Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

33
SQLSaturday Rheinland 2014 28.06.20 14 Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

description

I am sure you all know that troubleshooting problems related to locking and blocking (hey, sometimes there are deadlocks too) can be a real nightmare! In this session, you will be able to see and understand why and how locking actually works, what problems it causes and how can we use isolation levels and various other techniques to resolve them!

Transcript of Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Page 1: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SQLSaturday Rheinland 201428.06.2014

Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Page 2: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SQLSaturday Rheinland 2014

Organizer

28.06.2014

Page 3: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SQLSaturday Rheinland 2014

You Rock! Sponsor

28.06.2014

Page 4: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SQLSaturday Rheinland 2014

Gold Sponsor

28.06.2014

Page 5: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SQLSaturday Rheinland 2014

Silver Sponsor

28.06.2014

Page 6: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SQLSaturday Rheinland 2014

Bronze Sponsor and Media Partner

28.06.2014

Page 7: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

So who am I?

@BorisHristov

So who am I?

Page 8: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Agenda…

Locks. What is there for us?

Troubleshooting locking problems

Transaction Isolation Levels

Page 9: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Locks. What is there for us?

Page 10: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Methods of Concurrency Control

1. Pessimistic

– SQL Server uses locks, causes blocks and who said deadlocks?

2. Optimistic – SQL Server generates versions for everyone, but the updates…

Page 11: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

What Are Locks and what is locking?

Lock – internal memory structure that “tells” us what we all do with the resources inside the system

Locking – mechanism to protect the resources and guarantee consistent data

Page 12: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Common lock types

Intent

Used for: Preventing incompatible locksDuration: End of the transaction

Shared (S)

Used for: ReadingDuration: Released almost immediately

(depends on the isolation level)

Update (U)

Used for: Preparing to modifyDuration: End of the transaction or until

converted to exclusive (X)

Exclusive (X)

Used for: ModifyingDuration: End of the transaction

Page 13: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Lock Compatibility

Not all locks are compatible with other locks.

Lock Shared Update Exclusive

Shared (S) X

Update (U) X X

Exclusive (X) X X X

Page 14: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Lock Hierarchy

Database

Table

Page

Row

Page 15: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Let’s update a row! What do we need?

USE AdventureWorks2012GOUPDATE [Person].[Address]SET AddressLine1=’Stuttgart, Germany' WHERE AddressID=2

S

IX

HeaderRow

Row

Row

Row

Row

IX

X

Page 16: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Methods to View Locking Information

Dynamic Management

Views

SQL Server Profiler or

Extended Events

Performance monitor or

Activity Monitor

Page 17: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Troubleshooting locking problems

Page 18: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Locking and blocking

Locking and blocking are often confused!

Locking• The action of taking and potentially holding locks• Used to implement concurrency control

Blocking is result of locking!• One process needs to wait for another process to release locked

resources• In a multiuser environment, there is always, always blocking!• Only a problem if it lasts too long

Page 19: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Lock escalation S

S

X

>= 5000

IX

Header

Row

Row

Row

Row

Row

X

X

X

IX

X

Page 20: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

1. Switch the escalation level (per table)

AUTO – Partition-level escalation if the table is partitionedTABLE – Always table-level escalation

DISABLE – Do not escalate until absolutely necessary

2. Just disable it (that’s not Nike’s “Just do it!”) • Trace flag 1211 – disables lock escalation on server level• Trace flag 1224 – disables lock escalation if 40% of the memory used is consumed

Controlling Lock escalation

SELECT lock_escalation_descFROM sys.tablesWHERE name = 'Person.Address'

ALTER TABLE Person.Address SET (LOCK_ESCALATION = {AUTO | TABLE | DISABLE}

Page 21: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

What Are Deadlocks?

Task A

Task B

Resource 1

Resource 2

Who is victim?

• Cost for Rollback

• Deadlock priority – SET DEADLOCK_PRIOIRTY

Page 22: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Resolve blocking a.k.a live locking

1. Keep the transactions as short as possible

2. No user interactions required in the middle of the transaction

3. Use indexes (proper ones)

4. Consider a server to offload some of the workloads

5. Choose isolation level

Page 23: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

DEMO Monitor for locks with xEvents

Lock escalation – both to table and partition

Deadlock and the SET DEADLOCK_PRIORITY option

Page 24: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Transaction isolation levels

Page 25: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ UNCOMMITTED (NOLOCK?)

Transaction 1

Transaction 2

Suggestion: Better offload the reads or go with optimistic level concurrency!

Select

Update

eXclusive lock

Read Uncommitted(pessimistic concurrency control)

Dirty read

Page 26: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL REPEATABLE READ

Transaction 1 S(hared) lock

select

No non-repeatable reads possible (updates during Transaction 1)

Phantom records still possible (inserts during Transaction 1)

Update

Transaction 2

Repeatable Read(pessimistic concurrency control)

Page 27: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Transaction 1 S(hared) lock

select

Even phantom records are not possible!

Highest pessimistic level of isolation, lowest level of concurrency

Insert

Transaction 2

Serializable(pessimistic concurrency control)

SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE

Page 28: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Based on Row versioning (stored inside tempdb’s version store area)

• No dirty, non-repeatable reads or phantom records

• Every single modification is versioned even if not used

• Adds 14 bytes per row

Readers do not block writers and writers do not block readers

Writers can and will block writers, this can cause conflicts

Optimistic Concurrency

Page 29: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

RCSI – Read Committed Snapshot Isolation Level

• Statement level versioning

• Requires ALTER DATABASE SET READ_COMMITTED_SNAPSHOT ON

Snapshot Isolation Level

• Transaction level versioning

• Requires ALTER DATABASE SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION ON

• Requires SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT

RCSI and SI(optimistic concurrency control)

V1 V2Transaction 1

Transaction 2

Select in RCSISelect

Select in SI

Page 30: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

DEMO Playing around with the Isolation levels

Page 31: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

Summary

1. Blocking is something normal when it’s not for long

2. There are numerous of ways to monitor locking and blocking

3. Be extremely careful for lock escalations

4. Choosing the Isolation level is also a business decision!

Page 33: Welcome to the nightmare of locking, blocking and isolation levels!

SQLSaturday Rheinland 2014

Thank you!for sponsorshipfor volunteeringfor participation

for a great SQLSaturday #313

28.06.2014