15:44

11 February 2019

A feature of PostgreSQL that most people don’t even know exists is the ability to export and import transaction snapshots.

The documentation is accurate, but it doesn’t really describe why one might want to do such a thing.

First, what is a “snapshot”? You can think of a snapshot as the current set of committed tuples in the database, a consistent view of the database. When you start a transaction and set it to REPEATABLE READ mode, the snapshot remains consistent throughout the transaction, even if other sessions commit transactions. (In the default transaction mode, READ COMMITTED , each statement starts a new snapshot, so newly committed work could appear between statements within the transaction.)

However, each snapshot is local to a single transaction. But suppose you wanted to write a tool that connected to the database in multiple sessions, and did analysis or extraction? Since each session has its own transaction, and the transactions start asynchronously from each other, they could have different views of the database depending on what other transactions got committed. This might generate inconsistent or invalid results.

This isn’t theoretical: Suppose you are writing a tool like pg_dump , with a parallel dump facility. If different sessions got different views of the database, the resulting dump would be inconsistent, which would make it useless as a backup tool!

The good news is that we have the ability to “synchronize” various sessions so that they all use the same base snapshot.

First, a transaction opens and sets itself to REPEATABLE READ or SERIALIZABLE mode (there’s no point in doing exported snapshots in READ COMMITTED mode, since the snapshot will get replaced at the very next statement). Then, that session calls pg_export_snapshot . This creates an identifier for the current transaction snapshot.

Then, the client running the first session passes that identifier to the clients that will be using it. You’ll need to do this via some non-database channel. For example, you can’t use LISTEN / NOTIFY , since the message isn’t actually sent until COMMIT time.

Each client that receives the snapshot ID can then do SET TRANSACTION SNAPSHOT ... to use the snapshot. The client needs to call this before it does any work in the session (even SELECT ). Now, each of the clients has the same view into the database, and that view will remain until it COMMIT s or ABORT s.

Note that each transaction is still fully autonomous; the various sessions are not “inside” the same transaction. They can’t see each other’s work, and if two different clients modify the database, those modifications are not visible to any other session, including the ones that are sharing the snapshot. You can think of the snapshot as the “base” view of the database, but each session can modify it (subject, of course, to the usual rules involved in modifying the same tuples, or getting serialization failures).

This is a pretty specialized use-case, of course; not many applications need to have multiple sessions with a consistent view of the database. But if you do, PostgreSQL has the facilities to do it!