This section describes lock types used by
InnoDB
.
InnoDB
implements standard row-level locking
where there are two types of locks,
shared (S
)
locks and exclusive
(X
) locks.
A shared (
S
) lock permits the transaction that holds the lock to read a row.An exclusive (
X
) lock permits the transaction that holds the lock to update or delete a row.
If transaction T1
holds a shared
(S
) lock on row r
, then
requests from some distinct transaction T2
for a lock on row r
are handled as follows:
A request by
T2
for anS
lock can be granted immediately. As a result, bothT1
andT2
hold anS
lock onr
.A request by
T2
for anX
lock cannot be granted immediately.
If a transaction T1
holds an exclusive
(X
) lock on row r
, a
request from some distinct transaction T2
for
a lock of either type on r
cannot be granted
immediately. Instead, transaction T2
has to
wait for transaction T1
to release its lock
on row r
.
InnoDB
supports multiple
granularity locking which permits coexistence of row
locks and table locks. For example, a statement such as
LOCK TABLES ...
WRITE
takes an exclusive lock (an X
lock) on the specified table. To make locking at multiple
granularity levels practical, InnoDB
uses
intention locks.
Intention locks are table-level locks that indicate which type
of lock (shared or exclusive) a transaction requires later for a
row in a table. There are two types of intention locks:
An intention shared lock (
IS
) indicates that a transaction intends to set a shared lock on individual rows in a table.An intention exclusive lock (
IX
) indicates that a transaction intends to set an exclusive lock on individual rows in a table.
For example, SELECT ...
FOR SHARE
sets an IS
lock, and
SELECT ... FOR
UPDATE
sets an IX
lock.
The intention locking protocol is as follows:
Before a transaction can acquire a shared lock on a row in a table, it must first acquire an
IS
lock or stronger on the table.Before a transaction can acquire an exclusive lock on a row in a table, it must first acquire an
IX
lock on the table.
Table-level lock type compatibility is summarized in the following matrix.
X |
IX |
S |
IS |
|
---|---|---|---|---|
X |
Conflict | Conflict | Conflict | Conflict |
IX |
Conflict | Compatible | Conflict | Compatible |
S |
Conflict | Conflict | Compatible | Compatible |
IS |
Conflict | Compatible | Compatible | Compatible |
A lock is granted to a requesting transaction if it is compatible with existing locks, but not if it conflicts with existing locks. A transaction waits until the conflicting existing lock is released. If a lock request conflicts with an existing lock and cannot be granted because it would cause deadlock, an error occurs.
Intention locks do not block anything except full table requests
(for example, LOCK
TABLES ... WRITE
). The main purpose of intention locks
is to show that someone is locking a row, or going to lock a row
in the table.
Transaction data for an intention lock appears similar to the
following in SHOW
ENGINE INNODB STATUS
and
InnoDB monitor
output:
TABLE LOCK table `test`.`t` trx id 10080 lock mode IX
A record lock is a lock on an index record. For example,
SELECT c1 FROM t WHERE c1 = 10 FOR UPDATE;
prevents any other transaction from inserting, updating, or
deleting rows where the value of t.c1
is
10
.
Record locks always lock index records, even if a table is
defined with no indexes. For such cases,
InnoDB
creates a hidden clustered index and
uses this index for record locking. See
Section 17.6.2.1, “Clustered and Secondary Indexes”.
Transaction data for a record lock appears similar to the
following in SHOW
ENGINE INNODB STATUS
and
InnoDB monitor
output:
RECORD LOCKS space id 58 page no 3 n bits 72 index `PRIMARY` of table `test`.`t`
trx id 10078 lock_mode X locks rec but not gap
Record lock, heap no 2 PHYSICAL RECORD: n_fields 3; compact format; info bits 0
0: len 4; hex 8000000a; asc ;;
1: len 6; hex 00000000274f; asc 'O;;
2: len 7; hex b60000019d0110; asc ;;
A gap lock is a lock on a gap between index records, or a lock
on the gap before the first or after the last index record. For
example, SELECT c1 FROM t WHERE c1 BETWEEN 10 and 20
FOR UPDATE;
prevents other transactions from inserting
a value of 15
into column
t.c1
, whether or not there was already any
such value in the column, because the gaps between all existing
values in the range are locked.
A gap might span a single index value, multiple index values, or even be empty.
Gap locks are part of the tradeoff between performance and concurrency, and are used in some transaction isolation levels and not others.
Gap locking is not needed for statements that lock rows using a
unique index to search for a unique row. (This does not include
the case that the search condition includes only some columns of
a multiple-column unique index; in that case, gap locking does
occur.) For example, if the id
column has a
unique index, the following statement uses only an index-record
lock for the row having id
value 100 and it
does not matter whether other sessions insert rows in the
preceding gap:
SELECT * FROM child WHERE id = 100;
If id
is not indexed or has a nonunique
index, the statement does lock the preceding gap.
It is also worth noting here that conflicting locks can be held on a gap by different transactions. For example, transaction A can hold a shared gap lock (gap S-lock) on a gap while transaction B holds an exclusive gap lock (gap X-lock) on the same gap. The reason conflicting gap locks are allowed is that if a record is purged from an index, the gap locks held on the record by different transactions must be merged.
Gap locks in InnoDB
are “purely
inhibitive”, which means that their only purpose is to
prevent other transactions from inserting to the gap. Gap locks
can co-exist. A gap lock taken by one transaction does not
prevent another transaction from taking a gap lock on the same
gap. There is no difference between shared and exclusive gap
locks. They do not conflict with each other, and they perform
the same function.
Gap locking can be disabled explicitly. This occurs if you
change the transaction isolation level to
READ COMMITTED
. In this case,
gap locking is disabled for searches and index scans and is used
only for foreign-key constraint checking and duplicate-key
checking.
There are also other effects of using the
READ COMMITTED
isolation
level. Record locks for nonmatching rows are released after
MySQL has evaluated the WHERE
condition. For
UPDATE
statements, InnoDB
does a “semi-consistent” read, such that it returns
the latest committed version to MySQL so that MySQL can
determine whether the row matches the WHERE
condition of the UPDATE
.
A next-key lock is a combination of a record lock on the index record and a gap lock on the gap before the index record.
InnoDB
performs row-level locking in such a
way that when it searches or scans a table index, it sets shared
or exclusive locks on the index records it encounters. Thus, the
row-level locks are actually index-record locks. A next-key lock
on an index record also affects the “gap” before
that index record. That is, a next-key lock is an index-record
lock plus a gap lock on the gap preceding the index record. If
one session has a shared or exclusive lock on record
R
in an index, another session cannot insert
a new index record in the gap immediately before
R
in the index order.
Suppose that an index contains the values 10, 11, 13, and 20. The possible next-key locks for this index cover the following intervals, where a round bracket denotes exclusion of the interval endpoint and a square bracket denotes inclusion of the endpoint:
(negative infinity, 10]
(10, 11]
(11, 13]
(13, 20]
(20, positive infinity)
For the last interval, the next-key lock locks the gap above the largest value in the index and the “supremum” pseudo-record having a value higher than any value actually in the index. The supremum is not a real index record, so, in effect, this next-key lock locks only the gap following the largest index value.
By default, InnoDB
operates in
REPEATABLE READ
transaction
isolation level. In this case, InnoDB
uses
next-key locks for searches and index scans, which prevents
phantom rows (see Section 17.7.4, “Phantom Rows”).
Transaction data for a next-key lock appears similar to the
following in SHOW
ENGINE INNODB STATUS
and
InnoDB monitor
output:
RECORD LOCKS space id 58 page no 3 n bits 72 index `PRIMARY` of table `test`.`t`
trx id 10080 lock_mode X
Record lock, heap no 1 PHYSICAL RECORD: n_fields 1; compact format; info bits 0
0: len 8; hex 73757072656d756d; asc supremum;;
Record lock, heap no 2 PHYSICAL RECORD: n_fields 3; compact format; info bits 0
0: len 4; hex 8000000a; asc ;;
1: len 6; hex 00000000274f; asc 'O;;
2: len 7; hex b60000019d0110; asc ;;
An insert intention lock is a type of gap lock set by
INSERT
operations prior to row
insertion. This lock signals the intent to insert in such a way
that multiple transactions inserting into the same index gap
need not wait for each other if they are not inserting at the
same position within the gap. Suppose that there are index
records with values of 4 and 7. Separate transactions that
attempt to insert values of 5 and 6, respectively, each lock the
gap between 4 and 7 with insert intention locks prior to
obtaining the exclusive lock on the inserted row, but do not
block each other because the rows are nonconflicting.
The following example demonstrates a transaction taking an insert intention lock prior to obtaining an exclusive lock on the inserted record. The example involves two clients, A and B.
Client A creates a table containing two index records (90 and 102) and then starts a transaction that places an exclusive lock on index records with an ID greater than 100. The exclusive lock includes a gap lock before record 102:
mysql> CREATE TABLE child (id int(11) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY(id)) ENGINE=InnoDB;
mysql> INSERT INTO child (id) values (90),(102);
mysql> START TRANSACTION;
mysql> SELECT * FROM child WHERE id > 100 FOR UPDATE;
+-----+
| id |
+-----+
| 102 |
+-----+
Client B begins a transaction to insert a record into the gap. The transaction takes an insert intention lock while it waits to obtain an exclusive lock.
mysql> START TRANSACTION;
mysql> INSERT INTO child (id) VALUES (101);
Transaction data for an insert intention lock appears similar to
the following in
SHOW ENGINE INNODB
STATUS
and
InnoDB monitor
output:
RECORD LOCKS space id 31 page no 3 n bits 72 index `PRIMARY` of table `test`.`child`
trx id 8731 lock_mode X locks gap before rec insert intention waiting
Record lock, heap no 3 PHYSICAL RECORD: n_fields 3; compact format; info bits 0
0: len 4; hex 80000066; asc f;;
1: len 6; hex 000000002215; asc " ;;
2: len 7; hex 9000000172011c; asc r ;;...
An AUTO-INC
lock is a special table-level
lock taken by transactions inserting into tables with
AUTO_INCREMENT
columns. In the simplest case,
if one transaction is inserting values into the table, any other
transactions must wait to do their own inserts into that table,
so that rows inserted by the first transaction receive
consecutive primary key values.
The innodb_autoinc_lock_mode
variable controls the algorithm used for auto-increment locking.
It allows you to choose how to trade off between predictable
sequences of auto-increment values and maximum concurrency for
insert operations.
For more information, see Section 17.6.1.6, “AUTO_INCREMENT Handling in InnoDB”.
InnoDB
supports SPATIAL
indexing of columns containing spatial data (see
Section 13.4.9, “Optimizing Spatial Analysis”).
To handle locking for operations involving
SPATIAL
indexes, next-key locking does not
work well to support REPEATABLE
READ
or
SERIALIZABLE
transaction
isolation levels. There is no absolute ordering concept in
multidimensional data, so it is not clear which is the
“next” key.
To enable support of isolation levels for tables with
SPATIAL
indexes, InnoDB
uses predicate locks. A SPATIAL
index
contains minimum bounding rectangle (MBR) values, so
InnoDB
enforces consistent read on the index
by setting a predicate lock on the MBR value used for a query.
Other transactions cannot insert or modify a row that would
match the query condition.