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Cosc 2206 Internet Tools: Mysql Database System Installation Overview SQL Summary

This document provides an overview and instructions for installing and using a MySQL database system. It discusses a 2-tier and 3-tier database architecture, and provides tutorials and references for SQL. The document summarizes the MySQL installation process and shows how to connect to the database server using the command line client. It provides examples of SQL commands for interacting with databases, tables, and data. Key topics covered include data types, the SHOW, USE, CREATE, SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE commands.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
70 views

Cosc 2206 Internet Tools: Mysql Database System Installation Overview SQL Summary

This document provides an overview and instructions for installing and using a MySQL database system. It discusses a 2-tier and 3-tier database architecture, and provides tutorials and references for SQL. The document summarizes the MySQL installation process and shows how to connect to the database server using the command line client. It provides examples of SQL commands for interacting with databases, tables, and data. Key topics covered include data types, the SHOW, USE, CREATE, SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE commands.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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COSC 2206 Internet Tools

MySQL Database System


Installation Overview
SQL summary
2-Tier Architecture

Web Web
Server
Browser
(Client)
PHP

04/14/10 BGA 2
3-Tier Architecture

Web Web Database


Browser Server PHP
Server
(Client)

04/14/10 BGA 3
SQL links
 Tutorials
 http://www.w3schools.com/sql/

 http://www.sqlzoo.net (part 2)
http://sqlcourse.com
 http://sqlcourse2/com (part 1)
 MySQL online reference manual
 http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/Reference.ht

04/14/10 BGA 4
Installation Summary
 More detailed installation instructions are
given on the CD
 Install MySQL in c:\mysql
 MySQL can be installed as a service
(Win 2000/XP)
 Can make icons on the desktop for starting
and stopping the server.

04/14/10 BGA 5
Command Line
Client
 The standard command line client is
 c:\mysql\bin\mysql.exe
 The command line client can be used to
send commands and SQL queries to
the MySQL server
 There are also GUI clients such as
MyCC

04/14/10 BGA 6
Client-Server Interaction

Make a request
(SQL query)

MySQL Client
Server Get results Program

Client program can be a MySQL command line client,


GUI client, or a program written in any language
such as C, Perl, PHP, Java that has an interface to
the MySQL server.

04/14/10 BGA 7
Connecting to the Server
 Use a command prompt that sets the path to
c:\mysql\bin
 The following command connects to the
server:
 mysql -u root -p
 you are prompted for the root password.
 you can now send comands and SQL statements
to the server

04/14/10 BGA 8
WARNING WARNING

 WARNING
 Always assume that everything is case
sensitive, especially table names.
 This is not the case in Windows XP but it is
the case in Linux

04/14/10 BGA 9
Entering commands (1)
 Show all the databases
 SHOW DATABASES;
mysql> SHOW DATABASES;
+-------------+
| Database |
+-------------+
| bookstore |
| employee_db |
| mysql |
| student_db |
| test |
| web_db |
+-------------+

04/14/10 BGA 10
Entering commands (2)
 Choosing a database and showing its tables
 USE test;
SHOW tables;
mysql> USE test;
Database changed
mysql> SHOW tables;
+----------------+
| Tables_in_test |
+----------------+
| books |
| name2 |
| names |
| test |
+----------------+
4 rows in set (0.00 sec)
mysql>

04/14/10 BGA 11
Entering commands (3)
 Show the structure of a table
 DESCRIBE names;
mysql> DESCRIBE names;
+-----------+-------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra |
+-----------+-------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
| id | int(11) | | PRI | NULL | auto_increment |
| firstName | varchar(20) | | | | |
| lastName | varchar(20) | | | | |
+-----------+-------------+------+-----+---------+----------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)

mysql>

04/14/10 BGA 12
Entering commands (4)
 Show the rows of a table (all columns)
 SELECT * FROM names;
mysql> SELECT * FROM names;
+----+-----------+------------+
| id | firstName | lastName |
+----+-----------+------------+
| 1 | Fred | Flintstone |
| 2 | Barney | Rubble |
+----+-----------+------------+
2 rows in set (0.00 sec)

mysql>

04/14/10 BGA 13
Entering commands (5)
 Inserting a new record
 INSERT INTO names (firstName,
lastName) VALUES ('Rock','Quarry');
 SELECT * FROM names;
mysql> INSERT INTO names (firstName, lastName) VALUES ('Ralph', 'Quarry');
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.02 sec)
mysql> SELECT * FROM names;
+----+-----------+------------+
| id | firstName | lastName |
+----+-----------+------------+
| 1 | Fred | Flintstone |
| 2 | Barney | Rubble |
| 3 | Ralph | Quarry |
+----+-----------+------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)
mysql>

04/14/10 BGA 14
Entering commands (6)
 Updating a record
 UPDATE names SET lastName = 'Stone'
WHERE id=3;
 SELECT * FROM names;
mysql> UPDATE names SET lastName = 'Stone' WHERE id=3;
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.28 sec)
Rows matched: 1 Changed: 1 Warnings: 0
mysql> SELECT * FROM names;
+----+-----------+------------+
| id | firstName | lastName |
+----+-----------+------------+
| 1 | Fred | Flintstone |
| 2 | Barney | Rubble |
| 3 | Ralph | Stone |
+----+-----------+------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)
mysql>
04/14/10 BGA 15
Logging output
 The commands you type and their ouput can
be logged to a file by using the following
command inside the MySQL command line
client
 tee log.txt
 Here log.txt is the name of the file

04/14/10 BGA 16
Executing SQL files (1)
 It is usually better to use an editor to write
an SQL script and send it to the server.
 A file of SQL commands such as books.sql
can be executed by the server by using a
command such as
 C:\mysql\bin\mysql -u root -p < books.sql
 This assumes that books.sql is in your
current directory. Otherwise the
complete path to books.sql must be
supplied
04/14/10 BGA 17
Executing SQL files (2)
 A file of SQL commands such as books.sql
can also be executed from inside the
MySQL client using the source command
 source c:\.....\books.sql
 Here the full path to books.sql should
be used.

04/14/10 BGA 18
Documentation
 MySQL comes with a tutorial and complete
documentation in a HUGE file:
 c:\mysql\Docs\manual.html
 Table of contents with links:
 c:\mysql\Docs\manual_toc.html
 Use this file to locate the link to the topic
you are interested in.

04/14/10 BGA 19
Database concepts (1)
 A relational database management system
consists of a number of databases.
 Each database consists of a number of
tables.
column
 Example table headings

isbn title author pub year price


books
table
rows
(records)

04/14/10 BGA 20
Some SQL data types (1)
 Each entry in a row has a type specified by
the column.
 Numeric data types
 TINYINT, SMALLINT, MEDIUMINT,
 INT, BIGINT
 FLOAT(display_length, decimals)
 DOUBLE(display_length, decimals)
 DECIMAL(display_length,
decimals)
 NUMERIC is the same as

DECIMAL
04/14/10 BGA 21
Some SQL data types (2)
 Date and time types
 DATE
 format is YYYY-MM-DD
 DATETIME
 format YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS
 TIMESTAMP
 format YYYYMMDDHHMMSS
 TIME
 format HH:MM:SS
 YEAR
 default length is 4

04/14/10 BGA 22
SQL data types (3)
 String types
 CHAR
 fixed length string, e.g., CHAR(20)
 VARCHAR
 variable length string, e.g., VARCHAR(20)
 BLOB, TINYBLOB, MEDIUMBLOB, LONGBLOB
 same as TEXT, TINYTEXT ...
 ENUM
 list of items from which value is selected

04/14/10 BGA 23
SQL commands SHOW, USE
 SHOW
 Display databases or tables in current database;
 Example (command line client):
 show databases;
 show tables;
 USE
 Specify which database to use
 Example
 use bookstore;
04/14/10 BGA 24
The CREATE Command (1)
 CREATE creates a database table
CREATE TABLE table_name
(
column_name1 column_type1,
column_name2
column_type2,
...
column_nameN column_typeN
);

Note: To create a database use the statement


CREATE db_name;
04/14/10 BGA 25
The CREATE Command (2)
 Specifying primary keys
CREATE TABLE table_name
(
column_name1 column_type1 NOT NULL
DEFAULT '0',
column_name2 column_type2,
...
column_nameN column_typeN,
PRIMARY KEY (column_name1)
);
04/14/10 BGA 26
The CREATE Command (3)
 autoincrement primary integer keys
CREATE TABLE table_name
(
column_name1 column_type1 PRIMARY
KEY NOT NULL DEFAULT '0'
AUTO_INCREMENT,
column_name2 column_type2,
...
column_nameN column_typeN,
);
04/14/10 BGA 27
The CREATE Command (4)
 Can also create UNIQUE keys. They are
similar to PRIMARY KEYS but can have NULL
values.
 Can also create INDEX fields.

04/14/10 BGA 28
Conditional Creation
 Conditional database creation
 CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS
db_name;
 Conditional table creation
 CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS
table_name;

04/14/10 BGA 29
The DROP Command
 To delete databases and tables use the
DROP command
 Examples
 DROP DATABASE db_name;
 DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS db_name;
 DROP TABLE table_name;
 DROP TABLE IF EXISTS table_name;

Note: Don't confuse DROP with DELETE which deletes


rows of a table.

04/14/10 BGA 30
The INSERT Command
 Inserting rows into a table
INSERT INTO table_name
( col_1, col_2, ..., col_N)
VALUES
( val_1, val_2, ...,
val_N);

String values are enclosed in single quotes by


default but double quotes are also allowed. Literal
quotes need to be escaped using \' and \"

04/14/10 BGA 31
The SELECT Command (1)
 Selecting rows from a table
 Simplest form: select all columns
SELECT * FROM table_name;
 Select specified columns
SELECT column_list FROM table_name;
 Conditional selection of rows
SELECT column_list FROM table_name
WHERE condition;

04/14/10 BGA 32
The SELECT Command (2)
 Specifying ascending row ordering
SELECT column_list FROM table_name
WHERE condition
ORDER by ASC;
 Specifying descending row ordering
SELECT column_list FROM table_name
WHERE condition
ORDER by DESC;

04/14/10 BGA 33
The SELECT Command (3)
 There are many other variations of the select
command.
 Example: finding the number of records in a
table assuming a primary key called id:
SELECT COUNT(id) FROM table_name

 Can also perform searching using the


WHERE option

04/14/10 BGA 34
The UPDATE Command
 Used to modify an existing record
UPDATE table_name
SET col_1 = 'new_value1',
..., col_n = 'new_value2';
 Conditional update version
UPDATE table_name
SET col_1 = 'new_value1',
..., col_n = 'new_value2'
WHERE condition;
04/14/10 BGA 35
marks.sql (1)
studentID first_name last_name mark
marks
table

USE
tes
t;
CRE
ATE
TAB
LE
mar
ks
(4/14/10
0 BGA 36
marks.sql (2)
-- Insert some rows into marks table
INSERT INTO marks (first_name, last_name,
mark) VALUES ('Fred', 'Jones', 78);
INSERT INTO marks (first_name, last_name,
mark) VALUES ('Bill', 'James', 67);
INSERT INTO marks (first_name, last_name,
mark) VALUES ('Carol', 'Smith', 82);
INSERT INTO marks (first_name, last_name,
mark) VALUES ('Bob', 'Duncan', 60);
INSERT INTO marks (first_name, last_name,
mark) VALUES ('Joan', 'Davis', 86);

04/14/10 BGA 37
Executing The Script
 within MySQL use a command such as

 source
c:/.........../marks.sql
 This adds the marks table to the
test
database

04/14/10 BGA 38
The Marks Table
 Selecting the complete table
SELECT * FROM marks;

+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
| studentID | first_name | last_name | mark |
+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
| 1 | Fred | Jones | 78 |
| 2 | Bill | James | 67 |
| 3 | Carol | Smith | 82 |
| 4 | Bob | Duncan | 60 |
| 5 | Joan | Davis | 86 |
+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
5 rows in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 39
The WHERE Clause (1)
 Select rows according to some criterion
SELECT * FROM marks WHERE studentID > 1
AND studentID < 5;

+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
| studentID | first_name | last_name | mark |
+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
| 2 | Bill | James | 67 |
| 3 | Carol | Smith | 82 |
| 4 | Bob | Duncan | 60 |
+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
3 rows in set (0.01 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 40
The WHERE Clause (2)
 Select rows with marks >= 80
SELECT * FROM marks WHERE mark >= 80;

+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
| studentID | first_name | last_name | mark |
+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
| 3 | Carol | Smith | 82 |
| 5 | Joan | Davis | 86 |
+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
2 rows in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 41
The ORDER BY Clause
 Select rows according to some criterion
SELECT * FROM marks ORDER BY mark DESC;

+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
| studentID | first_name | last_name | mark |
+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
| 5 | Joan | Davis | 86 |
| 3 | Carol | Smith | 82 |
| 1 | Fred | Jones | 78 |
| 2 | Bill | James | 67 |
| 4 | Bob | Duncan | 60 |
+-----------+------------+-----------+------+
5 rows in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 42
Searching Using LIKE (1)
 LIKE is used to search a table for values
containing a search string:
 There are two wild-card characters used to
specifiy patterns:
 _ matches a single character
 % matches zero or more characters
 Can also use NOT LIKE
 Searching is case insensitive

04/14/10 BGA 43
Searching Using LIKE (2)
 Example: last names in marks table that
begin with J
SELECT * FROM marks WHERE last_name
LIKE 'J%';

 Example: first names that have 3 letters

SELECT * FROM marks WHERE first_name


LIKE '_ _ _';

04/14/10 BGA 44
Quoting strings
 If a string contains a single quote it must be
backquoted (escaped) before it can be
used in a query
 Example: find records containing O'Reilly
in the last_name field.
SELECT * FROM marks WHERE last_name
= 'O\'Reilly';

04/14/10 BGA 45
Limiting number of rows
 LIMIT can be used to specify the
maximum number of rows that are to be
returned by a select query. Example
 SELECT * FROM marks LIMIT 3;
 This query will return only the first 3 rows
from the marks table
 To return 15 rows beginning at row 5 use
 SELECT * FROM marks LIMIT 4, 15;

04/14/10 BGA 46
MySQL Functions (1)
 How many rows are there ?
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM marks;

+----------+
| COUNT(*) |
+----------+
| 5 |
+----------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

 Can use COUNT(marks) instead of


COUNT(*)
04/14/10 BGA 47
MySQL Functions (2)
 What is the sum of all the marks?
SELECT SUM(mark) FROM marks;

+-----------+
| SUM(mark) |
+-----------+
| 373 |
+-----------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 48
MySQL Functions (3)
 What is the average mark?
SELECT AVG(mark) FROM marks;

+-----------+
| AVG(mark) |
+-----------+
| 74.6000 |
+-----------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 49
MySQL Functions (4)
 What is the minimum mark?
SELECT MIN(mark) FROM marks;

+-----------+
| MIN(mark) |
+-----------+
| 60 |
+-----------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 50
MySQL Functions (5)
 What is the maximum mark?
SELECT MAX(mark) FROM marks;

+-----------+
| MAX(mark) |
+-----------+
| 86 |
+-----------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 51
books.sql (1)
isbn title author pub year price
books this is a
table simple
design

USE web_db;
CREATE TABLE books (
isbn CHAR(15) PRIMARY KEY NOT NULL,
title VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
author VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
pub VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
year YEAR NOT NULL,
price DECIMAL(9,2) DEFAULT
NULL
);
04/14/10 BGA 52
books.sql (2)
-- Insert some books into books table
INSERT INTO books VALUES ('0-672-31784-2',
'PHP and MySQL Web Development',
'Luke Welling, Laura Thomson',
'Sams', 2001, 74.95
);
INSERT INTO books VALUES ('1-
861003-02-1',
'Professional Apache',
'Peter Wainwright',
'Wrox Press Ltd',
1999, 74.95
04/14/10
); BGA 53
Executing The Script
 within MySQL use a command such as

 source
c:/.........../books.sql
 This adds the books table to the web_db
database

04/14/10 BGA 54
employee_db.sql (1)
employeeID name position address
employees
table

employeeID hours
jobs
table

CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS employee_db;


USE employee_db;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS employees;
DROP TABLE IF EXITS jobs;
04/14/10 BGA 55
employee_db.sql (1)
CREATE TABLE employees
( employeeID SMALLINT NOT
NULL, name VARCHAR(20) NOT
NULL, position VARCHAR(20)
NOT NULL, address VARCHAR(40)
NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (employeeID)
);
INSERT INTO employees VALUES (1001, 'Fred',
'programmer', '13 Windle St');
INSERT INTO employees VALUES (1002, 'Joan',
'programmer', '23 Rock St');
INSERT INTO employees VALUES (1003, 'Bill',
04/14/10'manager', '37 Front
BGA St'); 56
employee_db.sql (2)
CREATE TABLE jobs (
employeeID SMALLINT NOT NULL,
hours DECIMAL(5,2) NOT NULL,
);
INSERT INTO jobs VALUES (1001, 13.5);
INSERT INTO jobs VALUES (1002, 2);
INSERT INTO jobs VALUES (1002, 6.25);
INSERT INTO jobs VALUES (1003, 4);
INSERT INTO jobs VALUES (1001, 1);
INSERT INTO jobs VALUES (1003, 7);
INSERT INTO jobs VALUES (1003, 9.5);

04/14/10 BGA 57
Executing The Script
 within MySQL use a command such as

 source
c:/......./employee_db.sql
 This creates the employee_db database
and adds the employees and jobs tables to it

04/14/10 BGA 58
Select Queries With Joins (1)
 Cartesian product query
SELECT * FROM employees, jobs;

+------------+------+------------+--------------+------------+-------+
| employeeID | name | position | address | employeeID | hours |
+------------+------+------------+--------------+------------+-------+
| 1001 | Fred | programmer | 13 Windle St | 1001 | 13.50 |
| 1002 | Joan | programmer | 23 Rock St | 1001 | 13.50 |
| 1003 | Bill | manager | 37 Front St | 1001 | 13.50 |
| 1001 | Fred | programmer | 13 Windle St | 1002 | 2.00 |
| 1002 | Joan | programmer | 23 Rock St | 1002 | 2.00 |
| 1003 | Bill | manager | 37 Front St | 1002 | 2.00 |
| 1001 | Fred | programmer | 13 Windle St | 1002 | 6.25 |
| 1002 | Joan | programmer | 23 Rock St | 1002 | 6.25 |
| 1003 | Bill | manager | 37 Front St | 1002 | 6.25 |

04/14/10 BGA 59
Select Queries With Joins (2)
 Cartesian product query (continued)
| 1001 | Fred | programmer | 13 Windle St | 1003 | 4.00 |
| 1002 | Joan | programmer | 23 Rock St | 1003 | 4.00 |
| 1003 | Bill | manager | 37 Front St | 1003 | 4.00 |
| 1001 | Fred | programmer | 13 Windle St | 1001 | 1.00 |
| 1002 | Joan | programmer | 23 Rock St | 1001 | 1.00 |
| 1003 | Bill | manager | 37 Front St | 1001 | 1.00 |
| 1001 | Fred | programmer | 13 Windle St | 1003 | 7.00 |
| 1002 | Joan | programmer | 23 Rock St | 1003 | 7.00 |
| 1003 | Bill | manager | 37 Front St | 1003 | 7.00 |
| 1001 | Fred | programmer | 13 Windle St | 1003 | 9.50 |
| 1002 | Joan | programmer | 23 Rock St | 1003 | 9.50 |
| 1003 | Bill | manager | 37 Front St | 1003 | 9.50 |
+------------+------+------------+--------------+------------+-------+
21 rows in set (0.01 sec)

The cartesian product query is rarely what we want.

04/14/10 BGA 60
Select Queries With Joins (3)
 Substitution
SELECT name, hours FROM employees, jobs WHERE
employees.employeeID = jobs.employeeID;

+------+-------+
| name | hours |
+------+-------+
| Fred | 13.50 | Here we are replacing
| Joan | 2.00 | the employeeID
| Joan | 6.25 |
| Bill | 4.00 |
numbers in the jobs
| Fred | 1.00 | table by the employee's
| Bill | 7.00 | name
| Bill | 9.50 |
+------+-------+
7 rows in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 61
Select Queries With Joins (4)
 Entries only for Fred
SELECT name, hours FROM employees, jobs WHERE
employees.employeeID = jobs.employeeID AND
name = 'Fred';

+------+-------+
| name | hours |
+------+-------+
| Fred | 13.50 |
| Fred | 1.00 |
+------+-------+
2 rows in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 62
Select Queries With Joins (5)
 Total hours worked for each person
SELECT name, SUM(hours) FROM employees, jobs
WHERE employees.employeeID =
jobs.employeeID GROUP BY name;

+------+------------+
| name | SUM(hours) |
+------+------------+
| Bill | 20.50 |
| Fred | 14.50 |
| Joan | 8.25 |
+------+------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 63
Select Queries With Joins (6)
 Total hours worked, for Fred
SELECT name, SUM(hours) FROM employees, jobs
WHERE employees.employeeID =
jobs.employeeID AND name = 'Fred' GROUP BY
name;
+------+------------+
| name | SUM(hours) |
+------+------------+
| Fred | 14.50 |
+------+------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

04/14/10 BGA 64

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