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mysql - How to properly use transactions and locks to ensure database integrity?

I develop an online reservation system. To simplify let's say that users can book multiple items and each item can be booked only once. Items are first added to the shopping cart.

App uses MySql / InnoDB database. According to MySql documentation, default isolation level is Repeatable reads.

Here is the checkout procedure I've came up with so far:

  1. Begin transaction
  2. Select items in the shopping cart (with for update lock)
    Records from cart-item and items tables are fetched at this step.
  3. Check if items haven't been booked by anybody else
    Basically check if quantity > 0. It's more complicated in the real application, thus I put it here as a separate step.
  4. Update items, set quantity = 0
    Also perform other essential database manipulations.
  5. Make payment (via external api like PayPal or Stripe)
    No user interaction is necessary as payment details can be collected before checkout.
  6. If everything went fine commit transaction or rollback otherwise
  7. Continue with non-essential logic
    Send e-mail etc in case of success, redirect for error.

I am unsure if that is sufficient. I'm worried whether:

  1. Other user that tries to book same item at the same time will be handled correcly. Will his transaction T2 wait until T1 is done?
  2. Payment using PayPal or Stripe may take some time. Wouldn't this become a problem in terms of performance?
  3. Items availability will be shown correctly all the time (items should be available until checkout succeeds). Should these read-only selects use shared lock?
  4. Is it possible that MySql rollbacks transaction by itself? Is it generally better to retry automatically or display an error message and let user try again?
  5. I guess its enough if I do SELECT ... FOR UPDATE on items table. This way both request caused by double click and other user will have to wait till transaction finishes. They'll wait because they also use FOR UPDATE. Meanwhile vanilla SELECT will just see a snapshot of db before the transaction, with no delay though, right?
  6. If I use JOIN in SELECT ... FOR UPDATE, will records in both tables be locked?
  7. I'm a bit confused about SELECT ... FOR UPDATE on non-existent rows section of Willem Renzema answer. When may it become important? Could you provide any example?

Here are some resources I've read: How to deal with concurrent updates in databases?, MySQL: Transactions vs Locking Tables, Do database transactions prevent race conditions?, Isolation (database systems), InnoDB Locking and Transaction Model, A beginner’s guide to database locking and the lost update phenomena.

Rewrote my original question to make it more general.
Added follow-up questions.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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  1. Begin transaction
  2. Select items in shopping cart (with for update lock)

So far so good, this will at least prevent the user from doing checkout in multiple sessions (multiple times trying to checkout the same card - good to deal with double clicks.)

  1. Check if items haven't been booked by other user

How do you check? With a standard SELECT or with a SELECT ... FOR UPDATE? Based on step 5, I'm guessing you are checking a reserved column on the item, or something similar.

The problem here is that the SELECT ... FOR UPDATE in step 2 is NOT going to apply the FOR UPDATE lock to everything else. It is only applying to what is SELECTed: the cart-item table. Based on the name, that is going to be a different record for each cart/user. This means that other transactions will NOT be blocked from proceeding.

  1. Make payment
  2. Update items marking them as reserved
  3. If everything went fine commit transaction, rollback otherwise

Following the above, based on the information you've provided, you may end up with multiple people buying the same item, if you aren't using SELECT ... FOR UPDATE on step 3.

Suggested Solution

  1. Begin transaction
  2. SELECT ... FOR UPDATE the cart-item table.

This will lock a double click out from running. What you select here should be the some kind of "cart ordered" column. If you do this, a second transaction will pause here and wait for the first to finish, and then read the result what the first saved to the database.

Make sure to end the checkout process here if the cart-item table says it has already been ordered.

  1. SELECT ... FOR UPDATE the table where you record if an item has been reserved.

This will lock OTHER carts/users from being able to read those items.

Based on the result, if the items are not reserved, continue:

  1. UPDATE ... the table in step 3, marking the item as reserved. Do any other INSERTs and UPDATEs you need, as well.

  2. Make payment. Issue a rollback if the payment service says the payment didn't work.

  3. Record payment, if success.

  4. Commit transaction

Make sure you don't do anything that might fail between steps 5 and 7 (like sending emails), else you may end up with them making a payment without it being recorded, in the event the transaction gets rolled back.

Step 3 is the important step with regards to making sure two (or more) people don't try to order the same item. If two people do try, the 2nd person will end up having their webpage "hang" while it processes the first. Then when the first finishes, the 2nd will read the "reserved" column, and you can return a message to the user that someone has already purchased that item.

Payment in transaction or not

This is subjective. Generally, you want to close transactions as quickly as possible, to avoid multiple people being locked out from interacting with the database at once.

However, in this case, you actually do want them to wait. It's just a matter of how long.

If you choose to commit the transaction before payment, you'll need to record your progress in some intermediate table, run the payment, and then record the result. Be aware that if the payment fails, you'll then have to manually undo the item reservation records that you updated.

SELECT ... FOR UPDATE on non-existent rows

Just a word of warning, in case your table design involves inserting rows where you need to earlier SELECT ... FOR UPDATE: If a row doesn't exist, that transaction will NOT cause other transactions to wait, if they also SELECT ... FOR UPDATE the same non-existent row.

So, make sure to always serialize your requests by doing a SELECT ... FOR UPDATE on a row that you know exists first. Then you can SELECT ... FOR UPDATE on the row that may or may not exist yet. (Don't try to do just a SELECT on the row that may or may not exist, as you'll be reading the state of the row at the time the transaction started, not at the moment you run the SELECT. So, SELECT ... FOR UPDATE on non-existent rows is still something you need to do in order to get the most up to date information, just be aware it will not cause other transactions to wait.)


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