pub struct ReadOnly {
pub exact_staleness: Option<Duration>,
pub max_staleness: Option<Duration>,
pub min_read_timestamp: Option<DateTime<Utc>>,
pub read_timestamp: Option<DateTime<Utc>>,
pub return_read_timestamp: Option<bool>,
pub strong: Option<bool>,
}Expand description
Message type to initiate a read-only transaction.
This type is not used in any activity, and only used as part of another schema.
Fields§
§exact_staleness: Option<Duration>Executes all reads at a timestamp that is exact_staleness old. The timestamp is chosen soon after the read is started. Guarantees that all writes that have committed more than the specified number of seconds ago are visible. Because Cloud Spanner chooses the exact timestamp, this mode works even if the client’s local clock is substantially skewed from Cloud Spanner commit timestamps. Useful for reading at nearby replicas without the distributed timestamp negotiation overhead of max_staleness.
max_staleness: Option<Duration>Read data at a timestamp >= NOW - max_staleness seconds. Guarantees that all writes that have committed more than the specified number of seconds ago are visible. Because Cloud Spanner chooses the exact timestamp, this mode works even if the client’s local clock is substantially skewed from Cloud Spanner commit timestamps. Useful for reading the freshest data available at a nearby replica, while bounding the possible staleness if the local replica has fallen behind. Note that this option can only be used in single-use transactions.
min_read_timestamp: Option<DateTime<Utc>>Executes all reads at a timestamp >= min_read_timestamp. This is useful for requesting fresher data than some previous read, or data that is fresh enough to observe the effects of some previously committed transaction whose timestamp is known. Note that this option can only be used in single-use transactions. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, accurate to nanoseconds. Example: "2014-10-02T15:01:23.045123456Z".
read_timestamp: Option<DateTime<Utc>>Executes all reads at the given timestamp. Unlike other modes, reads at a specific timestamp are repeatable; the same read at the same timestamp always returns the same data. If the timestamp is in the future, the read is blocked until the specified timestamp, modulo the read’s deadline. Useful for large scale consistent reads such as mapreduces, or for coordinating many reads against a consistent snapshot of the data. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, accurate to nanoseconds. Example: "2014-10-02T15:01:23.045123456Z".
return_read_timestamp: Option<bool>If true, the Cloud Spanner-selected read timestamp is included in the Transaction message that describes the transaction.
strong: Option<bool>Read at a timestamp where all previously committed transactions are visible.