxids.
*
* Caller must hold ProcArrayLock in exclusive mode.
*/
static void
KnownAssignedXidsRemoveTree(TransactionId xid, int nsubxids,
TransactionId *subxids)
{
int i;
if (TransactionIdIsValid(xid))
KnownAssignedXidsRemove(xid);
for (i = 0; i < nsubxids; i++)
KnownAssignedXidsRemove(subxids[i]);
/* Opportunistically compress the array */
KnownAssignedXidsCompress(false);
}
/*
* Prune KnownAssignedXids up to, but *not* including xid. If xid is invalid
* then clear the whole table.
*
* Caller must hold ProcArrayLock in exclusive mode.
*/
static void
KnownAssignedXidsRemovePreceding(TransactionId removeXid)
{
ProcArrayStruct *pArray = procArray;
int count = 0;
int head,
tail,
i;
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(removeXid))
{
elog(trace_recovery(DEBUG4), "removing all KnownAssignedXids");
pArray->numKnownAssignedXids = 0;
pArray->headKnownAssignedXids = pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids = 0;
return;
}
elog(trace_recovery(DEBUG4), "prune KnownAssignedXids to %u", removeXid);
/*
* Mark entries invalid starting at the tail. Since array is sorted, we
* can stop as soon as we reach an entry >= removeXid.
*/
tail = pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids;
head = pArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
for (i = tail; i < head; i++)
{
if (KnownAssignedXidsValid[i])
{
TransactionId knownXid = KnownAssignedXids[i];
if (TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(knownXid, removeXid))
break;
if (!StandbyTransactionIdIsPrepared(knownXid))
{
KnownAssignedXidsValid[i] = false;
count++;
}
}
}
pArray->numKnownAssignedXids -= count;
Assert(pArray->numKnownAssignedXids >= 0);
/*
* Advance the tail pointer if we've marked the tail item invalid.
*/
for (i = tail; i < head; i++)
{
if (KnownAssignedXidsValid[i])
break;
}
if (i >= head)
{
/* Array is empty, so we can reset both pointers */
pArray->headKnownAssignedXids = 0;
pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids = 0;
}
else
{
pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids = i;
}
/* Opportunistically compress the array */
KnownAssignedXidsCompress(false);
}
/*
* KnownAssignedXidsGet - Get an array of xids by scanning KnownAssignedXids.
* We filter out anything >= xmax.
*
* Returns the number of XIDs stored into xarray[]. Caller is responsible
* that array is large enough.
*
* Caller must hold ProcArrayLock in (at least) shared mode.
*/
static int
KnownAssignedXidsGet(TransactionId *xarray, TransactionId xmax)
{
TransactionId xtmp = InvalidTransactionId;
return KnownAssignedXidsGetAndSetXmin(xarray, &xtmp, xmax);
}
/*
* KnownAssignedXidsGetAndSetXmin - as KnownAssignedXidsGet, plus
* we reduce *xmin to the lowest xid value seen if not already lower.
*
* Caller must hold ProcArrayLock in (at least) shared mode.
*/
static int
KnownAssignedXidsGetAndSetXmin(TransactionId *xarray, TransactionId *xmin,
TransactionId xmax)
{
int count = 0;
int head,
tail;
int i;
/*
* Fetch head just once, since it may change while we loop. We can stop
* once we reach the initially seen head, since we are certain that an xid
* cannot enter and then leave the array while we hold ProcArrayLock. We
* might miss newly-added xids, but they should be >= xmax so irrelevant
* anyway.
*
* Must take spinlock to ensure we see up-to-date array contents.
*/
SpinLockAcquire(&procArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
tail = procArray->tailKnownAssignedXids;
head = procArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
SpinLockRelease(&procArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
for (i = tail; i < head; i++)
{
/* Skip any gaps in the array */
if (KnownAssignedXidsValid[i])
{
TransactionId knownXid = KnownAssignedXids[i];
/*
* Update xmin if required. Only the first XID need be checked,
* since the array is sorted.
*/
if (count == 0 &&
TransactionIdPrecedes(knownXid, *xmin))
*xmin = knownXid;
/*
* Filter out anything >= xmax, again relying on sorted property
* of array.
*/
if (TransactionIdIsValid(xmax) &&
TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(knownXid, xmax))
break;
/* Add knownXid into output array */
xarray[count++] = knownXid;
}
}
return count;
}
/*
* Get oldest XID in the KnownAssignedXids array, or InvalidTransactionId
* if nothing there.
*/
static TransactionId
KnownAssignedXidsGetOldestXmin(void)
{
int head,
tail;
int i;
/*
* Fetch head just once, since it may change while we loop.
*/
SpinLockAcquire(&procArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
tail = procArray->tailKnownAssignedXids;
head = procArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
SpinLockRelease(&procArray->known_assigned_xids_lck);
for (i = tail; i < head; i++)
{
/* Skip any gaps in the array */
if (KnownAssignedXidsValid[i])
return KnownAssignedXids[i];
}
return InvalidTransactionId;
}
/*
* Display KnownAssignedXids to provide debug trail
*
* Currently this is only called within startup process, so we need no
* special locking.
*
* Note this is pretty expensive, and much of the expense will be incurred
* even if the elog message will get discarded. It's not currently called
* in any performance-critical places, however, so no need to be tenser.
*/
static void
KnownAssignedXidsDisplay(int trace_level)
{
ProcArrayStruct *pArray = procArray;
StringInfoData buf;
int head,
tail,
i;
int nxids = 0;
tail = pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids;
head = pArray->headKnownAssignedXids;
initStringInfo(&buf);
for (i = tail; i < head; i++)
{
if (KnownAssignedXidsValid[i])
{
nxids++;
appendStringInfo(&buf, "[%d]=%u ", i, KnownAssignedXids[i]);
}
}
elog(trace_level, "%d KnownAssignedXids (num=%d tail=%d head=%d) %s",
nxids,
pArray->numKnownAssignedXids,
pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids,
pArray->headKnownAssignedXids,
buf.data);
pfree(buf.data);
}
/*
* KnownAssignedXidsReset
* Resets KnownAssignedXids to be empty
*/
static void
KnownAssignedXidsReset(void)
{
ProcArrayStruct *pArray = procArray;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
pArray->numKnownAssignedXids = 0;
pArray->tailKnownAssignedXids = 0;
pArray->headKnownAssignedXids = 0;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}