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Monday, 15 July 2013

DB2 Locking, Part 16: Skipping Uncommitted Inserts

Posted on 09:28 by Unknown
DB2 10 for z/OS introduces a new technique for concurrency. As we have discussed previously in this series on DB2 locking, one of the most troublesome problems for DB2 performance analysts is reducing timeouts and lock suspensions.

The CONCURRENTACCESSRESOLUTION parameter can be used to specify a concurrent access resolution option to use for statements in a package when binding your application program.
There are two options. The first, USECURRENTLYCOMMITTED, indicates that DB2 can use the currently committed version of the data for applicable scans when data is in the process of being updated or deleted. Rows that are in the process of being inserted can be skipped. This clause applies only when the isolation level in effect is Cursor Stability (CS) or Read Stability (RS) making skip uncommitted inserts apply. It is ignored for other isolation levels.

The second option is WAITFOROUTCOME, which indicates that applicable scans must wait for a COMMIT or ROLLBACK operation to complete when data is in the process of being updated or deleted. Rows that are in the process of being inserted are not skipped.

The default behavior is WAITFOROUTCOME. Instead, if you choose to specify USECURRENTLYCOMMITTED DB2 will ignore rows that are in the process of being inserted and use only currently committed rows. This might be desirable for highly concurrent web transactions or to mimic the application concurrency settings or behavior of another DBMS.

Another option at your disposal is to specify that uncommitted inserts are to be skipped at the subsystem level (using option 19 on panel DSNTIPB during DB2 installation or by assembling a new DSNZPARM). The SKIPUNCI subsystem parameter specifies whether statements ignore a row that was inserted by another transaction if the row has not if the row has not yet been detected as committed. A newly inserted row can be detected as committed only after the lock held on the row has been released.

There are two options for this parameter:
  • Specifying YES for SKIPUNCI will cause DB2 to behave as though the newly inserted row has not yet arrived and the row is skipped, until the lock held on a newly inserted row is released.
  • SKIPUNCI(NO) indicates that DB2 will wait for the inserted row to be committed or rolled back. It then processes the row if the insert commits, or it moves on to find another row if the insert is rolled back. If a transaction performs one or more inserts, and then spawns a second transaction, specify NO for SKIP UNCOMM INSERTS if the first transaction needs the second transaction to wait for the outcome of the inserts. This is the default value.
By using either of these two methods to skip uncommitted inserts you can improve concurrent access to data as you tune your application’s locking and concurrency requirements.
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