I've just been studying DBMS. There are a lot of programs for DB. (eg. Mysql, MariaDB etc..)
So I wonder in program, for example Postgresql, can I change data structure each table?
Most of programs are using B-tree, however I hope change data structure each table if I can.
Are you asking if you can change the table structure like adding or removing columns, altering the data type of a column, if yes, then it is possible.
Refer here for postgresql syntax
Refer here for SQL Server/MS SQL syntax
Refer here for MySQL syntax
I am in the process of writing a relatively large query which organizes a bunch of information on tables in my database. One thing I want to add is information on indexes and constraints on each table.
I found that sp_help 'tablename' generated two tables with basically exactly what I wanted, specifically the constraint and index tables, organized in an ideal way (all applicable keys grouped together as one bit of text, separated by commas).
Is there any simple way to either command sp_help to only pull these tables for easy access, or barring that any way to replicate the exact form of these tables with a SQL query?
It seems possible to brute force a replica of these tables without too much difficulty using a clunky mixture of sys and information_schema, but is there any minimal/elegant way to do it?
Try reading through the following blog post by Kimberly Tripp -
https://www.sqlskills.com/blogs/kimberly/sp_helpindex-v20170228/
You can download a procedure called [sp_SQLskills_helpindex], to be run as per the below -
sp_SQLskills_helpindex [TableName]
The result set can be stored in a temp table and used in whichever way you wish.
In Oracle 11G I can easily invoke:
SELECT * FROM TABLE#DB_LINK_NAME;
But how invoke SELECT over DB_LINK that is on another DB_LINK?
Something like this:
SELECT * FROM TABLE#REMOTE_DB_LINK_NAME#DB_LINK_NAME;
First off, architecturally, I'd be pretty leery of any design that involved pulling data over multiple database links. I've seen it done when the eventual source is some ancient version of Oracle that the target database cannot connect to directly so an intermediate database running an intermediate version of Oracle was used. That is very rare in practice, though.
From a performance perspective, this sort of approach is gravely problematic. There is, of course, the issue that the data is going to be sent over the network twice. But more to worryingly, you are taking a difficult problem, optimizing distributed SQL statements, and making it nearly intractable. You'd basically have to either guarantee that you would never query local data and remote data in the same query or you would have to live with the resulting performance if Oracle decides on a stupid query plan because the set of tools left to allow you to optimize this sort of query is minimal.
That being said, the intermediate database would need to have synonyms or views that abstract away the database link. So
On A:
create database link to B
On B:
create database link to C
create synonym table for table#C
On A, you can then
SELECT *
FROM table#B
will the sql queries i run in ms-access also work on mysql without any changes ?
It's possible, but it depends on what the queries use. Date and string functions are the most likely to cause problems when porting queries.
The DATEDIFF keyword is supported on both Access & MySQL, but the function takes different parameters:
Access: DATEDIFF
MySQL: DATEDIFF
Well, if the coder wrote the queries with portability in the forefront of their mind then there's a good chance that you will need to make only minimal changes. However, you could only expect the most simple queries to work with no changes, regardless of which SQL product were involved.
In an ideal world, all SQL products would comply with ISO/ANSI Standard SQL with vendor extensions. In reality, while mySQL generally has a good track record in Standard SQL compliance, the Access Database Engine's record is rather poor -- it still doesn't even conform to entry level SQL-92, which was a fairly fundamental requirement even a decade ago (and seemingly none too difficult to achieve either).
[Your question is in all lower case. I've assumed by 'queries' you mean SQL DML SELECT. If you use 'queries' to mean INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE SQL DML plus SQL DDL and SQL DCL then this changes the answer. You should note the the Access Database Engine's UPDATE SQL DML is proprietary and non-deterministic; further, it does not support SQL-92's scalar subquery syntax. This is of major significance when porting to a SQL product.]
Thanks for your question. It just goes to show that it's worth considering portability from day one.
I would like to add one more point to OMG Ponies answer
Transform that is use for cross tab queries in MS ACCESS cannot be used in MySQL
e.g.
TRANSFORM Sum([M_Sales].[Amount]) AS SumOfAmount
SELECT [M_Sales].[Department]
FROM M_Sales
GROUP BY [M_Sales].[Department]
PIVOT Format([M_Sales].[Sale_date],"mmm") In ("Jan","Feb","Mar","Apr","May","Jun","Jul","Aug","Sep","Oct","Nov","Dec");
in MSACCESS ( taken from )
could be something in MySql Common MySQL Queries . Just visit the Pivot table section
Given some of your previous questions, you could save some time with MySQL, compared to Access: 12.1.10. CREATE TABLE Syntax
I've worked with T-SQL for years but I've just moved to an organisation that is going to require writing some Oracle stuff, probably just simple CRUD operations at least until I find my feet. I'm not going to be migrating databases from one to the other simply interacting with existing Oracle databases from an Application Development perspective. Is there are tool or utility available to easily translate T-SQL into Oracle SQL, a keyword mapper is the sort of thing I'm looking for.
P.S. I'm too lazy to RTFM, besides it's not going to be a big part of my role so I just want something to get me up to speed a little faster.
The language difference listed so far are trivial compared to the logical differences. Anyone can lookup NVL. What's hard to lookup is
DDL
In SQL server you manipulate your schema, anywhere, anytime, with little or no fuss.
In Oracle, we don't like DDL in stored procedures so you have jump through hoops. You need to use EXECUTE IMMEDIATE to perform a DDL function.
Temp Tables
IN SQL Server when the logic becomes a bit tough, the common thing is to shortcut the sql and have it resolved to a temp table and then the next step is done using that temp table.
MSSS makes it very easy to do this.
In Oracle we don't like that. By forcing an intermediate result you completely prevent the Optimizer from finding a shortcut for you. BUT If you must stop halfway and persist the intermediate results Oracle wants you to make the temp table in advance, not on the fly.
Locks
In MSSS you worry about locking, you have nolock hints to apply to DML, you have lock escalation to reduce the count of locks.
In Oracle we don't worry about these in that way.
Read Commited
Until recently MSSS didn't fully handle Read Committed isolation so you worried about dirty reads.
Oracle has been that way for decades.
etc
MSSS has no concept of Bitmap indexes, IOT, Table Clusters, Single Table hash clusters, non unique indexes enforcing unique constraints....
I get the impression most answers focus on migrating an entire database or just point to some differences between T-SQL and PL/SQL. I recently had the same problem. The Oracle database exists, but I need to convert a whole load of T-SQL scripts to PL/SQL.
I installed Oracle SQL Developer and ran the Translation Scratch Editor (Tools > Migration > Scratch Editor).
Then, just enter your T-SQL, choose the correct translation in the dropdown-list (it should default to 'T-SQL to PL/SQL'), and convert it.
I have to things to mention.
1) When I worked on Oracle 8, you could not do "Select #Result", you had to instead use the dummy table as follows "Select #Result from dual". Not sure if that ridiculousness still exists.
2) In the Oracle world they seem to love cursors and you better read up on them, they use them all the time AFAICS.
Good luck and enjoy,
it is not that different to MS SQL. Thankfully, I do not have to work with it anymore and I am back in the warm comfort of MS tools.
If you replace your ISNULL and NVL nonsense with COALESCE, it'll work in T-SQL and PL/SQL!
It's not trivial to map them back and forth, so I doubt there's a tool that does it automatically. But this link might help you out: http://vyaskn.tripod.com/oracle_sql_server_differences_equivalents.htm
The most important differences for plain T-SQL are:
NVL replaces ISNULL
SYSDATE replaces GETDATE()
CONVERT is not supported
Identity columns must be replaced with sequences <-- not technically T- or PL/ but just SQL
Note. I assume you do not use the deprecated SQL Server *= syntax for joins
#jodonell: The table you link to is a bit outdated, oracle has become somewhat more standards compliant after 9i supporting things like CASE and ANSI outer joins
I have done a few SQL server to oracle migrations. There is no way to migrate without rewriting the backend code. Too many differences between the 2 databases and more importantly differences between the 2 mind sets of the programmers. Many managers think that the 2 are interchangeable, I have had managers ask me to copy the stored procedures from SQL server and compile them in oracle, not a clue! Toad is by far the best tool on the market for supporting an oracle application. SQL developer is ok but was disappointing compared to toad. I hope that oracle will catch their product up to toad one day but it is not there yet. Have a good day :) chances are if you are migrating to oracle it is for a reason and in order to meet that requirement you will need to rewrite the back end code or you will have many issues.
In Oracle SQL Developer, there is a tool called Translation Scratch Editor. You can find it from Tools > Migration.
The Oracle SQL Developer is a free download from Oracle and it is an easy install.
If you're doing a one-off conversion, rather than trying to support two versions, you must look at Oracle Migration Workbench. This tool works with Oracle's SQLDeveloper (which you really should have if you are working with Oracle). This does a conversion of the schema, data, and some of the T-SQL to PL/SQL. Knowing both well, I found it did about an 80% job. Good enough to make it worth while to convert the bulk of procedures, and hand convert the remainder "tougher" unknown parts.
Not cheap ($995) but this tool works great: http://www.swissql.com/products/sql-translator/sql-converter.html
A few people have mentioned here converting back and forward. I do not know of a tool to convert from MSSQL to Oracle, but I used the free MS tool to convert a Oracle db to MSSQL and it worked for me and converted a large db with no problems I can call. It is similar to the Access to MSSQL tool that MS also provide for free. Enjoy
jOOQ has a publicly available, free translator, which can be accessed from the website here: https://www.jooq.org/translate
It supports DML, DDL, and a few procedural syntax elements. If you want to run the translation locally via command line, a license can be purchased and the command line works as follows:
$ java -cp jooq-3.11.9.jar org.jooq.ParserCLI -t ORACLE -s "SELECT substring('abcde', 2, 3)"
select substr('abcde', 2, 3) from dual;
See: https://www.jooq.org/doc/latest/manual/sql-building/sql-parser/sql-parser-cli
(Disclaimer, I work for the vendor)