Using the soft invalidation and automatic revalidation support
In the earlier versions of DB2, whenever an object was altered or dropped, an exclusive lock was applied to ensure that no user accessed the object. This locking resulted in lock-waits or the rolling back of the transaction because of the deadlocks.
Getting ready
We need the SYSADM
authority to modify the values for DB2 registry variables.
How to do it...
To enable or disable soft invalidation at the instance level, use the DB2 registry variable, DB2_DDL_SOFT_INVAL
.
To enable soft invalidation at the instance level, set the value of the
DB2_DDL_SOFT_INVAL
registry variable toON
.
db2set DB2_DDL_SOFT_INVAL=ON
db2stop
db2start
To disable soft invalidation at the instance level, set the value of the
DB2_DDL_SOFT_INVAL
registry variable toOFF
.
db2set DB2_DDL_SOFT_INVAL=OFF
db2stop
db2start
How it works...
In DB2 9.7, we have the soft invalidation feature to avoid these lock-waits or deadlocks. Upon activating soft invalidation using the registry variable DB2_DDL_SOFT_INVAL=ON
in any transaction, the DDL operations, such as DROP TABLE, ALTER TABLE
, and DETACH
partitions on database objects will not be stuck because of a lock-wait (SQL0911N Reason Code 68)
or a deadlock (SQL0911N Reason Code 2)
while the modifying objects are being accessed by other transactions. This is because the current transaction will continue to access the original object definition while the new transaction will make use of the changed object definition of ALTER, DROP
, or DETACH
if the object being accessed is altered. During the DROP
statement, the current transaction would still see the object until the completion of the execution of the transaction and all new transactions would fail to find the dropped object. This way, DB2 9.7 improves the application concurrency for DDL statements.
The following is the list of DDL statements for which soft invalidation is supported in DB2 9.7:
CREATE OR REPLACE ALIAS
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER
CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW
DROP ALIAS
DROP FUNCTION
DROP TRIGGER
DROP VIEW
There's more...
As discussed in the earlier recipe, DB2 9.7 supports automatic object revalidation, based on the database configuration parameter's AUTO_REVAL
setting.
Normally, the object would get revalidated whenever the application or the user accesses the invalid object, if AUTO_REVAL
is set to DEFERRED
. If we set AUTO_REVAL
to IMMEDIATE
, the objects get revalidated immediately after they become invalid.