The problem can generally be written as "tuples seeing multiple
updates in the same transaction"?

I think that every time PostgreSQL is used with an ORM, there is
a certain amount of multiple updates taking place. I have actually
been reworking clientside to get around multiple updates, since they
popped up in one of my profiling runs. Allthough the time I optimized
away ended being both "roundtrip time" + "update time", but having
the database do half of it transparently, might have been sufficient
to get me to have had a bigger problem elsewhere..

To sum up. Yes I think indeed it is a real-world case.

Jesper

On the Python side, elixir and sqlalchemy have an excellent way of handling this, basically when you start a transaction, all changes are accumulated in a "session" object and only flushed to the database on session commit (which is also generally the transaction commit). This has multiple advantages, for instance it is able to issue multiple-line statements, updates are only done once, you save a lot of roundtrips, etc. Of course it is most of the time not compatible with database triggers, so if there are triggers the ORM needs to be told about them.

--
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers

Reply via email to