Chapter 1: Introduction: Database System Concepts, 6 Ed
Chapter 1: Introduction: Database System Concepts, 6 Ed
Collection of interrelated data Set of programs to access the data An environment that is both convenient and efficient to use Banking: transactions Airlines: reservations, schedules Universities: registration, grades Sales: customers, products, purchases Online retailers: order tracking, customized recommendations Manufacturing: production, inventory, orders, supply chain Human resources: employee records, salaries, tax deductions
Database Applications:
Databases can be very large. Databases touch all aspects of our lives
Database System Concepts - 6th Edition 1.2 Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Add new students, instructors, and courses Register students for courses, and generate class rosters Assign grades to students, compute grade point averages (GPA) and generate transcripts
file systems
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Multiple file formats, duplication of information in different files Need to write a new program to carry out each new task
Integrity constraints (e.g., account balance > 0) become buried in program code rather than being stated explicitly Hard to add new constraints or change existing ones
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Atomicity of updates
Failures may leave database in an inconsistent state with partial updates carried out Example: Transfer of funds from one account to another should either complete or not happen at all Concurrent access needed for performance Uncontrolled concurrent accesses can lead to inconsistencies Example: Two people reading a balance (say 100) and updating it by withdrawing money (say 50 each) at the same time
Security problems
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Data Models
A collection of tools for describing
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Relational Model
Relational model (Chapter 2) Example of tabular data in the relational model
Columns
Rows
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Specification notation for defining the database schema Example: create table instructor ( ID char(5), name varchar(20), dept_name varchar(20), salary numeric(8,2))
DDL compiler generates a set of table templates stored in a data dictionary Data dictionary contains metadata (i.e., data about data)
Primary key (ID uniquely identifies instructors) Referential integrity (references constraint in SQL) e.g. dept_name value in any instructor tuple must appear in department relation
Authorization
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SQL
SQL: widely used non-procedural language
Example: Find the name of the instructor with ID 22222 select name from instructor where instructor.ID = 22222 Example: Find the ID and building of instructors in the Physics dept. select instructor.ID, department.building from instructor, department where instructor.dept_name = department.dept_name and department.dept_name = Physics
Application program interface (e.g., ODBC/JDBC) which allow SQL queries to be sent to a database Chapters 3, 4 and 5
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Database Design?
Is there any problem with this design?
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Design Approaches
Normalization Theory (Chapter 8)
Formalize what designs are bad, and test for them Models an enterprise as a collection of entities and relationships
Entity: a thing or object in the enterprise that is distinguishable from other objects Described by a set of attributes Relationship: an association among several entities
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Entity: a thing or object in the enterprise that is distinguishable from other objects
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Storage Management
Storage manager is a program module that provides the interface
between the low-level data stored in the database and the application programs and queries submitted to the system.
The storage manager is responsible to the following tasks:
Interaction with the file manager Efficient storing, retrieving and updating of data Storage access File organization Indexing and hashing
Issues:
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Query Processing
1. Parsing and translation 2. Optimization 3. Evaluation
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Transaction Management
What if the system fails? What if more than one user is concurrently updating the same data? A transaction is a collection of operations that performs a single
remains in a consistent (correct) state despite system failures (e.g., power failures and operating system crashes) and transaction failures.
Concurrency-control manager controls the interaction among the
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Database Architecture
The architecture of a database systems is greatly influenced by the underlying computer system on which the database is running:
Centralized Client-server Parallel (multi-processor) Distributed
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Punched cards for input Hard disks allowed direct access to data Network and hierarchical data models in widespread use Ted Codd defines the relational data model
Would win the ACM Turing Award for this work IBM Research begins System R prototype UC Berkeley begins Ingres prototype
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History (cont.)
1980s:
Research relational prototypes evolve into commercial systems SQL becomes industrial standard Parallel and distributed database systems Object-oriented database systems 1990s: Large decision support and data-mining applications Large multi-terabyte data warehouses Emergence of Web commerce Early 2000s: XML and XQuery standards Automated database administration Later 2000s: Giant data storage systems Google BigTable, Yahoo PNuts, Amazon, ..
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End of Chapter 1
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Figure 1.02
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Figure 1.04
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Figure 1.06
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