Hello,
The point is that when two threads or processes are trying to write at the same time, one of the two must back off, abandon their transaction (using ROLLBACK) and let the other proceed.
And how can this be done? What if there are more threads involved? Who decides?
-- Tito
On Aug 11, 2004, at 15:49, D. Richard Hipp wrote:
Paolo Vernazza wrote:D. Richard Hipp wrote:Dave Hayden wrote:
I'm running into a deadlock,
db1: BEGIN TRANSACTION; db2: BEGIN TRANSACTION; db1: INSERT INTO test VALUES ( 1 );
At this point, both of these return SQLITE_BUSY:
db2: UPDATE test SET num = 2 WHERE num = 1; db1: END TRANSACTION;
Is this a bug? Or do I have to do something with sqlite 3 I didn't with 2?
After the db1 transaction ends, the db2 UPDATE should be able to complete. In version 2, db2 would have blocked when it tried to begin the transaction. Version 3 allows db2 to continue future, but you still cannot have two threads changing the same database at the same time, so it also eventually blocks.
Works as designed.But db1 transaction never ends.... it will ever return SQLITE_BUSY! Paolo
Oops. The db1 should do a ROLLBACK, not a COMMIT. Or db2 can do an END TRANSACTION (since it never made any changes) and allow db1 to complete instead. The point is that when two threads or processes are trying to write at the same time, one of the two must back off, abandon their transaction (using ROLLBACK) and let the other proceed.
In version 2, it was impossible for two threads to hold a transaction at the same time, so this issue never came up. Version 3 allows other threads to do read transactions while one thread is doing a write transaction provided that the read transactions all finish before the write transaction commits. If a reader tries to write, it gets SQLITE_BUSY. If the writer tries to commit before all the readers finish, it gets SQLITE_BUSY.
-- D. Richard Hipp -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- 704.948.4565