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MySQL uses metadata locking to manage access to objects (tables, triggers, and so forth). Metadata locking is used to ensure data consistency but does involve some overhead, which increases as query volume increases. Metadata contention increases the more that multiple queries attempt to access the same objects.
Metadata locking is not a replacement for the table definition case, and its mutxes and locks differ from the
LOCK_open
mutex. The following discussion provides some information about how
metadata locking works.
To ensure transaction serializability, the server must not permit one session to perform a data definition language (DDL) statement on a table that is used in an uncompleted transaction in another session. The server achieves this by acquiring metadata locks on tables used within a transaction and deferring release of those locks until the transaction ends. A metadata lock on a table prevents changes to the table's structure. This locking approach has the implication that a table that is being used by a transaction within one session cannot be used in DDL statements by other sessions until the transaction ends.
This principle applies not only to transactional tables, but also to nontransactional tables. Suppose that a
session begins a transaction that uses transactional table t
and nontransactional
table nt
as follows:
START TRANSACTION;SELECT * FROM t;SELECT * FROM nt;
Metadata locks are held on both t
and nt
until the
transaction ends. If another session attempts a DDL operation on either table, it blocks until metadata lock
release at transaction end. For example, a second session blocks if it attempts any of these operations:
DROP TABLE t;ALTER TABLE t ...;DROP TABLE nt;ALTER TABLE nt ...;
If the server acquires metadata locks for a statement that is syntactically valid but fails during execution, it does not release the locks early. Lock release is still deferred to the end of the transaction because the failed statement is written to the binary log and the locks protect log consistency.
In autocommit mode, each statement is in effect a complete transaction, so metadata locks acquired for the statement are held only to the end of the statement.
Metadata locks acquired during a PREPARE
statement are released once the statement has been prepared, even if preparation occurs within a
multiple-statement transaction.
Before MySQL 5.5, when a transaction acquired the equivalent of a metadata lock for a table used within a statement, it released the lock at the end of the statement. This approach had the disadvantage that if a DDL statement occurred for a table that was being used by another session in an active transaction, statements could be written to the binary log in the wrong order.