- Docs Home
- About TiDB Cloud
- Get Started
- Develop Applications
- Overview
- Quick Start
- Build a TiDB Developer Cluster
- CRUD SQL in TiDB
- Build a Simple CRUD App with TiDB
- Example Applications
- Connect to TiDB
- Design Database Schema
- Write Data
- Read Data
- Transaction
- Optimize
- Troubleshoot
- Reference
- Cloud Native Development Environment
- Manage Cluster
- Plan Your Cluster
- Create a TiDB Cluster
- Connect to Your TiDB Cluster
- Set Up VPC Peering Connections
- Use an HTAP Cluster with TiFlash
- Scale a TiDB Cluster
- Upgrade a TiDB Cluster
- Delete a TiDB Cluster
- Use TiDB Cloud API (Beta)
- Migrate Data
- Import Sample Data
- Migrate Data into TiDB
- Configure Amazon S3 Access and GCS Access
- Migrate from MySQL-Compatible Databases
- Migrate Incremental Data from MySQL-Compatible Databases
- Migrate from Amazon Aurora MySQL in Bulk
- Import or Migrate from Amazon S3 or GCS to TiDB Cloud
- Import CSV Files from Amazon S3 or GCS into TiDB Cloud
- Import Apache Parquet Files from Amazon S3 or GCS into TiDB Cloud
- Troubleshoot Access Denied Errors during Data Import from Amazon S3
- Export Data from TiDB
- Back Up and Restore
- Monitor and Alert
- Overview
- Built-in Monitoring
- Built-in Alerting
- Third-Party Monitoring Integrations
- Tune Performance
- Overview
- Analyze Performance
- SQL Tuning
- Overview
- Understanding the Query Execution Plan
- SQL Optimization Process
- Overview
- Logic Optimization
- Physical Optimization
- Prepare Execution Plan Cache
- Control Execution Plans
- TiKV Follower Read
- Coprocessor Cache
- Garbage Collection (GC)
- Tune TiFlash performance
- Manage User Access
- Billing
- Reference
- TiDB Cluster Architecture
- TiDB Cloud Cluster Limits and Quotas
- TiDB Limitations
- SQL
- Explore SQL with TiDB
- SQL Language Structure and Syntax
- SQL Statements
ADD COLUMN
ADD INDEX
ADMIN
ADMIN CANCEL DDL
ADMIN CHECKSUM TABLE
ADMIN CHECK [TABLE|INDEX]
ADMIN SHOW DDL [JOBS|QUERIES]
ALTER DATABASE
ALTER INDEX
ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE COMPACT
ALTER USER
ANALYZE TABLE
BATCH
BEGIN
CHANGE COLUMN
COMMIT
CHANGE DRAINER
CHANGE PUMP
CREATE [GLOBAL|SESSION] BINDING
CREATE DATABASE
CREATE INDEX
CREATE ROLE
CREATE SEQUENCE
CREATE TABLE LIKE
CREATE TABLE
CREATE USER
CREATE VIEW
DEALLOCATE
DELETE
DESC
DESCRIBE
DO
DROP [GLOBAL|SESSION] BINDING
DROP COLUMN
DROP DATABASE
DROP INDEX
DROP ROLE
DROP SEQUENCE
DROP STATS
DROP TABLE
DROP USER
DROP VIEW
EXECUTE
EXPLAIN ANALYZE
EXPLAIN
FLASHBACK TABLE
FLUSH PRIVILEGES
FLUSH STATUS
FLUSH TABLES
GRANT <privileges>
GRANT <role>
INSERT
KILL [TIDB]
MODIFY COLUMN
PREPARE
RECOVER TABLE
RENAME INDEX
RENAME TABLE
REPLACE
REVOKE <privileges>
REVOKE <role>
ROLLBACK
SELECT
SET DEFAULT ROLE
SET [NAMES|CHARACTER SET]
SET PASSWORD
SET ROLE
SET TRANSACTION
SET [GLOBAL|SESSION] <variable>
SHOW ANALYZE STATUS
SHOW [GLOBAL|SESSION] BINDINGS
SHOW BUILTINS
SHOW CHARACTER SET
SHOW COLLATION
SHOW [FULL] COLUMNS FROM
SHOW CREATE SEQUENCE
SHOW CREATE TABLE
SHOW CREATE USER
SHOW DATABASES
SHOW DRAINER STATUS
SHOW ENGINES
SHOW ERRORS
SHOW [FULL] FIELDS FROM
SHOW GRANTS
SHOW INDEX [FROM|IN]
SHOW INDEXES [FROM|IN]
SHOW KEYS [FROM|IN]
SHOW MASTER STATUS
SHOW PLUGINS
SHOW PRIVILEGES
SHOW [FULL] PROCESSSLIST
SHOW PROFILES
SHOW PUMP STATUS
SHOW SCHEMAS
SHOW STATS_HEALTHY
SHOW STATS_HISTOGRAMS
SHOW STATS_META
SHOW STATUS
SHOW TABLE NEXT_ROW_ID
SHOW TABLE REGIONS
SHOW TABLE STATUS
SHOW [FULL] TABLES
SHOW [GLOBAL|SESSION] VARIABLES
SHOW WARNINGS
SHUTDOWN
SPLIT REGION
START TRANSACTION
TABLE
TRACE
TRUNCATE
UPDATE
USE
WITH
- Data Types
- Functions and Operators
- Overview
- Type Conversion in Expression Evaluation
- Operators
- Control Flow Functions
- String Functions
- Numeric Functions and Operators
- Date and Time Functions
- Bit Functions and Operators
- Cast Functions and Operators
- Encryption and Compression Functions
- Locking Functions
- Information Functions
- JSON Functions
- Aggregate (GROUP BY) Functions
- Window Functions
- Miscellaneous Functions
- Precision Math
- Set Operations
- List of Expressions for Pushdown
- TiDB Specific Functions
- Clustered Indexes
- Constraints
- Generated Columns
- SQL Mode
- Table Attributes
- Transactions
- Views
- Partitioning
- Temporary Tables
- Cached Tables
- Character Set and Collation
- Read Historical Data
- System Tables
mysql
- INFORMATION_SCHEMA
- Overview
ANALYZE_STATUS
CLIENT_ERRORS_SUMMARY_BY_HOST
CLIENT_ERRORS_SUMMARY_BY_USER
CLIENT_ERRORS_SUMMARY_GLOBAL
CHARACTER_SETS
CLUSTER_INFO
COLLATIONS
COLLATION_CHARACTER_SET_APPLICABILITY
COLUMNS
DATA_LOCK_WAITS
DDL_JOBS
DEADLOCKS
ENGINES
KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
PARTITIONS
PROCESSLIST
REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS
SCHEMATA
SEQUENCES
SESSION_VARIABLES
SLOW_QUERY
STATISTICS
TABLES
TABLE_CONSTRAINTS
TABLE_STORAGE_STATS
TIDB_HOT_REGIONS_HISTORY
TIDB_INDEXES
TIDB_SERVERS_INFO
TIDB_TRX
TIFLASH_REPLICA
TIKV_REGION_PEERS
TIKV_REGION_STATUS
TIKV_STORE_STATUS
USER_PRIVILEGES
VIEWS
- System Variables
- API Reference
- Storage Engines
- Dumpling
- Table Filter
- Troubleshoot Inconsistency Between Data and Indexes
- FAQs
- Release Notes
- Support
- Glossary
Transaction overview
TiDB supports complete distributed transactions, providing optimistic transactions and pessimistic transactions (introduced in TiDB 3.0). This article mainly introduces transaction statements, optimistic transactions and pessimistic transactions, transaction isolation levels, and application-side retry and error handling in optimistic transactions.
Common statements
This chapter introduces how to use transactions in TiDB. The following example demonstrates the process of a simple transaction:
Bob wants to transfer $20 to Alice. This transaction includes two operations:
- Bob's account is reduced by $20.
- Alice's account is increased by $20.
Transactions can ensure that both of the above operations are executed successfully or both fail.
Insert some sample data into the table using the users
table in the bookshop database:
INSERT INTO users (id, nickname, balance)
VALUES (2, 'Bob', 200);
INSERT INTO users (id, nickname, balance)
VALUES (1, 'Alice', 100);
Run the following transactions and explain what each statement means:
BEGIN;
UPDATE users SET balance = balance - 20 WHERE nickname = 'Bob';
UPDATE users SET balance = balance + 20 WHERE nickname= 'Alice';
COMMIT;
After the above transaction is executed successfully, the table should look like this:
+----+--------------+---------+
| id | account_name | balance |
+----+--------------+---------+
| 1 | Alice | 120.00 |
| 2 | Bob | 180.00 |
+----+--------------+---------+
Start a transaction
To explicitly start a new transaction, you can use either BEGIN
or START TRANSACTION
.
BEGIN;
START TRANSACTION;
The default transaction mode of TiDB is pessimistic. You can also explicitly specify the optimistic transaction model:
BEGIN OPTIMISTIC;
Enable the pessimistic transaction mode:
BEGIN PESSIMISTIC;
If the current session is in the middle of a transaction when the above statement is executed, TiDB commits the current transaction first, and then starts a new transaction.
Commit a transaction
You can use the COMMIT
statement to commit all modifications made by TiDB in the current transaction.
COMMIT;
Before enabling optimistic transactions, make sure that your application can properly handle errors that may be returned by a COMMIT
statement. If you are not sure how your application will handle it, it is recommended to use the pessimistic transaction mode instead.
Roll back a transaction
You can use the ROLLBACK
statement to roll back modifications of the current transaction.
ROLLBACK;
In the previous transfer example, if you roll back the entire transaction, Alice's and Bob's balances will remain unchanged, and all modifications of the current transaction are canceled.
TRUNCATE TABLE `users`;
INSERT INTO `users` (`id`, `nickname`, `balance`) VALUES (1, 'Alice', 100), (2, 'Bob', 200);
SELECT * FROM `users`;
+----+--------------+---------+
| id | nickname | balance |
+----+--------------+---------+
| 1 | Alice | 100.00 |
| 2 | Bob | 200.00 |
+----+--------------+---------+
BEGIN;
UPDATE `users` SET `balance` = `balance` - 20 WHERE `nickname`='Bob';
UPDATE `users` SET `balance` = `balance` + 20 WHERE `nickname`='Alice';
ROLLBACK;
SELECT * FROM `users`;
+----+--------------+---------+
| id | nickname | balance |
+----+--------------+---------+
| 1 | Alice | 100.00 |
| 2 | Bob | 200.00 |
+----+--------------+---------+
The transaction is also automatically rolled back if the client connection is stopped or closed.
Transaction isolation levels
The transaction isolation levels are the basis of database transaction processing. The "I" (Isolation) in ACID refers to the isolation of the transactions.
The SQL-92 standard defines four isolation levels:
- read uncommitted (
READ UNCOMMITTED
) - read committed (
READ COMMITTED
) - repeatable read (
REPEATABLE READ
) - serializable (
SERIALIZABLE
).
See the table below for details:
Isolation Level | Dirty Write | Dirty Read | Fuzzy Read | Phantom |
---|---|---|---|---|
READ UNCOMMITTED | Not Possible | Possible | Possible | Possible |
READ COMMITTED | Not Possible | Not possible | Possible | Possible |
REPEATABLE READ | Not Possible | Not possible | Not possible | Possible |
SERIALIZABLE | Not Possible | Not possible | Not possible | Not possible |
TiDB supports the following isolation levels: READ COMMITTED
and REPEATABLE READ
:
mysql> SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ UNCOMMITTED;
ERROR 8048 (HY000): The isolation level 'READ-UNCOMMITTED' is not supported. Set tidb_skip_isolation_level_check=1 to skip this error
mysql> SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL REPEATABLE READ;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE;
ERROR 8048 (HY000): The isolation level 'SERIALIZABLE' is not supported. Set tidb_skip_isolation_level_check=1 to skip this error
TiDB implements Snapshot Isolation (SI) level consistency, also known as "repeatable read" for consistency with MySQL. This isolation level is different from ANSI Repeatable Read Isolation Level and MySQL Repeatable Read Isolation Level. For more details, see TiDB Transaction Isolation Levels.