Overview of Oracle Database
Part 1. Introduction to Database System
Introduction to Database
History of RDBMS
Entity-Relationship Modeling
Database Language
Introduction to Database
File-Based Approach
Each program defines and manages its own data
Limitation
Separation and isolation of data
Duplication of data
Data dependence
Incompatibility of files
Fixed queries/proliferation of application program
Database Approach
A shared collection of logically related data, designed
to meet the information needs of an organization
Database Management System(DBMS)
A software system that enables users to define, create and
maintain the database and provides controlled access to
database
DDL
DML : procedural, non-procedural
Control : security, integrity, concurrency control,
recovery control, user-accessible catalog
Components of the DBMS Environment
Hardware - Software - Data - Procedures - People
Advantages of DBMS
- Control of data redundancy - Economy of scale
- Data consistency - Balance of conflicting requirements
- More information from the same amount of data
- Sharing of data - Improved data accessibility and responsivenes
s
- Improved data integrity - Increased productivity
- Improved security - Improved maintenance through data independe
nce
- Enforcement of standards - Increased concurrency
- Improved backup and recovery services
Disadvantages of DBMS
- Complexity, Size, Cost of DBMSs, Additional H/W costs
- Cost of conversion, Performance, Higher impact of a failure
Three-Level Database Architecture
External Level
The users’ view of the database
Conceptual Level
The community view of the database
Internal Level
The physical representation of the database on the computer
Functions of a DBMS
1. Data storage, retrieval, and update
2. A user-accessible catalog
3. Transaction support
4. Concurrency control services
5. Recovery services
6. Authorization services
7. Support for data communication
8. Integrity services
9. Services to promote data independence
10. Utility services
Components of a DBMS
Programmers Users DBA
Application Database
Queries
Programs Schema
DML Query DDL DBMS
preprocessor processor compiler
Program Database Dictionary
object code manager manager
Access File
methods manager
System Database and
buffers system catalog
Components of Database Manager
Authorization
control
Integrity Command Query
checker processor optimizer
Transaction
Scheduler
manager
Data
Buffer Recovery
Manager
manager manager
History of RDBMS
History of DBMS
1960s - Apollo moon-landing project, GUAM
mid 1960s - IMS by IBM (hierarchical DBMS)
mid 1960s - IDS by GE (network DBMS)
1965 - CODASYL(Conference on Data SYStems Langua
ge)
1967 -DBTG(Data Base Task Group)
1970 - E.F.Codd of the IBM Research Lab.
Late 1970s - System R project at IBM
1980s - commercial relational DBMS(DB2, Oracle, Infor
mix..)
Now - OODBMS, ORDBMS
Terminology
Relation : a relation is a table with columns and rows
Attribute : an attribute is a named column of a relation
Domain : a domain is the set of allowable values for on
e or more attributes
Tuple : a tuple is a row of a relation
Degree : the degree of a relation is the number of attri
butes it contrains
Cardinality : the cardinality of a relation is the number
of tuples it contains
Relational database : a collection of normalized relatio
n
Properties of Relations
The relation has a name that is distinct from all other r
elation names
Each cell of the relation contains exactly on atomic val
ue
Each attribute has a distinct name
The values of an attribute are all from the same domain
The order of attributes has no significance
Each tuple is distinct; there are no duplicate tuples
The order of tuples has no significance, theoretically
When is a DBMS Relational?
Foundational rules
Rule 0 : Foundational rule Rule 12 : Nonsubversion rule
Structural rules
Rule 1 : Information representation Rule 6 : View updateing
Integrity rules
Rule 3 : Systematic treatment of null values Rule 10 : Integrity independance
Data manipulation rules
Rule2 : Guaranteed access Rule 4 : Dynamic online catalog based on the
relational model
Rule5 : Comprehensive data sublanguage Rule7 : High-level insert, update, delete
Data independence rules
Rule8 : Physical data independence Rule 9 : Logical data independence
Rule11 : Distribution independence
Entity-Relationship Modeling
Concepts of the E-R Modeling
Entity Types
An object or concept that is identified by the enterprise as having an
independent existence
Attributes
A property of an entity or a relationship type
Relationship Types
A meaningful association among entity types
Normalization
A technique for producing a set of relations with desirable
properties, given the data requirements of an enterprise
UNF is a table that contains one or more repeating groups
1NF is a relation in which the intersection of each row and column contains one
and only one value
2NF is a relation that is in 1NF and every non-primary-key attribute is fully
functionally dependent on the primary key.
3NF is a relation that is in 1NF, 2NF in which no non-primary-key attribute is
transitively dependent on the primary key
BCNF is a relation in which every determinant is a candidate key
4NF is a relation that is in BCNF and contains no trivial multi-valued
dependency
5NF is a relation that contains no join dependency
Conceptual Database Design
The process of constructing a model of the informatio
n used in an enterprise, independent of all physical co
nsiderations
Logical Database Design
The process of constructing a model of the informatio
n used in an enterprise based on a specific data model
, but independent of a particular DBMS and other physi
cal considerations.
Physical Database Design
The process of producing a description of the impleme
ntation of the database on secondary storage; it descri
bes the storage structures and access methods used t
o archieve efficient access to the data
Database Language
SQL
1974 - SEQUEL by D.Chamberlin (IBM)
1975 - SQUARE by Boyce (System R project)
1976 - SEQUEL/2 (SQL) by Chamberlin and Boyce)
late 1970 - SQL(Oracle), QUEL(Ingres)
1982 - Relational Database Language(RDL) : ANSI
1987 - ISO standard
1989 - Integrity Enhancement Feature (ISO)
1992 - SQL2(SQL92) : ISO
DML
SELECT
INSERT
UPDATE
DELETE
DDL
CREATE(DROP) SCHEMA
CREATE(ALTER, DROP) DOMAIN
CREATE(ALTER, DROP) TABLE
CREATE(DROP) VIEW
CREATE(DROP) INDEX
Advanced SQL
View
Integrity Enhancement Feature
Primary key
Unique
Foreign key
Access Control
Embedded SQL
Host Language Variables
Application Programming Interface
Dynamic SQL
Part 2. Understanding Oracle Database
Overview of oracle Database Architecture
Memory Structure
Process Structure
Storage Structure
New Features
Overview of Oracle Architecture
PMON SMON RECO D000 S000 P000 * Total SGA Size :
1700 Mbyte
* Fixed Size :
Redo Log
SGA Buffer
70 Kbyte
Shared SQL Area Database Buffer Cashe
* Variavle Size :
490 MByte
TL-812
4,000,000 KByte 1,200,000 KByte 2,100 KByte
DBW0 CKPT LGWR
Server
Data File
Raw Device ARCH
USER
Archive Log Mode(50M)
Memory Structure : Shared Pool
Shared Pool Shared Pool Contents
- Text of the SQL or PL/SQL statement
Library Cache Dictionary
Cache - Parsed form of the SQL or PL/SQL statement
- Execution plan for the SQL or PL/SQL
Shared
statements
SQL Area
- Data dictionary cache containing rows of data
dictionary information
Control Structures
for example: Library Cache
PL/SQL Procedures
Character Set - shared SQL area
and Package Conversion - private SQL area
Memory
Network Security - PL/SQL procedures and package
Attributes
Control Structures - control structures : lock and library cache handles
for examples; and so on ..
Dictionary Cache
Locks
Library - names of all tables and views in the database
Cache handles Reusable
and so on ... Runtime - names and datatypes of columns in database tables
Memory - privileges of all Oracle users
SHARED_POOL_SIZE
Memory Structure :Database Buffer
Cache
Database Buffer Cache holds copies of data blocks read from disk
All users concurrently connected to the system share access to the buffer cache
Dirty List
LRU List
Size = DB_BLOCK_SIZE * DB_BLOCK_BUFFERS
SGA Database Buffer Cache
Shared Pool
Shared SQL
Area
Memory Structure :Redo Log Buffer
Circular buffer containing information about changes made to the database
save it redo entry
Redo Entries is used when Database Recovery
DBWR write contents of Redo Log Buffer to Online Redo Log
LOG_BUFFER
change vector #1
redo record
change vector #1
change vector #1
Oracle Processes
SNPn SMON PMON RECO LCK0
Pnnn
SGA
Database Buffer Cache Redo Log
Buffer
Offline
Storage
Device
Dedicated
Snnn Server
Process
DBWR LGWR ARCH
Dnnn
User
Process CKPT
Control
Files
Users Redo Log
Data Files
Files
Background Process
DBWR (Database Writer)
- write all dirty buffers to datafiles
- Use a LRU algorithm to keep most recently used blocks in memory
- Defers write for I/O optimization
dirty list reaches a threshold length
A process scnas a specifed number of buffer in the LRU without finding free buffer
A time-out occurs
DBWR checkpoint occurs
LGWR (Log Writer)
- writes redo log entries to disk
Commit occurs
The redo log buffers pool becomes one-third full
DBWR completes cleaning the buffer blocks at a checkpoint
LGWR time-out
- A commit confirmation is not issued until the tx has been recorded in the rego
log file
Cont’d
PMON (Process Monitor)
- Cleans up abnormally terminated connection
- Rolls back uncommited transactions
- Releases locks held by a terminated process
- Frees SGA resources allocated to the failed processes
- Database maintenance
SMON (System Monitor)
- Performs automatic instance recovery
- Reclaims space used by temporary segments no longer in use
- Merges contiguous area of free space in the datafile
Cont’d
CKPT (Check Point)
- is enabled by setting the parameter CHECKPOINT_PROCESS=TRUE
- If enabled, take over LGWR’s task of updating files at a checkpoint
- Updates header of datafiles and control files at the end of checkpoint
- More frequent checkpoint reduce recovery time from instance failure
- CKPT improve the performance of database with many database files
ARCH (Archiver)
- Copies redo log files to tape or disk for media failure
- Operates only when a log switch occurs
- Is optional and is only needed when in ARCHIVELOG mode
- May write to a tape drive or to a disk
LCKn (Lock), Dnnn (Dispatcher), Snnn (Server),
RECO (Recover), Pnnn(Parallel), SNPn(Job Queue),
QMNn(Queue Monitor),
Server/User Process
User Processes
- A user process is used when a user runs an application program
- Runs the tool/application and is considered the client
- Passes SQL to the server process and receives the results
Server Processes
- A server process must place the data in the database buffer cache
- Parce and execute SQL statements
- Read data blocks from disk into the shred database buffers of the SGA
- Return the results of SQL statements to the user process
Parse : check syntax, security access, object resolution, optimization
Execute : applies the parse tree to the data, perform a physical read and cha
nge
Fetch : Passes data to the user (only SELECT)
Oracle Files
Datafile
Redo Log Files
Control Files
Parameter File
Archive File
Log File (alert*.log, sqlnet.log, listener.log...)
Trace File
Storage Architecture
Physical storage structures
Data files
Segments
Extents
Blocks
Logical storage structures
Tablespaces
Tables / Clusters / Indexes
Rows
Columns
Physical Storage Architecture
Relationship among Segments, Extents, and Blocks
Segment
96K
Extent Extent
24K 72K 2K
2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
2K 2K 2K 2K
Database Blocks
Logical Storage Architecture
Relationship between tablespaces and datafiles
Database
System Tablespace USER Tablespace
DATA1.ORA DATA2.ORA
DATA3.ORA
Cont’d
Objects stored in tablespaces
Tablespace (one or more datafiles)
Table Table INDEX
INDEX INDEX INDEX INDEX
INDEX INDEX
INDEX Table
INDEX INDEX
Database Files Objects
(Physical structures associated (stored in tablespace may
with only one tablespace) span serveral datafiles)
Block
Header General Block Information
Table Dictionary
(Block add, Segment type)
Row Dictionary
85 ~ 100 bytes
Free Space Table info in Cluster
Row info in Block
(2 byte per row)
Row Data
using when New Row
Insert or Update
(pctfree, pctused)
Table or Index Data
PCTFREE / PCTUSED
PCTFREE
PCTFREE PCTUSED
PCTUSED
20% Free space
61% Free space
PCTFREE = 20 PCTUSED = 40
Insert new row until 80% Can insert new row when below 60%
When Usage is below 40% (61% Free
20% use when Update space), block is listed in FREELIST
Extent
A set of contiguous database blocks within a datafile.
Extent are allocated when.
- The segment is created (INITIAL EXTENT)
- The segments grows (NEXT EXTENT)
- The table is altered to allocate extents.
Extent are de-allocated when the
- The segment is dropped and truncated.
- The segment is larger than optimal and contains free extents
(for rollback segments only)
Each segment is created with at least on extend( initial extent )
( Rollback segment : 2)
ALTER TABLE table_name DEALLOCATE UNUSED
Segment
a set of one or more extents that contains all the data for a specific type of logical storage structu
re within a tablespace
Data Segment
- A collection of extents that holds all of the data for a table or a cluster
Index Segment
- A collection of extents that holds all of the index data for search optimization on large tables a
nd clusters
Rollback Segment
- A collection of extents that holds rollback data for rollback, read-consistency, or recovery
Temporary segment
- A collection of extents that holds data belonging to temporary tables created during a sort oper
ation
Bootstrap segment
- An extent that contains dictionary definitions for dictionary tables to be loaded when the datab
ase is opened.
Oracle8 New Feature
VLDB, Warehouse OLTP
Parallel DML Advanced Queuing
Parallel Index Scans XA rewrite
Star Query Optimization Memory reduction
Partitioning Serially reusable memory
Parallel Backup/Recovery New OCI Interface
Incremental Backup Improve Function Performance
Point-in-time Recovery
Objects Network Computing
Object Relational Database Simple User Integration
Object Type Simple Maintenance
Object View Simple Development
Oracle8i New Features
Data Warehousing OLTP
Summary management Publish and subscribe capabilities
Analytic function Database event trigger
Hash and Composite Paritioning Single table hash cluster
Resource Management Object type column in partition table
Transportable tablespace Partitioned index-organized table
Functional index, virtual column Stable optimizer execution plans
Application Development Security
Oracle Jserver, VM in Database Virtual Private Database
Java stored procedure, function.. LDAP integration
SQLJ: embedded SQL in Java N-tier authentication/authorization
WebDB SSL and X.509v3, RAIDUS support
Data encrypt, decrypt
Oracle 9i - The eBusiness Platform
Oracle9i continues Oracle8i's focus on the Internet by providing a series of specifi
c capabilities and product bundles targeted at eBusiness environments. In addition,
Oracle9i continues to add features and capabilities that extends existing investmen
t in mission-critical infrastructure. Oracle9i has been designed with focus on certai
n key development areas.
Key Infrastructure Area Key Application Area
Availability Internet Contents Management
Scalability and Performance B2B and B2C eBusiness
Security Packaged Application
Development Platform Business Intelligence
Manageability
Windows2000 Integration
Oracle Client/Server Architecture
NETWORK
Client Server b
Application
Client/Server Server/Server
Server A
Benefit of Client/Server Component
- Database S/W work on Server - Only Server upgrade to increase size
- Minimize network resource - Minimize Client H/W spec
- concurrency, consistency, transparency - concurrency, consistency, transparency
SQL*Net
What is SQL*Net?
- Oracle’s Client/Server middleware product
- transparent connection from client tool to DB ( from on DB to another )
- works across multiple network protocol and operation system
What is TNS?
- Transparent Network Substrate
- Oracle’s Network applications to access the underlying network protocols transparently
- TNS-based application, Oracle Protocol Adapters, Network software like TCP/IP
Configuration File
- TNSNAME.ORA ( Client )
- TNSNAV.ORA ( Client )
- SQLNET.ORA ( Client, Server )
- LISTENER.ORA ( Server )
SQL*Net Configuration
TNSNAME.ORA LISTENER.ORA
info = LISTENER=
(DESCRIPTION= (ADDRESS_LIST=
(ADDRESS_LIST=
(ADDRESS=
(ADDRESS=
(PROTOCOL=tcp)
(PROTOCOL=tcp)
(HOST=brinfoa01) (HOST=brinfoa01)
(PORT=1521) (PORT=1521)
) )
) )
(CONNECT_DATA= SID_LIST_LISTENER=
(SID=BRBINFO1) (SID_LIST=
) (SID_DESC=
) (SID_NAME=BRBINFO1)
(ORACLE_HOME=/oracle7/oracle7)
(ENVS='EPC_DISABLED=TRUE')
)
SQLNET.ORA )
STARTUP_WAIT_TIME_LISTENER=0
# SQLNET.EXPIRE_TIME = 0 CONNECT_TIMEOUT_LISTENER=0
SQLNET.AUTHENTICATION_S LOG_DIRECTORY_LISTENER=/oracle7/oracle7/network/log
ERVICES=(none, beq) LOG_FILE_LISTENER=listener
TRACE_LEVEL_LISTENER=OFF
Net8
Networking Challenge
Support large mission-critical
client/server, and provide migration
path towards distributed object
architecture
Net8 Focus
1. Scalability : Connection Pooling, Multiplexing(Connection Manager)
2. Manageability : Configuration-free installation option,
Centralized client administration, Automated client configuration
3. Security : Oracle Security Server
ODBC / oo4o / JDBC
ODBC (Open Database Connectivity )
- Provide a way for client program (eg VB, Excel, Access) to access database
- is a standardized API, developed according to the specification of the SQL
Access Group, than allows one to connect to SQL database
oo4o (Oracle Object for OLE)
- a middleware product manufactured by Oracle that allows native access to Oracle7
databases from client applications via the Microsoft OLE standard
- OLE 2.0 Automation Server, Oracle Data Control, Two C++ Class Library
JDBC (Java Database Connectivity )
- a set of classes and interfaces written in Java to allow other Java programs to send
SQL statements to a relational database management system
- JDBC Thin for Java applets, JDBC OCI for Java application