Lock table
A lock is created when a user thread writes an entry in the lock table. A single transaction can own multiple locks. The lock table is the pool of available locks.
For an explanation of locking and the SQL statements associated with locking, see the HCL OneDB™ Guide to SQL: Tutorial.
- The address of the transaction that owns the lock
- The type of lock (exclusive, update, shared, byte, or intent)
- The page or rowid that is locked
- The table space where the lock is placed
- Information about the bytes locked (byte-range locks for smart
large objects):
- Smart-large-object ID
- Offset into the smart large object where the locked bytes begin
- The number of bytes locked, starting at the offset
To specify the initial size of the lock table, set the LOCKS configuration parameter. For information about using the LOCKS configuration parameter to specify the number of locks for a session, see the topics about configuration parameters in the HCL OneDB Administrator's Reference and the topics about configuration effects on memory utilization in your HCL OneDB Performance Guide.
If the number of locks allocated by sessions exceeds the value specified in the LOCKS configuration parameter, the database server doubles the size of the lock table, up to 15 times. The database server increases the size of the lock table by attempting to double the lock table on each increase. However, the amount added during each increase is limited to a maximum value. For 32-bit platforms, a maximum of 100,000 locks can be added during each increase. Therefore, the total maximum locks allowed for 32-bit platforms is 8,000,000 (maximum number of starting locks) + 99 (maximum number of dynamic lock table extensions) x 100,000 (maximum number of locks added per lock table extension). For 64-bit platforms, a maximum of 1,000,000 locks can be added during each increase. Therefore, the total maximum locks allowed is 500,000,000 (maximum number of starting locks) + 99 (maximum number of dynamic lock table extensions) x 1,000,000 (maximum number of locks added per lock table extension).
Use the DEF_TABLE_LOCKMODE configuration parameter to set the lock mode to page or row for new tables.
Locks can prevent sessions from reading data until after a concurrent transaction is committed or rolled back. For databases created with transaction logging, you can use the USELASTCOMMITTED configuration parameter in the onconfig file to specify whether the database server uses the last committed version of the data. The last committed version of the data is the version of the data that existed before any updates occurred. The value you set with the USELASTCOMMITTED configuration parameter overrides the isolation level that is specified in the SET ISOLATION TO COMMITTED READ statement of SQL. For more information about using the USELASTCOMMITTED configuration parameter, see the topics about configuration parameters in the HCL OneDB Administrator's Reference.
For more information about using and monitoring locks, see the topics about locking in your HCL OneDB Performance Guide and the HCL OneDB Guide to SQL: Tutorial.