## Proposed changes
Add transaction for the operation of insert. It will cost less time than non-transaction(it will cost 1/1000 time) when you want to insert a amount of rows.
### Syntax
```
BEGIN [ WITH LABEL label];
INSERT INTO table_name ...
[COMMIT | ROLLBACK];
```
### Example
commit a transaction:
```
begin;
insert into Tbl values(11, 22, 33);
commit;
```
rollback a transaction:
```
begin;
insert into Tbl values(11, 22, 33);
rollback;
```
commit a transaction with label:
```
begin with label test_label;
insert into Tbl values(11, 22, 33);
commit;
```
### Description
```
begin: begin a transaction, the next insert will execute in the transaction until commit/rollback;
commit: commit the transaction, the data in the transaction will be inserted into the table;
rollback: abort the transaction, nothing will be inserted into the table;
```
### The main realization principle:
```
1. begin a transaction in the session. next sql is executed in the transaction;
2. insert sql will be parser and get the database name and table name, they will be used to select a be and create a pipe to accept data;
3. all inserted values will be sent to the be and write into the pipe;
4. a thread will get the data from the pipe, then write them to disk;
5. commit will complete this transaction and make these data visible;
6. rollback will abort this transaction
```
### Some restrictions on the use of update syntax.
1. Only ```insert``` can be called in a transaction.
2. If something error happened, ```commit``` will not succeed, it will ```rollback``` directly;
3. By default, if part of insert in the transaction is invalid, ```commit``` will only insert the other correct data into the table.
4. If you need ```commit``` return failed when any insert in the transaction is invalid, you need execute ```set enable_insert_strict = true``` before ```begin```.