BEGIN

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The BEGIN statement initiates a transaction, which either successfully executes all of the statements it contains or none at all.

Warning:

When using transactions, your application should include logic to retry transactions that are aborted to break a dependency cycle between concurrent transactions.

Synopsis

BEGIN TRANSACTION PRIORITY LOW NORMAL HIGH READ ONLY WRITE AS OF SYSTEM TIME a_expr ,

Required privileges

No privileges are required to initiate a transaction. However, privileges are required for each statement within a transaction.

Aliases

In CockroachDB, the following are aliases for the BEGIN statement:

  • BEGIN TRANSACTION
  • START TRANSACTION

Parameters

Parameter Description
PRIORITY If you do not want the transaction to run with NORMAL priority, you can set it to LOW or HIGH.

Transactions with higher priority are less likely to need to be retried.

For more information, see Transactions: Priorities.

Default: NORMAL
READ Set the transaction access mode to READ ONLY or READ WRITE. The current transaction access mode is also exposed as the session variable transaction_read_only.

Default: READ WRITE
AS OF SYSTEM TIME New in v19.1 Execute the transaction using the database contents "as of" a specified time in the past.

The AS OF SYSTEM TIME clause can be used only when the transaction is read-only. If the transaction contains any writes, or if the READ WRITE mode is specified, an error will be returned.

For more information, see AS OF SYSTEM TIME.

CockroachDB now only supports SERIALIZABLE isolation, so transactions can no longer be meaningfully set to any other ISOLATION LEVEL. In previous versions of CockroachDB, you could set transactions to SNAPSHOT isolation, but that feature has been removed.

Examples

Begin a transaction

Use default settings

Without modifying the BEGIN statement, the transaction uses SERIALIZABLE isolation and NORMAL priority.

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> BEGIN;
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> SAVEPOINT cockroach_restart;
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> UPDATE products SET inventory = 0 WHERE sku = '8675309';
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> INSERT INTO orders (customer, sku, status) VALUES (1001, '8675309', 'new');
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> RELEASE SAVEPOINT cockroach_restart;
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> COMMIT;
Warning:
This example assumes you're using client-side intervention to handle transaction retries.

Change priority

You can set a transaction's priority to LOW or HIGH.

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> BEGIN PRIORITY HIGH;
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> SAVEPOINT cockroach_restart;
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> UPDATE products SET inventory = 0 WHERE sku = '8675309';
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> INSERT INTO orders (customer, sku, status) VALUES (1001, '8675309', 'new');
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> RELEASE SAVEPOINT cockroach_restart;
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> COMMIT;

You can also set a transaction's priority with SET TRANSACTION.

Warning:

This example assumes you're using client-side intervention to handle transaction retries.

Use the AS OF SYSTEM TIME option

You can execute the transaction using the database contents "as of" a specified time in the past.

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> BEGIN AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2019-04-09 18:02:52.0+00:00';
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> SELECT * FROM orders;
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> SELECT * FROM products;
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> COMMIT;

Begin a transaction with automatic retries

CockroachDB will automatically retry all transactions that contain both BEGIN and COMMIT in the same batch. Batching is controlled by your driver or client's behavior, but means that CockroachDB receives all of the statements as a single unit, instead of a number of requests.

From the perspective of CockroachDB, a transaction sent as a batch looks like this:

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> BEGIN;

> DELETE FROM customers WHERE id = 1;

> DELETE orders WHERE customer = 1;

> COMMIT;

However, in your application's code, batched transactions are often just multiple statements sent at once. For example, in Go, this transaction would sent as a single batch (and automatically retried):

db.Exec(
  "BEGIN;

  DELETE FROM customers WHERE id = 1;

  DELETE orders WHERE customer = 1;

  COMMIT;"
)

Issuing statements this way signals to CockroachDB that you do not need to change any of the statement's values if the transaction doesn't immediately succeed, so it can continually retry the transaction until it's accepted.

See also


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