Andres Freund <and...@2ndquadrant.com> writes: > There frequently have been bugs where (heap|relation|index)_open(NoLock) > was used without a previous locks which in some circumstances is an easy > mistake to make and which is hard to notice. > The attached patch adds --use-cassert only WARNINGs against doing so:
While I agree that there seems to be a problem here, I'm not convinced that this is the solution. The implication of a heap_open(NoLock) is that the programmer believes that some previous action must have taken a lock on the relation; if he's wrong, then the causal link that he thought existed doesn't really. But this patch is not checking for a causal link; it'll be fooled just as easily as the programmer is by a happenstance (that is, unrelated) previous lock on the relation. What's more, it entirely fails to check whether the previous lock is really strong enough for what we're going to do. I also find it unduly expensive to search the whole lock hashtable on every relation open. That's going to be a O(N^2) cost for a transaction touching N relations, and that doesn't sound acceptable, not even for assert-only code. If we're sufficiently worried by this type of bug, ISTM we'd be better off just disallowing heap_open(NoLock). At the time we invented that, every lock request went to shared memory; but now that we have the local lock table, re-locking just requires a local hash lookup followed by incrementing a local counter. That's probably pretty cheap --- certainly a lot cheaper than what you've got here. regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers