WriteUnPrepared: Relax restriction on iterators and writes with no snapshot (#5697)

Summary:
Currently, if a write is done without a snapshot, then `largest_validated_seq_` is set to `kMaxSequenceNumber`. This is too aggressive, because an iterator with a snapshot created after this write should be valid.

Set `largest_validated_seq_` to `GetLastPublishedSequence` instead. The variable means that no keys in the current tracked key set has changed by other transactions since `largest_validated_seq_`.

Also, do some extra cleanup in Clear() for safety.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5697

Differential Revision: D16788613

Pulled By: lth

fbshipit-source-id: f2aa40b8b12e0c0cf9e38c940fecc8f1cc0d2385
main
Manuel Ung 5 years ago committed by Facebook Github Bot
parent 04a849b7b4
commit 8a678a50ba
  1. 27
      utilities/transactions/write_unprepared_transaction_test.cc
  2. 10
      utilities/transactions/write_unprepared_txn.cc
  3. 6
      utilities/transactions/write_unprepared_txn.h

@ -537,6 +537,33 @@ TEST_P(WriteUnpreparedTransactionTest, MarkLogWithPrepSection) {
}
}
TEST_P(WriteUnpreparedTransactionTest, NoSnapshotWrite) {
WriteOptions woptions;
TransactionOptions txn_options;
txn_options.write_batch_flush_threshold = 1;
Transaction* txn = db->BeginTransaction(woptions, txn_options);
// Do some writes with no snapshot
ASSERT_OK(txn->Put("a", "a"));
ASSERT_OK(txn->Put("b", "b"));
ASSERT_OK(txn->Put("c", "c"));
// Test that it is still possible to create iterators after writes with no
// snapshot, if iterator snapshot is fresh enough.
ReadOptions roptions;
auto iter = txn->GetIterator(roptions);
int keys = 0;
for (iter->SeekToLast(); iter->Valid(); iter->Prev(), keys++) {
ASSERT_OK(iter->status());
ASSERT_EQ(iter->key().ToString(), iter->value().ToString());
}
ASSERT_EQ(keys, 3);
delete iter;
delete txn;
}
} // namespace rocksdb
int main(int argc, char** argv) {

@ -106,7 +106,10 @@ Status WriteUnpreparedTxn::HandleWrite(std::function<Status()> do_write) {
largest_validated_seq_ =
std::max(largest_validated_seq_, snapshot_->GetSequenceNumber());
} else {
largest_validated_seq_ = kMaxSequenceNumber;
// TODO(lth): We should use the same number as tracked_at_seq in TryLock,
// because what is actually being tracked is the sequence number at which
// this key was locked at.
largest_validated_seq_ = db_impl_->GetLastPublishedSequence();
}
}
return s;
@ -680,6 +683,11 @@ void WriteUnpreparedTxn::Clear() {
if (!recovered_txn_) {
txn_db_impl_->UnLock(this, &GetTrackedKeys());
}
unprep_seqs_.clear();
flushed_save_points_.reset(nullptr);
unflushed_save_points_.reset(nullptr);
recovered_txn_ = false;
largest_validated_seq_ = 0;
TransactionBaseImpl::Clear();
}

@ -241,9 +241,9 @@ class WriteUnpreparedTxn : public WritePreparedTxn {
// Track the largest sequence number at which we performed snapshot
// validation. If snapshot validation was skipped because no snapshot was set,
// then this is set to kMaxSequenceNumber. This value is useful because it
// means that for keys that have unprepared seqnos, we can guarantee that no
// committed keys by other transactions can exist between
// then this is set to GetLastPublishedSequence. This value is useful because
// it means that for keys that have unprepared seqnos, we can guarantee that
// no committed keys by other transactions can exist between
// largest_validated_seq_ and max_unprep_seq. See
// WriteUnpreparedTxnDB::NewIterator for an explanation for why this is
// necessary for iterator Prev().

Loading…
Cancel
Save