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McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 15 Transaction Management.

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Presentation on theme: "McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 15 Transaction Management."— Presentation transcript:

1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 15 Transaction Management

2 15-2 Outline  Transaction basics  Concurrency control  Recovery management  Transaction design issues  Workflow management

3 15-3 Transaction Definition  Supports daily operations of an organization  Collection of database operations  Reliably and efficiently processed as one unit of work  No lost data  Interference among multiple users  Failures

4 15-4 Airline Transaction Example START TRANSACTION Display greeting Get reservation preferences from user SELECT departure and return flight records If reservation is acceptable then UPDATE seats remaining of departure flight record UPDATE seats remaining of return flight record INSERT reservation record Print ticket if requested End If On Error: ROLLBACK COMMIT

5 15-5 ATM Transaction Example START TRANSACTION Display greeting Get account number, pin, type, and amount SELECT account number, type, and balance If balance is sufficient then UPDATE account by posting debit INSERT history record Display message and dispense cash Print receipt if requested End If On Error: ROLLBACK COMMIT

6 15-6 Transaction Properties  Atomic: all or nothing  Consistent: database must be consistent before and after a transaction  Isolated: no unwanted interference from other users  Durable: database changes are permanent after the transaction completes

7 15-7 Transaction Processing Services  Concurrency control  Recovery management  Service characteristics  Transparent  Consume significant resources  Significant cost component  Transaction design important

8 15-8 Concurrency Control  Problem definition  Concurrency control problems  Concurrency control tools

9 15-9 Concurrency Control Problem  Objective:  Maximize work performed  Throughput: number of transactions processed per unit time  Constraint:  No interference: serial effect  Interference occurs on commonly manipulated data known as hot spots

10 15-10 Lost Update Problem

11 15-11 Uncommitted Dependency Problem

12 15-12 Inconsistent Retrieval Problems  Interference causes inconsistency among multiple retrievals of a subset of data  Incorrect summary  Phantom read  Non repeatable read

13 15-13 Incorrect Summary Problem

14 15-14 Locking Fundamentals  Fundamental tool of concurrency control  Obtain lock before accessing an item  Wait if a conflicting lock is held  Shared lock: conflicts with exclusive locks  Exclusive lock: conflicts with all other kinds of locks  Concurrency control manager maintains the lock table

15 15-15 Locking Granularity

16 15-16 Deadlock (Mutual Waiting)

17 15-17 Deadlock Resolution  Detection  Overhead is reasonable for deadlocks among 2 or 3 transactions  Used by enterprise DBMSs  Timeout  Waiting limit  Can abort transactions that are not deadlocked  Timeout interval is difficult to determine

18 15-18 Two Phase Locking (2PL)  Protocol to prevent lost update problems  All transactions must follow  Conditions  Obtain lock before accessing item  Wait if a conflicting lock is held  Cannot obtain new locks after releasing locks

19 15-19 2PL Implementation

20 15-20 Optimistic Approaches  Assumes conflicts are rare  No locks  Check for conflicts  After each read and write  At end of transaction  Evaluation  Less overhead  More variability

21 15-21 Recovery Management  Device characteristics and failure types  Recovery tools  Recovery processes

22 15-22 Storage Device Basics  Volatile: loses state after a shutdown  Nonvolatile: retains state after a shutdown  Nonvolatile is more reliable than volatile but failures can cause loss of data  Use multiple levels and redundant levels of nonvolatile storage for valuable data

23 15-23 Failure Types  Local  Detected and abnormal termination  Limited to a single transaction  Operating System  Affects all active transactions  Less common than local failures  Device  Affects all active and past transactions  Least common

24 15-24 Transaction Log  History of database changes  Large storage overhead  Operations  Undo: revert to previous state  Redo: reestablish a new state  Fundamental tool of recovery management

25 15-25 Transaction Log Example

26 15-26 Checkpoints  Reduces restart work but adds overhead  Checkpoint log record  Write log buffers and database buffers  Checkpoint interval: time between checkpoints  Types of checkpoints  Cache consistent  Fuzzy  Incremental

27 15-27 Other Recovery Tools  Force writing  Checkpoint time  End of transaction  Database backup  Complete  Incremental

28 15-28 Recovery from a Media Failure  Restore database from the most recent backup  Redo all committed transactions since the most recent backup  Restart active transactions

29 15-29 Recovery Timeline

30 15-30 Recovery Processes  Depend on timing of database writes  Immediate update approach:  Before commit  Log records written first (write-ahead log protocol)  Deferred update approach  After commit  Undo operations not needed

31 15-31 Immediate Update Recovery

32 15-32 Deferred Update Recovery

33 15-33 Oracle Recovery Features  Incremental checkpoints  Immediate update approach  Mean Time to Recover (MTTR) parameter  MTTR advisor  Dynamic dictionary views to monitor recovery state

34 15-34 Transaction Design Issues  Transaction boundary  Isolation levels  Deferred constraint checking  Savepoints

35 15-35 Transaction Boundary Decisions  Division of work into transactions  Objective: minimize transaction duration  Constraint: enforcement of important integrity constraints  Transaction boundary decision can affect hot spots

36 15-36 Registration Form Example

37 15-37 Transaction Boundary Choices  One transaction for the entire form  One transaction for the main form and one transaction for all subform records  One transaction for the main form and separate transactions for each subform record

38 15-38 Avoiding User Interaction Time  Avoid to increase throughput  Possible side effects: user confusion due to database changes  Balance increase in throughput with occurrences of side effects  Most situations increase in throughput more important than possible user confuusion

39 15-39 Isolation Levels  Degree to which a transaction is separated from the actions of other transactions  Balance concurrency control overhead with interference problems  Some transactions can tolerate uncommitted dependency and inconsistent retrieval problems  Specify using the SET TRANSACTION statement

40 15-40 SQL Isolation Levels LevelXLocksSLocksPLocksInterference Read uncommitted None Uncommitted dependency Read committed LongShortNoneAll except uncommitted dependency Repeatable read Long Short (S), Long (X) Phantom reads SerializableLong None

41 15-41 Scholar’s Lost Update Transaction ATimeTransaction B Obtain S lock on SRT1T1 Read SR (10)T2T2 Release S lock on SRT3T3 If SR > 0 then SR = SR -1T4T4 T5T5 Obtain S lock on SR T6T6 Read SR (10) T7T7 Release S lock on SR T8T8 If SR > 0 then SR = SR -1 Obtain X lock on SRT9T9 Write SR (9)T 10 CommitT 11 T 12 Obtain X lock on SR T 13 Write SR (9)

42 15-42 Integrity Constraint Timing  Most constraints checked immediately  Can defer constraint checking to EOT  SQL  Constraint timing clause for constraints in a CREATE TABLE statement  SET CONSTRAINTS statement

43 15-43 Save Points  Some transactions have tentative actions  SAVEPOINT statement determines intermediate points  ROLLBACK to specified save points

44 15-44 Workflow Management  Workflow description  Enabling technologies  Advanced transaction management

45 15-45 Workflow Basics  Set of tasks to accomplish a business process  Human-oriented vs. computer-oriented  Amount of judgment  Amount of automation  Task structure vs. task complexity  Relationships among tasks  Difficulty of performing individual tasks

46 15-46 Workflow Classification

47 15-47 Enabling Technologies  Distributed object management  Many kinds of non traditional data  Data often dispersed in location  Workflow modeling  Specification  Simulation  Optimization

48 15-48 Advanced Transaction Management  Conversational transactions  Transactions with complex structure  Transactions involving legacy systems  Compensating transactions  More flexible transaction processing

49 15-49 Summary  Transaction: user-defined collection of work  DBMSs support ACID properties  Knowledge of concurrency control and recovery important for managing databases  Transaction design issues are important  Transaction processing is an important part of workflow management


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