Locking::Pessimistic provides support for row-level locking using SELECT … FOR UPDATE and other lock types.

Pass lock: true to ActiveRecord::Base.find to obtain an exclusive lock on the selected rows:

# select * from accounts where id=1 for update
Account.find(1, lock: true)

Pass lock: 'some locking clause' to give a database-specific locking clause of your own such as ‘LOCK IN SHARE MODE’ or ‘FOR UPDATE NOWAIT’. Example:

Account.transaction do
  # select * from accounts where name = 'shugo' limit 1 for update
  shugo = Account.where("name = 'shugo'").lock(true).first
  yuko = Account.where("name = 'yuko'").lock(true).first
  shugo.balance -= 100
  shugo.save!
  yuko.balance += 100
  yuko.save!
end

You can also use ActiveRecord::Base#lock! method to lock one record by id. This may be better if you don’t need to lock every row. Example:

Account.transaction do
  # select * from accounts where ...
  accounts = Account.where(...)
  account1 = accounts.detect { |account| ... }
  account2 = accounts.detect { |account| ... }
  # select * from accounts where id=? for update
  account1.lock!
  account2.lock!
  account1.balance -= 100
  account1.save!
  account2.balance += 100
  account2.save!
end

You can start a transaction and acquire the lock in one go by calling with_lock with a block. The block is called from within a transaction, the object is already locked. Example:

account = Account.first
account.with_lock do
  # This block is called within a transaction,
  # account is already locked.
  account.balance -= 100
  account.save!
end

Database-specific information on row locking:

MySQL: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/innodb-locking-reads.html
PostgreSQL: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/interactive/sql-select.html#SQL-FOR-UPDATE-SHARE
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