On Wed, 2008-11-12 at 16:25 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:

> The alternative I was thinking about involved taking an exclusive buffer
> lock on the page containing the tuple to be updated in-place.  The point
> being that you have to examine the old tuple contents and decide whether
> to update after you have lock, not before.  I think this would amount to
> refactoring heap_inplace_update into two operations: fetch/lock and
> update/unlock.  (I guess there should be a third function to release
> without updating, too --- that would really just be an unlock-buffer
> operation, but it'd be better if callers didn't explicitly know that.)
> The callers would probably still use the syscache to obtain the tuple
> address, but they wouldn't rely on it to supply the tuple image.

Here's what I'm working on:

HeapTuple
heap_inplace_xxx(Relation relation, HeapTuple tuple, Buffer *buffer)

xxx = (fetch, update, release)

usage:

tuple = heap_inplace_fetch(rel, tuple, &buffer);

....

if (dirty)
        heap_inplace_fe(rel, tuple, &buffer);
else
        heap_inplace_fetch(rel, tuple, &buffer);


heap_inplace_fetch takes as input "tuple" which is a palloc'd tuple,
extracts from it the tid of the tuple, reads the buffer, locks it, then
releases the original tuple. It then returns a copy of the on-block
tuple. So all other code the same as before when we were working on a
copy produced from the syscache.

Is that roughly what you intended?

-- 
 Simon Riggs           www.2ndQuadrant.com
 PostgreSQL Training, Services and Support


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