Sorry for top posting -- damn phone.

The standard defines all the *other* transaction isolations in terms of phantom reads, dirty reads, and, uh one other phenomenon. But it defines serializability literally, as the transactions having the same effect as ift they were run serially. It explicitly says the fact that phantom reads can't occur in serializable is only a consequence of tfe definition.

And I don't see why you discard "visibility" as unimportant. All the transaction isolations are defined in terms of the results if the transactions. Those results include both the database state and the data returned by the queries. Otherwise "phantom read" is a meaningless concept.

--
Greg


On 29 Dec 2008, at 07:20, Peter Eisentraut <pete...@gmx.net> wrote:

On Tuesday 23 December 2008 16:51:03 Kevin Grittner wrote:
If you look at the serializable queries in the original post for this
thread, it's not hard to see that this standard is not met.  The
insert of receipt 3 appears to happen before the update of the control
record, since it has the old deposit date.  The transaction which
selects from both tables sees the update to the control record, so it
must come after that.  Yet it doesn't see the results of the first
transaction.  There is no sequence of serial execution which is
consistent with the behavior.

I am not sure yet whether or not your complaint is valid, but your arguments
are not very rigid.

Serializability is not defined in terms of what is visible, but what the state of the database is. If you can order the transactions without overlap so that the state of the database is the same as in your original schedule, the
schedule is serializable.  It is not of concern what was "visible" in
between. You may, however, be able to transform that argument to proving that a phantom read is possible, which is how the SQL standard ultimately
defines serializability.

Also note that discussing what is visible necessarily implies the existence of another transaction that does the reading, and that transaction does not
appear to be defined in your arguments.

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