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Relational Data Model and ER/EER-to-Relational Mapping

This document discusses the relational data model and mapping from ER/EER diagrams to relational schemas. It begins by covering basic concepts of the relational model including relations, relation schemas, tuples, domains, and integrity constraints. It then discusses key constraints, entity integrity, referential integrity and other constraint types. Finally it covers update operations and mapping from ER/EER diagrams to relational schemas.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
156 views

Relational Data Model and ER/EER-to-Relational Mapping

This document discusses the relational data model and mapping from ER/EER diagrams to relational schemas. It begins by covering basic concepts of the relational model including relations, relation schemas, tuples, domains, and integrity constraints. It then discusses key constraints, entity integrity, referential integrity and other constraint types. Finally it covers update operations and mapping from ER/EER diagrams to relational schemas.

Uploaded by

Thạnh Hồ
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 85

Relational Data Model and

ER/EER-to-Relational Mapping
Chapter 4
Contents

1 Relational Data Model


2 Main Phases of Database Design
3 ER-/EER-to-Relational Mapping

2
Contents

1 Relational Data Model


2 Main Phases of Database Design
3 ER-/EER-to-Relational Mapping

3
Relational Data Model
 Basic Concepts: relational data model, relation schema,
domain, tuple, cardinality & degree, database schema,
etc.
 Relational Integrity Constraints
 key, primary key & foreign key
 entity integrity constraint
 referential integrity
 Update Operations on Relations

4
Basic Concepts
 The relational model of data is based on the concept of
a relation
 A relation is a mathematical concept based on the
ideas of sets
 The model was first proposed by Dr. E.F. Codd of IBM in
1970 in the following paper:
"A Relational Model for Large Shared Data Banks,"
Communications of the ACM, June 1970

5
Basic Concepts
 Relational data model: represents a database in the
form of relations - 2-dimensional table with rows and
columns of data. A database may contain one or more
such tables. A relation schema is used to describe a
relation
 Relation schema: R(A1, A2,…, An) is made up of a
relation name R and a list of attributes A1, A2, . . ., An.
Each attribute Ai is the name of a role played by some
domain D in the relation schema R. R is called the
name of this relation

6
Basic Concepts
 The degree of a relation is the number of attributes n
of its relation schema.
 Domain D: D is called the domain of Ai and is denoted
by dom(Ai). It is a set of atomic values and a set of
integrity constraints
 STUDENT(Name, SSN, HomePhone, Address, OfficePhone,
Age, GPA)
 Degree = ??
 dom(GPA) = ??

7
Basic Concepts
 Tuple: row/record in table
 Cardinality: number of tuples in a table
 Database schema S = {R1, R2,…, Rm}

8
Basic Concepts
 A relation r (or relation state, relation instance) of
the relation schema R(A1, A2, . . ., An), also denoted by
r(R), is a set of n-tuples r = {t1, t2, . . ., tm}.
 Each n-tuple t is an ordered list of n values t = <v1, v2, . . .,
vn>, where each value vi, i=1..n, is an element of dom(Ai)
or is a special null value. The ith value in tuple t, which
corresponds to the attribute Ai, is referred to as t[Ai]

9
Basic Concepts

Relational data model


Database schema
Relation schema
Relation
Tuple
Attribute

10
Basic Concepts
 A relation can be conveniently represented by a table,
as the example shows
 The columns of the tabular relation represent
attributes
 Each attribute has a distinct name, and is always
referenced by that name, never by its position
 Each row of the table represents a tuple. The ordering
of the tuples is immaterial and all tuples must be
distinct

11
Basic Concepts

12
Alternative Terminology for Relational Model
Formal Terms Informal Terms

Relation Table
Attribute Column Header
Domain All possible Column Values

Tuple Row
Schema of a Relation Table Definition
State of the Relation Populated Table

13
Relational Integrity Constraints
 Constraints are conditions that must hold on all valid
relation instances. There are three main types of
constraints:
 Key constraints
 Entity integrity constraints
 Referential integrity constraints
 But …

14
Relational Integrity Constraints
 Null value
 Represents value for an attribute that is currently
unknown or inapplicable for tuple
 Deals with incomplete or exceptional data
 Represents the absence of a value and is not the same as
zero or spaces, which are values

15
Relational Integrity Constraints -
Key Constraints
 Superkey of R: A set of attributes SK of R such that no
two tuples in any valid relation instance r(R) will have
the same value for SK. That is, for any distinct tuples t1
and t2 in r(R), t1[SK]  t2[SK]
 Key of R: A "minimal" superkey; that is, a superkey K
such that removal of any attribute from K results in a
set of attributes that is not a superkey

16
Relational Integrity Constraints -
Key Constraints
Example: The CAR relation schema:
CAR(State, Reg#, SerialNo, Make, Model, Year) has two keys
Key1 = {State, Reg#}
Key2 = {SerialNo}, which are also superkeys. {SerialNo, Make}
is a superkey but not a key
 If a relation has several candidate keys, one is chosen
arbitrarily to be the primary key. The primary key
attributes are underlined.

17
Relational Integrity Constraints -
Key Constraints
 The CAR relation, with two candidate keys:
License_Number and Engine_Serial_Number

18
Relational Integrity Constraints -
Entity Integrity
 Relational Database Schema: A set S of relation
schemas that belong to the same database. S is the
name of the database: S = {R1, R2, ..., Rn}
 Entity Integrity: primary key attributes PK of each
relation schema R in S cannot have null values in any
tuple of r(R) because primary key values are used to
identify the individual tuples: t[PK]  null for any tuple
t in r(R)
 Note: Other attributes of R may be similarly constrained
to disallow null values, even though they are not
members of the primary key

19
Relational Integrity Constraints - Referential
Integrity
 A constraint involving two relations (the previous
constraints involve a single relation)
 Used to specify a relationship among tuples in two
relations: the referencing relation and the referenced
relation
 Tuples in the referencing relation R1 have attributes FK
(called foreign key attributes) that reference the primary
key attributes PK of the referenced relation R2. A tuple t1 in
R1 is said to reference a tuple t2 in R2 if t1[FK] = t2[PK]
 A referential integrity constraint can be displayed in a
relational database schema as a directed arc from R1.FK to
R2

20
Relational Integrity Constraints -
Referential Integrity

21
Relational Integrity Constraints -
Referential Integrity
 The value in the foreign key column (or columns) FK of
the referencing relation R1 can be either:
 (1) a value of an existing primary key value of the
corresponding primary key PK in the referenced relation
R2, or
 (2) a NULL
 In case (2), the FK in R1 should not be a part of its own
primary key

22
Referential integrity constraints displayed on
the COMPANY relational database schema

23
Relational Integrity Constraints -
Other Types of Constraints
 Semantic Integrity Constraints:
 based on application semantics and cannot be expressed
by the model per se
 E.g., “the max. no. of hours per employee for all projects
he or she works on is 56 hrs per week”
 A constraint specification language may have to be used
to express these
 SQL-99 allows triggers and ASSERTIONS to allow for
some of these
 State/static constraints (so far)
 Transition/dynamic constraints: e.g., “the salary of an
employee can only increase”

24
Update Operations on Relations
 INSERT a tuple
 DELETE a tuple
 MODIFY a tuple

 Integrity constraints should not be violated by the


update operations

25
Update Operations on Relations
 Insertion: to insert a new tuple t into a relation R.
When inserting a new tuple, it should make sure that
the database constraints are not violated:
 The value of an attribute should be of the correct data
type (i.e. from the appropriate domain).
 The value of a prime attribute (i.e. the key attribute) must
not be null
 The key value(s) must not be the same as that of an
existing tuple in the same relation
 The value of a foreign key (if any) must refer to an
existing tuple in the corresponding relation
 Options if the constraints are violated: Homework !!
26
Update Operations on Relations
 Deletion: to remove an existing tuple t from a relation
R. When deleting a tuple, the following constraints
must not be violated:
 The tuple must already exist in the database
 The referential integrity constraint is not violated
 Modification: to change values of some attributes of
an existing tuple t in a relation R

27
Update Operations on Relations
 In case of integrity violation, several actions can be
taken:
 Cancel the operation that causes the violation (REJECT
option)
 Perform the operation but inform the user of the
violation
 Trigger additional updates so the violation is corrected
(CASCADE option, SET NULL option)
 Execute a user-specified error-correction routine
 Again, homework !!

28
Contents

1 Relational Data Model


2 Main Phases of Database Design
3 ER-/EER-to-Relational Mapping

29
Main Phases of Database Design
 Three main phases
 Conceptual database design
 Logical database design
 Physical database design

30
Overview of Database Miniworld
Design Process
REQUIREMENTS - COLLECTION & ANALYSIS

Functional requirements Data requirements


DBMS–independent

FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS
CONCEPTUAL DESIGN

High-level transaction Conceptual schema


specification
LOGICAL DESIGN
(DATA MODEL MAPPING)
DBMS–specific

APPLICATION PROGRAM Database schema


DESIGN
PHYSICAL DESIGN

TRANSACTION
Internal schema
IMPLEMENTATION

Application program
31
Application Design Database Design
Overview of Database Miniworld
Design Process
REQUIREMENTS - COLLECTION & ANALYSIS

• Create a database Data requirements

DBMS–independent
schema in CONCEPTUAL DESIGN
implementation data
Conceptual schema
model of a commercial
DBMS LOGICAL DESIGN
• Data model mapping (DATA MODEL MAPPING)

DBMS–specific
is often automated or Database schema
semi-automated within
the database design PHYSICAL DESIGN
tool.
Internal schema

32
Database Design
Main Phases of Database Design
 Logical database design
 The process of constructing a model of the data used in
an enterprise based on a specific data model (e.g.
relational), but independent of a particular DBMS and
other physical considerations
 ER- & EER-to-Relational Mapping
 Normalization

33
Entity-Relationship
Diagram (ERD) for
COMPANY Database
34
Result of mapping the ERD into a relational schema

35
Contents

1 Relational Data Model


2 Main Phases of Database Design
3 ER-/EER-to-Relational Mapping

36
ER- & EER-to-Relational Mapping
 ER-
 Step 1: Mapping of Regular Entity Types
 Step 2: Mapping of Weak Entity Types
 Step 3: Mapping of Binary 1:1 Relationship Types
 Step 4: Mapping of Binary 1:N Relationship Types
 Step 5: Mapping of Binary M:N Relationship Types
 Step 6: Mapping of Multivalued attributes
 Step 7: Mapping of N-ary Relationship Types
 EER-
 Step 8: Options for Mapping Specialization or
Generalization.
 Step 9: Mapping of Union Types (Categories)

37
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Step 1: Mapping of Regular (strong) Entity Types
 Entity --> Relation
 Attribute of entity --> Attribute of relation
 Primary key of entity --> Primary key of relation
 Example: We create the relations EMPLOYEE,
DEPARTMENT, and PROJECT in the relational schema
corresponding to the regular entities in the ER diagram.
SSN, DNUMBER, and PNUMBER are the primary keys for
the relations EMPLOYEE, DEPARTMENT, and PROJECT as
shown

38
39
Step 1: Mapping of Regular (strong) Entity Types

40
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Step 2: Mapping of Weak Entity Types
 For each weak entity type W in the ER schema with owner entity
type E, create a relation R and include all simple attributes (or simple
components of composite attributes) of W as attributes of R
 In addition, include as foreign key attributes of R the primary key
attribute(s) of the relation(s) that correspond to the owner entity
type(s)
 The primary key of R is the combination of the primary key(s) of the
owner(s) and the partial key of the weak entity type W, if any
 Example: Create the relation DEPENDENT in this step to correspond
to the weak entity type DEPENDENT. Include the primary key SSN of
the EMPLOYEE relation as a foreign key attribute of DEPENDENT
(renamed to ESSN)
The primary key of the DEPENDENT relation is the combination
{ESSN, DEPENDENT_NAME} because DEPENDENT_NAME is the
partial key of DEPENDENT
 Note: CASCADE option as implemented

41
Owner’s PK

PK
Weak Entity Type
Partial key

42
Step 2: Mapping of Weak Entity Types

43
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 ER-
 Step 1: Mapping of Regular Entity Types
 Step 2: Mapping of Weak Entity Types
 Step 3: Mapping of Binary 1:1 Relationship Types
 Step 4: Mapping of Binary 1:N Relationship Types
 Step 5: Mapping of Binary M:N Relationship Types
 Step 6: Mapping of Multivalued attributes
 Step 7: Mapping of N-ary Relationship Types
 Transformation of binary relationships - depends on
functionality of relationship and membership class of
participating entity types

44
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Mandatory membership class
 For two entity types E1 and E2: If E2 is a mandatory
member of an N:1 (or 1:1) relationship with E1, then the
relation for E2 will include the prime attributes of E1 as a
foreign key to represent the relationship
 1:1 relationship: If the membership class for E1 and E2 are
both mandatory, a foreign key can be used in either
relation
 N:1 relationship: If the membership class of E2, which is at
the N-side of the relationship, is optional (i.e. partial), then
the above guideline is not applicable

45
ER-to-Relational Mapping

DEPARTMENT OFFER MODULE


1 N

 Assume every module must be offered by a department,


then the entity type MODULE is a mandatory member of
the relationship OFFER. The relation for MODULE is:

MODULE(MDL-NUMBER, TITLE, TERM, ..., DNAME)

46
47
Step 3-4: Mapping of Relationship Types
(Mandatory)

48
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Optional membership classes
 If entity type E2 is an optional member of the N:1
relationship with entity type E1 (i.e. E2 is at the N-side of
the relationship), then the relationship is usually
represented by a new relation containing the prime
attributes of E1 and E2, together with any attributes of
the relationship. The key of the entity type at the N-side
(i.e. E2) will become the key of the new relation
 If both entity types in a 1:1 relationship have the optional
membership, a new relation is created which contains the
prime attributes of both entity types, together with any
attributes of the relationship. The prime attribute(s) of
either entity type will be the key of the new relation

49
ER-to-Relational Mapping
1 N
BORROWER ON_LOAN BOOK

 One possible representation of the relationship:


BORROWER(BNUMBER, NAME, ADDRESS, ...)
BOOK(ISBN, TITLE, ..., BNUMBER)
 A better alternative:
BORROWER(BNUMBER, NAME, ADDRESS, ...)
BOOK(ISBN, TITLE, ...)
ON_LOAN(ISBN, BNUMBER)
51
Step 3-4: Mapping of Relationship Types
(Optional)

52
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 N:M binary relationships:
 An N:M relationship is always represented by a new
relation which consists of the prime attributes of both
participating entity types together with any attributes of
the relationship
 The combination of the prime attributes will form the
primary key of the new relation

 Example: ENROL is an M:N relationship between


STUDENT and MODULE. To represent the relationship,
we have a new relation:
ENROL(SNUMBER, MDL-NUMBER, DATE)

53
54
Step 5: Mapping M:N Relationship Types

55
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Transformation of recursive/involuted relationships
 Relationship among different instances of the same entity
 The name(s) of the prime attribute(s) needs to be changed to reflect the
role each entity plays in the relationship

PERSON MARRY
M
1
PART COMPRISE

N
N

EMPLOYEE SUPERVISE

1
56
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Example 1: 1:1 involuted relationship, in which the
memberships for both entities are optional

PERSON(ID, NAME, ADDRESS, ...)


MARRY(HUSBAND-ID, WIFE_ID, DATE_OF_MARRIAGE)

57
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Example 2: 1:M involuted relationship
 If the relationship is mandatory or almost mandatory:
EMPLOYEE(ID, ENAME, ..., SUPERVISOR_ID)
 If the relationship is optional:
EMPLOYEE(ID, ENAME, ...)
SUPERVISE(ID, START_DATE, ..., SUPERVISOR_ID)

 Example 3: N:M involuted relationship


PART(PNUMBER, DESCRIPTION, ...)
COMPRISE( MAJOR-PNUMBER, MINOR-PNUMBER, QUANTITY)

58
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 ER-
 Step 1: Mapping of Regular Entity Types
 Step 2: Mapping of Weak Entity Types
 Step 3: Mapping of Binary 1:1 Relationship Types
 Step 4: Mapping of Binary 1:N Relationship Types
 Step 5: Mapping of Binary M:N Relationship Types
 Step 6: Mapping of Multivalued attributes
 Step 7: Mapping of N-ary Relationship Types

59
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Step 6: Mapping of Multivalued attributes
 For each multivalued attribute A, create a new relation R.
This relation R will include an attribute corresponding to
A, plus the primary key attribute K-as a foreign key in R-
of the relation that represents the entity type or
relationship type that has A as an attribute
 The primary key of R is the combination of A and K. If the
multivalued attribute is composite, we include its simple
components
Example: The relation DEPT_LOCATIONS is created. The attribute
DLOCATION represents the multivalued attribute LOCATIONS of
DEPARTMENT, while DNUMBER-as foreign key-represents the
primary key of the DEPARTMENT relation. The primary key of R is
the combination of {DNUMBER, DLOCATION}

60
61
Result of mapping the COMPANY ER schema into a relational
schema

62
ER-to-Relational Mapping
 Step 7: Mapping of N-ary Relationship Types
 For each n-ary relationship type R, where n>2, create a
new relationship S to represent R
 Include as foreign key attributes in S the primary keys of
the relations that represent the participating entity types
 Also include any simple attributes of the n-ary
relationship type (or simple components of composite
attributes) as attributes of S
Example: The relationship type SUPPY in the ER below.
This can be mapped to the relation SUPPLY shown in the
relational schema, whose primary key is the combination
of the three foreign keys {SNAME, PARTNO, PROJNAME}

63
ER-to-Relational Mapping
Ternary relationship types: The SUPPLY relationship

N
N
N

Note: if the cardinality


constraint on any of the
entity types E participating
in the relationship is 1, the
PK should not include the
FK attributes that
reference the relation E’
corresponding to E

64
ER-to-Relational Mapping
Correspondence between ER and Relational Models

ER Model Relational Model


Entity type “Entity” relation
1:1 or 1:N relationship type Foreign key (or “relationship” relation)
M:N relationship type “Relationship” relation & 2 foreign keys
n-ary relationship type “Relationship” relation & n foreign keys
Simple attribute Attribute
Composite attribute Set of simple component attributes
Multivalued attribute Relation and foreign key
Value set Domain
Key attribute Primary (or secondary) key

65
ER- & EER-to-Relational Mapping
 ER-
 Step 1: Mapping of Regular Entity Types
 Step 2: Mapping of Weak Entity Types
 Step 3: Mapping of Binary 1:1 Relationship Types
 Step 4: Mapping of Binary 1:N Relationship Types
 Step 5: Mapping of Binary M:N Relationship Types
 Step 6: Mapping of Multivalued attributes
 Step 7: Mapping of N-ary Relationship Types
 EER-
 Step 8: Options for Mapping Specialization or
Generalization.
 Step 9: Mapping of Union Types (Categories)

66
EER-to-Relational Mapping
 Step8: Options for Mapping Specialization or
Generalization.
Convert each specialization with m subclasses {S1,
S2,….,Sm} and generalized superclass C, where the
attributes of C are {k,a1,…an} and k is the (primary)
key, into relational schemas using one of the four
following options:
 Option 8A: Multiple relations-Superclass and subclasses
 Option 8B: Multiple relations-Subclass relations only
 Option 8C: Single relation with one type attribute
 Option 8D: Single relation with multiple type attributes

67
67
EER-to-Relational Mapping
 Option 8A: Multiple relations-Superclass and
subclasses
Create a relation L for C with attributes Attrs(L) = {k,a1,…an} and
PK(L) = k. Create a relation Li for each subclass Si, 1 < i < m, with
the attributesAttrs(Li) = {k} U {attributes of Si} and PK(Li)=k. This
option works for any specialization (total or partial, disjoint or
over-lapping).
 Option 8B: Multiple relations-Subclass relations only
Create a relation Li for each subclass Si, 1 < i < m, with the
attributes Attr(Li) = {attributes of Si} U {k,a1…,an} and PK(Li) = k.
This option only works for a specialization whose subclasses are
total (every entity in the superclass must belong to (at least) one
of the subclasses).

68
Example:
Option 8A

69
Example:
Option 8B

Tonnage
70
EER-to-Relational Mapping

 Option 8C: Single relation with one type attribute


Create a single relation L with attributes Attrs(L) = {k,a1,…an} U
{attributes of S1} U…U {attributes of Sm} U {t} and PK(L) = k. The
attribute t is called a type (or discriminating) attribute that
indicates the subclass to which each tuple belongs
 Option 8D: Single relation with multiple type attributes
Create a single relation schema L with attributes Attrs(L) =
{k,a1,…an} U {attributes of S1} U…U {attributes of Sm} U {t1, t2,…,tm}
and PK(L) = k. Each ti, 1 < I < m, is a Boolean type attribute
indicating whether a tuple belongs to the subclass Si.

71
Example:
Option 8C

EngType

72
Example:
Option 8D

73
EER-to-Relational Mapping
 Mapping of Shared Subclasses (Multiple Inheritance)
 A shared subclass, such as STUDENT_ASSISTANT, is a subclass
of several classes, indicating multiple inheritance. These
classes must all have the same key attribute; otherwise, the
shared subclass would be modeled as a category.
 We can apply any of the options discussed in Step 8 to a shared
subclass, subject to the restriction discussed in Step 8 of the
mapping algorithm. Below both 8C and 8D are used for the
shared class STUDENT_ASSISTANT.

74
75
Example: Mapping of Shared Subclasses

76
EER-to-Relational Mapping
 Step 9: Mapping of Union Types (Categories).
 For mapping a category whose defining superclass have
different keys, it is customary to specify a new key
attribute, called a surrogate key, when creating a relation
to correspond to the category.
 In the example below we can create a relation OWNER to
correspond to the OWNER category and include any
attributes of the category in this relation. The primary
key of the OWNER relation is the surrogate key, which we
called OwnerId.

77
Example: Mapping of Union Types

78
Contents

1 Relational Data Model


2 Main Phases of Database Design
3 ER-/EER-to-Relational Mapping

79
80
Exercise 1
A5
A2 A3 A4 A7

A1
1 1 A6
E1 R1 E2 A8

n
1
A16
A18 A19
R4 R2

A15
A1
A17
n 1

n n
E4 R3 E3

A1
A12

A13 A14 A9 A11


A10

81
Exercise 2

82
Exercise 3

83
Exercise 3

d
O

84
85
Exercise 4

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