google-apis-spanner_v1 0.18.0 → 0.19.0
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- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/CHANGELOG.md +4 -0
- data/lib/google/apis/spanner_v1/classes.rb +205 -200
- data/lib/google/apis/spanner_v1/gem_version.rb +2 -2
- metadata +3 -3
checksums.yaml
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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1
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---
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SHA256:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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+
metadata.gz: d2a066cde62010b9e3316bf3577a4833c6bc909f6ddeff9746e9bfa01415d2ec
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4
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+
data.tar.gz: 7921a7d949a8003b299858b58cbf4849a33adf8341e3dca210f9ea22ae4be94d
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5
5
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SHA512:
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metadata.gz:
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7
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data.tar.gz:
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6
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+
metadata.gz: eb511303a6979888a2bc73ce005c59b6fc21ce0a7f19a2bbd04ccba3b74f607dc911152fcfa77123d0e2da6a388e371f277b3684368b0c8a99beaa8486d04725
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7
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+
data.tar.gz: 1c75f9196ced0547c7d475d24a8ade964acab87aa1e440a9de228bca9f15c6ab390b92a89698de09b4f207eb32f1ca6727a970336d521b471aae6e4f4f6bac53
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data/CHANGELOG.md
CHANGED
@@ -248,49 +248,50 @@ module Google
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# committing the retry, the client should execute the retry in the same session
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# as the original attempt. The original session's lock priority increases with
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# each consecutive abort, meaning that each attempt has a slightly better chance
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# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (
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# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (for example, many
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# transactions attempting to modify the same row(s)), a transaction can abort
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# many times in a short period before successfully committing. Thus, it is not a
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# good idea to cap the number of retries a transaction can attempt; instead, it
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# is better to limit the total amount of
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#
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#
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#
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#
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# ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
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# query in the transaction (
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# becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
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# transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
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# for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
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# support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
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# choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
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# Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
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# transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
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# transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
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# garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
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# enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
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# Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
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# fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
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# client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
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# read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
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# Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
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# is geographically distributed, stale read-only
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# quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
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# execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
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# in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
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#
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# all rows yielded by a single read are
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#
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# transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
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# transactions might return inconsistent
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#
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# transaction or at an exact
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# strong. Exact Staleness: These
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#
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#
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-
#
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-
#
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-
#
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# is better to limit the total amount of time spent retrying. Idle Transactions:
|
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+
# A transaction is considered idle if it has no outstanding reads or SQL queries
|
257
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+
# and has not started a read or SQL query within the last 10 seconds. Idle
|
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# transactions can be aborted by Cloud Spanner so that they don't hold on to
|
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# locks indefinitely. If an idle transaction is aborted, the commit will fail
|
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# with error `ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
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# a simple SQL query in the transaction (for example, `SELECT 1`) prevents the
|
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# transaction from becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
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+
# only transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
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+
# transactions for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
265
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+
# transaction does not support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
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+
# Instead, they work by choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
267
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# reads at that timestamp. Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
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+
# concurrent read-write transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
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# snapshot read-only transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
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# timestamp is garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
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# is generous enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
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# practice. Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
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+
# Rollback (and in fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
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+
# transaction, the client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
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# how to choose a read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
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+
# the default). - Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
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+
# database to be read is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
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+
# transactions can execute more quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
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# because they are able to execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
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# timestamp bound is discussed in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
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# guaranteed to see the effects of all transactions that have committed before
|
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+
# the start of the read. Furthermore, all rows yielded by a single read are
|
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# consistent with each other -- if any part of the read observes a transaction,
|
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# all parts of the read see the transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
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# two consecutive strong read-only transactions might return inconsistent
|
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# results if there are concurrent writes. If consistency across reads is
|
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# required, the reads should be executed within a transaction or at an exact
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# read timestamp. See TransactionOptions.ReadOnly.strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
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+
# timestamp bounds execute reads at a user-specified timestamp. Reads at a
|
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+
# timestamp are guaranteed to see a consistent prefix of the global transaction
|
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+
# history: they observe modifications done by all transactions with a commit
|
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+
# timestamp less than or equal to the read timestamp, and observe none of the
|
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+
# modifications done by transactions with a larger commit timestamp. They will
|
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+
# block until all conflicting transactions that may be assigned commit
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# timestamps <= the read timestamp have finished. The timestamp can either be
|
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# expressed as an absolute Cloud Spanner commit timestamp or a staleness
|
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# relative to the current time. These modes do not require a "negotiation phase"
|
@@ -559,49 +560,50 @@ module Google
|
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560
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# committing the retry, the client should execute the retry in the same session
|
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561
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# as the original attempt. The original session's lock priority increases with
|
561
562
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# each consecutive abort, meaning that each attempt has a slightly better chance
|
562
|
-
# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (
|
563
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+
# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (for example, many
|
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# transactions attempting to modify the same row(s)), a transaction can abort
|
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565
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# many times in a short period before successfully committing. Thus, it is not a
|
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566
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# good idea to cap the number of retries a transaction can attempt; instead, it
|
566
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-
# is better to limit the total amount of
|
567
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-
#
|
568
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-
#
|
569
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-
#
|
570
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-
#
|
571
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-
# ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
572
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-
# query in the transaction (
|
573
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-
# becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
574
|
-
# transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
575
|
-
# for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
576
|
-
# support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
577
|
-
# choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
578
|
-
# Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
579
|
-
# transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
580
|
-
# transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
|
581
|
-
# garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
582
|
-
# enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
583
|
-
# Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
584
|
-
# fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
585
|
-
# client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
586
|
-
# read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
587
|
-
# Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
588
|
-
# is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
589
|
-
# quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
590
|
-
# execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
591
|
-
# in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
592
|
-
#
|
593
|
-
# all rows yielded by a single read are
|
594
|
-
#
|
595
|
-
# transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
596
|
-
# transactions might return inconsistent
|
597
|
-
#
|
598
|
-
# transaction or at an exact
|
599
|
-
# strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
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-
#
|
601
|
-
#
|
602
|
-
#
|
603
|
-
#
|
604
|
-
#
|
567
|
+
# is better to limit the total amount of time spent retrying. Idle Transactions:
|
568
|
+
# A transaction is considered idle if it has no outstanding reads or SQL queries
|
569
|
+
# and has not started a read or SQL query within the last 10 seconds. Idle
|
570
|
+
# transactions can be aborted by Cloud Spanner so that they don't hold on to
|
571
|
+
# locks indefinitely. If an idle transaction is aborted, the commit will fail
|
572
|
+
# with error `ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
573
|
+
# a simple SQL query in the transaction (for example, `SELECT 1`) prevents the
|
574
|
+
# transaction from becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
575
|
+
# only transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
576
|
+
# transactions for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
577
|
+
# transaction does not support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
578
|
+
# Instead, they work by choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
579
|
+
# reads at that timestamp. Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
580
|
+
# concurrent read-write transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
581
|
+
# snapshot read-only transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
|
582
|
+
# timestamp is garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
583
|
+
# is generous enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
584
|
+
# practice. Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
585
|
+
# Rollback (and in fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
586
|
+
# transaction, the client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
587
|
+
# how to choose a read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
588
|
+
# the default). - Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
589
|
+
# database to be read is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
590
|
+
# transactions can execute more quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
591
|
+
# because they are able to execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
592
|
+
# timestamp bound is discussed in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
593
|
+
# guaranteed to see the effects of all transactions that have committed before
|
594
|
+
# the start of the read. Furthermore, all rows yielded by a single read are
|
595
|
+
# consistent with each other -- if any part of the read observes a transaction,
|
596
|
+
# all parts of the read see the transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
597
|
+
# two consecutive strong read-only transactions might return inconsistent
|
598
|
+
# results if there are concurrent writes. If consistency across reads is
|
599
|
+
# required, the reads should be executed within a transaction or at an exact
|
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+
# read timestamp. See TransactionOptions.ReadOnly.strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
601
|
+
# timestamp bounds execute reads at a user-specified timestamp. Reads at a
|
602
|
+
# timestamp are guaranteed to see a consistent prefix of the global transaction
|
603
|
+
# history: they observe modifications done by all transactions with a commit
|
604
|
+
# timestamp less than or equal to the read timestamp, and observe none of the
|
605
|
+
# modifications done by transactions with a larger commit timestamp. They will
|
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+
# block until all conflicting transactions that may be assigned commit
|
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# timestamps <= the read timestamp have finished. The timestamp can either be
|
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# expressed as an absolute Cloud Spanner commit timestamp or a staleness
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# relative to the current time. These modes do not require a "negotiation phase"
|
@@ -4057,49 +4059,50 @@ module Google
|
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# committing the retry, the client should execute the retry in the same session
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# as the original attempt. The original session's lock priority increases with
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# each consecutive abort, meaning that each attempt has a slightly better chance
|
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-
# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (
|
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+
# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (for example, many
|
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# transactions attempting to modify the same row(s)), a transaction can abort
|
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# many times in a short period before successfully committing. Thus, it is not a
|
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# good idea to cap the number of retries a transaction can attempt; instead, it
|
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-
# is better to limit the total amount of
|
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-
#
|
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-
#
|
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-
#
|
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-
#
|
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-
# ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
4070
|
-
# query in the transaction (
|
4071
|
-
# becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
4072
|
-
# transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
4073
|
-
# for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
4074
|
-
# support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
4075
|
-
# choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
4076
|
-
# Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
4077
|
-
# transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
4078
|
-
# transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
|
4079
|
-
# garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
4080
|
-
# enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
4081
|
-
# Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
4082
|
-
# fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
4083
|
-
# client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
4084
|
-
# read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
4085
|
-
# Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
4086
|
-
# is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
4087
|
-
# quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
4088
|
-
# execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
4089
|
-
# in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
4090
|
-
#
|
4091
|
-
# all rows yielded by a single read are
|
4092
|
-
#
|
4093
|
-
# transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
4094
|
-
# transactions might return inconsistent
|
4095
|
-
#
|
4096
|
-
# transaction or at an exact
|
4097
|
-
# strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
4098
|
-
#
|
4099
|
-
#
|
4100
|
-
#
|
4101
|
-
#
|
4102
|
-
#
|
4066
|
+
# is better to limit the total amount of time spent retrying. Idle Transactions:
|
4067
|
+
# A transaction is considered idle if it has no outstanding reads or SQL queries
|
4068
|
+
# and has not started a read or SQL query within the last 10 seconds. Idle
|
4069
|
+
# transactions can be aborted by Cloud Spanner so that they don't hold on to
|
4070
|
+
# locks indefinitely. If an idle transaction is aborted, the commit will fail
|
4071
|
+
# with error `ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
4072
|
+
# a simple SQL query in the transaction (for example, `SELECT 1`) prevents the
|
4073
|
+
# transaction from becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
4074
|
+
# only transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
4075
|
+
# transactions for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
4076
|
+
# transaction does not support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
4077
|
+
# Instead, they work by choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
4078
|
+
# reads at that timestamp. Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
4079
|
+
# concurrent read-write transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
4080
|
+
# snapshot read-only transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
|
4081
|
+
# timestamp is garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
4082
|
+
# is generous enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
4083
|
+
# practice. Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
4084
|
+
# Rollback (and in fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
4085
|
+
# transaction, the client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
4086
|
+
# how to choose a read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
4087
|
+
# the default). - Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
4088
|
+
# database to be read is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
4089
|
+
# transactions can execute more quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
4090
|
+
# because they are able to execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
4091
|
+
# timestamp bound is discussed in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
4092
|
+
# guaranteed to see the effects of all transactions that have committed before
|
4093
|
+
# the start of the read. Furthermore, all rows yielded by a single read are
|
4094
|
+
# consistent with each other -- if any part of the read observes a transaction,
|
4095
|
+
# all parts of the read see the transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
4096
|
+
# two consecutive strong read-only transactions might return inconsistent
|
4097
|
+
# results if there are concurrent writes. If consistency across reads is
|
4098
|
+
# required, the reads should be executed within a transaction or at an exact
|
4099
|
+
# read timestamp. See TransactionOptions.ReadOnly.strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
4100
|
+
# timestamp bounds execute reads at a user-specified timestamp. Reads at a
|
4101
|
+
# timestamp are guaranteed to see a consistent prefix of the global transaction
|
4102
|
+
# history: they observe modifications done by all transactions with a commit
|
4103
|
+
# timestamp less than or equal to the read timestamp, and observe none of the
|
4104
|
+
# modifications done by transactions with a larger commit timestamp. They will
|
4105
|
+
# block until all conflicting transactions that may be assigned commit
|
4103
4106
|
# timestamps <= the read timestamp have finished. The timestamp can either be
|
4104
4107
|
# expressed as an absolute Cloud Spanner commit timestamp or a staleness
|
4105
4108
|
# relative to the current time. These modes do not require a "negotiation phase"
|
@@ -4252,49 +4255,50 @@ module Google
|
|
4252
4255
|
# committing the retry, the client should execute the retry in the same session
|
4253
4256
|
# as the original attempt. The original session's lock priority increases with
|
4254
4257
|
# each consecutive abort, meaning that each attempt has a slightly better chance
|
4255
|
-
# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (
|
4258
|
+
# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (for example, many
|
4256
4259
|
# transactions attempting to modify the same row(s)), a transaction can abort
|
4257
4260
|
# many times in a short period before successfully committing. Thus, it is not a
|
4258
4261
|
# good idea to cap the number of retries a transaction can attempt; instead, it
|
4259
|
-
# is better to limit the total amount of
|
4260
|
-
#
|
4261
|
-
#
|
4262
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-
#
|
4263
|
-
#
|
4264
|
-
# ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
4265
|
-
# query in the transaction (
|
4266
|
-
# becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
4267
|
-
# transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
4268
|
-
# for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
4269
|
-
# support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
4270
|
-
# choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
4271
|
-
# Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
4272
|
-
# transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
4273
|
-
# transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
|
4274
|
-
# garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
4275
|
-
# enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
4276
|
-
# Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
4277
|
-
# fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
4278
|
-
# client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
4279
|
-
# read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
4280
|
-
# Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
4281
|
-
# is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
4282
|
-
# quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
4283
|
-
# execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
4284
|
-
# in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
4285
|
-
#
|
4286
|
-
# all rows yielded by a single read are
|
4287
|
-
#
|
4288
|
-
# transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
4289
|
-
# transactions might return inconsistent
|
4290
|
-
#
|
4291
|
-
# transaction or at an exact
|
4292
|
-
# strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
4293
|
-
#
|
4294
|
-
#
|
4295
|
-
#
|
4296
|
-
#
|
4297
|
-
#
|
4262
|
+
# is better to limit the total amount of time spent retrying. Idle Transactions:
|
4263
|
+
# A transaction is considered idle if it has no outstanding reads or SQL queries
|
4264
|
+
# and has not started a read or SQL query within the last 10 seconds. Idle
|
4265
|
+
# transactions can be aborted by Cloud Spanner so that they don't hold on to
|
4266
|
+
# locks indefinitely. If an idle transaction is aborted, the commit will fail
|
4267
|
+
# with error `ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
4268
|
+
# a simple SQL query in the transaction (for example, `SELECT 1`) prevents the
|
4269
|
+
# transaction from becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
4270
|
+
# only transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
4271
|
+
# transactions for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
4272
|
+
# transaction does not support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
4273
|
+
# Instead, they work by choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
4274
|
+
# reads at that timestamp. Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
4275
|
+
# concurrent read-write transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
4276
|
+
# snapshot read-only transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
|
4277
|
+
# timestamp is garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
4278
|
+
# is generous enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
4279
|
+
# practice. Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
4280
|
+
# Rollback (and in fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
4281
|
+
# transaction, the client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
4282
|
+
# how to choose a read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
4283
|
+
# the default). - Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
4284
|
+
# database to be read is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
4285
|
+
# transactions can execute more quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
4286
|
+
# because they are able to execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
4287
|
+
# timestamp bound is discussed in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
4288
|
+
# guaranteed to see the effects of all transactions that have committed before
|
4289
|
+
# the start of the read. Furthermore, all rows yielded by a single read are
|
4290
|
+
# consistent with each other -- if any part of the read observes a transaction,
|
4291
|
+
# all parts of the read see the transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
4292
|
+
# two consecutive strong read-only transactions might return inconsistent
|
4293
|
+
# results if there are concurrent writes. If consistency across reads is
|
4294
|
+
# required, the reads should be executed within a transaction or at an exact
|
4295
|
+
# read timestamp. See TransactionOptions.ReadOnly.strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
4296
|
+
# timestamp bounds execute reads at a user-specified timestamp. Reads at a
|
4297
|
+
# timestamp are guaranteed to see a consistent prefix of the global transaction
|
4298
|
+
# history: they observe modifications done by all transactions with a commit
|
4299
|
+
# timestamp less than or equal to the read timestamp, and observe none of the
|
4300
|
+
# modifications done by transactions with a larger commit timestamp. They will
|
4301
|
+
# block until all conflicting transactions that may be assigned commit
|
4298
4302
|
# timestamps <= the read timestamp have finished. The timestamp can either be
|
4299
4303
|
# expressed as an absolute Cloud Spanner commit timestamp or a staleness
|
4300
4304
|
# relative to the current time. These modes do not require a "negotiation phase"
|
@@ -4421,49 +4425,50 @@ module Google
|
|
4421
4425
|
# committing the retry, the client should execute the retry in the same session
|
4422
4426
|
# as the original attempt. The original session's lock priority increases with
|
4423
4427
|
# each consecutive abort, meaning that each attempt has a slightly better chance
|
4424
|
-
# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (
|
4428
|
+
# of success than the previous. Under some circumstances (for example, many
|
4425
4429
|
# transactions attempting to modify the same row(s)), a transaction can abort
|
4426
4430
|
# many times in a short period before successfully committing. Thus, it is not a
|
4427
4431
|
# good idea to cap the number of retries a transaction can attempt; instead, it
|
4428
|
-
# is better to limit the total amount of
|
4429
|
-
#
|
4430
|
-
#
|
4431
|
-
#
|
4432
|
-
#
|
4433
|
-
# ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
4434
|
-
# query in the transaction (
|
4435
|
-
# becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
4436
|
-
# transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
4437
|
-
# for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
4438
|
-
# support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
4439
|
-
# choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
4440
|
-
# Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
4441
|
-
# transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
4442
|
-
# transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
|
4443
|
-
# garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
4444
|
-
# enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
4445
|
-
# Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
4446
|
-
# fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
4447
|
-
# client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
4448
|
-
# read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
4449
|
-
# Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
4450
|
-
# is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
4451
|
-
# quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
4452
|
-
# execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
4453
|
-
# in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
4454
|
-
#
|
4455
|
-
# all rows yielded by a single read are
|
4456
|
-
#
|
4457
|
-
# transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
4458
|
-
# transactions might return inconsistent
|
4459
|
-
#
|
4460
|
-
# transaction or at an exact
|
4461
|
-
# strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
4462
|
-
#
|
4463
|
-
#
|
4464
|
-
#
|
4465
|
-
#
|
4466
|
-
#
|
4432
|
+
# is better to limit the total amount of time spent retrying. Idle Transactions:
|
4433
|
+
# A transaction is considered idle if it has no outstanding reads or SQL queries
|
4434
|
+
# and has not started a read or SQL query within the last 10 seconds. Idle
|
4435
|
+
# transactions can be aborted by Cloud Spanner so that they don't hold on to
|
4436
|
+
# locks indefinitely. If an idle transaction is aborted, the commit will fail
|
4437
|
+
# with error `ABORTED`. If this behavior is undesirable, periodically executing
|
4438
|
+
# a simple SQL query in the transaction (for example, `SELECT 1`) prevents the
|
4439
|
+
# transaction from becoming idle. Snapshot Read-Only Transactions: Snapshot read-
|
4440
|
+
# only transactions provides a simpler method than locking read-write
|
4441
|
+
# transactions for doing several consistent reads. However, this type of
|
4442
|
+
# transaction does not support writes. Snapshot transactions do not take locks.
|
4443
|
+
# Instead, they work by choosing a Cloud Spanner timestamp, then executing all
|
4444
|
+
# reads at that timestamp. Since they do not acquire locks, they do not block
|
4445
|
+
# concurrent read-write transactions. Unlike locking read-write transactions,
|
4446
|
+
# snapshot read-only transactions never abort. They can fail if the chosen read
|
4447
|
+
# timestamp is garbage collected; however, the default garbage collection policy
|
4448
|
+
# is generous enough that most applications do not need to worry about this in
|
4449
|
+
# practice. Snapshot read-only transactions do not need to call Commit or
|
4450
|
+
# Rollback (and in fact are not permitted to do so). To execute a snapshot
|
4451
|
+
# transaction, the client specifies a timestamp bound, which tells Cloud Spanner
|
4452
|
+
# how to choose a read timestamp. The types of timestamp bound are: - Strong (
|
4453
|
+
# the default). - Bounded staleness. - Exact staleness. If the Cloud Spanner
|
4454
|
+
# database to be read is geographically distributed, stale read-only
|
4455
|
+
# transactions can execute more quickly than strong or read-write transaction,
|
4456
|
+
# because they are able to execute far from the leader replica. Each type of
|
4457
|
+
# timestamp bound is discussed in detail below. Strong: Strong reads are
|
4458
|
+
# guaranteed to see the effects of all transactions that have committed before
|
4459
|
+
# the start of the read. Furthermore, all rows yielded by a single read are
|
4460
|
+
# consistent with each other -- if any part of the read observes a transaction,
|
4461
|
+
# all parts of the read see the transaction. Strong reads are not repeatable:
|
4462
|
+
# two consecutive strong read-only transactions might return inconsistent
|
4463
|
+
# results if there are concurrent writes. If consistency across reads is
|
4464
|
+
# required, the reads should be executed within a transaction or at an exact
|
4465
|
+
# read timestamp. See TransactionOptions.ReadOnly.strong. Exact Staleness: These
|
4466
|
+
# timestamp bounds execute reads at a user-specified timestamp. Reads at a
|
4467
|
+
# timestamp are guaranteed to see a consistent prefix of the global transaction
|
4468
|
+
# history: they observe modifications done by all transactions with a commit
|
4469
|
+
# timestamp less than or equal to the read timestamp, and observe none of the
|
4470
|
+
# modifications done by transactions with a larger commit timestamp. They will
|
4471
|
+
# block until all conflicting transactions that may be assigned commit
|
4467
4472
|
# timestamps <= the read timestamp have finished. The timestamp can either be
|
4468
4473
|
# expressed as an absolute Cloud Spanner commit timestamp or a staleness
|
4469
4474
|
# relative to the current time. These modes do not require a "negotiation phase"
|
@@ -16,13 +16,13 @@ module Google
|
|
16
16
|
module Apis
|
17
17
|
module SpannerV1
|
18
18
|
# Version of the google-apis-spanner_v1 gem
|
19
|
-
GEM_VERSION = "0.
|
19
|
+
GEM_VERSION = "0.19.0"
|
20
20
|
|
21
21
|
# Version of the code generator used to generate this client
|
22
22
|
GENERATOR_VERSION = "0.4.0"
|
23
23
|
|
24
24
|
# Revision of the discovery document this client was generated from
|
25
|
-
REVISION = "
|
25
|
+
REVISION = "20210914"
|
26
26
|
end
|
27
27
|
end
|
28
28
|
end
|
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
|
|
1
1
|
--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
|
2
2
|
name: google-apis-spanner_v1
|
3
3
|
version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
4
|
-
version: 0.
|
4
|
+
version: 0.19.0
|
5
5
|
platform: ruby
|
6
6
|
authors:
|
7
7
|
- Google LLC
|
8
8
|
autorequire:
|
9
9
|
bindir: bin
|
10
10
|
cert_chain: []
|
11
|
-
date: 2021-
|
11
|
+
date: 2021-10-04 00:00:00.000000000 Z
|
12
12
|
dependencies:
|
13
13
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
|
14
14
|
name: google-apis-core
|
@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ licenses:
|
|
58
58
|
metadata:
|
59
59
|
bug_tracker_uri: https://github.com/googleapis/google-api-ruby-client/issues
|
60
60
|
changelog_uri: https://github.com/googleapis/google-api-ruby-client/tree/master/generated/google-apis-spanner_v1/CHANGELOG.md
|
61
|
-
documentation_uri: https://googleapis.dev/ruby/google-apis-spanner_v1/v0.
|
61
|
+
documentation_uri: https://googleapis.dev/ruby/google-apis-spanner_v1/v0.19.0
|
62
62
|
source_code_uri: https://github.com/googleapis/google-api-ruby-client/tree/master/generated/google-apis-spanner_v1
|
63
63
|
post_install_message:
|
64
64
|
rdoc_options: []
|