To achieve a very high lock speed, MySQL uses table locking
(instead of page, row, or column locking) for all storage
engines except InnoDB
.
For InnoDB
tables, MySQL uses table locking
only if you explicitly lock the table with
LOCK TABLES
. For this storage
engine, avoid using LOCK TABLES
at all, because InnoDB
uses automatic
row-level locking to ensure transaction isolation.
For large tables, table locking is often better than row locking, but there are some disadvantages:
Table locking enables many sessions to read from a table at the same time, but if a session wants to write to a table, it must first get exclusive access. During the update, all other sessions that want to access this particular table must wait until the update is done.
Table locking causes problems in cases such as when a session is waiting because the disk is full and free space needs to become available before the session can proceed. In this case, all sessions that want to access the problem table are also put in a waiting state until more disk space is made available.
Table locking is also disadvantageous under the following scenario:
A session issues a SELECT
that takes a long time to run.
Another session then issues an
UPDATE
on the same table.
This session waits until the
SELECT
is finished.
Another session issues another
SELECT
statement on the same
table. Because UPDATE
has
higher priority than SELECT
,
this SELECT
waits for the
UPDATE
to finish,
after waiting for the first
SELECT
to finish.
The following items describe some ways to avoid or reduce contention caused by table locking:
Try to get the SELECT
statements to run faster so that they lock tables for a
shorter time. You might have to create some summary tables
to do this.
Start mysqld with
--low-priority-updates
. For
storage engines that use only table-level locking (such as
MyISAM
, MEMORY
, and
MERGE
), this gives all statements that
update (modify) a table lower priority than
SELECT
statements. In this
case, the second SELECT
statement in the preceding scenario would execute before the
UPDATE
statement, and would
not need to wait for the first
SELECT
to finish.
To specify that all updates issued in a specific connection
should be done with low priority, set the
low_priority_updates
server
system variable equal to 1.
To give a specific INSERT
,
UPDATE
, or
DELETE
statement lower
priority, use the LOW_PRIORITY
attribute.
To give a specific SELECT
statement higher priority, use the
HIGH_PRIORITY
attribute. See
Section 12.2.8, “SELECT
Syntax”.
Start mysqld with a low value for the
max_write_lock_count
system
variable to force MySQL to temporarily elevate the priority
of all SELECT
statements that
are waiting for a table after a specific number of inserts
to the table occur. This allows READ
locks after a certain number of WRITE
locks.
If you have problems with
INSERT
combined with
SELECT
, consider switching to
MyISAM
tables, which support concurrent
SELECT
and
INSERT
statements. (See
Section 7.3.3, “Concurrent Inserts”.)
If you mix inserts and deletes on the same table,
INSERT DELAYED
may be of
great help. See Section 12.2.5.2, “INSERT DELAYED
Syntax”.
If you have problems with mixed
SELECT
and
DELETE
statements, the
LIMIT
option to
DELETE
may help. See
Section 12.2.2, “DELETE
Syntax”.
Using SQL_BUFFER_RESULT
with
SELECT
statements can help to
make the duration of table locks shorter. See
Section 12.2.8, “SELECT
Syntax”.
You could change the locking code in
mysys/thr_lock.c
to use a single queue.
In this case, write locks and read locks would have the same
priority, which might help some applications.
Here are some tips concerning table locks in MySQL:
Concurrent users are not a problem if you do not mix updates with selects that need to examine many rows in the same table.
You can use LOCK TABLES
to
increase speed, because many updates within a single lock is
much faster than updating without locks. Splitting table
contents into separate tables may also help.
If you encounter speed problems with table locks in MySQL,
you may be able to improve performance by converting some of
your tables to InnoDB
. See
Section 13.6, “The InnoDB
Storage Engine”.
MySQL Enterprise. Lock contention can seriously degrade performance. The MySQL Enterprise Monitor provides expert advice on avoiding this problem. To subscribe, see http://www.mysql.com/products/enterprise/advisors.html.
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