Book Image

Mastering PostgreSQL 15 - Fifth Edition

By : Hans-Jürgen Schönig
Book Image

Mastering PostgreSQL 15 - Fifth Edition

By: Hans-Jürgen Schönig

Overview of this book

Starting with an introduction to the newly released features of PostgreSQL 15, this updated fifth edition will help you get to grips with PostgreSQL administration and how to build dynamic database solutions for enterprise apps, including designing both physical and technical aspects of the system. You'll explore advanced PostgreSQL features, such as logical replication, database clusters, advanced indexing, and user management to manage and maintain your database. You'll then work with the PostgreSQL optimizer, configure PostgreSQL for high speed, and move from Oracle to PostgreSQL. Among the other skills that the book will help you build, you’ll cover transactions, handling recursions, working with JSON and JSONB data, and setting up a Patroni cluster. It will show you how to improve performance with query optimization. You'll also focus on managing network security and work with backups and replication while exploring useful PostgreSQL extensions that optimize the performance of large databases. By the end of this PostgreSQL book, you’ll be able to use your database to its utmost capacity by implementing advanced administrative tasks with ease.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Utilizing advisory locks

PostgreSQL has highly efficient and sophisticated transaction machinery that is capable of handling locks in a really fine-grained and efficient way. A few years ago, people came up with the idea of using this code to synchronize applications with each other. Thus, advisory locks were born.

When using advisory locks, it is important to mention that they won’t go away on COMMIT as normal locks do. Therefore, it is really important to make sure that unlocking is done properly and in a totally reliable way.

If you decide to use an advisory lock, what you really lock is a number. So, this isn’t about rows or data; it is really just a number. Here’s how it works:

Session 1

Session 2

BEGIN;

SELECT pg_advisory_lock(15);

SELECT pg_advisory_lock(15);

It has to wait

COMMIT;

It still has to wait

SELECT pg_advisory_unlock(15);

It is still waiting

Lock is taken

Table 2.12 – Sessions 1 and 2 on an advisory lock

The first transaction will lock 15. The second transaction has to wait until this number has been unlocked again. The second session will even wait until after the first one has committed. This is highly important, as you cannot rely on the fact that the end of the transaction nicely and miraculously solving things for you.

If you want to unlock all locked numbers, PostgreSQL offers the pg_advisory_unlock_all() function to do exactly this:

test=# SELECT pg_advisory_unlock_all();
pg_advisory_unlock_all
------------------------
 (1 row)

Sometimes, you might want to see whether you can get a lock and error out if this isn’t possible. To achieve this, PostgreSQL offers a couple of functions; to see a list of all such available functions, enter \df *try*advisory* at the command line.