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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-2991?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#action_12543576
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Øystein Grøvlen commented on DERBY-2991:
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I think pageVersion is bumped on all (logged) changes to the page.  The ideal 
here would be a version number that is only bumped when a row is moved.  
Otherwise, most re-navigations would happen when not necessary.   Given that an 
exclusive lock normally leads to the an update, one might as well do an 
unconditional re-navigation after having waited instead of basing it on 
pageVersion.

> Index split deadlock
> --------------------
>
>                 Key: DERBY-2991
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-2991
>             Project: Derby
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Store
>    Affects Versions: 10.2.2.0, 10.3.1.4
>         Environment: Windows XP, Java 6
>            Reporter: Bogdan Calmac
>         Attachments: derby.log, InsertSelectDeadlock.java, Repro2991.java, 
> stacktraces_during_deadlock.txt
>
>
> After doing dome research on the mailing list, it appears that the index 
> split deadlock is a known behaviour, so I will start by describing the 
> theoretical problem first and then follow with the details of my test case.
> If you have concurrent select and insert transactions on the same table, the 
> observed locking behaviour is as follows:
>  - the select transaction acquires an S lock on the root block of the index 
> and then waits for an S lock on some uncommitted row of the insert transaction
>  - the insert transaction acquires X locks on the inserted records and if it 
> needs to do an index split creates a sub-transaction that tries to acquire an 
> X lock on the root block of the index
> In summary: INDEX LOCK followed by ROW LOCK + ROW LOCK followed by INDEX LOCK 
> = deadlock
> In the case of my project this is an important issue (lack of concurrency 
> after being forced to use table level locking) and I would like to contribute 
> to the project and fix this issue (if possible). I was wondering if someone 
> that knows the code can give me a few pointers on the implications of this 
> issue:
>  - Is this a limitation of the top-down algorithm used?
>  - Would fixing it require to use a bottom up algorithm for better 
> concurrency (which is certainly non trivial)?
>  - Trying to break the circular locking above, I would first question why 
> does the select transaction need to acquire (and hold) a lock on the root 
> block of the index. Would it be possible to ensure the consistency of the 
> select without locking the index?
> -----
> The attached test (InsertSelectDeadlock.java) tries to simulate a typical 
> data collection application, it consists of: 
>  - an insert thread that inserts records in batch 
>  - a select thread that 'processes' the records inserted by the other thread: 
> 'select * from table where id > ?' 
> The derby log provides detail about the deadlock trace and 
> stacktraces_during_deadlock.txt shows that the inser thread is doing an index 
> split.
> The test was run on 10.2.2.0 and 10.3.1.4 with identical behaviour.
> Thanks,
> Bogdan Calmac.

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