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Intro To DBMS

This document discusses key concepts in database systems including: 1) A DBMS is software that stores and manages large collections of data by providing data independence, concurrency control, recovery from crashes and more. 2) Data models like the relational model are used to describe data through concepts like relations, attributes and schemas. 3) Transaction management ensures atomicity and consistency when concurrent transactions are executed through techniques like locking and logging. 4) A DBMS typically has a layered architecture including query processing, storage management and more to provide these critical services.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
109 views17 pages

Intro To DBMS

This document discusses key concepts in database systems including: 1) A DBMS is software that stores and manages large collections of data by providing data independence, concurrency control, recovery from crashes and more. 2) Data models like the relational model are used to describe data through concepts like relations, attributes and schemas. 3) Transaction management ensures atomicity and consistency when concurrent transactions are executed through techniques like locking and logging. 4) A DBMS typically has a layered architecture including query processing, storage management and more to provide these critical services.

Uploaded by

Abhishek Mathur
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CS662- Database Systems

Sang H. Son [email protected]


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What is DBMS?

Need for information management A very large, integrated collection of data. Models real-world enterprise.

Entities (e.g., students, courses) Relationships (e.g., John is taking CS662)

A Database Management System (DBMS) is a software package designed to store and manage databases.
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Why Use a DBMS?

Data independence and efficient access. Data integrity and security. Uniform data administration. Concurrent access, recovery from crashes. Replication control Reduced application development time.

Why Study Databases??

Shift from computation to information


at the low end: access to physical world at the high end: scientific applications Digital libraries, interactive video, Human Genome project, e-commerce, sensor networks ... need for DBMS/data services exploding OS, languages, theory, AI, multimedia, logic
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Datasets increasing in diversity and volume.


DBMS encompasses several areas of CS

Data Models

A data model is a collection of concepts for describing data. A schema is a description of a particular collection of data, using the a given data model. The relational model of data is the most widely used model today.

Main concept: relation, basically a table with rows and columns. Every relation has a schema, which describes the columns, or fields.
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Levels of Abstraction

Many views, single conceptual (logical) schema and physical schema.


View 1

View 2

View 3

Views describe how users see the data. Conceptual schema defines logical structure Physical schema describes the files and indexes used.

Conceptual Schema

Physical Schema

* Schemas are defined using DDL; data is modified/queried using DML.


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Example: University Database

Conceptual schema:

Students(sid: string, name: string, login: string, age: integer, gpa:real) Courses(cid: string, cname:string, credits:integer) Enrolled(sid:string, cid:string, grade:string)
Relations stored as unordered files. Index on first column of Students. Course_info(cid:string, enrollment:integer)
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Physical schema:

External Schema (View):

Data Independence

Applications insulated from how data is structured and stored. Logical data independence: Protection from changes in logical structure of data. Physical data independence: Protection from changes in physical structure of data.
* One of the most important benefits of using a DBMS!
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Concurrency Control

Concurrent execution of user programs is essential for good DBMS performance.

Because disk accesses are frequent, and relatively slow, it is important to keep the CPU humming by working on several user programs concurrently.

Interleaving actions of different user programs can lead to inconsistency: e.g., check is cleared while account balance is being computed. DBMS ensures such problems dont arise: users can pretend they are using a single-user system.
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Transaction: An Execution Unit of a DB


Key concept is transaction, which is an atomic sequence of database actions (reads/writes). Each transaction, executed completely, must leave the DB in a consistent state if DB is consistent when the transaction begins.

Users can specify some simple integrity constraints on the data, and the DBMS will enforce these constraints. Beyond this, the DBMS does not really understand the semantics of the data. (e.g., it does not understand how the interest on a bank account is computed). Why not? Thus, ensuring that a transaction (run alone) preserves consistency is ultimately the users responsibility!
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Scheduling Concurrent Transactions

DBMS ensures that execution of {T1, ... , Tn} is equivalent to some serial execution T1 ... Tn.

Before reading/writing an object, a transaction requests a lock on the object, and waits till the DBMS gives it the lock. All locks are released at the end of the transaction. (Strict 2PL locking protocol.) Idea: If an action of Ti (say, writing X) affects Tj (which perhaps reads X), one of them, say Ti, will obtain the lock on X first and Tj is forced to wait until Ti completes; this effectively orders the transactions. What if Tj already has a lock on Y and Ti later requests a lock on Y? What is it called? What will happen?
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Ensuring Atomicity

DBMS ensures atomicity (all-or-nothing property) even if system crashes in the middle of a Xact. Idea: Keep a log (history) of all actions carried out by the DBMS while executing a set of Xacts:

Before a change is made to the database, the corresponding log entry is forced to a safe location. (WAL protocol.) After a crash, the effects of partially executed transactions are undone using the log. (Thanks to WAL, if log entry wasnt saved before the crash, corresponding change was not applied to database!)
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The Log

The following actions are recorded in the log:


Ti writes an object: the old value and the new value.


u

Log record must go to disk before the changed page!

Ti commits/aborts: a log record indicating this action.

Log records chained together by Xact id, so its easy to undo a specific Xact (e.g., to resolve a deadlock). Log is often duplexed and archived on stable storage. All log related activities (and in fact, all CC related activities such as lock/unlock, dealing with deadlocks etc.) are handled transparently by the DBMS.
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Databases make these folks happy ...


End users and DBMS vendors DB application programmers

e.g. webmasters Designs logical /physical schemas Handles security and authorization Data availability, crash recovery Database tuning as needs evolve

Database administrator (DBA)


Must understand how a DBMS works!


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Structure of a DBMS

These layers must consider concurrency control and recovery

A typical DBMS has a Query Optimization layered architecture. and Execution The figure does not Relational Operators show the concurrency Files and Access Methods control and recovery components. Buffer Management This is one of several Disk Space Management possible architectures; each system has its own variations.
DB
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Summary

DBMS used to maintain, query large datasets. Benefits include recovery from system crashes, concurrent access, quick application development, data integrity and security. Levels of abstraction give data independence. A DBMS typically has a layered architecture. DBAs hold responsible jobs and are well-paid! DBMS R&D is one of the broadest, mature areas in CS.
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What to Study in 662?

DBMS basics ER, relational model, SQL, DB design using FD Transaction management atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability concurrency control and recovery Databases/data services for real-time applications scheduling and CC QoS metrics Data services in emerging applications event services, sensor networks, data aggregation, streaming data
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