InfluxDB 2.7 Deadlock Detected — Transactions Blocked on Oracle Linux 9
InfluxDB 2.7 has detected a deadlock between concurrent transactions. Affected queries are being rolled back, causing application errors.
Pattern
DATABASE_EVENT
Severity
HIGH
Confidence
68%
Remediation
Auto-Heal
Test Results
Metric
Expected
Actual
Result
Pattern Recognition
DATABASE_EVENT
DATABASE_EVENT
Severity Assessment
HIGH
HIGH
Incident Correlation
N/A
None
Cascade Escalation
N/A
No
Remediation
—
Auto-Heal — Corax resolves autonomously
Scenario Conditions
Oracle Linux 9. InfluxDB 2.7 deadlock between 296 transactions. Deadlock graph shows circular wait. Victim transaction rolled back.
Injected Error Messages (1)
InfluxDB 2.7 deadlock detected on Oracle Linux 9 — deadlock storm between 296 concurrent transactions, deadlock victim rolled back, database connection pool at capacity, application errors rising
Neural Engine Root Cause Analysis
Database infrastructure event detected — the connection pool may be exhausted preventing new connections, replication lag is growing between primary and replica, deadlocks are occurring between competing transactions, or slow queries are degrading overall database performance. Database issues cascade to affect all applications and services that depend on the database.
Remediation Plan
1. For connection pool exhaustion, check current connections with 'SHOW PROCESSLIST' or 'pg_stat_activity' and identify idle/stuck connections.
2. For replication lag, check replica I/O and SQL thread status and identify long-running transactions on the primary.
3. For deadlocks, review the deadlock graph (InnoDB: 'SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS', Postgres: check pg_locks) and optimize transaction ordering.
4. For slow queries, enable and review the slow query log, add missing indexes, and optimize query plans with EXPLAIN.
5. Consider scaling read replicas or implementing connection pooling (PgBouncer/ProxySQL) if connection limits are consistently hit.