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Update UPSERT comment now that native upserts are the default (#13924)
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changelog.d/13924.misc
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changelog.d/13924.misc
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Update an innaccurate comment in Synapse's upsert database helper.
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@ -1141,17 +1141,57 @@ class DatabasePool:
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desc: str = "simple_upsert",
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lock: bool = True,
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) -> bool:
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"""
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"""Insert a row with values + insertion_values; on conflict, update with values.
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`lock` should generally be set to True (the default), but can be set
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to False if either of the following are true:
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1. there is a UNIQUE INDEX on the key columns. In this case a conflict
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will cause an IntegrityError in which case this function will retry
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the update.
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2. we somehow know that we are the only thread which will be updating
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this table.
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As an additional note, this parameter only matters for old SQLite versions
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because we will use native upserts otherwise.
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All of our supported databases accept the nonstandard "upsert" statement in
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their dialect of SQL. We call this a "native upsert". The syntax looks roughly
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like:
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INSERT INTO table VALUES (values + insertion_values)
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ON CONFLICT (keyvalues)
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DO UPDATE SET (values); -- overwrite `values` columns only
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If (values) is empty, the resulting query is slighlty simpler:
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INSERT INTO table VALUES (insertion_values)
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ON CONFLICT (keyvalues)
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DO NOTHING; -- do not overwrite any columns
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This function is a helper to build such queries.
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In order for upserts to make sense, the database must be able to determine when
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an upsert CONFLICTs with an existing row. Postgres and SQLite ensure this by
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requiring that a unique index exist on the column names used to detect a
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conflict (i.e. `keyvalues.keys()`).
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If there is no such index, we can "emulate" an upsert with a SELECT followed
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by either an INSERT or an UPDATE. This is unsafe: we cannot make the same
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atomicity guarantees that a native upsert can and are very vulnerable to races
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and crashes. Therefore if we wish to upsert without an appropriate unique index,
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we must either:
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1. Acquire a table-level lock before the emulated upsert (`lock=True`), or
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2. VERY CAREFULLY ensure that we are the only thread and worker which will be
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writing to this table, in which case we can proceed without a lock
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(`lock=False`).
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Generally speaking, you should use `lock=True`. If the table in question has a
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unique index[*], this class will use a native upsert (which is atomic and so can
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ignore the `lock` argument). Otherwise this class will use an emulated upsert,
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in which case we want the safer option unless we been VERY CAREFUL.
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[*]: Some tables have unique indices added to them in the background. Those
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tables `T` are keys in the dictionary UNIQUE_INDEX_BACKGROUND_UPDATES,
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where `T` maps to the background update that adds a unique index to `T`.
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This dictionary is maintained by hand.
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At runtime, we constantly check to see if each of these background updates
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has run. If so, we deem the coresponding table safe to upsert into, because
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we can now use a native insert to do so. If not, we deem the table unsafe
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to upsert into and require an emulated upsert.
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Tables that do not appear in this dictionary are assumed to have an
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appropriate unique index and therefore be safe to upsert into.
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Args:
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table: The table to upsert into
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