Concurrent data access
Understanding concurrent data access and data consistency.
Data concurrency is the simultaneous access of the same data by many users. On the other hand, data consistency means that each user sees a consistent view of the database. Without adequate concurrency and consistency controls, data may be changed improperly, compromising data integrity. To write inter-operable applications, you must adapt the program logic to the behavior of the database server regarding concurrency and consistency management. This issue requires good knowledge of multiuser application programming, transactions, locking mechanisms, isolation levels and wait mode. If you are not familiar with these concepts, carefully read the documentation of each database server which covers this subject.
Processes accessing the database can change transaction parameters such as the isolation level. Existing programs might have to be adapted in order to work with this new behavior.
The following is the best configuration to get common behavior with all types of database engines:
- The database must support transactions; this is usually the case.
- Transactions must be as short as possible (under a second is fine, 3 or more seconds is a long transaction).
- The isolation level should be set to
COMMITTED READ
orCURSOR STABILITY
. IBM® Informix® IDS 11 has introduced theLAST COMMITTED
option for theCOMMITTED READ
isolation level, which makes IDS behave like other database server using row-versioning, returning the most recently committed version of the row, rather than wait for a lock to be released. This option can also be turned on implicitly with theUSELASTCOMMITTED
configuration parameter, saving code changes. - The wait mode for locks must be
WAIT
orWAIT n
(timeout). Wait mode can be adapted to wait for the longest transaction.
Remarks: With this configuration, the locking granularity does not have to be at the row level.
To improve performance with IBM
Informix databases, you can use the LOCK MODE
PAGE
locking level, which is the default. However, if the application requires row-level
locking, you must use LOCK MODE ROW
clause, or define the
DEF_TABLES_LOCKMODE
configuration parameter to ROW
, in the
onconfig file of the server.
Database Server Type | Concurrency topic |
---|---|
IBM DB2® LUW (UNIX™) | Concurrency in IBM DB2 |
IBM Informix | N/A |
IBM Netezza® | Concurrency in Netezza |
Microsoft™ SQL Server | Concurrency in SQL Server |
Oracle® MySQL | Concurrency in Oracle MySQL |
Oracle Database Server | Concurrency in Oracle DB |
PostgreSQL | Concurrency in PostgreSQL |
SAP® ASE | Concurrency in SAP ASE |
SAP HANA® | Concurrency in SAP HANA |
SQLite | Concurrency in SQLite |