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Concurrency control

In computer science -- more specifically, in the field of databases -- concurrency control is a method used to ensure that database transactions are executed in a safe manner (i.e., without data loss). Concurrency control is especially applicable to database management systems, which must ensure that transactions are executed safely and that they follow the ACID rules, as described in the following section. The DBMS must be able to ensure that only serializable, recoverable schedules are allowed, and that no actions of committed transactions are lost while undoing aborted transactions.

Transaction ACID rules

Concurrency control mechanism

The main categories of concurrency control mechanisms are:

  • Pessimist - The concurrent executions of transactions are synchronized early in their execution life cycle.
  • Optimistic - Delay the synchronization for transactions until their termination.

There are several methods for concurrency control, the majority of which uses Strict 2PL locking:

Locks are bookkeeping objects associated with a database object.

There are also Non-lock concurrency control methods.

See also

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