Alvaro Herrera eb63cc3da8 Arrange for autovacuum to be killed when another operation wants to be alone
accessing it, like DROP DATABASE.  This allows the regression tests to pass
with autovacuum enabled, which open the gates for finally enabling autovacuum
by default.
2007-01-16 13:28:57 +00:00

1003 lines
27 KiB
C

/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* procarray.c
* POSTGRES process array code.
*
*
* This module maintains an unsorted array of the PGPROC 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 MyProc->xid field.
* See notes in GetSnapshotData.
*
* The process array now also includes PGPROC 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.
*
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2007, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $PostgreSQL: pgsql/src/backend/storage/ipc/procarray.c,v 1.21 2007/01/16 13:28:56 alvherre Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include <signal.h>
#include "access/subtrans.h"
#include "access/transam.h"
#include "access/xact.h"
#include "access/twophase.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "storage/procarray.h"
#include "utils/tqual.h"
/* Our shared memory area */
typedef struct ProcArrayStruct
{
int numProcs; /* number of valid procs entries */
int maxProcs; /* allocated size of procs array */
/*
* We declare procs[] as 1 entry because C wants a fixed-size array, but
* actually it is maxProcs entries long.
*/
PGPROC *procs[1]; /* VARIABLE LENGTH ARRAY */
} ProcArrayStruct;
static ProcArrayStruct *procArray;
#ifdef XIDCACHE_DEBUG
/* counters for XidCache measurement */
static long xc_by_recent_xmin = 0;
static long xc_by_main_xid = 0;
static long xc_by_child_xid = 0;
static long xc_slow_answer = 0;
#define xc_by_recent_xmin_inc() (xc_by_recent_xmin++)
#define xc_by_main_xid_inc() (xc_by_main_xid++)
#define xc_by_child_xid_inc() (xc_by_child_xid++)
#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_main_xid_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_by_child_xid_inc() ((void) 0)
#define xc_slow_answer_inc() ((void) 0)
#endif /* XIDCACHE_DEBUG */
/*
* Report shared-memory space needed by CreateSharedProcArray.
*/
Size
ProcArrayShmemSize(void)
{
Size size;
size = offsetof(ProcArrayStruct, procs);
size = add_size(size, mul_size(sizeof(PGPROC *),
add_size(MaxBackends, max_prepared_xacts)));
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", ProcArrayShmemSize(), &found);
if (!found)
{
/*
* We're the first - initialize.
*/
procArray->numProcs = 0;
procArray->maxProcs = MaxBackends + max_prepared_xacts;
}
}
/*
* Add the specified PGPROC to the shared array.
*/
void
ProcArrayAdd(PGPROC *proc)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_EXCLUSIVE);
if (arrayP->numProcs >= arrayP->maxProcs)
{
/*
* Ooops, 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")));
}
arrayP->procs[arrayP->numProcs] = proc;
arrayP->numProcs++;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
/*
* Remove the specified PGPROC from the shared array.
*/
void
ProcArrayRemove(PGPROC *proc)
{
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);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
if (arrayP->procs[index] == proc)
{
arrayP->procs[index] = arrayP->procs[arrayP->numProcs - 1];
arrayP->numProcs--;
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return;
}
}
/* Ooops */
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
elog(LOG, "failed to find proc %p in ProcArray", proc);
}
/*
* TransactionIdIsInProgress -- is given transaction running in some backend
*
* There are three 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 PGPROC 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. Search the SubTrans tree to find the Xid's topmost parent, and then
* see if that is running according to PGPROC. This is the slowest, but
* sadly it has to be done always if the other two failed, unless we see
* that the cached subxact sets are complete (none have overflowed).
*
* ProcArrayLock has to be held while we do 1 and 2. If we save the top Xids
* while doing 1, we can release the ProcArrayLock while we do 3. This buys
* back some concurrency (we can't retrieve the main Xids from PGPROC again
* anyway; see GetNewTransactionId).
*/
bool
TransactionIdIsInProgress(TransactionId xid)
{
bool result = false;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int i,
j;
int nxids = 0;
TransactionId *xids;
TransactionId topxid;
bool locked;
/*
* 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;
}
/* Get workspace to remember main XIDs in */
xids = (TransactionId *) palloc(sizeof(TransactionId) * arrayP->maxProcs);
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
locked = true;
for (i = 0; i < arrayP->numProcs; i++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[i];
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
TransactionId pxid = proc->xid;
if (!TransactionIdIsValid(pxid))
continue;
/*
* Step 1: check the main Xid
*/
if (TransactionIdEquals(pxid, xid))
{
xc_by_main_xid_inc();
result = true;
goto result_known;
}
/*
* 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
*/
for (j = proc->subxids.nxids - 1; j >= 0; j--)
{
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
TransactionId cxid = proc->subxids.xids[j];
if (TransactionIdEquals(cxid, xid))
{
xc_by_child_xid_inc();
result = true;
goto result_known;
}
}
/*
* Save the main Xid for step 3. 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 (proc->subxids.overflowed)
xids[nxids++] = pxid;
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
locked = false;
/*
* If none of the relevant caches overflowed, we know the Xid is not
* running without looking at pg_subtrans.
*/
if (nxids == 0)
goto result_known;
/*
* Step 3: 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_clog to see if it's been aborted.
*/
xc_slow_answer_inc();
if (TransactionIdDidAbort(xid))
goto result_known;
/*
* It isn't aborted, so check whether the transaction tree it belongs to
* is still running (or, more precisely, whether it was running when this
* routine started -- note that we already released ProcArrayLock).
*/
topxid = SubTransGetTopmostTransaction(xid);
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(topxid));
if (!TransactionIdEquals(topxid, xid))
{
for (i = 0; i < nxids; i++)
{
if (TransactionIdEquals(xids[i], topxid))
{
result = true;
break;
}
}
}
result_known:
if (locked)
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
pfree(xids);
return result;
}
/*
* TransactionIdIsActive -- is xid the top-level XID of an active backend?
*
* This differs from TransactionIdIsInProgress in that it ignores prepared
* transactions. 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++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[i];
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
TransactionId pxid = proc->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 allDbs is TRUE then all backends are considered; if allDbs is FALSE
* then only backends running in my own database are considered.
*
* If ignoreVacuum is TRUE then backends with inVacuum set are ignored.
*
* This is used by VACUUM to decide which deleted tuples must be preserved
* in a table. allDbs = TRUE is needed for shared relations, but allDbs =
* FALSE is sufficient for non-shared relations, 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. allDbs
* must be TRUE for that case, and ignoreVacuum FALSE.
*
* Note: we include the 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.
*/
TransactionId
GetOldestXmin(bool allDbs, bool ignoreVacuum)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
TransactionId result;
int index;
/*
* Normally we start the min() calculation with our own XID. But if
* called by checkpointer, we will not be inside a transaction, so use
* next XID as starting point for min() calculation. (Note that if there
* are no xacts running at all, that will be the subtrans truncation
* point!)
*/
if (IsTransactionState())
result = GetTopTransactionId();
else
result = ReadNewTransactionId();
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[index];
if (ignoreVacuum && proc->inVacuum)
continue;
if (allDbs || proc->databaseId == MyDatabaseId)
{
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
TransactionId xid = proc->xid;
if (TransactionIdIsNormal(xid))
{
/* First consider the transaction own's Xid */
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, result))
result = xid;
/*
* Also consider the transaction's Xmin, if set.
*
* We must check both Xid and Xmin because there is a window
* where an xact's Xid is set but Xmin isn't yet.
*/
xid = proc->xmin;
if (TransactionIdIsNormal(xid))
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, result))
result = xid;
}
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return result;
}
/*----------
* GetSnapshotData -- returns information about running transactions.
*
* The returned snapshot includes xmin (lowest still-running xact ID),
* xmax (next xact ID to be assigned), 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. 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 will need to
* be done to determine what's running (see XidInSnapshot() in tqual.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 MyProc->xmin). This
* is just the xmin computed for the first, serializable snapshot.
* 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(true, true).
*----------
*/
Snapshot
GetSnapshotData(Snapshot snapshot, bool serializable)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
TransactionId xmin;
TransactionId xmax;
TransactionId globalxmin;
int index;
int count = 0;
int subcount = 0;
Assert(snapshot != NULL);
/* Serializable snapshot must be computed before any other... */
Assert(serializable ?
!TransactionIdIsValid(MyProc->xmin) :
TransactionIdIsValid(MyProc->xmin));
/*
* 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->xip = (TransactionId *)
malloc(arrayP->maxProcs * 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(arrayP->maxProcs * PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS * sizeof(TransactionId));
if (snapshot->subxip == NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_OUT_OF_MEMORY),
errmsg("out of memory")));
}
globalxmin = xmin = GetTopTransactionId();
/*
* It is sufficient to get shared lock on ProcArrayLock, even if we are
* computing a serializable snapshot and therefore will be setting
* MyProc->xmin. This is because any two backends that have overlapping
* shared holds on ProcArrayLock will certainly compute the same xmin
* (since no xact, in particular not the oldest, can exit the set of
* running transactions while we hold ProcArrayLock --- see further
* discussion just below). So it doesn't matter whether another backend
* concurrently doing GetSnapshotData or GetOldestXmin sees our xmin as
* set or not; he'd compute the same xmin for himself either way.
*/
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
/*--------------------
* Unfortunately, we have to call ReadNewTransactionId() after acquiring
* ProcArrayLock above. It's not good because ReadNewTransactionId() does
* LWLockAcquire(XidGenLock), but *necessary*. We need to be sure that
* no transactions exit the set of currently-running transactions
* between the time we fetch xmax and the time we finish building our
* snapshot. Otherwise we could have a situation like this:
*
* 1. Tx Old is running (in Read Committed mode).
* 2. Tx S reads new transaction ID into xmax, then
* is swapped out before acquiring ProcArrayLock.
* 3. Tx New gets new transaction ID (>= S' xmax),
* makes changes and commits.
* 4. Tx Old changes some row R changed by Tx New and commits.
* 5. Tx S finishes getting its snapshot data. It sees Tx Old as
* done, but sees Tx New as still running (since New >= xmax).
*
* Now S will see R changed by both Tx Old and Tx New, *but* does not
* see other changes made by Tx New. If S is supposed to be in
* Serializable mode, this is wrong.
*
* By locking ProcArrayLock before we read xmax, we ensure that TX Old
* cannot exit the set of running transactions seen by Tx S. Therefore
* both Old and New will be seen as still running => no inconsistency.
*--------------------
*/
xmax = ReadNewTransactionId();
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[index];
/* Fetch xid just once - see GetNewTransactionId */
TransactionId xid = proc->xid;
/*
* Ignore my own proc (dealt with my xid above), procs not running a
* transaction, xacts started since we read the next transaction ID,
* and xacts executing LAZY VACUUM. There's no need to store XIDs
* above what we got from ReadNewTransactionId, since we'll treat them
* as running anyway. We also assume that such xacts can't compute an
* xmin older than ours, so they needn't be considered in computing
* globalxmin.
*/
if (proc == MyProc ||
!TransactionIdIsNormal(xid) ||
TransactionIdFollowsOrEquals(xid, xmax) ||
proc->inVacuum)
continue;
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, xmin))
xmin = xid;
snapshot->xip[count] = xid;
count++;
/* Update globalxmin to be the smallest valid xmin */
xid = proc->xmin;
if (TransactionIdIsNormal(xid))
if (TransactionIdPrecedes(xid, globalxmin))
globalxmin = 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.
*
* 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.)
*/
if (subcount >= 0)
{
if (proc->subxids.overflowed)
subcount = -1; /* overflowed */
else
{
int nxids = proc->subxids.nxids;
if (nxids > 0)
{
memcpy(snapshot->subxip + subcount,
proc->subxids.xids,
nxids * sizeof(TransactionId));
subcount += nxids;
}
}
}
}
if (serializable)
MyProc->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;
RecentXmin = xmin;
snapshot->xmin = xmin;
snapshot->xmax = xmax;
snapshot->xcnt = count;
snapshot->subxcnt = subcount;
snapshot->curcid = GetCurrentCommandId();
return snapshot;
}
/*
* DatabaseCancelAutovacuumActivity -- are there any backends running in the
* given DB, apart from autovacuum? If an autovacuum process is running on the
* database, kill it and restart the counting.
*
* If 'ignoreMyself' is TRUE, ignore this particular backend while checking
* for backends in the target database.
*
* This function is used to interlock DROP DATABASE 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.
*/
bool
DatabaseCancelAutovacuumActivity(Oid databaseId, bool ignoreMyself)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
int num;
restart:
num = 0;
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS();
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[index];
if (proc->databaseId == databaseId)
{
if (ignoreMyself && proc == MyProc)
continue;
num++;
if (proc->isAutovacuum)
{
/* an autovacuum -- kill it and restart */
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
kill(proc->pid, SIGINT);
pg_usleep(100 * 1000); /* 100ms */
goto restart;
}
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return (num != 0);
}
/*
* 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 = NULL;
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int index;
if (pid == 0) /* never match dummy PGPROCs */
return NULL;
LWLockAcquire(ProcArrayLock, LW_SHARED);
for (index = 0; index < arrayP->numProcs; index++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[index];
if (proc->pid == pid)
{
result = proc;
break;
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
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.
*/
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++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[index];
if (proc->xid == xid)
{
result = proc->pid;
break;
}
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return result;
}
/*
* IsBackendPid -- is a given pid a running backend
*/
bool
IsBackendPid(int pid)
{
return (BackendPidGetProc(pid) != NULL);
}
/*
* CountActiveBackends --- count backends (other than myself) that are in
* active transactions. 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.
*/
int
CountActiveBackends(void)
{
ProcArrayStruct *arrayP = procArray;
int count = 0;
int index;
/*
* 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++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[index];
if (proc == MyProc)
continue; /* do not count myself */
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue; /* do not count prepared xacts */
if (proc->xid == InvalidTransactionId)
continue; /* do not count if not in a transaction */
if (proc->waitLock != NULL)
continue; /* do not count if blocked on a lock */
count++;
}
return count;
}
/*
* 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++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[index];
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue; /* do not count prepared xacts */
if (proc->databaseId == databaseid)
count++;
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return count;
}
/*
* 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++)
{
PGPROC *proc = arrayP->procs[index];
if (proc->pid == 0)
continue; /* do not count prepared xacts */
if (proc->roleId == roleid)
count++;
}
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
return count;
}
#define XidCacheRemove(i) \
do { \
MyProc->subxids.xids[i] = MyProc->subxids.xids[MyProc->subxids.nxids - 1]; \
MyProc->subxids.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.
*/
void
XidCacheRemoveRunningXids(TransactionId xid, int nxids, TransactionId *xids)
{
int i,
j;
Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(xid));
/*
* We must hold ProcArrayLock exclusively in order to remove transactions
* from the PGPROC array. (See notes in GetSnapshotData.) 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.
*/
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 = MyProc->subxids.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 && !MyProc->subxids.overflowed)
elog(WARNING, "did not find subXID %u in MyProc", anxid);
}
for (j = MyProc->subxids.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 && !MyProc->subxids.overflowed)
elog(WARNING, "did not find subXID %u in MyProc", xid);
LWLockRelease(ProcArrayLock);
}
#ifdef XIDCACHE_DEBUG
/*
* Print stats about effectiveness of XID cache
*/
static void
DisplayXidCache(void)
{
fprintf(stderr,
"XidCache: xmin: %ld, mainxid: %ld, childxid: %ld, slow: %ld\n",
xc_by_recent_xmin,
xc_by_main_xid,
xc_by_child_xid,
xc_slow_answer);
}
#endif /* XIDCACHE_DEBUG */