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Re: Question regarding how databases support atomicity

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Thanks All for the kind responses. I understand how MVCC takes care of atomicity for updates to rows. I was developing a project where lets say data for each table is stored in its own folder together with metadata (we are not talking postgres now). So if I have two tables A and B I have a folder structure like:
A
\_ metadata.json
B
\_ metadata.json
Now if I want to rename a table, I need to move the folder and also update metadata accordingly. These are two separate operations but need to be done atomically - all or none. in this case it is possible that we succeed in renaming the folder but fail to update metadata for whatever reason. then if we try to undo the folder rename we get another failure for whatever reason. how to deal with such scenarios? are there no such scenarios in postgres?


On Fri, May 3, 2024 at 8:29 PM Tom Lane <tgl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"David G. Johnston" <david.g.johnston@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
> On Friday, May 3, 2024, Siddharth Jain <siddhsql@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> The way I understand this is that if there is a failure in-between, we
>>> start undoing and reverting the previous operations one by one.

> Not in PostgreSQL.  All work performed is considered provisional until a
> commit succeeds.  At which point all provisional work, which had been
> tagged with the same transaction identifier, becomes reality to the rest of
> the system, by virtue of marking the transaction live.

Right.  We don't use UNDO; instead, we use multiple versions of
database rows (MVCC).  A transaction doesn't modify the contents
of existing rows, but just marks them as provisionally outdated, and
then inserts new row versions that are marked provisionally inserted.
Other transactions ignore the outdate markings and the uncommitted new
rows, until the transaction commits, at which time the new versions
become live and the old ones become dead.  If the transaction never
does commit -- either through ROLLBACK or a crash -- then the old row
versions remain live and the new ones are dead.  In either case, we
don't have a consistency or correctness problem, but we do have dead
rows that must eventually get vacuumed away to prevent indefinite
storage bloat.  That can be done by background housekeeping processes
though (a/k/a autovacuum).

I believe Oracle, for one, actually does use UNDO.  I don't know
what they do about failure-to-UNDO.

                        regards, tom lane

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