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353 points HunOL | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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asa400 ◴[] No.45781519[source]
In SQLite, transactions by default start in “deferred” mode. This means they do not take a write lock until they attempt to perform a write.

You get SQLITE_BUSY when transaction #1 starts in read mode, transaction #2 starts in write mode, and then transaction #1 attempts to upgrade from read to write mode while transaction #2 still holds the write lock.

The fix is to set a busy_timeout and to begin any transaction that does a write (any write, even if it is not the first operation in the transaction) in “immediate” mode rather than “deferred” mode.

https://zeroclarkthirty.com/2024-10-19-sqlite-database-is-lo...

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1. tlaverdure ◴[] No.45781577[source]
Yes, these are both important points. I didn't see any mention of SQLITE_BUSY in the blog post and wonder if that was never configured. Something that people miss quite often.