DEV Community

Cover image for Understanding SQL Server Deadlocks
Matt Eland
Matt Eland Subscriber

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at killalldefects.com

Understanding SQL Server Deadlocks

This is a continuation of a series of articles I've written on SQL Server concepts.

When you work with SQL Server long enough on a database with enough traffic, you're eventually going to encounter deadlocks.

This article discusses what deadlocks are, how to interpret deadlock graphs, and some options for handling deadlocks.

What is a Deadlock?

A deadlock occurs when two processes are competing for multiple resources in a way that does not resolve itself. When this occurs, SQL Server must terminate one of the two processes, resulting in the query failing to execute and the transaction failing. The error is then propagated to the executing code which can determine how to proceed.

So, what does this look like?

Update PersonSkill Query

In this scenario, we have a query that needs to update a People entry as well as a PersonSkill entry associated with that person and a skill. In order to do this, the query needs a lock on the People table and a lock on a range of data in the PersonSkill table, which the query already has a lock for.

Update User Skill Count

Unfortunately, the row in question in the People table is already exclusively locked by the Update User Skill Count query, creating a deadlock.

Ordinarily, the Update User Skill Count query would complete, release its lock and then the Update PersonSkill query could acquire its lock on People and complete its task.

Mutual Locking Scenario

However, the Update User Skill Count is currently waiting for Update PersonSkill to complete and release its lock on PersonSkills so we now have a scenario where two queries each have something the other needs and will not release their locks until they complete.

Thankfully, SQL Server has a deadlock resolution mechanism to prevent processes from keeping the database busy waiting for something that will never happen. In deadlock resolution, SQL Server will choose a victim at random (more on this later) and kill the process.

Deadlock Victim

In this case, the Update PersonSkill query was chosen as the deadlock victim and terminated. An exception propagated up to the caller informing it that the process was terminated due to deadlock. Meanwhile, the locks held by the query are released and Update User Skill Count is able to acquire the lock it needed and complete without any knowledge that anything happened.

We'll talk more about how to deal with deadlocks later on, but next, let's look at how to get deadlock information from SQL Server.

Getting Deadlock Info from SQL Server

You can run the following query to get a list of deadlock event XML and the time the deadlock occurred (Query and image taken from Microsoft's documentation).

SELECT xdr.value('@timestamp', 'datetime') AS [Date],
    xdr.query('.') AS [Event_Data]
FROM (SELECT CAST([target_data] AS XML) AS Target_Data
            FROM sys.dm_xe_session_targets AS xt
            INNER JOIN sys.dm_xe_sessions AS xs ON xs.address = xt.event_session_address
            WHERE xs.name = N'system_health'
              AND xt.target_name = N'ring_buffer'
    ) AS XML_Data
CROSS APPLY Target_Data.nodes('RingBufferTarget/event[@name="xml_deadlock_report"]') AS XEventData(xdr)
ORDER BY [Date] DESC
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The XML can then be opened via SQL Server Management Studio by clicking on it, which will then open the deadlock graph.

Deadlock Graph

Note the similarities in the deadlock graph to our examples above. The range of information on the database objects in a deadlock graph is much deeper in terms of IDs, object names, index names, lock types, etc. but at its core, it is just telling you that two queries needed the same two locks and couldn't resolve their differences.

Resolving Deadlocks

So now that we've looked into what deadlocks are and how you get basic information about them, we need to shift our focus to resolving those deadlocks.

There are a few ways of approaching deadlock problems, and I present to you a few options from most preferred to least preferred.

Improve Indexes

First of all, deadlocks are a result of objects being locked. Sometimes the objects locked are wider than they need to be. For example, if a query needs to scan a table to find a particular row or set of rows, the query might lock the table or a page of data when locking individual rows would be more efficient.

By improving the indexes that are used to join to the table in question, you can potentially make the set of locks so specific that they drastically reduce the odds of a deadlock occurring to begin with.

This is the most preferred way of dealing with a deadlock, but keep in mind that there are tradeoffs made whenever you add a new index.

Change Transaction Priorities

Next, while we said that the deadlock victim is random, it's random within a priority bucket. You can set the DEADLOCK_PRIORITY of a transaction manually. If a deadlock involves two transactions with differing priorities, it will always kill the process with the lower priority.

You can set priority with the following SQL:

SET DEADLOCK_PRIORITY LOW -- or NORMAL or HIGH
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

You can also set priority numerically from a -10 to 10 range with -10 being lowest and 10 being highest priority.

SET DEADLOCK_PRIORITY -5 -- Equivalent to LOW
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

By default all transactions will have a priority of NORMAL or 0.

Bear in mind that this does not prevent the deadlock from occurring, but it does state a preference for which query will survive and which will be terminated.

Implementing a Try / Retry Model

In combination with the other modes, you can design routines with deadlocks in mind. If you expect a deadlock may occur in some scenarios, you can look for deadlock exceptions and retry the query in question up to a certain number of times until a success is reached. This is done outside of SQL and is a programming language-specific detail, so an example will not be provided.

Generally speaking this option is a longer-lasting solution, but takes longer to implement and is much more difficult to test during development and quality assurance.

Change Isolation Modes

Finally, you can change the transaction's isolation mode so that it is less aggressive about the locks it requests. See my article on isolation modes for more details on this process.

When changing isolation modes to avoid deadlocks, you typically will move from READ COMMITTED to READ UNCOMMITTED, but keep in mind that READ COMMITTED protects you from dirty reads or reads of potentially incomplete information in rows. If you're reading something infrequently updated such as a name, this is probably fine, but if you require an accurate numerical total of a frequently updated field or your data needs to be completely accurate, you probably can't go to READ UNCOMMITTED and you're better off with another solution.

Summary

In summary, deadlocks are a naturally occurring problem for busy databases, but there are a few things you can do to reduce their likelihood or strategically handle them if they do occur.

Next in this series I'll discuss database indexes and performance.

Top comments (1)

Collapse
 
tersarset profile image
Tersarset

Deadlocks are a result of objects which is being blocked. Sometimes the objects locked are wider than they need to be. Sometimes the rows or column be locked. So that's Type of problems have been implemented .This article provided us useful information about deadlocks and I always use edbirdie here you can see professional writers, they always provide best writing stuff. As we can see good information in your post.