Mini Shell
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* proc.h
* per-process shared memory data structures
*
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2012, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
* src/include/storage/proc.h
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#ifndef _PROC_H_
#define _PROC_H_
#include "access/xlog.h"
#include "datatype/timestamp.h"
#include "storage/latch.h"
#include "storage/lock.h"
#include "storage/pg_sema.h"
/*
* Each backend advertises up to PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS TransactionIds
* for non-aborted subtransactions of its current top transaction. These
* have to be treated as running XIDs by other backends.
*
* We also keep track of whether the cache overflowed (ie, the transaction has
* generated at least one subtransaction that didn't fit in the cache).
* If none of the caches have overflowed, we can assume that an XID that's not
* listed anywhere in the PGPROC array is not a running transaction. Else we
* have to look at pg_subtrans.
*/
#define PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS 64 /* XXX guessed-at value */
struct XidCache
{
TransactionId xids[PGPROC_MAX_CACHED_SUBXIDS];
};
/* Flags for PGXACT->vacuumFlags */
#define PROC_IS_AUTOVACUUM 0x01 /* is it an autovac worker? */
#define PROC_IN_VACUUM 0x02 /* currently running lazy vacuum */
#define PROC_IN_ANALYZE 0x04 /* currently running analyze */
#define PROC_VACUUM_FOR_WRAPAROUND 0x08 /* set by autovac only */
/* flags reset at EOXact */
#define PROC_VACUUM_STATE_MASK (0x0E)
/*
* We allow a small number of "weak" relation locks (AccesShareLock,
* RowShareLock, RowExclusiveLock) to be recorded in the PGPROC structure
* rather than the main lock table. This eases contention on the lock
* manager LWLocks. See storage/lmgr/README for additional details.
*/
#define FP_LOCK_SLOTS_PER_BACKEND 16
/*
* Each backend has a PGPROC struct in shared memory. There is also a list of
* currently-unused PGPROC structs that will be reallocated to new backends.
*
* links: list link for any list the PGPROC is in. When waiting for a lock,
* the PGPROC is linked into that lock's waitProcs queue. A recycled PGPROC
* is linked into ProcGlobal's freeProcs list.
*
* Note: twophase.c also sets up a dummy PGPROC struct for each currently
* prepared transaction. These PGPROCs appear in the ProcArray data structure
* so that the prepared transactions appear to be still running and are
* correctly shown as holding locks. A prepared transaction PGPROC can be
* distinguished from a real one at need by the fact that it has pid == 0.
* The semaphore and lock-activity fields in a prepared-xact PGPROC are unused,
* but its myProcLocks[] lists are valid.
*/
struct PGPROC
{
/* proc->links MUST BE FIRST IN STRUCT (see ProcSleep,ProcWakeup,etc) */
SHM_QUEUE links; /* list link if process is in a list */
PGSemaphoreData sem; /* ONE semaphore to sleep on */
int waitStatus; /* STATUS_WAITING, STATUS_OK or STATUS_ERROR */
Latch procLatch; /* generic latch for process */
LocalTransactionId lxid; /* local id of top-level transaction currently
* being executed by this proc, if running;
* else InvalidLocalTransactionId */
int pid; /* Backend's process ID; 0 if prepared xact */
int pgprocno;
/* These fields are zero while a backend is still starting up: */
BackendId backendId; /* This backend's backend ID (if assigned) */
Oid databaseId; /* OID of database this backend is using */
Oid roleId; /* OID of role using this backend */
/*
* While in hot standby mode, shows that a conflict signal has been sent
* for the current transaction. Set/cleared while holding ProcArrayLock,
* though not required. Accessed without lock, if needed.
*/
bool recoveryConflictPending;
/* Info about LWLock the process is currently waiting for, if any. */
bool lwWaiting; /* true if waiting for an LW lock */
uint8 lwWaitMode; /* lwlock mode being waited for */
struct PGPROC *lwWaitLink; /* next waiter for same LW lock */
/* Info about lock the process is currently waiting for, if any. */
/* waitLock and waitProcLock are NULL if not currently waiting. */
LOCK *waitLock; /* Lock object we're sleeping on ... */
PROCLOCK *waitProcLock; /* Per-holder info for awaited lock */
LOCKMODE waitLockMode; /* type of lock we're waiting for */
LOCKMASK heldLocks; /* bitmask for lock types already held on this
* lock object by this backend */
/*
* Info to allow us to wait for synchronous replication, if needed.
* waitLSN is InvalidXLogRecPtr if not waiting; set only by user backend.
* syncRepState must not be touched except by owning process or WALSender.
* syncRepLinks used only while holding SyncRepLock.
*/
XLogRecPtr waitLSN; /* waiting for this LSN or higher */
int syncRepState; /* wait state for sync rep */
SHM_QUEUE syncRepLinks; /* list link if process is in syncrep queue */
/*
* All PROCLOCK objects for locks held or awaited by this backend are
* linked into one of these lists, according to the partition number of
* their lock.
*/
SHM_QUEUE myProcLocks[NUM_LOCK_PARTITIONS];
struct XidCache subxids; /* cache for subtransaction XIDs */
/* Per-backend LWLock. Protects fields below. */
LWLockId backendLock; /* protects the fields below */
/* Lock manager data, recording fast-path locks taken by this backend. */
uint64 fpLockBits; /* lock modes held for each fast-path slot */
Oid fpRelId[FP_LOCK_SLOTS_PER_BACKEND]; /* slots for rel oids */
bool fpVXIDLock; /* are we holding a fast-path VXID lock? */
LocalTransactionId fpLocalTransactionId; /* lxid for fast-path VXID
* lock */
};
/* NOTE: "typedef struct PGPROC PGPROC" appears in storage/lock.h. */
extern PGDLLIMPORT PGPROC *MyProc;
extern PGDLLIMPORT struct PGXACT *MyPgXact;
/*
* Prior to PostgreSQL 9.2, the fields below were stored as part of the
* PGPROC. However, benchmarking revealed that packing these particular
* members into a separate array as tightly as possible sped up GetSnapshotData
* considerably on systems with many CPU cores, by reducing the number of
* cache lines needing to be fetched. Thus, think very carefully before adding
* anything else here.
*/
typedef struct PGXACT
{
TransactionId xid; /* id of top-level transaction currently being
* executed by this proc, if running and XID
* is assigned; else InvalidTransactionId */
TransactionId xmin; /* minimal running XID as it was when we were
* starting our xact, excluding LAZY VACUUM:
* vacuum must not remove tuples deleted by
* xid >= xmin ! */
uint8 vacuumFlags; /* vacuum-related flags, see above */
bool overflowed;
bool inCommit; /* true if within commit critical section */
uint8 nxids;
} PGXACT;
/*
* There is one ProcGlobal struct for the whole database cluster.
*/
typedef struct PROC_HDR
{
/* Array of PGPROC structures (not including dummies for prepared txns) */
PGPROC *allProcs;
/* Array of PGXACT structures (not including dummies for prepared txns) */
PGXACT *allPgXact;
/* Length of allProcs array */
uint32 allProcCount;
/* Head of list of free PGPROC structures */
PGPROC *freeProcs;
/* Head of list of autovacuum's free PGPROC structures */
PGPROC *autovacFreeProcs;
/* WALWriter process's latch */
Latch *walwriterLatch;
/* Checkpointer process's latch */
Latch *checkpointerLatch;
/* Current shared estimate of appropriate spins_per_delay value */
int spins_per_delay;
/* The proc of the Startup process, since not in ProcArray */
PGPROC *startupProc;
int startupProcPid;
/* Buffer id of the buffer that Startup process waits for pin on, or -1 */
int startupBufferPinWaitBufId;
} PROC_HDR;
extern PROC_HDR *ProcGlobal;
extern PGPROC *PreparedXactProcs;
/*
* We set aside some extra PGPROC structures for auxiliary processes,
* ie things that aren't full-fledged backends but need shmem access.
*
* Background writer, checkpointer and WAL writer run during normal operation.
* Startup process and WAL receiver also consume 2 slots, but WAL writer is
* launched only after startup has exited, so we only need 4 slots.
*/
#define NUM_AUXILIARY_PROCS 4
/* configurable options */
extern int DeadlockTimeout;
extern int StatementTimeout;
extern bool log_lock_waits;
extern volatile bool cancel_from_timeout;
/*
* Function Prototypes
*/
extern int ProcGlobalSemas(void);
extern Size ProcGlobalShmemSize(void);
extern void InitProcGlobal(void);
extern void InitProcess(void);
extern void InitProcessPhase2(void);
extern void InitAuxiliaryProcess(void);
extern void PublishStartupProcessInformation(void);
extern void SetStartupBufferPinWaitBufId(int bufid);
extern int GetStartupBufferPinWaitBufId(void);
extern bool HaveNFreeProcs(int n);
extern void ProcReleaseLocks(bool isCommit);
extern void ProcQueueInit(PROC_QUEUE *queue);
extern int ProcSleep(LOCALLOCK *locallock, LockMethod lockMethodTable);
extern PGPROC *ProcWakeup(PGPROC *proc, int waitStatus);
extern void ProcLockWakeup(LockMethod lockMethodTable, LOCK *lock);
extern bool IsWaitingForLock(void);
extern void LockErrorCleanup(void);
extern void ProcWaitForSignal(void);
extern void ProcSendSignal(int pid);
extern bool enable_sig_alarm(int delayms, bool is_statement_timeout);
extern bool disable_sig_alarm(bool is_statement_timeout);
extern void handle_sig_alarm(SIGNAL_ARGS);
extern bool enable_standby_sig_alarm(TimestampTz now,
TimestampTz fin_time, bool deadlock_only);
extern bool disable_standby_sig_alarm(void);
extern void handle_standby_sig_alarm(SIGNAL_ARGS);
#endif /* PROC_H */
Zerion Mini Shell 1.0