On Wed, May 7, 2025, 00:57 Laurenz Albe <laurenz.a...@cybertec.at> wrote:
> On Tue, 2025-05-06 at 12:06 +0300, Agis Anastasopoulos wrote: > > I'd like to "preflight" a given schema migration (i.e. one or > > more DDL statements) before applying it to the production database (e.g. > > for use in a CI pipeline). I'm thinking of a strategy and would like to > > know about its soundness. > > > > The general idea is: > > > > - you have a test database that's a clone of your production one (with > > or without data but with the schema being identical) > > - given the DDL statements, you open a transaction, grab its pid, and > > for each statement: > > 1. from a different "observer" connection, you read pg_locks, > > filtering locks for that pid. This is the "before" locks > > 2. from the first tx, you execute the statement > > 3. from the observer, you grab again pg_locks and compute the diff > > between this and the "before" view > > 4. from the first tx, you rollback the transaction > > > > By diffing the after/before pg_locks view, my assumption is that you > > know what locks will be acquired by the DDL statements (but not for how > > long). The query I'm thinking is: > > > > SELECT locktype, database, relation, objid, mode FROM > > pg_catalog.pg_locks WHERE pid = $1 AND locktype IN ('relation', > > 'object') AND granted"; > > > > The type of statements that would be fed as input would be `ALTER|CREATE > > TABLE`, `CREATE|DROP INDEX` and perhaps DML statements (`UPDATE`, > > `INSERT`, `DELETE`). > > > > Do you think this is a robust way to detect the locks that were > > acquired? Are there any caveats/drawbacks/flaws in this strategy? > > I think that that is a good strategy, as long as you run all DDL statements > in a single transaction. > > Yours, > Laurenz Albe > Can you elaborate on that? I was thinking that we should mirror the way the statements are going to be executed in production: if they're all going to be executed inside a single tx, then we should do the same. But if not, them we should follow course and execute them in separate txs. Am I missing something? Thanks >