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PSQLException: current transaction is aborted, commands ignored until end of transaction block

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Which syntax is used to abort the current transaction in postgresql?

Use COMMIT to successfully terminate a transaction. Issuing ABORT outside of a transaction block emits a warning and otherwise has no effect.

What is rollback in postgresql?

The ROLLBACK command is the transactional command used to undo transactions that have not already been saved to the database. The ROLLBACK command can only be used to undo transactions since the last COMMIT or ROLLBACK command was issued.


I got this error using Java and PostgreSQL doing an insert on a table. I will illustrate how you can reproduce this error:

org.postgresql.util.PSQLException: ERROR: 
current transaction is aborted, commands ignored until end of transaction block

Summary:

The reason you get this error is because you have entered a transaction and one of your SQL Queries failed, and you gobbled up that failure and ignored it. But that wasn't enough, THEN you used that same connection, using the SAME TRANSACTION to run another query. The exception gets thrown on the second, correctly formed query because you are using a broken transaction to do additional work. PostgreSQL by default stops you from doing this.

I'm using: PostgreSQL 9.1.6 on x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu, compiled by gcc (GCC) 4.7.2 20120921 (Red Hat 4.7.2-2), 64-bit".

My PostgreSQL driver is: postgresql-9.2-1000.jdbc4.jar

Using Java version: Java 1.7

Here is the table create statement to illustrate the Exception:

CREATE TABLE moobar
(
    myval   INT
);

Java program causes the error:

public void postgresql_insert()
{
    try  
    {
        connection.setAutoCommit(false);  //start of transaction.
        
        Statement statement = connection.createStatement();
        
        System.out.println("start doing statement.execute");
        
        statement.execute(
                "insert into moobar values(" +
                "'this SQL statement fails, and it " +
                "is gobbled up by the catch, okfine'); ");
     
        //The above line throws an exception because we try to cram
        //A string into an Int.  I Expect this, what happens is we gobble 
        //the Exception and ignore it like nothing is wrong.
        //But remember, we are in a TRANSACTION!  so keep reading.

        System.out.println("statement.execute done");
        
        statement.close();
        
    }
    catch (SQLException sqle)
    {
        System.out.println("keep on truckin, keep using " +
                "the last connection because what could go wrong?");
    }
    
    try{
        Statement statement = connection.createStatement();
        
        statement.executeQuery("select * from moobar");

        //This SQL is correctly formed, yet it throws the 
        //'transaction is aborted' SQL Exception, why?  Because:
        //A.  you were in a transaction.
        //B.  You ran a SQL statement that failed.
        //C.  You didn't do a rollback or commit on the affected connection.
        
    }
    catch (SQLException sqle)
    {
        sqle.printStackTrace();
    }   

}

The above code produces this output for me:

start doing statement.execute

keep on truckin, keep using the last connection because what could go wrong?

org.postgresql.util.PSQLException: 
  ERROR: current transaction is aborted, commands ignored until 
  end of transaction block

Workarounds:

You have a few options:

  1. Simplest solution: Don't be in a transaction. Set the connection.setAutoCommit(false); to connection.setAutoCommit(true);. It works because then the failed SQL is just ignored as a failed SQL statement. You are welcome to fail SQL statements all you want and PostgreSQL won't stop you.

  2. Stay being in a transaction, but when you detect that the first SQL has failed, either rollback/re-start or commit/restart the transaction. Then you can continue failing as many SQL queries on that database connection as you want.

  3. Don't catch and ignore the Exception that is thrown when a SQL statement fails. Then the program will stop on the malformed query.

  4. Get Oracle instead, Oracle doesn't throw an exception when you fail a query on a connection within a transaction and continue using that connection.

In defense of PostgreSQL's decision to do things this way... Oracle was making you soft in the middle letting you do dumb stuff and overlooking it.


Check the output before the statement that caused current transaction is aborted. This typically means that database threw an exception that your code had ignored and now expecting next queries to return some data.

So you now have a state mismatch between your application, which considers things are fine, and database, that requires you to rollback and re-start your transaction from the beginning.

You should catch all exceptions and rollback transactions in such cases.

Here's a similar issue.


I think that the best solution is to use java.sql.Savepoint.

Before you execute a query which can throw SQLException, use the method Connection.setSavepoint(), and if an exception is thrown you only rollback to this savepoint, not the whole transaction.

Example code:

Connection conn = null;
Savepoint savepoint = null;
try {
    conn = getConnection();
    savepoint = conn.setSavepoint();
    //execute some query
} catch(SQLException e) {
    if(conn != null && savepoint != null) {
        conn.rollback(savepoint);
    }
} finally {
   if(conn != null) {
      try {
          conn.close();
      } catch(SQLException e) {}

   }
}

There's been some work done on the postgresql JDBC Driver, related to this behaviour:
see https://github.com/pgjdbc/pgjdbc/pull/477

It is now possible, by setting

autosave=always
in the connection (see https://jdbc.postgresql.org/documentation/head/connect.html) to avoid the 'current transaction is aborted' syndroma.
Overhead due to handling a savepoint around the statement execution is kept very low (see link above for details).

In Ruby on Rails PG, I had created a migration, migrated my DB, but forgot to restart my development server. I restarted my server and it worked.


The reason for this error is that there are other database before the wrong operation led to the current database operation can not be carried out(i use google translation to translate my chinese to english)


Try this COMMIT;

I run that in pgadmin4. It may help. It has to do with the previous command stopping prematurely