I wrote: > I can fairly consistently crash CVS tip with the following: > ... > Apparently, session 1's locks are being released while it still shows as > an active transaction in the PGPROC array, causing XactLockTableWait to > suppose it was a subtransaction and look for the parent. This indicates > something is being done incompletely or in the wrong order during > backend exit, because AbortTransaction is perfectly clear that you mark > yourself not running before you release your locks. Haven't found it > yet.
It looks to me like the problem is that ShutdownPostgres tries to get away with doing just a subset of AbortTransaction; in particular it does nothing to mark the PGPROC as not running a transaction anymore. So when ProcKill releases locks, the xact is still InProgress. I'm thinking that the correct fix is to forget the notion that it's safer to do a subset of AbortTransaction than to do the whole thing. We should make ShutdownPostgres do this: AbortOutOfAnyTransaction(); /* Drop user-level locks, which are not dropped by xact abort */ #ifdef USER_LOCKS LockReleaseAll(USER_LOCKMETHOD, true); #endif and then remove the lock manager cleanup operations from ProcKill. > I could not provoke the same crash in 8.0, but I suspect this may just > be a chance timing difference, and that the bug may be of long standing. I haven't done the experiment, but I'm pretty certain that it's possible to provoke this same crash in 8.0 if the timing is right, which could be forced by using gdb to delay execution at the right place in ProcKill. In pre-8.0 releases XactLockTableWait doesn't try to chain up to parent transactions, so the particular crash doesn't exist, but we still have the problem that the exiting backend releases locks while its xact still appears to be running. That's been incorrect according to the comments in xact.c since forever, so I would imagine that there are other race conditions in which this is a Bad Thing. This bug may well explain the known reports of failures from SIGTERM'ing an individual backend, since (IIRC) that code path could also try to exit the backend with a transaction still in progress. I'm a bit hesitant to back-patch such a nontrivial and hard-to-test change, but it sure looks badly broken to me. Any thoughts about the risks involved? regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org