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02:39
I don't really have any projects assigned to me at the moment so I got bored and made this themis.myrayhawk.com/traceroute.php
@stevether Any reason that stuff happens on mouseover of the buttons, instead of clicking?
Or is stuff getting added to the list completely unrelated to the UI
Ah, I think I get it
unrelated
@stevether You should read worrydream.com/MagicInk
It may change your life
Design book?
More of a paper than a book
02:47
You guys are choking my network. that domain points to a computer in this office o.O
I should have realized that probably wasn't a good idea.
How often does it ping? 8-|
forever
the idea is it constantly checks the domains to see if they're down
It's stupidly showy and I should just do a cron job instead
Just use a JS event
Re-ping the server 10s after the last time you pinged it
 
15 hours later…
17:31
@TehShrike I'm gonna do that plus sleep in between each request
if I can figure it out
@stevether setTimeout should be sufficient?
Not in a for loop
		function startPing() {

			var j = 0;

			for (var i in hosts) {

				// do thing with hosts[i]

				// sleep for 1 second

				j++;

				if (i == j) {

					setTimeout(startPing, 10000);
				}
			}
		}
Why not just call setTimeout on all of them? Don't ping them inside the loop
call setTimeout for each of them, 100ms apart or something
And then when they return, have the callback function call setTimeout again for another time a few seconds in the future
anyone here happened to be familiar with database locking?
17:47
@didxga Sure, that's a thing
@TehShrike To achieve read committed isolation, we need write lock in place right?
To achieve read committed isolation, you would need to be using the InnoDB storage engine for all your tables, start a transaction, and then SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL READ COMMITTED dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/set-transaction.html
T1 begin transaction; T2 begin transaction update Table set col = 'another value' where id='123'; commit; T1 select * from Table where Table.id = '123' T2: rollback;
@TehShrike see my update example above
You probably want to read that documentation that I linked to
where transaction T1 try to read data updated by transaction T2 which rollbacked the updates
this is the so called read uncommitted scenario
17:54
What's the question?
to solve it we need a write lock, but write lock for which Transaction, T1 or T2?
And is that question not answered by the documentation page I linked to?
I supposed it should be for T2
What are you trying to prevent/cause?
You want T1 to read T2's uncommitted data?
yes, prevent T1 to read t2's uncommitted data
17:56
Well, that's never a risk with a transactional storage engine like InnoDB
Nobody but T2's session will be able to see it before the commit
actually, my example is not accurate in that the T2 did not commit
Have you read that documentation page yet? :-|
The MySQL docs contain the answers to all your questions!
@TehShrike I don't want to be specific solution, I want to ask the theory kinda thing. is the write lock acquired by T2?
They are full of magic and useful information!
17:58
lemme check
@didxga How that interaction plays out depends on the isolation level. The default isolation level is REPEATABLE READ
@didxga You can find out how REPEATABLE READ works on that documentation page I linked you to
@TehShrike if i set the isolation to read committed, what will be going on for these two transaction in term of locking
@didxga I believe the second session would get a write lock across at least all of the rows in the table that would be getting updated. Those rows would be locked until the transaction committed.
@TehShrike the link you sent only say which isolation strategy can prevent which read phenomena , but not discussion on how to achieve certain isolation strategy by using different locking
So those isolation levels determine what your session sees while it's doing things inside of a transaction
18:03
@Tehshirk, yes. I agree with you
What exactly do you want to know about locking?
@TehShrike give the T1 a read lock can also achieve read committed isolation, isn't it?
I'm sorry, I still don't know what you're trying to accomplish
@TehShrike I want to know how each isolation achieve?
is it by using lock?
Session 1 won't see anything that Session 2 is doing until Session 2 commits their transaction, no matter what either session's transaction isolation level is
Locking only affects other sessions ability to access certain tables/rows, it doesn't affect the data that they see in various rows
18:06
@TehShrike yes.
let make a diagram for you
assume isolation level is read committed
what kind of locking will be acquired by which transaction
@TehShrike
are you around
18:27
Was away.
As soon as the second session updates those rows, they are locked.
The first session will not be able to read those rows until after the second session commits or rolls back their transaction.
The first session's read query would sit and spin until the second session's rollback unlocked those rows.
@TehShrike thanks, I got it
@didxga Yay!
does T1 acquire a read lock while query the data, assume we are in read committed isolation
I think will not get read lock
yes.
thanks, night

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