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Database Management Systems: Basic Concepts
Definitions• Data: known facts that can be recorded • Database: a collection of data
• represents some aspect of the real world• logically coherent collection (not a random collection)• designed, built & populated for a specific purpose
• Database Management System: the software that manages the data
DBMSs provide...• Facilities to:
– Define – specify data types, structures & constraints for the data to be stored in the database
– Construct – store the data– Manipulate – pose queries to retrieve specific
data, update data or generate reports based on the data
Popular Examples• Company Databases
– employees, departments, projects …
• Airline Reservation Systems– flights, fares, customers, reservations ..
• Library Databases– authors, titles, publishers, videos …
• Bank Databases– accounts, customers ...
Schemas & Instances• Important to distinguish between
– database schema: the description of the database
– database: the stored data
Company Type Name Date Amt NumShares Broker
Trimark MutualFund
TrimarkFund
01/01/84 49.75 100 C. Harris
AGF MutualFund
ForeignEquity
01/01/94 62.25 1000 C. Harris
Financial Records (Company, Type, Name, Date, Amt, NumShares, Broker)
Database States
• Empty State -- database is empty when we first define the database schema
• Initial State -- database is first populated or loaded with data
• Current State -- snapshot in time
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DBMS Languages
• DDL: Data Definition Language– used to define/change the structure of the
database
• DML: Data Manipulation Language– used to query the database, insert data,
change data or delete data
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Classification of DBMSs• Data Model Classification
– relational, network, hierarchical, object-oriented …
• Number of users– single user or multi-user
• Number of Sites– centralized vs distributed
• Cost of the DBMS
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Data Model
• A collection of concepts that can be used to define the structure (data, data types, relations and constraints) of a database.
• Examples:– Entity Relationship model– Relational Model– hierarchical & network models– object-data models
Entity-Relationship Model
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Entity-Relationship Model
• Most popular conceptual model for database design
• Basis for many other models
• Describes the data in a system and how that data is related
• Describes data as entities, attributes and relationships
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Database requirements
• We must convert the written database requirements into an E-R diagram
• Need to determine the entities, attributes and relationships.– nouns = entities– adjectives = attributes– verbs = relationships
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The Pieces
• Objects– Entity (including weak entities)– Attribute– Relationship
• “Structural” Constraints– Cardinality– Participation
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Entities
• Entity – basic object of the E-R model– Represents a “thing” with an independent
existence– Can exist physically or conceptually
• a professor, a student, a course
• Entity type – used to define a set of entities with the same properties.
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Entity and Entity Types
EntityNumber: 3753Name: Database Management SystemsTopic: Introduction to DBMSs
Entity TypeCourse
Number Topic
Name
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Attributes
• Each entity has a set of associated properties that describes the entity. These properties are known as attributes.
• Attributes can be:– Simple or Composite– Single or Multi-valued– Stored or Derived– NULL
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Attributes (cont’d)
Simple Professor Start Date
Composite Professor Name
First
Last
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Attributes (cont’d)
Single Professor Employee ID#
Multi-Valued Professor Email
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Attributes (cont’d)
Stored Professor Start Date
Derived Professor Years Teaching
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Attributes (cont’d)
• NULL attributes have no value– not 0 (zero) – not a blank string
• Attributes can be “nullable” where a null value is allowed, or “not nullable” where they must have a value.
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Primary Keys
• Employee ID is the primary key
• Primary keys must be unique for the entity in question
Professor Employee ID
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Relationships
• defines a set of associations between various entities
• can have attributes to define them
• are limited by:– Participation– Cardinality Ratio
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Relationships (cont’d)
Section Coursepart of
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Participation
• Defines if the existence of an entity depends on it being related to another entity with a relationship type.– Partial– Total
Section Coursepart of
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Cardinality
• The number of relationships that an entity may participate in.– 1:1, 1:N, N:M, M:1
Section Coursepart of1N
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Weak entity
• Weak entities do not have key attributes of their own.
• Weak entities cannot exist without another a relationship to another entity.
• A partial key is the portion of the key that comes from the weak entity. The rest of the key comes from the other entity in the relationship.
• Weak entities always have total participation as they cannot exist without the identifying relationship.
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Weak Entity (cont’d)
Section
Course
part of
Number
Section ID
Identifying Relationship
Descriminator
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Acadia Teaching Database
Design an E-R schema for a database to store info about professors, courses and course sections indicating the following:
• The name and employee ID number of each professor• The salary and email address(es) for each professor• How long each professor has been at the university• The course sections each professor teaches• The name, number and topic for each course offered• The section and room number for each course section• Each course section must have only one professor• Each course can have multiple sections
Professor
Name
First
Last
Course
Employee ID Start Date Years Teaching
Name
Room
Topic
teaches1 N Section
Section ID
Part of
1
N
Number
Visual View of the Database
Salary
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University DB Case Study
• Maintain the following information about undergraduate students:– Name, address, student number, date of
birth, year of study, degree program (BA, BSc, BCS), concentration (Major, Honours, etc) and department of concentration.
• Note: An address is composed of a street, city, province and postal code; the student number is unique for each student
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University Case Study (cont’d)
• Maintain information about departments– Name, code (CS, Phy), office phone, and faculty
members
• Maintain information about courses:– Course number (3753), title, description,
prerequisites.
• Maintain information about course sections:– Section (A, B, C), term (X1), slot #, instructor
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University Case Study (cont’d)
• Maintain information about faculty:– Name, rank, employee number, salary, office
number, phone number and email address.– Note: employee number is unique
• Maintain a program of study for the current year for each student:– i.e. courses that each student is enrolled in
SectionNumber
Term
Slot
Number
Title
Description
Course
StudentNumber
Name
DOB
Address
Enrolled
Street
Postal Code
Province
City
Dept
Code
Name
Phone
Faculty Number
Office
Phone
Name
Rank
Head Member
Offer
TeachesHas
Prereq
N
1
N
M
N
N
N M
1
N
1
1
1
1
Start Date
End Date
Salary
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Extended E-R Model
• E-R model is sufficient for traditional database applications
• Nontraditional applications (CAD, multimedia) have more complex requirements
• Can extend traditional E-R diagrams with semantic data modeling concepts
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IS-A Relationship
Employee
Staff Faculty
Teaching Assistant
S.S.N.
Student #Rank
IS-A
Position
Name
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Specialization & Generalization
• Specialization– process of taking an entity and creating
several specialized subclasses
• Generalization– process of taking several related entities
and creating a general superclass
• We will talk mainly of specialization, but most information will also apply to generalization
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Specialization constraints
• Specializations can be predicate-defined or attribute-defined or user-defined
• Disjointness constraint – specialization is disjoint or overlapping
• Completeness constraint – specialization is total or partial
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Predicate-defined subclass
• An attribute value is used to determine the members of a subclass
• Not all members of every subclass can be determined by the attribute value
• In the following example, the Pension Plan type can be used to determine faculty from staff, but has no effect on students or those who opted out of the pension plan.
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Predicate-defined subclass
Person
Staff Faculty
S.S.N.
Rank
d
Position
Pension Plan Type
Note: not all employees included
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Attribute-defined subclass
• There is one defining attribute for all subclasses
• Each member of the superclass can be assigned to the appropriate subclass based on this one attribute
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Attribute-defined subclass
Employee
Staff Faculty
S.S.N.
Rank
d
Rank
Jobtype
Students
Year
Jobtype
“Staff”
“Faculty”
“Student”
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User-defined subclass
• When there is no condition to automatically determine membership in a subclass, it must be done at the discretion of the user.
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Disjointness constraint
• Specifies that an entity can be a member of at most one subclass
• There can be no overlap between the subclasses
• We use the notation of a d in a circle to symbolize that the subclasses are disjoint
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Disjoint constraint
Employee
StaffFaculty
Teaching Assistant
S.S.N.
Student #Rank
d
Position
Name
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Overlap
• Entities are able to belong to more than one subclass
• Notation is an o inside of a circle
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Overlap
Employee
Staff Faculty
S.S.N.
Rank
o
Rank
Jobtype
Students
Year
A staff member mayalso be a student
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Completeness Constraint
• May be total or partial• for total, every entity in the superclass
must belong to a subclass• for partial, entities in the superclass do not
need to be part of any subclass• notation for total and partial are the same
as in a regular E-R diagram – single and double lines
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Partial
Person
Staff Faculty
S.S.N.
Rank
d
Rank
Pension Plan Type
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Total
Employee
Staff Faculty
S.I.N.
Rank
o
Rank
Jobtype
Students
Year
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Hierarchies and Lattices
• Hierarchies– a tree-like structure where each subclass
belongs to only one superclass
• Lattices– a graph-like structure where a subclass can
belong to more than one superclass
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Lattice
Person
Teaching Assistant
StudentEmployee
o
name
course
student #
salary
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Union Types and Lattice
• Lattice– Subset of the Intersection of the superclasses.– A shared subclass (Teaching Assistant) is the
subclass in two distinct superclass relatioships
• Union Types– Subset of the unoin of distinct Entity Types
The UNIVERSITY Database• Consider a UNIVERSITY database that keeps track of students and
their majors, transcripts, and registration as well as of the university’s course offerings. The database also keeps track of the sponsored research projects of faculty and graduate students.
• For each person, the database maintains information on the person’s Name [Name], social security number [Ssn], address [Address], sex [Sex], and birth date [BDate]. PERSON can be classified as FACULTY and STUDENT. Specific attributes of FACULTY are rank (assistant, associate, adjunct, research, visiting, etc.), office [FOffice], office phone [FPhone], and salary [Salary]. All faculty members are related to the academic department(s) with which they are affiliated (a faculty member can be associated with several departments).
• A specific attribute of STUDENT is Class. Each student is also related to his or her major and minor departments, if known ([MAJOR] and [MINOR]), to the course sections he or she is currently attending [REGISTERED], and to the courses completed [TRANSCRIPT]. Each transcript instance includes the grade the student received in the course section.
• GRAD_STUDENT is a subclass of STUDENT, with the defining predicate Class = 5. For each graduate student, we keep a list of previous degrees [Degrees]. We also relate the graduate student to a faculty advisor [ADVISOR] and to a thesis committee [COMMITTEE], if one exists.
• An academic department has the attributes name [DName], telephone [DPhone], and office number [Office] and is related to the faculty member who is its chairperson [CHAIRS] and to the college to which it belongs [CD]. Each college has attributes college name [CName], office number [COffice], and the name of its dean [Dean].
• A course has attributes course number [C#], course name [Cname], and course description [CDesc]. Several sections of each course are offered, with each section having the attributes section number [Sec#] and the year and quarter in which the section was offered ([Year] and [Qtr]). Section numbers uniquely identify each section. The sections being offered during the current quarter are in a subclass CURRENT_SECTION of SECTION, with the defining predicate Qtr = CurrentQtr and Year = CurrentYear. Each section is related to the instructor who taught or is teaching it ([TEACH]), if that instructor is in the database.
• The category INSTRUCTOR_RESEARCHER is a subset of the union of FACULTY and GRAD_STUDENT and includes all faculty, as well as graduate students who are supported by teaching or research. Finally, the entity type GRANT keeps track of research grants and contracts awarded to the university. Each grant has attributes grant title [Title], grant number [No], the awarding agency [Agency], and the starting date [StDate]. A grant is related to one principal investigator [PI] and to all researchers it supports [SUPPORT]. Each instance of support has as attributes the starting date of support [Start], the ending date of the support (if known) [End], and the percentage of time being spent on the project [Time] by the researcher being supported
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Private Airport Database
• An EER diagram for a small private airport database that is used to keep track of airplanes, their owners, airport employees, and pilots. From the requirements for this database, the following information was collected: Each AIRPLANE has a registration number [Reg#], is of a particular plane type [OF_TYPE], and is stored in a particular hangar [STORED_IN]. Each PLANE_TYPE has a model number [Model], a capacity [Capacity], and a weight [Weight]. Each HANGAR has a number [Number], a capacity [Capacity], and a location [Location].
• The database also keeps track of the OWNERs of each plane [OWNS] and the EMPLOYEEs who have maintained the plane [MAINTAIN]. Each relationship instance in OWNS relates an airplane to an owner and includes the purchase date [Pdate]. Each relationship instance in MAINTAIN relates an employee to a service record [SERVICE].
• Each plane undergoes service many times; hence, it is related by [PLANE_SERVICE] to a number of service records. A service record includes as attributes the date of maintenance [Date], the number of hours spent on the work [Hours], and the type of work done [Workcode]. We use an entity type [SERVICE] to represent airplane service, because the airplane registration number is used to identify a service record. An owner is either a person or a corporation. person [PERSON] entity type can be classified as pilots [PILOT] and employees [EMPLOYEE].
• Each pilot has specific attributes license number [Lic_Num] and• restrictions [Restr]; each employee has specific attributes salary
[Salary] and shift worked [Shift].• All PERSON entities in the database have data kept on their social
security number [Ssn], name [Name], address [Address], and telephone number [Phone].
• For CORPORATION entities, the data kept includes name [Name], address[Address], and telephone number [Phone].
• The database also keeps track of the types of planes each pilot is authorized to fly [FLIES] and the types of planes each employee can do maintenance work on [WORKS_ON].
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Chapter 3-62
Relationships of Higher Degree
Relationship types of degree 2 are called binary
Relationship types of degree 3 are called ternary and of degree n are called n-ary
In general, an n-ary relationship is not equivalent to n binary relationships
Chapter 3-63
TERNARY RELATIONSHIPS
© The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company, Inc. 1994, Elmasri/Navathe, Fundamentals of Database Systems, Second Edition
Chapter 3-64
TERNARY RELATIONSHIP- Instance Diagram
s1
s2
SUPPLIER
p1
p2
p3
PART
r1
r2
r3
r4
r5
r6
r7
SUPPLY
j1
j2
j3
PROJECT
Chapter 3-65
Problem with constraints on higher order relationship types
What does it mean to put m:n:p on the three arms of the relationship ? It is essentially meaningless.
mn
p
Chapter 3-66
TERNARY VS. BINARY RELATIONSHIPS
© The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company, Inc. 1994, Elmasri/Navathe, Fundamentals of Database Systems, Second Edition
Chapter 3-67
The (min,max) notation for higher order relationship type
constraints
A Teacher can offer min 1 and max 2 OfferingsA Course may have 1 to 3 OfferingsA Student may enroll in from 1 to 5 Offerings
(1,5)
(1,3)(1,2)