I have query when executed from different session is resulting in deadlock.
TAB1 (ID, TARGET, STATE, NEXT) AND ID is primary key
Column ID is the primary key.
SELECT *
FROM
TAB1 WHERE NEXT = (SELECT MIN(NEXT) FROM TAB1 WHERE TARGET=? AND STATE=?)
AND TARGET=? AND STATE=? FOR UPDATE
In the Oracle trace file, I see the statement:
DEADLOCK DETECTED
Current SQL statement for this session:
SELECT ID, TARGET, NEXT, STATE FROM TAB1
WHERE NEXT=(SELECT MIN(NEXT) FROM TAB1 WHERE (TARGET='$any') AND ( STATE = 0))
AND (TARGET='$any')
AND (STATE = 0) FOR UPDATE
The following deadlock is not an ORACLE error. It is a
deadlock due to user error in the design of an application
or from issuing incorrect ad-hoc SQL. The following
information may aid in determining the deadlock:
Deadlock graph:
---------Blocker(s)-------- ---------Waiter(s)---------
Resource Name process session holds waits process session holds waits
TX-00010012-0102905b 54 474 X 52 256 X
TX-000a0005-00a30961 52 256 X 54 474 X
session 474: DID 0001-0036-00000002 session 256: DID 0001-0034-00000002
session 256: DID 0001-0034-00000002 session 474: DID 0001-0036-00000002
Rows waited on:
Session 256: obj - rowid = 00013181 - AAATGBAAzAABtPTAAI
(dictionary objn - 78209, file - 51, block - 447443, slot - 8)
Session 474: obj - rowid = 00013181 - AAATGBAAzAABtPUAAJ
(dictionary objn - 78209, file - 51, block - 447444, slot - 9)
Information on the OTHER waiting sessions:
Session 256:
pid=52 serial=58842 audsid=43375302 user: 106/B2B_ISINTERNAL
O/S info: user: admwmt, term: spl099wmt04.compucom.local, ospid: , machine: spl099wmt04.compucom.local/10.16.0.41
program: JDBC Connect Client
Current SQL Statement:
SELECT ID, TARGET, NEXT, STATE FROM TAB1
WHERE NEXT=(SELECT MIN(NEXT) FROM TAB1 WHERE (TARGET='$any') AND ( STATE = 0))
AND (TARGET='$any')
AND (STATE = 0) FOR UPDATE
End of information on OTHER waiting sessions.
===================================================
Is there any way to avoid this? Rewriting the Query or Indexing?
Update
Instead of trying to guess exactly how Oracle retrieves rows and force a plan, it may be easier to use one of the available
UPDATE FOR
locking features.NOWAIT
orSKIP LOCKED
should be able to fix the problem. Although withNOWAIT
you would probably need to add some application logic to retry after an error.Since there are bind variables there may be multiple execution plans for the same SQL statement. This is normally a good thing, for example think about a query like this:
select * from tab where status = ?
. A full table scan would work best for a popular status, and an index scan would work better for a rare status. But if one plan uses an index and one uses a table, the same statement will retrieve resources in a different order, potentially causing a deadlock.Forcing the statement to always use the same plan will prevent the deadlocks.
First, you will want to confirm my theory about multiple execution plans is correct. Look for multiple rows in this query, specifically look for different
plan_hash_value
s for the same SQL_ID.Then it's a matter of forcing the statements to always use the same plan. One simple way is to find the outline that fixes a specific plan, and use the same set of hints for both statements. Hopefully the forced plan will still run well for all sets of bind variables.
I think the reason can be that you are actually selecting the same table twice with FOR UPDATE clause, once in the main query and once in subquery.