On 2022-Sep-22, Simon Riggs wrote:

> On Mon, 19 Sept 2022 at 00:16, Greg Stark <st...@mit.edu> wrote:

> >     VACUUM was willing to remove a committed-dead tuple immediately if it 
> > was
> >     deleted by the same transaction that inserted it.  The idea is that 
> > such a
> >     tuple could never have been visible to any other transaction, so we 
> > don't
> >     need to keep it around to satisfy MVCC snapshots.  However, there was
> >     already an exception for tuples that are part of an update chain, and 
> > this
> >     exception created a problem: we might remove TOAST tuples (which are 
> > never
> >     part of an update chain) while their parent tuple stayed around (if it 
> > was
> >     part of an update chain).  This didn't pose a problem for most things,
> >     since the parent tuple is indeed dead: no snapshot will ever consider it
> >     visible.  But MVCC-safe CLUSTER had a problem, since it will try to copy
> >     RECENTLY_DEAD tuples to the new table.  It then has to copy their TOAST
> >     data too, and would fail if VACUUM had already removed the toast tuples.

> Good research Greg, thank you. Only took 10 years for me to notice it
> was gone ;-)

But this begs the question: is the proposed change safe, given that
ancient consideration?  I don't think TOAST issues have been mentioned
in this thread so far, so I wonder if there is a test case that verifies
that this problem doesn't occur for some reason.

-- 
Álvaro Herrera         PostgreSQL Developer  —  https://www.EnterpriseDB.com/


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