Lock Based Protocols
Lock Based Protocols
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.1 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Lock-Based Protocols (Cont.)
Lock-compatibility matrix
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.2 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Lock-Based Protocols (Cont.)
Example of a transaction performing locking:
T2: lock-S(A);
read (A);
unlock(A);
lock-S(B);
read (B);
unlock(B);
display(A+B)
Locking as above is not sufficient to guarantee serializability — if A and B
get updated in-between the read of A and B, the displayed sum would be
wrong.
A locking protocol is a set of rules followed by all transactions while
requesting and releasing locks. Locking protocols restrict the set of
possible schedules.
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.3 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Pitfalls of Lock-Based Protocols
Consider the partial schedule
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.4 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Pitfalls of Lock-Based Protocols (Cont.)
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.5 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Binary Lock Protocol
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.6 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Binary Lock Protocols (cont..)
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.7 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Binary Lock Protocol (cont..)
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.8 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
The Two-Phase Locking Protocol
This is a protocol which ensures conflict-serializable schedules.
Phase 1: Growing Phase
transaction may obtain locks
transaction may not release locks
Phase 2: Shrinking Phase
transaction may release locks
transaction may not obtain locks
The protocol assures serializability. It can be proved that the
transactions can be serialized in the order of their lock points (i.e.
the point where a transaction acquired its final lock).
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.9 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
The Two-Phase Locking Protocol (Cont.)
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.10 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
The Two-Phase Locking Protocol (Cont.)
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.11 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Lock Conversions
Two-phase locking with lock conversions:
– First Phase:
can acquire a lock-S on item
can acquire a lock-X on item
can convert a lock-S to a lock-X (upgrade)
– Second Phase:
can release a lock-S
can release a lock-X
can convert a lock-X to a lock-S (downgrade)
This protocol assures serializability. But still relies on the programmer to
insert the various locking instructions.
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.12 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Implementation of Locking
A lock manager can be implemented as a separate process to which
transactions send lock and unlock requests
The lock manager replies to a lock request by sending a lock grant
messages (or a message asking the transaction to roll back, in case of
a deadlock)
The requesting transaction waits until its request is answered
The lock manager maintains a data-structure called a lock table to
record granted locks and pending requests
The lock table is usually implemented as an in-memory hash table
indexed on the name of the data item being locked
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.13 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Lock Table
Black rectangles indicate granted locks,
white ones indicate waiting requests
Lock table also records the type of lock
granted or requested
New request is added to the end of the
queue of requests for the data item, and
granted if it is compatible with all earlier
locks
Unlock requests result in the request
being deleted, and later requests are
checked to see if they can now be
granted
If transaction aborts, all waiting or
Granted granted requests of the transaction are
deleted
Waiting
lock manager may keep a list of
locks held by each transaction, to
implement this efficiently
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.14 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Deadlock Handling
Consider the following two transactions:
T1: write (X) T2: write(Y)
write(Y) write(X)
Schedule with deadlock
T1 T2
lock-X on X
write (X)
lock-X on Y
write (X)
wait for lock-X on X
wait for lock-X on Y
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.15 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Deadlock Handling
System is deadlocked if there is a set of transactions such that every
transaction in the set is waiting for another transaction in the set.
Deadlock prevention protocols ensure that the system will never
enter into a deadlock state. Some prevention strategies :
Require that each transaction locks all its data items before it
begins execution (predeclaration).
Impose partial ordering of all data items and require that a
transaction can lock data items only in the order specified by the
partial order (graph-based protocol).
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.16 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
More Deadlock Prevention Strategies
Following schemes use transaction timestamps for the sake of deadlock
prevention alone.
wait-die scheme — non-preemptive
older transaction may wait for younger one to release data item.
Younger transactions never wait for older ones; they are rolled back
instead.
a transaction may die several times before acquiring needed data
item
wound-wait scheme — preemptive
older transaction wounds (forces rollback) of younger transaction
instead of waiting for it. Younger transactions may wait for older
ones.
may be fewer rollbacks than wait-die scheme.
Database System Concepts - 5th Edition 16.17 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan