* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Part 1
Survey
Document related concepts
Microsoft Access wikipedia , lookup
Microsoft SQL Server wikipedia , lookup
Oracle Database wikipedia , lookup
Ingres (database) wikipedia , lookup
Concurrency control wikipedia , lookup
Open Database Connectivity wikipedia , lookup
Entity–attribute–value model wikipedia , lookup
Extensible Storage Engine wikipedia , lookup
Microsoft Jet Database Engine wikipedia , lookup
ContactPoint wikipedia , lookup
Clusterpoint wikipedia , lookup
Transcript
Introduction to MIS Databases Chapter 5 and 6 in your textbook Relational Database Concepts 1 Examples of Database Applications Purchases from the supermarket Purchases using your credit card Booking a holiday at the travel agents Using the local library Taking out insurance Using the Internet Studying at university 2 File-Based Systems Collection of application programs that perform services for the end users (e.g. reports). Each program defines and manages its own data. 3 Limitations of File-Based Approach Separation and isolation of data » Each program maintains its own set of data. » Users of one program may be unaware of potentially useful data held by other programs. Duplication of data » Same data is held by different programs. » Wasted space and potentially different values and/or different formats for the same item. 4 Database Approach Arose because: » Definition of data was embedded in application programs, rather than being stored separately and independently. » No control over access and manipulation of data beyond that imposed by application programs. Result: » the database and Database Management System (DBMS). 5 Database Shared collection of logically related data (and a description of this data), designed to meet the information needs of an organization. System catalog (metadata) provides description of data to enable program–data independence. Logically related data comprises entities, attributes, and relationships of an organization’s information. 6 Database Approach Controlled access to database may include: » A security system. » An integrity system. » A concurrency control system. » A recovery control system. » A user-accessible catalog. A view mechanism. » Provides users with only the data they want or need to use. 7 Views Allows each user to have his or her own view of the database. A view is essentially some subset of the database. 8 Views Benefits include: » Reduce complexity; » Provide a level of security; » Provide a mechanism to customize the appearance of the database; » Present a consistent, unchanging picture of the structure of the database, even if the underlying database is changed. 9 History of Database Systems First-generation » Hierarchical and Network Second generation » Relational Third generation » Object-Oriented 10 The DBMS Marketplace Relational DBMS companies – Oracle, Sybase – are among the largest software companies in the world. IBM offers its relational DB2 system. With IMS, a non-relational system, IBM is by some accounts the largest DBMS vendor in the world. Microsoft offers SQL-Server, plus Microsoft Access for the cheap DBMS on the desktop 11 Terminology Database: persistent collection of data Database Management System (DBMS): software that controls access to the database Database Administrator (DBA): person who controls database Data Model: general structure of the data in the database Data Language: commands used to define the data model and give users access to the database 12 Utility of Databases Data has value independent of use Organized approach to data management Eliminate redundancy in data Share data Archive data Security of data Integrity of data 13 DB Terms and Techniques Database access is a key feature of current enterprise computing Relational DB: tables To link/merge tables and extract/write information: Structured Query Language (SQL) – language of all modern databases (but many dialects) SQL is transparent; operates with statements like SELECT, INSERT, DELETE, etc. SQL provides its result sets in table format 14 DB and the Internet One vs. multiple user access Internet browsers make it easy to access database programs (compared with traditional client/server programs) 15 Relational Database Model Database » Database is a collection of tables (relations) » Data are stored in tables Tables » Each table has a name » Each table has a set of columns (fields) and rows of data (records) » Each table has a fixed number of columns » Each table has an arbitrary number of rows Based on set theory SQL (Structured Query Language) » DBMS independent language 16 Database Columns (Fields) Columns » » » » Each column has a name Columns are accessed by name No standard column ordering Data in a column belongs to a particular domain – Columns are the “attributes” of the dataset – Each value in a column is from the same domain – Each value in a column is of the same data type 17 Database Rows (Records) Rows » » » » » » » Each row entry is either a simple value or empty ("null") Rows are sets of values for the columns (attribute values) Primary key: a set of columns that uniquely identifies each row Each row must be unique given the primary key (no duplicates) Rows are referenced by the primary key Row order cannot be determined by the user Does not make sense to say “the fourth row” like it does in a “paper” table or spreadsheet 18 Data Types Each row value is an instance of a primitive data type » » » » Integer Real (e.g., number, currency Character (e.g., text, hyperlink, yes/no) Date/Time No complex types in standard DBMS (matrix, drawing) » MS Access will allow drawings and some objects » Object oriented databases may allow objects and structures Non existent value is “null” 19 Database Design Database design deals with how to design a database Importance of Good Design » Poor design results in unwanted data redundancy » Poor design generates errors leading to bad decisions Practical Approach » Focus on principles and concepts of database design » Importance of logical design 20 Database Design Goals Create a balanced design which is good for all users Based on a set of assumptions about the world being modeled Determine the data to be stored Determine the relations among the data Determine the operations to be performed Specify the structure of the tables 21 Database Design Process 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Identify all the objects, entities, and attributes Identify all the dependencies, draw a dependency diagram Design tables to represent the data items and dependencies Verify the design Implement the database Design the queries Test and revise 22 Identify All Objects and Entities Determine the objects of your Database For each object, describe each entity to be stored » example: better to store first name and last name separately Determine the data type for each item » text, currency, date, etc. Determine the range of allowable values for each item » » » » » » non-negative? greater than zero? decimal points? any of the 50 state abbreviations zip code between 00000 and 99999 phone number 23 Turn Data Items into Attributes Each attribute should have: » a meaningful name » a description of what the attribute means or what kind of data make up the attribute » a domain – the data type of the attribute – the range or a list of allowable values of the attribute 24 Identify All the Dependencies Assume a set of relationships between data items » a model of the world » may have to make assumptions » these assumptions should be listed clearly Turn these relationships into dependencies » single-valued : there is one and only one value of ‘x’ for every value of ‘y’ – a person Y receives a grade X for a course in a semester – a person Y has a birth date X » multi-valued : there are zero (or one) or more values of ‘x’ for every value of ‘y’ – a student Y enrolls in one or more classes (X) each semester – a person Y has zero or more sisters Draw a dependency diagram 25 Single-Valued (One-to-One) Dependencies Draw a single-headed arrow for single-valued dependencies a person has one and only one birth date PERSON BIRTHDATE a student has one and only one final grade for a course STUDENT FINAL COURSE GRADE 26 Multi-Valued (One-to-Many) Dependencies Draw a double-headed arrow between multi-valued dependencies a student can enroll in one or more classes STUDENT CLASSES a person has zero or more sisters PERSON SISTERS 27 Independent vs. Dependent Attributes Some attributes are independent » E.g., in a business – client relationship, your client’s phone number does not depend on when you are scheduled to meet him » your client still exists whether or not you have an appointment with him Some attributes are dependent » the length of a side rails on a bridge is dependent on the structure of the bridge » the side rails of a bridge would not exist if the bridge itself was not there 28 Dependent vs. Independent Attribute Representation Start a new bubble around an independent attribute » properties of that attribute are attached to the new bubble » properties that are dependent on other attributes are attached to the old bubble » Each appointment is with one or more clients. Each appointment with one or more clients has a time. Each client has a single phone number. APPOINTMENT PHONE NUMBER CLIENT TIME 29 Design the Tables Draw a dependency diagram Each dependency statement is a part of the diagram Each statement is a single path through the diagram Tables are formed by traversing the dependency diagram 30 Traversing the Dependency Diagram Choose an attribute at the end of a path Follow the chain of arrows upwards » each multi-valued dependency on the path becomes a primary key for the table » combine all single-valued attributes at first level up into a single table » all attributes on the path should be included in the table » stop when you reach a bubble that has no arrows coming into it » each path becomes a separate table Mark off your traversed path Repeat until all paths have been traversed 31 Verify the design Inspect your tables » are all of the data included? Do you have too many tables? too few? If your design does not appear correct » go back to step 1 » you must repeat all steps of process in order » do not try to “rearrange” dependency diagram to give you the tables you think you should have 32 Common Database Design Mistakes Assuming the order of rows and columns is known » this is not a spreadsheet! » do not assume sorted order unless you explicitly sort Guessing the design, not following the process Storing what you can compute (when the value will change) » e.g., do not store age if you are already storing birth date Represent multi-valued dependencies in fixed size sets » if you know that there are exactly X number of something, create X singlevalued dependencies, otherwise use multi-valued dependency Adding a key when a unique value exists » adding an ID number for each person when you are already storing their social security number 33 Results If you follow the process correctly » you will not have redundant data » you will not lose unrelated data when you delete values Databases with these characteristics are called 3NF (Third Normal Form) databases Normalization means the tables are properly designed. 34 Program SQL Design SQL Design Tools: Database Design SQL (queries) Programming Program Goal: Build a Business Application Best: Spend your time on design and SQL. Worst: Compensate for poor design and limited SQL with programming. 35 Application Development tasks Feasibility Identify scope, costs, and schedule Analysis Gather information from users Design Define tables, relationships, forms, reports Development Create forms, reports, and help; test Implementation Transfer data, install, train, review time 36 DBMS Features/Components Database engine » Storage » Retrieval » Update Query Processor Data dictionary Utilities Security Report writer Forms generator (input screens) Application generator Communications Programming Interface 37 DBMS Engine, Security, Utilities Product OrderItemID Description 887 Dog food OrderID ODate Customer 946 Cat food 9874 3-3-97 CustomerID Name 9888 3-9-97 1195 Jones 2355 Rojas Product Customer ItemID Integer, Unique CustomerID Description Integer, Text, 100 Unique char Name Text, 50 char Data Tables Database Engine Data Dictionary User Identification Access Rights Security Concurrency and Lock Manager Backup and Recovery Utilities Administration 38 Database Tables (MS Access) 39 Database Tables (Oracle) 40 DBMS Report Writer All Data Database Engine Data Dictionary Query Processor Report Writer Report Format and Query 41 Report Writer (Oracle) 42 DBMS Input Forms All Data Database Engine Data Dictionary Query Processor Form Builder Input Form Design 43 Relational Database Customer(CustomerID, Name, … Order(OrderID, CustomerID, OrderDate, … ItemsOrdered(OrderID, ItemID, Quantity, … Items(ItemID, Description, Price, … 44 Object-Oriented DBMS Order OrderID CustomerID … NewOrder DeleteOrder … OrderItem OrderID ItemID … OrderItem DropOrderItem … Customer CustomerID Name … Add Customer Drop Customer Change Address Item ItemID Description … New Item Sell Item Buy Item … Government Customer Commercial ContactName Customer ContactPhone ContactName Discount, … ContactPhone … NewContact NewContact 45 OO Difficulties: Methods IBM Server Unix Server Database Object Personal Computer Database Object Customer Method: Add New Customer Program code Application Customer Name Address Phone How can a method run on different computers? Different processors use different code. Possibility: Java 46 End of Lecture Next Topic Entity Relationships and Database Diagrams. 47