Non-blocking DDL
When a user executes a DDL statement on a table with uncommitted long transactions or large queries, the DDL statement keeps waiting for an MDL-X lock. GaussDB(for MySQL) gives MDL-X locks the highest priority. When a DDL statement is waiting for an MDL-X lock, all new transactions on the table are blocked. As a result, connections are congested, which may even cause the entire service system to break down. Non-blocking DDL allows new transactions to enter the table even if the MDL-X lock cannot be acquired, ensuring the stability of the entire service system.
Prerequisites
The kernel version is 2.0.54.240600 or later.
Constraints
- Enabling non-blocking DDL lowers the priority of DDL statements, and increases the chance of DDL statement execution failure if an MDL-X lock cannot be acquired.
- Non-blocking DDL is only supported for ALTER TABLE, RENAME TABLE, CREATE INDEX, DROP INDEX, and OPTIMIZE TABLE statements.
Parameters
You can set rds_nonblock_ddl_enable to enable non-blocking DDL, and then set rds_nonblock_ddl_retry_times, rds_nonblock_ddl_retry_interval, and rds_nonblock_ddl_lock_wait_timeout to specify the maximum number, interval, and timeout period of retries for acquiring an MDL-X lock, respectively.
Parameter |
Level |
Description |
---|---|---|
rds_nonblock_ddl_enable |
Global, Session |
Enables or disables non-blocking DDL. Value range:
Default value: OFF |
rds_nonblock_ddl_lock_wait_timeout |
Global, Session |
Controls how long a statement waits to acquire the MDL-X lock before giving up. Value range: 1 to 31536000, in seconds Default value: 1 |
rds_nonblock_ddl_retry_interval |
Global, Session |
Controls the amount of time between retry attempts for acquiring the MDL-X lock. Value range: 1 to 31536000, in seconds Default value: 6 |
rds_nonblock_ddl_retry_times |
Global, Session |
Controls the maximum number of times to retry for acquiring the MDL-X lock. Value range: 0 to 31536000 Default value: 0 If this parameter is set to 0, the value is calculated based on the smaller value of the lock_wait_timeout and rds_ddl_lock_wait_timeout parameters. For statements that do not support the rds_ddl_lock_wait_timeout parameter, the value is calculated based on the lock_wait_timeout parameter. |
Example
- Use sysbench to create a test table sbtest1 and insert one million rows of data into the table.
./oltp_read_write.lua --mysql-host="cluster_address" --mysql-port="port" --mysql-user="username" --mysql-password="password" --mysql-db="sbtest" --tables=1 --table-size=1000000 --report-interval=1 --percentile=99 --threads=8 --time=6000 prepare
- Use oltp_read_write.lua in sysbench to simulate user services.
./oltp_read_write.lua --mysql-host="cluster_address" --mysql-port="port" --mysql-user="username" --mysql-password="password" --mysql-db="sbtest" --tables=1 --table-size=1000000 --report-interval=1 --percentile=99 --threads=8 --time=6000 run
- Start a new transaction on table sbtest1 but do not commit the transaction. The transaction holds the MDL lock of table sbtest1.
begin; select * from sbtest1;
- Start a new session, add columns to table sbtest1 when non-blocking DDL is enabled and disabled, and observe the TPS changes.
alter table sbtest1 add column d int;
- Check the test results.
- When non-blocking DDL is disabled, the TPS keeps decreasing to zero. The default timeout period is 31,536,000 seconds, which severely affects user services.
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Provide feedbackThank you very much for your feedback. We will continue working to improve the documentation.See the reply and handling status in My Cloud VOC.
For any further questions, feel free to contact us through the chatbot.
Chatbot