"Francesco Formenti - TVBLOB S.r.l." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Tom Lane wrote:
>> Probably you have been careless about avoiding "lock upgrade"
>> situations.

> Unfortunately, the first operation I do after the "BEGIN" declaration is 
> the LOCK TABLE in access exclusive mode, and is the only explicit lock I 
> perform in all the stored procedures.

If you mean that you placed a LOCK TABLE inside the stored procedure,
that's far from being the same thing as the start of the transaction.
For example, if your application does

        BEGIN;
        SELECT * FROM mytab;
        SELECT myprocedure();
        COMMIT;

then by the time control arrives inside myprocedure your transaction
already holds a nonexclusive lock on "mytab".  If you do LOCK TABLE mytab
inside the function then you're risking deadlock.

                        regards, tom lane

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