This topic describes how to start a transaction in OceanBase Database.
Start a transaction
OceanBase Database in Oracle mode is compatible with the transaction control statements in Oracle Database. You can start a transaction in OceanBase Database in the following ways.
Execute a
BEGINstatement.obclient [SYS]> BEGIN; //Start a transaction obclient [SYS]> INSERT INTO table1 VALUES(1,1); obclient [SYS]> COMMIT;Execute a
START TRANSACTIONstatement.obclient [SYS]> START TRANSACTION; //Start a transaction obclient [SYS]> INSERT INTO table1 VALUES(1,1); obclient [SYS]> COMMIT;Notice
BEGINis the alias ofSTART TRANSACTIONand is used to start a transaction.When
autocommitis set to0to disable the autocommit mode, execute theINSERT,UPDATE,DELETE, orSELECT FOR UPDATEstatement to start a new transaction.obclient [SYS]> SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; obclient [SYS]> INSERT INTO table1 VALUES(1,1); //Start a transaction obclient [SYS]> COMMIT; obclient [SYS]> SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; obclient [SYS]> UPDATE table1 SET id = 2 WHERE id = 1; //Start a transaction obclient [SYS]> COMMIT; obclient [SYS]> SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; obclient [SYS]> DELETE FROM table1 WHERE id = 2; //Start a transaction obclient [SYS]> COMMIT; obclient [SYS]> SET AUTOCOMMIT=0; obclient [SYS]> SELECT id FROM table1 WHERE id = 1 FOR UPDATE; //Start a transaction obclient [SYS]> COMMIT;
When a transaction is started, OceanBase Database assigns an ID to uniquely identify the transaction.
In scenarios with multiple concurrencies, the same row of data may be operated by two transactions. For query reads, you can use the SELECT FOR UPDATE statement to lock the query results to prevent other DML statements from modifying this record. For information about how to use the SELECT FOR UPDATE statement, see Use the SELECT FOR UPDATE statement to lock query results.
Use SET autocommit=0 to disable the autocommit mode and then use UPDATE to start a transaction.
obclient [SYS]> CREATE TABLE ordr(
id NUMBER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR2(10) NOT NULL,
value NUMBER,
gmt_create DATE NOT NULL DEFAULT sysdate );
Query OK, 0 rows affected
obclient [SYS]> INSERT INTO ordr(id, name, value)
VALUES (1,'CN',10001),(2,'US', 10002),(3,'EN', 10003);
Query OK, 3 rows affected
Records: 3 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
obclient [SYS]> SELECT * FROM ordr;
+----+------+-------+---------------------+
| id | name | value | gmt_create |
+----+------+-------+---------------------+
| 1 | CN | 10001 | 2022-10-19 14:51:12 |
| 2 | US | 10002 | 2022-10-19 14:51:12 |
| 3 | EN | 10003 | 2022-10-19 14:51:12 |
+----+------+-------+---------------------+
2 rows in set
obclient [SYS]> SET autocommit=0;
Query OK, 0 rows affected
obclient [SYS]> UPDATE ordr SET id=4 WHERE name='US';
Query OK, 1 row affected
Rows matched: 1 Changed: 1 Warnings: 0
You can query the status of a transaction in the V$OB_TRANSACTION_PARTICIPANTS view.
obclient [SYS]> SELECT * FROM V$OB_TRANSACTION_PARTICIPANTS;
*************************** 1. row ***************************
TENANT_ID: 1004
SVR_IP: XX.XX.XX.223
SVR_PORT: 2882
SESSION_ID: 3221487658
SCHEDULER_ADDR: "XX.XX.XX.223:2882"
TX_TYPE: UNDECIDED
TX_ID: 77130
LS_ID: 1001
PARTICIPANTS: NULL
CTX_CREATE_TIME: 02-NOV-22 02.58.12.850332 PM
TX_EXPIRED_TIME: 03-NOV-22 02.58.12.850332 PM
STATE: ACTIVE
ACTION: START
PENDING_LOG_SIZE: 48
FLUSHED_LOG_SIZE: 0
ROLE: LEADER
1 row in set
For more information about fields in the $OB_TRANSACTION_PARTICIPANTS view, see $OB_TRANSACTION_PARTICIPANTS.