LOCK TABLE
Locks a table, giving the caller's session exclusive access to certain operations. Tables are automatically unlocked after the current transaction ends—that is, after COMMIT or ROLLBACK. LOCK TABLE can be useful for preventing deadlocks.
To view existing locks, see LOCKS.
Note
READ COMMITTED isolation (default) and SERIALIZABLE isolation automatically handle locks for you, and the vast majority of users can rely on them exclusively; LOCK TABLE is only for advanced users who need granular control over locks for more complex workloads.
To implement pessimistic concurrency without manually locking tables, you can use SELECT...FOR UPDATE to acquire an EXCLUSIVE (X) lock on the table.
Syntax
LOCK [ TABLE ] [[database.]schema.] table [,...]
IN { lock_type } MODE
[ NOWAIT ]
Parameters
[
database
.]
schema
Database and schema. The default schema is
public
. If you specify a database, it must be the current database.table
- The table to lock.
lock-type
- The type of lock, one of the following:
-
SHARE
-
INSERT
-
INSERT VALIDATE
-
SHARE INSERT
-
EXCLUSIVE
-
NOT DELETE
-
USAGE
-
OWNER
Note
LOCK TABLE does not currently support D (drop partition) locks. -
NOWAIT
- If specified, LOCK TABLE returns and reports an error immediately if it cannot acquire the lock. Otherwise, LOCK TABLE waits for incompatible locks to be released by their respective sessions, returning an error if the lock is not released after a certain amount of time, as defined by LockTimeout.
Privileges
Required privileges depend on the type of lock requested:
Lock | Privileges |
---|---|
SHARED (S) | SELECT |
INSERT (I) | INSERT |
SHARE INSERT | SELECT, INSERT |
INSERT VALIDATE (IV) | SELECT, INSERT |
EXCLUSIVE (X) | UPDATE, DELETE |
NOT DELETE (T) | SELECT |
USAGE | All privileges |
Owner | All privileges |
Examples
See Lock examples.