Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference 11g Release 2 (11.2) E41084-02 |
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Use the SET
TRANSACTION
statement to establish the current transaction as read-only or read/write, establish its isolation level, assign it to a specified rollback segment, or assign a name to the transaction.
A transaction implicitly begins with any operation that obtains a TX lock:
When a statement that modifies data is issued
When a SELECT
... FOR
UPDATE
statement is issued
When a transaction is explicitly started with a SET
TRANSACTION
statement or the DBMS_TRANSACTION
package
Issuing either a COMMIT
or ROLLBACK
statement explicitly ends the current transaction.
The operations performed by a SET
TRANSACTION
statement affect only your current transaction, not other users or other transactions. Your transaction ends whenever you issue a COMMIT
or ROLLBACK
statement. Oracle Database implicitly commits the current transaction before and after executing a data definition language (DDL) statement.
If you use a SET
TRANSACTION
statement, then it must be the first statement in your transaction. However, a transaction need not have a SET
TRANSACTION
statement.
The READ
ONLY
clause establishes the current transaction as a read-only transaction. This clause established transaction-level read consistency.
All subsequent queries in that transaction see only changes that were committed before the transaction began. Read-only transactions are useful for reports that run multiple queries against one or more tables while other users update these same tables.
This clause is not supported for the user SYS
. Queries by SYS
will return changes made during the transaction even if SYS
has set the transaction to be READ
ONLY
.
Restriction on Read-only Transactions Only the following statements are permitted in a read-only transaction:
Subqueries—SELECT
statements without the for_update_clause
LOCK
TABLE
SET
ROLE
ALTER
SESSION
ALTER
SYSTEM
Specify READ
WRITE
to establish the current transaction as a read/write transaction. This clause establishes statement-level read consistency, which is the default.
Restriction on Read/Write Transactions You cannot toggle between transaction-level and statement-level read consistency in the same transaction.
Use the ISOLATION
LEVEL
clause to specify how transactions containing database modifications are handled.
The SERIALIZABLE
setting specifies serializable transaction isolation mode as defined in the SQL standard. If a serializable transaction contains data manipulation language (DML) that attempts to update any resource that may have been updated in a transaction uncommitted at the start of the serializable transaction, then the DML statement fails.
The READ
COMMITTED
setting is the default Oracle Database transaction behavior. If the transaction contains DML that requires row locks held by another transaction, then the DML statement waits until the row locks are released.
Note:
This clause is relevant and valid only if you are using rollback segments for undo. Oracle strongly recommends that you use automatic undo management to handle undo space. If you follow this recommendation and run your database in automatic undo mode, then Oracle Database ignores this clause.Specify USE ROLLBACK SEGMENT
to assign the current transaction to the specified rollback segment. This clause also implicitly establishes the transaction as a read/write transaction.
Parallel DML requires more than one rollback segment. Therefore, if your transaction contains parallel DML operations, then the database ignores this clause.
Use the NAME
clause to assign a name to the current transaction. This clause is especially useful in distributed database environments when you must identify and resolve in-doubt transactions. The string
value is limited to 255 bytes.
If you specify a name for a distributed transaction, then when the transaction commits, the name becomes the commit comment, overriding any comment specified explicitly in the COMMIT
statement.
See Also:
Oracle Database Concepts for more information about transaction namingSetting Transactions: Examples The following statements could be run at midnight of the last day of every month to count the products and quantities on hand in the Toronto warehouse in the sample Order Entry (oe
) schema. This report would not be affected by any other user who might be adding or removing inventory to a different warehouse.
COMMIT; SET TRANSACTION READ ONLY NAME 'Toronto'; SELECT product_id, quantity_on_hand FROM inventories WHERE warehouse_id = 5 ORDER BY product_id; COMMIT;
The first COMMIT
statement ensures that SET
TRANSACTION
is the first statement in the transaction. The last COMMIT
statement does not actually make permanent any changes to the database. It simply ends the read-only transaction.