In my db, I have schema a with entities that depend upon schema b, and schema b has entities that depend on schema a. This came about over a year of incremental development. Now, migrating the db to another server is failing. When I pgdump a schema from one server and try to pg_restore it on the other server, it croaks. What can I do to get around, both for now, and as a good strategy for the future?
Related
I'm having an issue at the moment where, we have a database which was already created, so used ef scaffold to create a model of it - the schema the model was created against is called "xxxx-dev".
Now, this has been fine, but in preparation to go live, I created a new DB server and provisioned the database to be called "xxxx-live". Switched the connection string, and attempted a query against it, and got an error.
It seems that scaffolding has hard-coded the schema name into every table in the OnModelCreating call, for example:
modelBuilder.Entity<xxxx>(entity =>
{
...
entity.ToTable("xxxx", "xxxx-dev");
...
});
This is a bit of an issue as going forward, we might have multi-tenant sites based on the same database, and obviously the query overriding the connection string every query isn't a great experience.
Is there anyway to configure the schema name, either in the Scaffold, or at runtime? I've done a bit of searching around and can't seem to see a solution.
Thanks,
I am trying to debug a performance issue in an ASP.NET application using .NET 4.5, EF5 (with a 2nd level cache and lazy loaded navigation properties) and SQL Server 2014. We are experiencing a number of wait locks in the SQL server. When I look at the locking transactions, they contain a very quick UPDATE, and then a very large SELECT. The UPDATE is ostensibly a necessary one, but I am confused as to why the SELECT is being run in the same transaction (and why anything is being selected at all). The fundamental issue is that the table referenced in the UPDATE statement is locked for the duration of the SELECT statement.
We use repository pattern for getting data from the db, and DbContext.SaveChanges() for committing changes. I cannot figure out how it is possible that EF produces a transaction where there is both a write and a read, and I am not getting relevant results when I try to search Google.
We have a number of interfaces into the system, and a couple of console applications working on the database as well, but they all go through the same setup/versions of .NET and EF.
I figure that it must be through SaveChanges, since this is (AFAIK) the only time that things are written to the database.
Does anyone here have a hint as to how these locking transactions might be produced?
The fundamental issue is that the table referenced in the UPDATE
statement is locked for the duration of the SELECT statement.
The answer is in your question:
the SELECT is being run in the same transaction
X lock is always held until the end of the transaction, i.e. until it commits or rolls back. So if after your quick update there is a long select, all that update locked in your table remains locked until your select ends.
You can separate your update and select if your business rules permit, you can add an appropriate index on the updated table to lock only some rows and not the whole table, or you can optimize your select to execute faster.
According to one of my posts (below) it seems that there is no such thing as a database in Oracle. What we call database in MySQL and MS-SQL is called schema in Oracle.
If that is the case, then why do the oracle docs mention the create database statement ?
For the record, I am using Oracle 11g and oracle SQL Developer GUI tool.
Post-
How to create a small and simple database using Oracle 11 g and SQL Developer?
The create database statement from oracle docs is given below. If there is no database concept, then how did this command come into the picture ?
CREATE DATABASE
CREATE DATABASE [ database ]
{ USER SYS IDENTIFIED BY password
| USER SYSTEM IDENTIFIED BY password
| CONTROLFILE REUSE
| MAXDATAFILES integer
| MAXINSTANCES integer
| CHARACTER SET charset
| NATIONAL CHARACTER SET charset
| SET DEFAULT
{ BIGFILE | SMALLFILE } TABLESPACE
| database_logging_clauses
| tablespace_clauses
| set_time_zone_clause
}... ;
There is concept of a "database" in Oracle. What the term "database" means in Oracle terms is different than what the term means in MySQL or SQL Server.
Since you are using the express edition, Oracle automatically runs the CREATE DATABASE statement as part of the installation process. You can only have 1 express edition database on a single machine. If you are installing a different edition, you can choose whether to have the installer create a database as part of the installation process or whether to do that manually via the CREATE DATABASE statement later. If you are just learning Oracle, you're much better off letting Oracle create the database for you at installation time-- you can only create the database via command-line tools (not SQL Developer) and it is rare that someone just starting out would need to tweak the database settings in a way that the installer didn't prmopt you for.
In Oracle, a "database" is a set of data files that includes the data files for the SYS and SYSTEM schemas which contain all the Oracle data dictionary tables, the data files for the TEMP tablespace where sorts and other temporary operations occur, and the data files for whatever schemas you want to create. In SQL Server and other RDBMSs, these would be separate "databases". In SQL Server, you have a master database, a tempdb database, additional database for different products (i.e. msdb for the SQL Server Agent), and then additional user-defined databases. In Oracle, these would all be separate schemas in a larger container that Oracle refers to as a "database".
Occasionally, a DBA will want to run multiple Oracle databases on the same server-- most commonly when there are different packaged applications that have different requirements about database versions or parameters. If you want to run application A that requires an 11.2 database and application B that doesn't support 11.2 yet, you would need to have two different databases on the server. The DBA could create a separate database and a separate instance but that doubles the memory requirements, doubles the number of background processes required to run the database, and generally makes things less scalable. It's necessary if you really want to run different versions of the database simultaneously but it's not ideal.
The person who answered your original question is correct. The DDL (Data Definition Language) above prepares a space for schemas, which is analogous to MySQL's 'database'. The above statement defines characteristics of the schemas, such as timezone, MBs of space for tables, encoding characterset, root account, etc. You would then issue DDL statements such as those in your other post to create schemas, which define what each user can see.
How to create a small and simple database using Oracle 11 g and SQL Developer ?
I am seeing too many errors and I cannot find any way to make a simple database.
For example
create database company;
Caused the following error:
Error starting at line 1 in command:
create database company
Error at Command Line:1 Column:0
Error report:
SQL Error: ORA-01501: CREATE DATABASE failed
ORA-01100: database already mounted
01501. 00000 - "CREATE DATABASE failed"
*Cause: An error occurred during create database
*Action: See accompanying errors.
EDIT-
This is completely different from MySQL and MS-SQL that I am familiar with.
Not as intuitive as I was expecting.
First off, what Oracle calls a "database" is generally different than what most other database products call a "database". A "database" in MySQL or SQL Server is much closer to what Oracle calls a "schema" which is the set of objects owned by a particular user. In Oracle, you would generally only have one database per server (a large server might have a handful of databases on it) where each database has many different schemas. If you are using the express edition of Oracle, you are only allowed to have 1 database per server. If you are connected to Oracle via SQL Developer, that indicates that you already have the Oracle database created.
Assuming that you really want to create a schema, not a database (using Oracle terminology), you would create the user
CREATE USER company
IDENTIFIED BY <<password>>
DEFAULT TABLESPACE <<tablespace to use for objects by default>>
TEMPORARY TABLESPACE <<temporary tablespace to use>>
You would then assign the user whatever privileges you wanted
GRANT CREATE SESSION TO company;
GRANT CREATE TABLE TO company;
GRANT CREATE VIEW TO company;
...
Once that is done, you can connect to the (existing) database as COMPANY and create objects in the COMPANY schema.
Actually the answer from Justin above could not be more incorrect. SQL Server and MySQL are for smallish databases. Oracle is for large enterprise databases, thus the difference in it's structure. And it is common to have more than one Oracle database on a server provided that the server is robust enough to handle the load. If you received the error posted above then you obviously are trying to create a new Oracle database and if you are doing that then you probably already understand the structure of an Oracle database. The likely scenario is that you attempted to create a database using dbca, it initially failed, but the binaries were created. You then adjusted your initial parameters and re-tried creating the database using dbca. However, the utility sees the binaries and folder structure for the database that you are creating so it thinks that the database already exists but is not mounted. Dropping the database and removing the binaries and folders as well as any other cleanup of the initial attempt should be done first, then try again.
From your question description, I think you were to create a database schema, not a database instance. In Oracle terminology, a database instance is a set of files in the file system. It's more like data files in MySQL. Whereas database in MySQL is somewhat equivalent to Oracle's schema.
To create a schema in Oracle: https://docs.oracle.com/cd/B19306_01/server.102/b14200/statements_6014.htm
To create a database instance in Oracle (I personally prefer CDBA):
https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E11882_01/server.112/e25494/create.htm#ADMIN11068
Notice the Oracle Express edition does not support mounting more than one database instance at one time.
Hi:
In our new application we have to use the oracle as the db,and we use mysql/sqlserver before,when I come to oracle I am confused by its concepts,for exmaple,the table space,the object,the schema table,index, procedure, database link,...:(
And the schema is closed to the user,I can not make it.
Since when we use the mysql,I just know that one database contain as many tables,and contain as many users,user have different authentication for different table.
But in oracle,everything is different.
Anyone can tell me some basic concepts of oracle,and some quick start docs?
Oracle has specific meanings for commonly-used terms, and you're right, it is confusing. I'll build a hierarchy of terms from the bottom up:
Database - In Oracle, the database is the collection of files that make up your overall collection of data. To get a handle on what Oracle means, picture the database management system (dbms) in a non-running state. All those files are your "database."
Instance - When you start the Oracle software, all those files become active, things get loaded into memory, and there's an entity to which you can connect. Many people would use the term "database" to describe a running dbms, but, once everything is up-and-running, Oracle calls it an, "instance."
Tablespace - A abstraction that allows you to think about a chunk of storage without worrying about the physical details. When you create a user, you ask Oracle to put that user's data in a specific tablespace. Oracle manages storage via the tablespace metaphor.
Data file - The physical files that actually store the data. Data files are grouped into tablespaces. If you use all the storage you have allocated to a user, or group of users, you add data files (or make the existing files bigger) to the tablespace they're configured to use.
User - An abstraction that encapsulates the privileges, authentication information, and default storage areas for an account that can log on to an Oracle instance.
Schema - The tables, indices, constraints, triggers, etc. that are owned by a particular user. There is a one-to-one correspondence between users and schemas. The schema has the same name as the user. The difference between the two is that the user concept is all about account information, while the schema concept deals with logical database objects.
This is a very simplified list of terms. There are different states of "running" for an Oracle instance, for example, and it's easy to get into very nuanced discussions of what things mean. Here's a practical exercise that will let you put your hands on these things, and will make the distinctions clearer:
Start an already-created Oracle instance. This step will transform a group of files, or as Oracle would say, a database, into a running Oracle instance.
Create a tablespace with the CREATE TABLESPACE command. You'll have to specify some data files to put into the tablespace, as well as some storage parameters.
Create a user with the CREATE USER command. You'll see that the items you have to specify have to do with passwords, privileges, quotas, and the like. Specify that the user's data be stored in the tablespace you created in step 2.
Connect to the Oracle using the credentials you created with the new user from step 3. Type, "SELECT * FROM CAT". Nothing should come back yet. Your user has a schema, but it's empty.
Run a CREATE TABLE command. INSERT some data into the table. The schema now contains some objects.
table spaces: these are basically
storage definitions. when defining a
table or index, etc., you can specify
storage options simply by putting
your table in a specific table_space
table, index, procedure: these are pretty much the same
user, schema: explained well before
database link: you can join table A in instance A and table B in instance B using a - database link between the two instances (while logged in on of them)
object: has properties (like a columns in a table) and methods that operate on those poperties (pretty much like in OO design); these are not widely used
A few links:
Start page for 11g rel 2 docs http://www.oracle.com/pls/db112/homepage
Database concepts, Table of contents http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E11882_01/server.112/e16508/toc.htm