deadlock_timeout
(integer
)
This is the amount of time, in milliseconds, to wait on a lock
before checking to see if there is a deadlock condition. The
check for deadlock is relatively slow, so the server doesn't run
it every time it waits for a lock. We (optimistically?) assume
that deadlocks are not common in production applications and
just wait on the lock for a while before starting the check for a
deadlock. Increasing this value reduces the amount of time
wasted in needless deadlock checks, but slows down reporting of
real deadlock errors. The default is one second (1s
),
which is probably about the smallest value you would want in
practice. On a heavily loaded server you might want to raise it.
Ideally the setting should exceed your typical transaction time,
so as to improve the odds that a lock will be released before
the waiter decides to check for deadlock.
max_locks_per_transaction
(integer
)
The shared lock table is created to track locks on
max_locks_per_transaction
* (max_connections + max_prepared_transactions) objects (e.g. tables);
hence, no more than this many distinct objects can be locked at
any one time. This parameter controls the average number of object
locks allocated for each transaction; individual transactions
can lock more objects as long as the locks of all transactions
fit in the lock table. This is not the number of
rows that can be locked; that value is unlimited. The default,
64, has historically proven sufficient, but you might need to
raise this value if you have clients that touch many different
tables in a single transaction. This parameter can only be set at
server start.
Increasing this parameter may cause PostgreSQL to request more System V shared memory than your operating system's default configuration allows. See Section 16.4.1, “Shared Memory and Semaphores” for information on how to adjust those parameters, if necessary.