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EM413 Using Adaptive Server Anywhere’s Remote Data Access Feature Mark Culp Software Development Manager iAnywhere Solutions [email protected] 1 Goals of this presentation • Enable you to access remote data from your ASA database • Show you how to migrate your data to ASA • Help you improve your cross database join performance • What should you not do when using ASA's remote data access feature 2 Contents • • • • • • • What is “Remote Data Access” ? Basics – How to get started What if it doesn't work? – Some helpful hints Data migration tools Cross database joins Limitations – What to avoid Questions 3 What is “Remote Data Access” ? 4 What is “Remote Data Access” ? • Allows an ASA server to access data from a remote source as if it were local • Remote data may be : • iAnywhere ASA, Sybase ASE • Oracle, IBM DB2, MS SQL Server • Other ODBC data sources • E.g. MS Access, MS Excel 5 Why use “Remote Data Access” ? • Cross database joins • Maintain real time access to remote data • Integration to other projects and other data sources • Migration of legacy data • Quickly set up a remote ASA database for Mobilink 6 What is … - Architecture Remote Server ASA Server Client Comm. Remote Store Query Execution Engine jConnect ODBC ASA Store 7 ASA ASE Other What is … - Platforms Available on • Win32 platforms: 95,98,ME,NT,2000 • UNIX platforms (since ASA 7.0.2): Linux and SPARC Solaris • Netware (since ASA 7.0.2) 8 What is … – Also known as … Remote Data Access capability is also known as: • OMNI - OmniConnect (from ASE 10.5) • CIS - Component Integration Services • Proxy Tables 9 Basics – How to get started 10 Basics Three steps to accessing remote data 1. Define your remote server 2. Map your external login 3. Create your remote proxy tables Then use the proxy tables in the same way you would use any other table in your query 11 Basics – Step 1: Define your remote server ASA needs to know: • What you will call the remote server • How to connect to the remote server • The capabilities of the remote server SQL statement: create server <server_name> class <connection_class> using <remote_location> 12 Step 1 – Create server … class Connection class: • JDBC (jConnect) classes: • asajdbc, asejdbc • ODBC classes: • • • • • asaodbc, aseodbc – ASA and ASE db2odbc – IBM DB2 mssodbc – MS SQL Server oraodbc – Oracle server (version 8.0 or later) odbc – any other ODBC data source 13 Step 1 – Create server … location (JDBC) Remote location (JDBC): <machine_name>:<port> [ /<db_name> ] Location appended to JDBC URL specification: 'jdbc.sybase.TDS.' /<db_name> only required if more than one database loaded on remote server 14 Step 1 – Create server … example (JDBC) Example 1 (using jConnect): create server DemoServerViaJconnect class 'asajdbc' using 'localhost:2638/asademo' Remote server: ASA server: DemoServer ViaJconnect asajdbc jConnect 15 localhost :2638 /asademo asademo Step 1 – Create server … location (ODBC) Remote location (ODBC): <DSN_name> [ ; <other_options> ] DSN (data source name) normally specifies parameters on how to find remote server • Driver name • Driver specific parameters: • E.g. ServerName Connection is in context of the ASA server 16 Step 1 – Create server … location (ODBC) Example 2 (using an ODBC DSN): create server DemoServer class 'asaodbc' using 'demoDSN' Remote server: ASA server: DemoServer asaodbc ODBC Driver Manager demoDSN ODBC Driver Eng= asademo asademo Note: You can use dbdsn to create ASA DSNs: dbdsn –w demoDSN –c “eng=asademo” 17 Step 1 – Create server … location (ODBC) Example 3 (connect to an Excel Spreadsheet): create server ExcelData class 'odbc' Note 'Read Only' using 'ExcelDataDSN' Check Box 18 Step 1 – Create server … location (ODBC) Example 4 (no ODBC DSN): create server DemoServerNoDSN class 'asaodbc' using 'driver=Adaptive Server Anywhere 8.0; ServerName=asademo' Remote server: ASA server: DemoServer NoDSN asaodbc ODBC Driver Manager Driver=… 19 ODBC Driver Server Name= asademo asademo Step 1 – Create server … location (UNIX) Remote location (UNIX ODBC): <DSN_name> [ ; driver=<driver_path> ] There is no standard ODBC driver manager on UNIX, so ASA needs to know where to find the driver (manager) that you want to use. You must specify a driver-path either: • In your location string, or • In your file DSN specification 20 Step 1 – Create server … location (UNIX) Example 5 (UNIX - no driver manager): create server DemoServerDirect class 'asaodbc' using 'demoDSN' Contents of ~/.odbc.ini: [demoDSN] driver=/opt/sybase/SYBSsa8/lib/dbodbc8_r.so servername=asademo 21 Step 1 – Create server … location (UNIX) Example 5 continued (UNIX - no driver manager): Remote server: ASA server: DemoServer Direct asaodbc ODBC Driver demoDSN asademo dbodbc8_r.so • Since no "driver=" found in location string, ASA looks for location of driver in the DSN 22 Step 1 – Create server … location (UNIX) Example 6 (UNIX - with driver manager): create server DemoServerUsingManager class 'asaodbc' using 'driver=<manager_path>; DSN=demoDSN' Contents of ~/.odbc.ini: [demoDSN] driver=/opt/sybase/SYBSsa8/lib/dbodbc8_r.so servername=asademo 23 Step 1 – Create server … location (UNIX) Example 6 continued (with driver manager): Remote server: ASA server: DemoServer asaodbc UsingManager ODBC Driver Manager .odbc.ini driver=… ODBC Driver Server Name= asademo asademo dbodbc8_r.so • ASA loads ODBC driver manager • ODBC driver manager loads ODBC driver 24 Basics – Step 2: Map your external login ASA may need to know: • User id and password to use when connecting to the remote server SQL statement: create externlogin <login_name> to <remote_server> remote login <remote_user> [ identified by <remote_password> ] 25 Step 2 – When to create externlogin • By default, ASA uses the names and passwords of its clients whenever it connects to a remote server on behalf of those clients. • CREATE EXTERNLOGIN statement assigns an alternate login name and password to be used when communicating with a remote server 26 Step 2 – Map your external login Example 7: create externlogin dba to DemoServer remote login dba identified by sql 27 Basics – Step 3: Create proxy tables ASA needs to know how to make the mapping from a local proxy table to its remote data: • If the remote table already exists, use the CREATE EXISTING statement. • If the remote table is to be created, use the CREATE … AT statement. 28 Step 3 – Create existing table To map an existing remote table: SQL Statement: create existing table [<owner>.]<table_name> [ ( <column_definitions> ) ] at <location_clause>; • This statement defines the proxy table for an existing table on the remote server. 29 Step 3 – Location clause location_clause specifies where to locate the remote table, and is of the form: '<server>;<database>;<owner>;<table>' where: • server - name of server as known by current database from create server command • database - depends on type of remote server • owner - owner of remote table • table – name of the remote table 30 Step 3 – Create existing example Example 8: create existing table dba.p_employee at 'DemoServer;;dba;employee'; ASA local database: DemoServer: proxy table: dba. p_employee remote table: dba. employee 31 Step 3 – Create new table To create a new remote table: SQL Statement: create table [<owner>.]<table_name> ( <column_definitions> ) at <location_clause>; This statement creates a new table on the remote server, and also defines the proxy table for that table. 32 Step 3 – Create new example Example 9: create table p_employee_sheet ( emp_id numeric(9,0), emp_fname varchar(30) ) at 'ExcelData;;;employee_sheet' Copy data into the remote table using: insert into p_employee_sheet select emp_id, emp_fname from p_employee 33 Some Helpful Hints 34 Hints – Dropping proxy tables To drop a proxy table, use: SQL Statement: drop table [<owner>.]<table_name>; • If the proxy table was created using CREATE EXISTING, only the proxy table is dropped • If the proxy table was created using CREATE … AT statement, then the proxy table and the remote table are both dropped. 35 Hints – Dropping proxy tables example Example 10: drop table p_employee • Since this proxy table was created using CREATE EXISTING, this statement drops the proxy table only; the remote table is not affected. drop table p_employee_sheet • Since this proxy table was created using CREATE TABLE … AT, this statement drops the proxy table, AND will also drop the remote table at 'ExcelData;;;employee_sheet' 36 Remote Data Access passthru mode To send a statement directly to the remote server, use: SQL statement: forward to <server_name>; <remote_statement(s)> forward to; • The remote_statements text is sent to the remote server as given • Text is terminated by the "forward" and "to" tokens 37 Hints – Useful system tables sys.sysservers – list of remote servers select * from sys.sysservers 38 Hints – Useful system tables sys.systable – list of proxy tables select table_name, remote_location, existing_obj from systable where remote_location is not NULL; 39 Hints – Useful built-in procedures sp_remote_tables server_name [, table_name ] [, table_owner ] [, table_qualifier ] [, with_table_type ] • Lists tables available at remote server sp_remote_columns server_name, table_name [, owner ] [, database] • Lists columns in remote table 40 Remote Data Access trace CIS option You diagnose remote data access problems by using the cis_option connection property SQL statement: set temporary option cis_option = 7; • ASA will display messages in console log. • Set cis_option value to 0 (zero) to turn off. 41 Trace CIS option example Example 11: set temporary option cis_option=7; select * from p_employee; 42 Data Migration Tools 43 Data migration tools - Availability You can import remote data using the sa_migrate set of stored procedures • Available in ASA 7.0.2, 7.0.3 and 8.0 • Source data may be from one of: • iAnywhere ASA • Sybase ASE • Oracle, IBM DB2, MS SQL Server, MS Access 44 Data migration tools - Basics Basic methodology: • create base table(s) and proxy table(s) • copy data from remote table(s) • create foreign keys ASA local database: base table Remote data source: proxy table remote table 45 Migration – Single step process To migrate entire remote database in one step, use stored procedure: dbo.sa_migrate( IN local_table_owner IN server_name IN table_name IN owner_name IN database_name IN migrate_data IN drop_proxy_tables VARCHAR(128), VARCHAR(128), VARCHAR(128) DEFAULT NULL, VARCHAR(128) DEFAULT NULL, VARCHAR(128) DEFAULT NULL, BIT DEFAULT 1, BIT DEFAULT 1 ) 46 Migration – Single step example Example 12: call dbo.sa_migrate( 'dba', 'DemoServer', 'Customer', 'dba' ) • This migrates the customer table definition and data from DemoServer to my database by: • • • • creating customer table in my database creating customer_et proxy table copying the customer data dropping the customer_et proxy table 47 Migration – Single step example results 48 Migration – Multi-step process To have more control over what is migrated, use: 1. sa_migrate_create_remote_table_list( … ) 2. sa_migrate_create_tables( … ) 3. sa_migrate_data( … ) 4. sa_migrate_create_remote_fks_list( … ) 5. sa_migrate_create_fks( … ) 6. sa_migrate_drop_proxy_tables( … ) 49 Migration – Step 1: create table list 1. Create a list of tables to migrate using dbo.sa_migrate_create_remote_table_list( IN server_name varchar(128), IN table_name varchar(128) default NULL, IN owner_name varchar(128) default NULL, IN database_name varchar(128) default NULL ) • this populates the dbo.migrate_remote_table_list table • delete any rows that you do not want 50 Migration – Step 2: create proxy tables 2. Create proxy and base tables using: dbo.sa_migrate_create_tables( IN local_table_owner varchar(128) ) • uses rows in dbo.migrate_remote_table_list • creates a proxy table and a base table for each remote table listed • also creates all primary key indexes 51 Migration - Step 3: migrate data 3. Migrate data into base tables using: dbo.sa_migrate_data ( IN local_table_owner varchar(128) ) • uses rows in dbo.migrate_remote_table_list • populates base tables with rows from proxy tables 52 Migration – Step 4: create fks list 4. Create list of foreign keys to migrate: dbo.sa_migrate_create_remote_fks_list( IN server_name varchar(128) ) • uses rows in dbo.migrate_remote_table_list • creates dbo.migrate_remote_fks_list table • delete any rows that you do not want 53 Migration – Step 5: create foreign keys 5. Create the foreign keys using: dbo.sa_migrate_create_fks( IN local_table_owner varchar(128) ) • uses rows in dbo.migrate_remote_fks_list • creates a foreign key for each listed 54 Migration - Step 6: drop proxy tables 6. Drop all of the proxy tables: dbo.sa_migrate_drop_proxy_tables( IN local_table_owner varchar(128) ) • uses rows in dbo.migrate_remote_table_list • drops the proxy table (created in step 2) for each remote table listed 55 Migration – Multi-step example Example 13: • call dbo.sa_migrate_create_remote_table_list ( 'DemoServer', NULL, 'dba' ) • select * from dbo.migrate_remote_table_list • delete from dbo.migrate_remote_table_list where table_name = 'customer' or table_name like 'sales_%' or table_name like 'fin%' • call dbo.sa_migrate_create_tables( 'dba' ) • call dbo.sa_migrate_data( 'dba' ) • call dbo.sa_migrate_create_remote_fks_list( 'DemoServer' ) • select * from dbo.migrate_remote_fks_list • call dbo.sa_migrate_create_fks( 'dba' ) • call dbo.sa_migrate_drop_proxy_tables( 'dba' ) 56 Migration – In case of a failure Migration may fail if a foreign key referenced table does not exist • You may choose to update the dbo.migrate_remote_fks_list table (delete the offending entry) and continue • Minimally you must run dbo.sa_migrate_drop_proxy_tables to delete the temporary proxy tables that were created 57 Cross Database Joins 58 Cross database joins – What is it? A "Cross Database Join" is a join between two or more tables where the tables reside on two or more different servers Example A: Table A (ASA) Example B: Join Table B (remote) Join Table A (remote a) 59 Table B (remote b) Cross database joins – Implementation ASA handles cross database joins by: • Parse the query and identify remote tables • Push predicates down to remote server when possible • Reads remote rows using forward-only cursor Note: • 6.0.x and 7.0.x uses only naïve nested loop join operator 60 Cross database joins – Remote Join • When the join is on tables from the same server, the join is pushed to the remote Example C: Join Table A (remote a) Table B (remote a) 61 Cross database joins – Example 14 Example 14: • R is remote table, S is ASA local table Select R.* from R join S where R.k = S.k For each row r in R if exists( select 1 from S where S.k = r.k ) match row 62 Cross database joins – Example 15 63 Cross database joins – Example 16 64 Cross Database Joins – Why is it slow? If ASA uses a plan that has the remote table on the right side of the join operator, then the remote data will be hauled across the communication link multiple times – once for each left hand side row. For each row s in S for each row r in ( select * from R ) if s.k = r.k match row 65 Cross Joins – How to make it go faster? • Only include remote columns that are absolutely required by the query • Run the query using dbisql, and check the plan that is being used • Simplify query to have fewer remote tables • Consider using local temporary tables to hold intermediate results • Migrate data to ASA and perform join on local table 66 Limitations: What should you avoid ? 67 Limitations Features not supported on remote data: • ALTER TABLE statement against remote tables • Triggers defined on proxy tables will not fire • SQL Remote • Java data types • Foreign keys that refer to remote tables are ignored • Positioned UPDATE and DELETE • UPDATE and DELETE requiring an intermediate temporary table • Backwards scrolling on cursors 68 What to avoid … No cycles 1. Don't create a proxy table that refers back to the same database. Reason: Deadlock can occur if remote access waits for a lock caused by the same connection. Corollary: Don't create cycles in your databases' remote access definitions. 69 What to avoid … Separate Servers 2. Don't create a proxy table that refers back to the same server. Reason: Deadlock will occur when more than one concurrent remote access is attempted. Work around: increase –gx parameter Solution: Use separate servers to host the local and remote databases. 70 What to avoid … Join Large Tables 3. Don't join two large remote tables from different remote servers. Reason: Slow response Solution: Migrate one of the tables into an ASA table first. 71 What to avoid … N-way joins 4. Don't create complicated joins containing many remote tables from many different servers. Reason: Slow response Solution: Migrate table(s) into ASA first. 72 Summary ASA's Remote Data Access feature is a powerful tool to access your remote data from your ASA database: • Easy to migrate your legacy data to ASA, or • Use your remote data in place as if it were part of the ASA database More detailed information found in: ASA SQL User's Guide 15. Accessing Remote Data 73 Thank you Questions ? [email protected] www.ianywhere.com 74