How to improve INSERT INTO … SELECT locking behavior

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一个人的身影
一个人的身影 2020-12-05 06:46

In our production database, we ran the following pseudo-code SQL batch query running every hour:

INSERT INTO TemporaryTable
    (SELECT FROM HighlyContentiou         


        
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  • 2020-12-05 07:01

    If you can allow some anomalies you can change ISOLATION LEVEL to the least strict one - READ UNCOMMITTED. But during this time someone is allowed to read from ur destination table. Or you can lock destination table manually (I assume mysql is giving this functionality?).

    Or alternatively you can use READ COMMITTED, which should not lock source table also. But it also locks inserted rows in destination table till commit.

    I would choose second one.

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  • 2020-12-05 07:05

    Everyone using Innodb tables probably got use to the fact Innodb tables perform non locking reads, meaning unless you use some modifiers such as LOCK IN SHARE MODE or FOR UPDATE, SELECT statements will not lock any rows while running.

    This is generally correct, however there a notable exception – INSERT INTO table1 SELECT * FROM table2. This statement will perform locking read (shared locks) for table2 table. It also applies to similar tables with where clause and joins. It is important for tables which is being read to be Innodb – even if writes are done in MyISAM table.

    So why was this done, being pretty bad for MySQL Performance and concurrency ?

    The reason is – replication. In MySQL before 5.1 replication is statement based which means statements replied on the master should cause the same effect as on the slave. If Innodb would not locking rows in source table other transaction could modify the row and commit before transaction which is running INSERT .. SELECT statement. This would make this transaction to be applied on the slave before INSERT… SELECT statement and possibly result in different data than on master. Locking rows in the source table while reading them protects from this effect as other transaction modifies rows before INSERT … SELECT had chance to access it it will also be modified in the same order on the slave. If transaction tries to modify the row after it was accessed and so locked by INSERT … SELECT, transaction will have to wait until statement is completed to make sure it will be executed on the slave in proper order. Gets pretty complicated ? Well all you need to know it had to be done fore replication to work right in MySQL before 5.1.

    In MySQL 5.1 this as well as few other problems should be solved by row based replication. I’m however yet to give it real stress tests to see how well it performs :)

    One more thing to keep into account – INSERT … SELECT actually performs read in locking mode and so partially bypasses versioning and retrieves latest committed row. So even if you’re operation in REPEATABLE-READ mode, this operation will be performed in READ-COMMITTED mode, potentially giving different result compared to what pure SELECT would give. This by the way applies to SELECT .. LOCK IN SHARE MODE and SELECT … FOR UPDATE as well.

    One my ask what is if I’m not using replication and have my binary log disabled ? If replication is not used you can enable innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog option, which will relax locks which Innodb sets on statement execution, which generally gives better concurrency. However as the name says it makes locks unsafe fore replication and point in time recovery, so use innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog option with caution.

    Note disabling binary logs is not enough to trigger relaxed locks. You have to set innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog=1 as well. This is done so enabling binary log does not cause unexpected changes in locking behavior and performance problems. You also can use this option with replication sometimes, if you really know what you’re doing. I would not recommend it unless it is really needed as you might not know which other locks will be relaxed in future versions and how it would affect your replication.

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  • 2020-12-05 07:10

    Probably you could use Create View command (see Create View Syntax). For example,

    Create View temp as SELECT FROM HighlyContentiousTableInInnoDb WHERE allKindsOfComplexConditions are true
    

    After that you could use your insert statement with this view. Something like this

    INSERT INTO TemporaryTable (SELECT * FROM temp)
    

    This is only my proposal.

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