35
Topics in Database Administration What is database administration? What is data administration? What are the tasks involved in establishing, creating, implementing and maintaining a database for an organization? What are the tasks involved in: Database transaction integrity? Database backup/recovery? Database security? DBMS efficiency? 1

Topics in Database Administration

  • Upload
    azizi

  • View
    48

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Topics in Database Administration. What is database administration? What is data administration? What are the tasks involved in establishing, creating, implementing and maintaining a database for an organization? What are the tasks involved in: Database transaction integrity? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Topics in Database Administration

Topics in Database Administration

What is database administration? What is data administration? What are the tasks involved in establishing,

creating, implementing and maintaining a database for an organization?

What are the tasks involved in: Database transaction integrity? Database backup/recovery? Database security? DBMS efficiency?

1

Page 2: Topics in Database Administration

What are the two general activity components of administering a database?

Category Data Administration Database Administration

Definition Function responsible for the overall management of data resources.

Function responsible for the technical viability of the database and database management system.

Scope Broad: organization-wide. Long term orientation.

Narrow: technical application. Daily operations.

Major Tasks

Sets policies and standards. Coordinates and manages database design.

Enforces policies and procedures. Chooses and maintains technology.

Page 3: Topics in Database Administration

Tasks in “data” administration

Planning.Assist in the development of the IS architecture.Develop enterprise data model.Assist in database design for application development.

Policies and procedures.Establish metadata.Assesses and controls the quality of the data.Establish policies towards data ownership.

Internal marketing.Explain the concept of data as a shared resource.Resolve conflicts between organizational areas.

3

Page 4: Topics in Database Administration

More detail: Data Resource Management Tasks Assess organizational data strategy.

Evaluate data level of data integration.

Evaluate quality of data.

Create and maintain metadata.

Create and maintain data models.

Identify stakeholders and ensure ongoing participation in data management.

Evaluate privacy of data. Determine ethical use of data collection and access.

Make effective use of data resources through business intelligence capabilities.

4

Page 5: Topics in Database Administration

Tasks in “database” administration

Planning. Guide the selection of hardware and DBMS software. Choose appropriate tool set for database administration,

development and maintenance. Procedures and policies.

Establish security policies.▪ Access.▪ Update.

Establish application development policies.▪ Use of views.▪ Use of indexes.

Establish backup and recovery policies. Enforce policies.

5

Page 6: Topics in Database Administration

More detail: Technical Management Tasks

Install and update the DBMS. Create the database(s).

Establish tablespace and constraints. Create users. Manage data dictionary.

Populate the database(s). Ensure data integrity.

Triggers and stored procedures. Referential integrity. Additional data constructs implemented through SQL.

Perform data backup and recovery. Monitor and tune performance.

6

Page 7: Topics in Database Administration

Data Administrator Database Administrator

Education

Experience

Skills

Page 8: Topics in Database Administration

Three of the critical technical tasks of a DBA Database backup and recovery.

Anticipating the event of a database failure.Establishing & enforcing database backup & recovery

procedures. Database security and integrity.

Defining security requirements based on data and application needs.

Establishing and enforcing security procedures.Establishing and enforcing data integrity procedures.

DBMS optimization.Tracking current response time.Modifying DBMS parameters to improve response time.

8

Page 9: Topics in Database Administration

Database backup and recovery

What is backup and recovery?Backup: A method of storing data from a database in a format that

can be used to rebuild the database if necessary.Recovery: Mechanisms for restoring a database quickly and

accurately after loss or damage.

Why have backup and recovery?Human error.Hardware failure. Incorrect or invalid data. Program errors.Viruses. Natural catastrophes.

9

Page 10: Topics in Database Administration

Backup and recovery are based on transactions A transaction is one or more database actions (SQL

statements) that are treated as a single unit of work. If the transaction is successful, then the transaction is committed. If the transaction is not successful, then the transaction is rolled

back or aborted.

Order_tbl

PK OrderID

OrderDateFK1 CustomerID BillingCode

OrderLine_tbl

PK,FK1 OrderIDPK,FK2 ProductID

Quantity Price

Product_tbl

PK ProductID

Name Description QOH Cost

Customer_tbl

PK CustomerID

Name Address Zip Phone

contains

is placed

by

is for

10

Imagine a database with this structure

Page 11: Topics in Database Administration

Accepting an order for a product

11

INSERT INTO orderline_tbl VALUES (123,6812,10, 34.99);

UPDATE product_tblSET qoh = qoh - 10WHERE prod_no = 6812;

INSERT INTO order_tbl VALUES (123,’23-apr-2012’, 765, ‘net30’);

Page 12: Topics in Database Administration

DBMS’s have methods to control transactions

Databases that support transactions provide specific commands for starting, committing, and rolling back transactions.Begin transaction.End transaction.Commit.Rollback.Autocommit.

Transaction throughput: The number of transactions processed per time interval. This is a measure of transaction processing performance.

12

Page 13: Topics in Database Administration

Transactions have properties (ACID) Atomicity: A transaction is an indivisible unit of work.

Almost all languages that interface with a DBMS have a way to signify the start and end of a transaction.

Within the start and end are one or more SQL commands. Consistency: The transaction moves a database from one state of

consistency, through inconsistency to another state of consistency. Isolation: A transaction executes in isolation from other

transactions. This is also referred to as the “serializability” of transactions. A transaction can affect another transaction, so the transaction must be

completed as though it is isolated in order to be accurate. Durability: Once a transaction is committed, its effects on the

database are durable, or permanent. No subsequent actions or failures to the database can cause that transaction to be lost.

13

Page 14: Topics in Database Administration

Transaction boundary decision

Division of work into transactions. Objectives:

Minimize transaction duration.Ensure transaction isolation.

Constraint: enforcement of important integrity constraints.

14

Page 15: Topics in Database Administration

Transaction boundary choices.

Transaction form example: http://www.elbowspace.com/FRHformexample30.htm

One transaction for the entire form?One transaction for the main form and one

transaction for all subform records?One transaction for the main form and separate

transactions for each subform record?

15

Page 16: Topics in Database Administration

Backup is conducted in 3 processes Backup: A DBMS software utility provides a way to do a complete, full or

incremental backup of the database in a consistent state. Complete: entire database. Full: all rows of specified tables. Incremental: rows that have changed since the last full backup.

Journalize: A DBMS software utility provides an audit trail of changes to the database. Transaction log: contains all data used to process changes against the database. Database change log: contains a before-image and an after-image of each row modified

by a database transaction.

Checkpoint: A DBMS software utility that periodically suspends all transaction processing and synchronizes files within the database. Some databases, such as Oracle, do not actually halt processing. They simply write

checkpoint information to files. The purpose of a checkpoint is to minimize the amount of time it takes to restore a

system.

16

Page 17: Topics in Database Administration

Recovery methods

A DBMS has a utility to recover the database. Usually referred to as the Recovery Manager.

The method of recovery depends on the type of failure. Recovery Manager usually has the following options:

Switch: Switches to a replica of the database on a different storage device. ▪ Requires that a mirror image of the database is stored.▪ Can be expensive.▪ Assumption is a storage failure, not a failure in transaction integrity, occurred.

Restore/Rerun: Reprocesses the transactions for a given time period against a correct version of the database. ▪ Assumption is that a failure in transaction integrity has occurred.▪ Can be very time-consuming.

17

Page 18: Topics in Database Administration

Two common methods of restore/rerun

Backward recovery. Also called “rollback” recovery. Used to undo unwanted changes to the database. Imagine that the current database is inaccurate. Before-images are applied to the current database to return it to a prior state of

consistency. Used to back out changes that are unwanted.

Forward recovery. Also called “rollforward” recovery. Used to recover accurate transactions and apply them to the database. Imagine that the current database is inaccurate. This database must be replaced

with a prior, consistent version of the database before forward recovery can begin. After-images are applied to a past version of the database. Does not require that

all transactions are applied - just takes the most recent after-images.

18

Page 19: Topics in Database Administration

Issues in database backup and recovery

Cost.Media.Computer overhead (processor, memory, disk) to create

journalizing files, control files, checkpoint files, etc.Personnel to supervise and tune.

Time.Can result in regularly scheduled downtime.Can make the system slower.

19

Page 20: Topics in Database Administration

Potential problems with shared databases

Concurrency control is the process of managing concurrent operations against a database in order to maintain data integrity.

Potential problems with shared databases are:Lost Update.Uncommitted Dependency. “Dirty Read”Incorrect Summary.

20

Page 21: Topics in Database Administration

Lost update

Transaction A Time Transaction B Read SR (10) T1 T2 Read SR (10) If SR > 0 then SR = SR -1

T3

T4 If SR > 0 then SR = SR -1

Write SR (9) T5 T6 Write SR (9)

21

SR: Seats Remaining

Page 22: Topics in Database Administration

Uncommitted dependency or “dirty read”

Transaction A Time Transaction B Read SR (10) T1 SR = SR - 1 T2 Write SR (9) T3 T4 Read SR (9) Rollback T5

22

Page 23: Topics in Database Administration

Incorrect summary

Transaction A Time Transaction B Read SR1 (10) T1 SR1 = SR1 - 1 T2 Write SR1 (9) T3 T4 Read SR1 (9) T5 Sum = Sum + SR1 T6 Read SR2 (5) T7 Sum = Sum + SR2 Read SR2 (5) T8 SR2 = SR2 - 1 T9 Write SR2 (4) T10

23

Page 24: Topics in Database Administration

Methods of concurrency control

Scheduler. The scheduler establishes the order in which the operations within concurrent transactions are executed. The scheduler interleaves the execution of database operations to ensure

serializability. Some schedulers have the ability to analyze transaction content.

Locking: Fundamental tool of concurrency control.

Obtain lock before accessing an item.

Wait if a conflicting lock is held. Shared lock: conflicts with exclusive locks Exclusive lock: conflicts with all other kinds of locks

Concurrency control manager maintains the lock table

24

Page 25: Topics in Database Administration

More about locking

Locking. A lock guarantees exclusive use of a data item to a current transaction.Locking can be performed programmatically or left to the

DBMS.Granularity of locking depends on the DBMS.

▪ Database level.▪ Table level.▪ Page level.▪ Row level.▪ Column level.

Can have shared or exclusive locks.

25

Page 26: Topics in Database Administration

Problem in locking Deadlock: An impasse that occurs when two

or more transactions have locked a common resource and each is waiting for the other to finish.

26

Page 27: Topics in Database Administration

Database security

Database Security: Protection of the data against accidental or intentional loss, destruction, or misuse. Threats to database security include the list below.

Accidental losses attributable to: Human error. Software failure. Hardware failure.

Theft and fraud. Improper data access:

Loss of privacy (personal data). Loss of confidentiality (corporate data).

Loss of data integrity. Loss of availability.

27

Page 28: Topics in Database Administration

DBMS security features

Views (frequently referred to as subschemas). Integrity controls. Authorization rules.

Controls incorporated in the DBMS. Restrict access to specific data. Restrict actions that can be taken.

User-defined procedures. Trigger an authorization procedure which asks additional identification

questions. Written in a standard programming language or proprietary language.

Encryption. Authentication schemes.

Biometric devices.

28

Page 29: Topics in Database Administration

SQL Server’s approach to security Multi-user database systems, such as SQL Server, include

security features that control how a database is accessed and used. For example, security mechanisms: Prevent unauthorized database access. Prevent unauthorized access to schema objects. Control system resource usage (such as CPU time or disk usage). Audit user actions.

Associated with each database user is a schema. A schema is a logical collection of database objects (tables, views, sequences,

synonyms, indexes, clusters, procedures, functions, packages, and database links).

By default, each database user creates and has access to all objects in the corresponding schema.

29

Page 30: Topics in Database Administration

SQL statements used for securitySQL Statement Action

CREATE USER Allows the DBA to create a new user.

GRANT Allows the user to give other users privileges to access the user's objects.

CREATE ROLE Allows the DBA to create a collection of privileges that can be assigned as a group.

ALTER USER Allows users to change their passwords. Can also be used to change other attributes of a user.

REVOKE Removes privileges on an object from a user, users, or role.

Page 31: Topics in Database Administration

SQL Statements Used for Data Integrity

SQL Statement Description

Create Domain Create custom data types with predefined CHECK constraints.

Create Assertion Create constraints involving multiple tables and calculations. Similar to CHECK constraints, but allows access to multiple tables through a SELECT statement.

Triggers and Stored Procedures

Programmer can create customized integrity check through proprietary procedural language. Transact-SQL for SQL Server.

Page 32: Topics in Database Administration

DBMS query optimization

DBMS’s are differentiated by their query optimizers.

A query optimizer is a component of a DBMS.You do not have the choice of how queries are

implemented on the physical database, the query optimizer assumes this responsibility.

32

Page 33: Topics in Database Administration

Query translation process

Syntax and semanticanalysis

Query transformation

Access planevaluation

Access planinterpretation

Code generation

Parsed query

Relational algebra query

AccessPlan

AccessPlan

Query

Query results Machine code

Page 34: Topics in Database Administration

Query optimizer methods

Rule based. Looks at syntax. Parses query and executes in the order written according to the rules pre-

established by the person who wrote the query optimizer.

Cost based. Looks at syntax. Looks at statistical data about the database. Parses query and executes based on the written and the information about the

current and historical data of the database.

Choose. Uses the rule based method for tables which have not been used/analyzed in the

past. Uses the cost based method for tables which have been previously analyzed.

34

Page 35: Topics in Database Administration

Becoming a DBA

Experience. Application programming with a database. Some DBA tasks. Systems programming with a database.

Education. Training classes with a specific DBMS. For example, Oracle offers a ten-class sequence for DBA’s. Most classes are

one week (40 hours) in time. Master’s degree?

Certification. Specific to DBMS. Offered by DBMS vendor. Formal programs offered for Oracle and SQL Server; informal programs for

other DBMS types.35