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COS 346 Day 21 DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-1 Agenda • Assignment 9 Posted – Due April 23 – 2 More to go • Assignment 10 Posted – Due April 26 – 1 more to go • Quiz 2 Corrected – 3 A’s, 2 B’s, 1 C and 1 D – There will only be 3 exams (3 @ 10% instead of 4 @ 7.5%) • Last Capstone Progress Reports Due April 26 • Today we will discuss – Managing databases with Oracle DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-2 End of days? (subject to change) • April 19 – DP Chap 10 • April 23 – DP Chap 12 – SQL Chap 11 – Assignment 9 due • April 26 – DP Chapter 13 – Assignment 10 due • April 30 – DP Chap 14 • May 3 – DP Chap 15 – Review – Assignment 11 Due • May 9 – Quiz 3 – 10 AM – Capstone presentations DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-3 David M. Kroenke’s Database Processing: Fundamentals, Design, and Implementation Chapter Ten: Managing Databases with Oracle Part One DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-4 Introduction • Oracle is the world’s most popular DBMS - It is a powerful and robust DBMS that runs on many different operating systems • Oracle DBMS engine available is several versions: – The Personal Edition of Oracle is available with this text and can also be downloaded from Oracle • Example of Oracle products: – SQL*Plus: a utility for processing SQL and creating components like stored procedures and triggers: • PL/SQL is a programming language that adds programming constructs to the SQL language – Oracle Developer (Forms & Reports Builder) • Also third-party products - Quest Software’s TOAD DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-5 View Ridge Gallery • View Ridge Gallery is a small art gallery that has been in business for 30 years • It sells contemporary European and North American fine art • View Ridge has one owner, three salespeople, and two workers • View Ridge owns all of the art that it sells; it holds no items on a consignment basis DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-6 Application Requirements • View Ridge application requirements: – Track customers and their artist interests – Record gallery's purchases – Record customers' art purchases – List the artists and works that have appeared in the gallery – Report how fast an artist's works have sold and at what margin – Show current inventory in a Web page DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-7 View Ridge Gallery Database Design VRG-Answers.zip DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-8 Creating an Oracle Database • Installing Oracle: – Install Oracle 9i Client to use an already created database – Install Oracle 9i Personal Edition to create your own databases • Three ways to create an Oracle database: – Via the Oracle Database Configuration Assistant – Via the Oracle-supplied database creation procedures – Via the SQL CREATE DATABASE command DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-9 Creating an Oracle Database: The Oracle Database Configuration Assistant DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-10 SQL*Plus • Oracle SQL*Plus or the Oracle Enterprise Manager Console may be used to manage an Oracle database • SQL*Plus is a text editor available in all Oracle • Except inside quotation marks of strings, Oracle commands are case-insensitive • The semicolon (;) terminates a SQL statement • The right-leaning slash (/) executes SQL statement stored in Oracle buffer • SQL*Plus can be used to: – Enter SQL statements – Submit SQL files created by text editors, e.g., notepad, to Oracle DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-11 SQL*Plus: Logging In to an Oracle Database DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-12 SQL*Plus: The SQL+Plus Window DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-13 SQL*Plus Buffer • SQL*Plus keeps the current statements in a multi-line buffer without executing it • LIST is used to see the contents of the buffer: – LIST {line_number} is used to change the current line • CHANGE/astring/bstring/ is used to change the contents of the current line: – astring = the string you want to change – bstring = what you want to change it to • Example: change/Table_Name/*/ – ‘Table_Name’ is replaced with ‘*’ DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-14 SQL*Plus Buffer DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-15 SQL*Plus LIST Command DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-16 SQL*Plus: Changing a Line in the Buffer DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-17 Creating Tables • Some of the SQL-92 CREATE TABLE statements we have studied need to be modified for Oracle – Oracle does not support a CASCADE UPDATE constraint – Money or currency is defined in Oracle using the Numeric data type • Oracle sequences must be used for surrogate keys • The DESCRIBE or DESC command is used to view table status DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-18 Oracle Data Types DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-19 Oracle CREATE TABLE Statements for the View Ridge Schema DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-20 Oracle CREATE TABLE Statements for the View Ridge Schema DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-21 Oracle Sequences • A sequence is an object that generates a sequential series of unique numbers: Create Sequence CustID Increment by 1 start with 1000; • It is the best way to work with surrogate keys in Oracle • Two sequence methods: – NextVal provides the next value in a sequence. – CurrVal provides the current value in a sequence. • Using sequences does not guarantee valid surrogate key values because it is possible to have missing, duplicate, or wrong sequence value in the table DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-22 Using Sequences • Creating a sequence: CREATE SEQUENCE CustID INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1000; • Entering data using a sequence: INSERT INTO CUSTOMER (CustomerID, Name, AreaCode, PhoneNumber) VALUES( CustID.NextVal, 'Mary Jones', '350', '555–1234'); • Retrieving the row just created: SELECT FROM WHERE * CUSTOMER CustomerID = CustID.CurrVal; DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-23 The DROP and ALTER Statements • SQL DROP statements may be used to remove structures from the database – DROP TABLE Command: • Any data in the MYTABLE table will be lost DROP TABLE MyTable; – DROP SEQUENCE Command: DROP SEQUENCE MySequence; • SQL ALTER statements may be used to drop (add) a column: ALTER TABLE MYTABLE DROP COLUMN MyColumn; ALTER TABLE MYTABLE ADD C1 NUMBER(4); DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-24 The TO_DATE Function • Oracle requires dates in a particular format. • TO_DATE function may be used to identify the format: TO_DATE('11/12/2002', 'MM/DD/YYYY') • 11/12/2002 is the date value • MM/DD/YYYY is the pattern to be used when interpreting the date • The TO_DATE function can be used with the INSERT and UPDATE statements to enter data: INSERT INTO T1 VALUES( 100, TO_DATE ('01/05/02', 'DD/MM/YY'); DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-25 Creating Indexes • Indexes are created to: – Enforce uniqueness on columns – Facilitate sorting – Enable fast retrieval by column values • Good candidates for indexes are columns that are frequently used with equal conditions in WHERE clause or in a join • Examples: CREATE INDEX CustNameIdx ON CUSTOMER(Name); CREATE UNIQUE INDEX WorkUniqueIndex ON WORK(Title, Copy, ArtistID); DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-26 Restrictions On Column Modifications • A column may be dropped at any time and all data will be lost • A column may be added at any time as long as it is a NULL column • To add a NOT NULL column: – Add a NULL column – Fill the new column in every row with data – Change its structure to NOT NULL: ALTER TABLE T1 MODIFY C1 NOT NULL; DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-27 Creating Views • SQL-92 CREATE VIEW command can be used to create views in Oracle • Unlike SQL-92, Oracle allows the ORDER BY clause in view definitions • Oracle 9i and newer verions support the JOIN…ON syntax • Example: CREATE VIEW CustomerInterests AS SELECT C.Name as Customer, A.Name as Artist FROM CUSTOMER C JOIN CUSTOMER_ARTIST_INT I ON C.CustomerID = I.CustomerID JOIN ARTIST A ON I.ArtistID = A.ArtistID; DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-28 Oracle Enterprise Manager Console • The Oracle Enterprise Manager Console provides graphical facilities for managing an Oracle database • The utility can be used to manage: – Database structures such as tables and views – User accounts, passwords, roles, and privileges • The Manager Console includes a SQL scratchpad for executing SQL statements DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-29 Oracle Enterprise Manager Console DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-30 Oracle Enterprise Manager Console: ARTIST Columns and Properties DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-31 Oracle Enterprise Manager Console: Displaying the CustomerInterests View DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-32 David M. Kroenke’s Database Processing Fundamentals, Design, and Implementation (10th Edition) End of Presentation: Chapter Ten Part One DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-33 David M. Kroenke’s Database Processing: Fundamentals, Design, and Implementation Chapter Ten: Managing Databases with Oracle Part Two DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-34 Application Logic • Oracle database application can be processed using: – Programming language to invoke Oracle DBMS commands – Stored procedures – The SQL*Plus Start command to invoke database commands stored in .sql files – Triggers DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-35 Stored Procedures • A stored procedure is a PL/SQL or Java program stored within the database • Stored procedures are programs that can: – – – – Have parameters Invoke other procedures and functions Return values Raise exceptions • A stored procedure must be compiled and stored in the database • The Execute or Exec command is used to invoke a stored procedure: Exec Customer_Insert ('Michael Bench', '203', '555-2014', 'US'); DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-36 IN signifies an input parameter; OUT signifies an output parameter; IN OUT is used for parameters with both functions DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall Variable are declared after the keyword AS 10-37 Triggers • An Oracle trigger is a PL/SQL or Java procedures that is invoked when a specified database activity occurs • Triggers can be used to: – – – – – Set default values Enforce a Data Constraint Update a view Enforce referential integrity action Handle exceptions DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-38 Triggers • Trigger types: – A command trigger will be fired once per SQL command – A row trigger will be fired once for every row involved in the processing of a SQL command: • There are three types of row triggers: BEFORE, AFTER, and INSTEAD OF • BEFORE and AFTER triggers are placed on tables while INSTEAD OF triggers are placed on views • Each trigger can be fired on INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE commands DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-39 This is a BEFORE trigger on INSERT on the table TRANSACTION. It is will set a default value on AskingPrice. DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-40 Triggers: Enforcing a Required Child Constraint There is an M-M relationship between WORK and TRANSACTION: DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-41 Triggers: Enforcing a Required Child Constraint • The hard way using two triggers – this one enforces the required child: DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-42 Triggers: Enforcing a Required Child Constraint • The hard way using two triggers – this one deletes any duplicate transaction: DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-43 Triggers: Enforcing a Required Child Constraint A better way - Create the Work_Trans view: CREATE VIEW SELECT FROM ON Work_Trans AS Title, Description, Copy, ArtistID, DateAcquired, AcquisitionPrice WORK W JOIN TRANSACTION T W.WorkID = T.WorkID; DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-44 Triggers: Enforcing a Required Child Constraint • A better way using one trigger – this one works with the Work_Trans view: DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-45 The OracleData Dictionary • Oracle maintains a data dictionary of metadata. • The metadata of the dictionary itself are stored in the table DICT: SELECT Table_Name, Comments FROM DICT WHERE Table_Name LIKE ('%TABLES%'); • USER_TABLES contains information about user or system tables: DESC USER_TABLES; DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-46 Example Oracle Metadata DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-47 Concurrency Control • Oracle processes database changes by maintaining a System Change Number (SCN) – SCN is a database-wide value that is incremented by Oracle when database changes are made • With SCN, SQL statements always read a consistent set of values; those that were committed at or before the time the statement was started • Oracle only reads committed changes; it will never reads dirty data DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-48 Oracle Transaction Isolation DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-49 Oracle Security • Oracle security components: – An ACCOUNT is a user account – A PROFILE is a set of system resource maximums that are assigned to an account – A SYSTEM PRIVILEGE is the right to perform a task – A ROLE consists of groups of PRIVILEGEs and other ROLEs DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-50 Account System Privileges • Each ACCOUNT can be allocated many SYSTEM PRIVILEGEs and many ROLEs • An ACCOUNT has all the PRIVILEGEs: – That have been assigned directly. – Of all of its ROLEs – Of all of its ROLEs that are inherited through ROLE connections • A ROLE can have many SYSTEM PRIVILEGEs and it may also have a relationship to other ROLEs • ROLEs simplify the administration of the database: – A set of privileges can be assigned to or removed from a ROLE just once DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-51 Account System Privileges: Privileges Granted to the System Account DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-52 Account Roles: Roles Granted to the System Account DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-53 Account Authentication • Accounts can be authenticated by: – Passwords – The host operating system • Password management can be specified via PROFILEs DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-54 Account Authentication: Password Authentication DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-55 Account Authentication: Password Management via a Profile DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-56 Oracle Recovery Facilities • Three file types for Oracle recovery: – Datafiles contain user and system data – ReDo log files contain logs of database changes: • OnLine ReDo files are maintained on disk and contain the rollback segments from recent database changes • Offline or Archive ReDo files are backups of the OnLine ReDo files – Control files describe the name, contents, and locations of various files used by Oracle DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-57 Oracle Recovery Facilities • Oracle can operate in either ARCHIVELOG or NOARCHIVELOG mode: – If running in ARCHIVELOG mode, Oracle logs all changes to the database – When the OnLine ReDo files fill up, they are copied to the Archive ReDo files • The Oracle Recovery Manager (RMAN) is a utility program used to create backups and to perform recovery. DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-58 Types of Failure • Oracle recovery techniques depend on the type of failure: – An application failure due to application logic errors – An instance failure occurs when Oracle itself fails due to an operating system or computer hardware failure • Oracle can recover from application and instance failure without using the archived log file – A media failure occurs when Oracle is unable to write to a physical file because of a disk failure or corrupted files • The database is restored from a backup DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-59 Oracle Backup Facilities • Two kinds of backups: – A consistent backup: Database activity must be stopped and all uncommitted changes have been removed from the datafiles • Cannot be done if the database supports 24/7 operations – An inconsistent backup: Backup is made while Oracle is processing the database • An inconsistent backup can be made consistent by processing an archive log file • http://www.oracle.com/technology/obe/obe10gdb/h a/bar/bar.htm DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-60 David M. Kroenke’s Database Processing Fundamentals, Design, and Implementation (10th Edition) End of Presentation: Chapter Ten Part Two DAVID M. KROENKE’S DATABASE PROCESSING, 10th Edition © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall 10-61