41. What is normalization?
It is a process of analysing the
given relation schemas based on their Functional Dependencies (FDs) and primary
key to achieve the properties
(1).Minimizing redundancy, (2). Minimizing insertion, deletion and update anomalies.
(1).Minimizing redundancy, (2). Minimizing insertion, deletion and update anomalies.
42. What is Functional Dependency?
A Functional dependency is denoted
by X Y between two sets of attributes X and Y that are subsets of R specifies a
constraint on the possible tuple that can form a relation state r of R. The
constraint is for any two tuples t1 and t2 in r if t1[X] = t2[X] then they have
t1[Y] = t2[Y]. This means the value of X component of a tuple uniquely
determines the value of component Y.
43. What is Lossless join property?
It guarantees that the spurious
tuple generation does not occur with respect to relation schemas after
decomposition.
44. What is 1 NF (Normal Form)?
The domain of attribute must include
only atomic (simple, indivisible) values.
45. What is Fully Functional
dependency?
It is based on concept of full
functional dependency. A functional dependency X Y is full functional
dependency if removal of any attribute A from X means that the dependency does
not hold any more.
46. What is 2NF?
A relation schema R is in 2NF if it
is in 1NF and every non-prime attribute A in R is fully functionally dependent
on primary key.
47. What is 3NF?
A relation schema R is in 3NF if it
is in 2NF and for every FD X A either of the following is true
- X is a Super-key of R.
- A is a prime attribute of R.
In other words, if every non prime
attribute is non-transitively dependent on primary key.
48. What is BCNF (Boyce-Codd Normal
Form)?
A relation schema R is in BCNF if it
is in 3NF and satisfies an additional constraint that for every FD X A, X must
be a candidate key.
49. What is 4NF?
A relation schema R is said to be in
4NF if for every Multivalued dependency X Y that holds over R, one of following
is true.
1.) X is subset or equal to (or) XY = R.
2.) X is a super key.
1.) X is subset or equal to (or) XY = R.
2.) X is a super key.
50. What is 5NF?
A Relation schema R is said to be
5NF if for every join dependency {R1, R2, ..., Rn} that holds R, one the
following is true 1.) Ri = R for some i.
2.) The join dependency is implied by the set of FD, over R in which the left side is key of R.
2.) The join dependency is implied by the set of FD, over R in which the left side is key of R.
51. What is Domain-Key Normal Form?
A relation is said to be in DKNF if
all constraints and dependencies that should hold on the the constraint can be
enforced by simply enforcing the domain constraint and key constraint on the
relation.
52. What are partial, alternate,,
artificial, compound and natural key?
- Partial Key: It is a set of attributes that can uniquely identify weak entities and that are related to same owner entity. It is sometime called as Discriminator.
- Alternate Key: All Candidate Keys excluding the Primary Key are known as Alternate Keys.
- Artificial Key: If no obvious key, either stand alone or compound is available, then the last resort is to simply create a key, by assigning a unique number to each record or occurrence. Then this is known as developing an artificial key.
- Compound Key: If no single data element uniquely identifies occurrences within a construct, then combining multiple elements to create a unique identifier for the construct is known as creating a compound key.
- Natural Key: When one of the data elements stored within a construct is utilized as the primary key, then it is called the natural key.
53. What is indexing and what are
the different kinds of indexing?
Indexing is a technique for
determining how quickly specific data can be found.
Types:
Types:
- Binary search style indexing
- B-Tree indexing
- Inverted list indexing
- Memory resident table
- Table indexing
54. What is system catalog or
catalog relation? How is better known as?
A RDBMS maintains a description of
all the data that it contains, information about every relation and index that
it contains. This information is stored in a collection of relations maintained
by the system called metadata. It is also called data dictionary.
55. What is meant by query
optimization?
The phase that identifies an
efficient execution plan for evaluating a query that has the least estimated
cost is referred to as query optimization.
56. What is durability in DBMS?
Once the DBMS informs the user that
a transaction has successfully completed, its effects should persist even if
the system crashes before all its changes are reflected on disk. This property
is called durability.
57. What do you mean by atomicity
and aggregation?
- Atomicity: Either all actions are carried out or none are. Users should not have to worry about the effect of incomplete transactions. DBMS ensures this by undoing the actions of incomplete transactions.
- Aggregation: A concept which is used to model a relationship between a collection of entities and relationships. It is used when we need to express a relationship among relationships.
58. What is a Phantom Deadlock?
In distributed deadlock detection,
the delay in propagating local information might cause the deadlock detection
algorithms to identify deadlocks that do not really exist. Such situations are
called phantom deadlocks and they lead to unnecessary aborts.
59. What is a checkpoint and When
does it occur?
A Checkpoint is like a snapshot of
the DBMS state. By taking checkpoints, the DBMS can reduce the amount of work
to be done during restart in the event of subsequent crashes.
60. What are the different phases of
transaction?
Different phases are
1.) Analysis phase,
2.) Redo Phase,
3.) Undo phase.
1.) Analysis phase,
2.) Redo Phase,
3.) Undo phase.
61. What do you mean by flat file
database?
It is a database in which there are
no programs or user access languages. It has no cross-file capabilities but is
user-friendly and provides user-interface management.
62. What is "transparent
DBMS"?
It is one, which keeps its Physical
Structure hidden from user.
63. What is a query?
A query with respect to DBMS relates
to user commands that are used to interact with a data base. The query language
can be classified into data definition language and data manipulation language.
64. What do you mean by Correlated
subquery?
Subqueries, or nested queries, are
used to bring back a set of rows to be used by the parent query. Depending on
how the subquery is written, it can be executed once for the parent query or it
can be executed once for each row returned by the parent query. If the subquery
is executed for each row of the parent, this is called a correlated subquery.
A correlated subquery can be easily
identified if it contains any references to the parent subquery columns in its
WHERE clause. Columns from the subquery cannot be referenced anywhere else in
the parent query. The following example demonstrates a non-correlated subquery.
Example: Select * From CUST Where
'10/03/1990' IN (Select ODATE From ORDER Where CUST.CNUM = ORDER.CNUM)
65. What are the primitive
operations common to all record management systems?
Addition, deletion and modification.
66. Name the buffer in which all the
commands that are typed in are stored?
'Edit' Buffer.
67. What are the unary operations in Relational Algebra?
PROJECTION and SELECTION.
68. Are the resulting relations of PRODUCT and JOIN
operation the same?
No.
PRODUCT : Concatenation of every row in one relation with every row in another.
JOIN : Concatenation of rows from one relation and related rows from another.
PRODUCT : Concatenation of every row in one relation with every row in another.
JOIN : Concatenation of rows from one relation and related rows from another.
69. What is RDBMS KERNEL?
Two important pieces of RDBMS architecture are the kernel,
which is the software, and the data dictionary, which consists of the
system-level data structures used by the kernel to manage the database You
might think of an RDBMS as an operating system (or set of subsystems), designed
specifically for controlling data access; its primary functions are storing,
retrieving, and securing data. An RDBMS maintains its own list of authorized
users and their associated privileges; manages memory caches and paging;
controls locking for concurrent resource usage; dispatches and schedules user
requests; and manages space usage within its table-space structures.
70. Name the sub-systems of a RDBMS.
I/O, Security, Language Processing, Process Control,
Storage Management, Logging and Recovery, Distribution Control, Transaction
Control, Memory Management, Lock Management.
71. Which part of the RDBMS takes care of the data
dictionary? How?
Data dictionary is a set of tables and database objects
that is stored in a special area of the database and maintained exclusively by
the kernel.
72. What is the job of the information stored in
data-dictionary?
The information in the data dictionary validates the
existence of the objects, provides access to them, and maps the actual physical
storage location.
73. How do you communicate with an
RDBMS?
You communicate with an RDBMS using
Structured Query Language (SQL).
74. Define SQL and state the
differences between SQL and other conventional programming Languages.
SQL is a nonprocedural language that
is designed specifically for data access operations on normalized relational
database structures. The primary difference between SQL and other conventional
programming languages is that SQL statements specify what data operations
should be performed rather than how to perform them.
75. Name the three major set of
files on disk that compose a database in Oracle.
There are three major sets of files
on disk that compose a database. All the files are binary. These are
1.) Database files
2.) Control files
3.) Redo logs
2.) Control files
3.) Redo logs
The most important of these are the
database files where the actual data resides. The control files and the redo
logs support the functioning of the architecture itself. All three sets of
files must be present, open, and available to Oracle for any data on the
database to be useable. Without these files, you cannot access the database,
and the database administrator might have to recover some or all of the
database using a backup, if there is one.
76. What is database Trigger?
A database trigger is a PL/SQL block
that can defined to automatically execute for insert, update, and delete
statements against a table. The trigger can e defined to execute once for the
entire statement or once for every row that is inserted, updated, or deleted.
For any one table, there are twelve events for which you can define database
triggers. A database trigger can call database procedures that are also written
in PL/SQL.
77. What are stored-procedures? And
what are the advantages of using them?
Stored procedures are database
objects that perform a user defined operation. A stored procedure can have a
set of compound SQL statements. A stored procedure executes the SQL commands
and returns the result to the client. Stored procedures are used to reduce
network traffic.
78. What is Storage Manager?
It is a program module that provides
the interface between the low-level data stored in database, application
programs and queries submitted to the system.
79. What is Buffer Manager?
It is a program module, which is responsible for fetching
data from disk storage into main memory and deciding what data to be cache in
memory.
80. What is Transaction Manager?
It is a program module, which ensures that database,
remains in a consistent state despite system failures and concurrent
transaction execution proceeds without conflicting.
81. What is File Manager?
It is a program module, which manages the allocation of
space on disk storage and data structure used to represent information stored
on a disk.
82. What is Authorization and Integrity manager?
It is the program module, which tests for the satisfaction
of integrity constraint and checks the authority of user to access data.
83. What are stand-alone procedures?
Procedures that are not part of a package are known as
stand-alone because they independently defined. A good example of a stand-alone
procedure is one written in a SQL*Forms application. These types of procedures
are not available for reference from other Oracle tools. Another limitation of
stand-alone procedures is that they are compiled at run time, which slows
execution.
84. What are cursors give different types of cursors?
PL/SQL uses cursors for all database information accesses
statements. The language supports the use two types of cursors
1.) Implicit
2.) Explicit
1.) Implicit
2.) Explicit
85. What is cold backup and hot
backup (in case of Oracle)?
- Cold Backup: It is copying the three sets of files (database files, redo logs, and control file) when the instance is shut down. This is a straight file copy, usually from the disk directly to tape. You must shut down the instance to guarantee a consistent copy. If a cold backup is performed, the only option available in the event of data file loss is restoring all the files from the latest backup. All work performed on the database since the last backup is lost.
- Hot Backup: Some sites (such as worldwide airline reservations systems) cannot shut down the database while making a backup copy of the files. The cold backup is not an available option.
86. What is meant by Proactive,
Retroactive and Simultaneous Update.
- Proactive Update: The updates that are applied to database before it becomes effective in real world.
- Retroactive Update: The updates that are applied to database after it becomes effective in real world.
- Simulatneous Update: The updates that are applied to database at the same time when it becomes effective in real world.
87. What is a foreign key, and what is it used for?
A foreign key is used to establish relationships among
relations in the relational model. Technically, a foreign key is a column (or
columns) appearing in one relation that is (are) the primary key of another
table. Although there may be exceptions, the values in the foreign key columns
usually must correspond to values existing in the set of primary key values.
This correspondence requirement is created in a database using a referential
integrity constraint on the foreign key.
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