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);
}
}
}
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 COMMITTEDdev.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;
@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
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