This section describes how to use the locking service interface provided by its loadable functions. To use the C language interface instead, see Section 5.6.9.1.1, “The Locking Service C Interface” For general characteristics of the locking service interface, see Section 5.6.9.1, “The Locking Service”. For general information about loadable functions, see Adding a Loadable Function.
The locking service routines described in Section 5.6.9.1.1, “The Locking Service C Interface” need not be installed because they are built into the server. The same is not true of the loadable functions that map onto calls to the service routines: The functions must be installed before use. This section describes how to do that. For general information about loadable function installation, see Section 5.7.1, “Installing and Uninstalling Loadable Functions”.
The locking service functions are implemented in a plugin library file located in the directory named by the plugin_dir
system variable. The file base name is locking_service
. The file name suffix differs per platform (for example, .so
for Unix and Unix-like systems, .dll
for Windows).
To install the locking service functions, use the CREATE FUNCTION
statement, adjusting the .so
suffix for your platform as necessary:
CREATE FUNCTION service_get_read_locks RETURNS INT SONAME 'locking_service.so'; CREATE FUNCTION service_get_write_locks RETURNS INT SONAME 'locking_service.so'; CREATE FUNCTION service_release_locks RETURNS INT SONAME 'locking_service.so';
If the functions are used on a replication source server, install them on all replica servers as well to avoid replication problems.
Once installed, the functions remain installed until uninstalled. To remove them, use the DROP FUNCTION
statement:
DROP FUNCTION service_get_read_locks; DROP FUNCTION service_get_write_locks; DROP FUNCTION service_release_locks;
Before using the locking service functions, install them according to the instructions provided at Installing or Uninstalling the Locking Service Function Interface.
To acquire one or more read locks, call this function:
mysql> SELECT service_get_read_locks('mynamespace', 'rlock1', 'rlock2', 10);
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| service_get_read_locks('mynamespace', 'rlock1', 'rlock2', 10) |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| 1 |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
The first argument is the lock namespace. The final argument is an integer timeout indicating how many seconds to wait to acquire the locks before giving up. The arguments in between are the lock names.
For the example just shown, the function acquires locks with lock identifiers (mynamespace, rlock1)
and (mynamespace, rlock2)
.
To acquire write locks rather than read locks, call this function:
mysql> SELECT service_get_write_locks('mynamespace', 'wlock1', 'wlock2', 10);
+----------------------------------------------------------------+
| service_get_write_locks('mynamespace', 'wlock1', 'wlock2', 10) |
+----------------------------------------------------------------+
| 1 |
+----------------------------------------------------------------+
In this case, the lock identifiers are (mynamespace, wlock1)
and (mynamespace, wlock2)
.
To release all locks for a namespace, use this function:
mysql> SELECT service_release_locks('mynamespace');
+--------------------------------------+
| service_release_locks('mynamespace') |
+--------------------------------------+
| 1 |
+--------------------------------------+
Each locking function returns nonzero for success. If the function fails, an error occurs. For example, the following error occurs because lock names cannot be empty:
mysql> SELECT service_get_read_locks('mynamespace', '', 10);
ERROR 3131 (42000): Incorrect locking service lock name ''.
A session can acquire multiple locks for the same lock identifier. As long as a different session does not have a write lock for an identifier, the session can acquire any number of read or write locks. Each lock request for the identifier acquires a new lock. The following statements acquire three write locks with the same identifier, then three read locks for the same identifier:
SELECT service_get_write_locks('ns', 'lock1', 'lock1', 'lock1', 0); SELECT service_get_read_locks('ns', 'lock1', 'lock1', 'lock1', 0);
If you examine the Performance Schema metadata_locks
table at this point, you should find that the session holds six distinct locks with the same (ns, lock1)
identifier. (For details, see Locking Service Monitoring.)
Because the session holds at least one write lock on (ns, lock1)
, no other session can acquire a lock for it, either read or write. If the session held only read locks for the identifier, other sessions could acquire read locks for it, but not write locks.
Locks for a single lock-acquisition call are acquired atomically, but atomicity does not hold across calls. Thus, for a statement such as the following, where service_get_write_locks()
is called once per row of the result set, atomicity holds for each individual call, but not for the statement as a whole:
SELECT service_get_write_locks('ns', 'lock1', 'lock2', 0) FROM t1 WHERE ... ;
Because the locking service returns a separate lock for each successful request for a given lock identifier, it is possible for a single statement to acquire a large number of locks. For example:
INSERT INTO ... SELECT service_get_write_locks('ns', t1.col_name, 0) FROM t1;
These types of statements may have certain adverse effects. For example, if the statement fails part way through and rolls back, locks acquired up to the point of failure still exist. If the intent is for there to be a correspondence between rows inserted and locks acquired, that intent is not satisfied. Also, if it is important that locks are granted in a certain order, be aware that result set order may differ depending on which execution plan the optimizer chooses. For these reasons, it may be best to limit applications to a single lock-acquisition call per statement.
The locking service is implemented using the MySQL Server metadata locks framework, so you monitor locking service locks acquired or waited for by examining the Performance Schema metadata_locks
table.
First, enable the metadata lock instrument:
mysql>UPDATE performance_schema.setup_instruments SET ENABLED = 'YES'
->WHERE NAME = 'wait/lock/metadata/sql/mdl';
Then acquire some locks and check the contents of the metadata_locks
table:
mysql>SELECT service_get_write_locks('mynamespace', 'lock1', 0);
+----------------------------------------------------+ | service_get_write_locks('mynamespace', 'lock1', 0) | +----------------------------------------------------+ | 1 | +----------------------------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT service_get_read_locks('mynamespace', 'lock2', 0);
+---------------------------------------------------+ | service_get_read_locks('mynamespace', 'lock2', 0) | +---------------------------------------------------+ | 1 | +---------------------------------------------------+ mysql>SELECT OBJECT_TYPE, OBJECT_SCHEMA, OBJECT_NAME, LOCK_TYPE, LOCK_STATUS
->FROM performance_schema.metadata_locks
->WHERE OBJECT_TYPE = 'LOCKING SERVICE'\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** OBJECT_TYPE: LOCKING SERVICE OBJECT_SCHEMA: mynamespace OBJECT_NAME: lock1 LOCK_TYPE: EXCLUSIVE LOCK_STATUS: GRANTED *************************** 2. row *************************** OBJECT_TYPE: LOCKING SERVICE OBJECT_SCHEMA: mynamespace OBJECT_NAME: lock2 LOCK_TYPE: SHARED LOCK_STATUS: GRANTED
Locking service locks have an OBJECT_TYPE
value of LOCKING SERVICE
. This is distinct from, for example, locks acquired with the GET_LOCK()
function, which have an OBJECT_TYPE
of USER LEVEL LOCK
.
The lock namespace, name, and mode appear in the OBJECT_SCHEMA
, OBJECT_NAME
, and LOCK_TYPE
columns. Read and write locks have LOCK_TYPE
values of SHARED
and EXCLUSIVE
, respectively.
The LOCK_STATUS
value is GRANTED
for an acquired lock, PENDING
for a lock that is being waited for. You can expect to see PENDING
if one session holds a write lock and another session is attempting to acquire a lock having the same identifier.
The SQL interface to the locking service implements the loadable functions described in this section. For usage examples, see Using the Locking Service Function Interface.
The functions share these characteristics:
The return value is nonzero for success. Otherwise, an error occurs.
Namespace and lock names must be non-NULL
, nonempty, and have a maximum length of 64 characters.
Timeout values must be integers indicating how many seconds to wait to acquire locks before giving up with an error. If the timeout is 0, there is no waiting and the function produces an error if locks cannot be acquired immediately.
These locking service functions are available:
service_get_read_locks(
namespace
, lock_name
[, lock_name
] ..., timeout
)
Acquires one or more read (shared) locks in the given namespace using the given lock names, timing out with an error if the locks are not acquired within the given timeout value.
service_get_write_locks(
namespace
, lock_name
[, lock_name
] ..., timeout
)
Acquires one or more write (exclusive) locks in the given namespace using the given lock names, timing out with an error if the locks are not acquired within the given timeout value.
service_release_locks(
namespace
)
For the given namespace, releases all locks that were acquired within the current session using service_get_read_locks()
and service_get_write_locks()
.
It is not an error for there to be no locks in the namespace.