Relational model

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Database model
Common models

Hierarchical
Network
Relational
Object-relational
Object

Other models

Associative
Concept-oriented
Multi-dimensional
Star schema
XML database

The relational model for database management is a database model based on first-order predicate logic, first formulated and proposed in 1969 by Edgar Codd.[1][2][3]

Its core idea is to describe a database as a collection of predicates over a finite set of predicate variables, describing constraints on the possible values and combinations of values. The content of the database at any given time is a finite model (logic) of the database, i.e. a set of relations, one per predicate variable, such that all predicates are satisfied. A request for information from the database (a database query) is also a predicate.

The purpose of the relational model is to provide a declarative method for specifying data and queries: we directly state what information the database contains and what information we want from it, and let the database management system software take care of describing data structures for storing the data and retrieval procedures for getting queries answered.

IBM implementated Codd's ideas with the DB2 database management system; it introduced the SQL data definition and query language. Other relational database management systems followed, most of them using SQL as well. A table in an SQL database schema corresponds to a predicate variable; the contents of a table to a relation; key constraints, other constraints, and SQL queries correspond to predicates. However, it must be noted that SQL databases, including DB2, deviate from the relational model in many details; Codd fiercely argued against deviations that compromise the original principles.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] The model

The fundamental assumption of the relational model is that all data is represented as mathematical n-ary relations, an n-ary relation being a subset of the Cartesian product of n domains. In the mathematical model, reasoning about such data is done in two-valued predicate logic, meaning there are two possible evaluations for each proposition: either true or false (and in particular no third value such as unknown, or not applicable, either of which are often associated with the concept of NULL). Some think two-valued logic is an important part of the relational model, where others think a system that uses a form of three-valued logic can still be considered relational.[citation needed][who?]

Data are operated upon by means of a relational calculus or relational algebra, these being equivalent in expressive power.

The relational model of data permits the database designer to create a consistent, logical representation of information. Consistency is achieved by including declared constraints in the database design, which is usually referred to as the logical schema. The theory includes a process of database normalization whereby a design with certain desirable properties can be selected from a set of logically equivalent alternatives. The access plans and other implementation and operation details are handled by the DBMS engine, and are not reflected in the logical model. This contrasts with common practice for SQL DBMSs in which performance tuning often requires changes to the logical model.

The basic relational building block is the domain or data type, usually abbreviated nowadays to type. A tuple is an unordered set of attribute values. An attribute is an ordered pair of attribute name and type name. An attribute value is a specific valid value for the type of the attribute. This can be either a scalar value or a more complex type.

A relation consists of a heading and a body. A heading is a set of attributes. A body (of an n-ary relation) is a set of n-tuples. The heading of the relation is also the heading of each of its tuples.

A relation is defined as a set of n-tuples. In both mathematics and the relational database model, a set is an unordered collection of items, although some DBMSs impose an order to their data. In mathematics, a tuple has an order, and allows for duplication. E.F. Codd originally defined tuples using this mathematical definition.[4] Later, it was one of E.F. Codd's great insights that using attribute names instead of an ordering would be so much more convenient (in general) in a computer language based on relations[citation needed]. This insight is still being used today. Though the concept has changed, the name "tuple" has not. An immediate and important consequence of this distinguishing feature is that in the relational model the Cartesian product becomes commutative.

A table is an accepted visual representation of a relation; a tuple is similar to the concept of row, but note that in the database language SQL the columns and the rows of a table are ordered.

A relvar is a named variable of some specific relation type, to which at all times some relation of that type is assigned, though the relation may contain zero tuples.

The basic principle of the relational model is the Information Principle: all information is represented by data values in relations. In accordance with this Principle, a relational database is a set of relvars and the result of every query is presented as a relation.

The consistency of a relational database is enforced, not by rules built into the applications that use it, but rather by constraints, declared as part of the logical schema and enforced by the DBMS for all applications. In general, constraints are expressed using relational comparison operators, of which just one, "is subset of" (⊆), is theoretically sufficient. In practice, several useful shorthands are expected to be available, of which the most important are candidate key (really, superkey) and foreign key constraints.

[edit] Interpretation

To fully appreciate the relational model of data it is essential to understand the intended interpretation of a relation.

The body of a relation is sometimes called its extension. This is because it is to be interpreted as a representation of the extension of some predicate, this being the set of true propositions that can be formed by replacing each free variable in that predicate by a name (a term that designates something).

There is a one-to-one correspondence between the free variables of the predicate and the attribute names of the relation heading. Each tuple of the relation body provides attribute values to instantiate the predicate by substituting each of its free variables. The result is a proposition that is deemed, on account of the appearance of the tuple in the relation body, to be true. Contrariwise, every tuple whose heading conforms to that of the relation but which does not appear in the body is deemed to be false. This assumption is known as the closed world assumption.

For a formal exposition of these ideas, see the section Set Theory Formulation, below.

[edit] Application to databases

A type as used in a typical relational database might be the set of integers, the set of character strings, the set of dates, or the two boolean values true and false, and so on. The corresponding type names for these types might be the strings "int", "char", "date", "boolean", etc. It is important to understand, though, that relational theory does not dictate what types are to be supported; indeed, nowadays provisions are expected to be available for user-defined types in addition to the built-in ones provided by the system.

Attribute is the term used in the theory for what is commonly referred to as a column. Similarly, table is commonly used in place of the theoretical term relation (though in SQL the term is by no means synonymous with relation). A table data structure is specified as a list of column definitions, each of which specifies a unique column name and the type of the values that are permitted for that column. An attribute value is the entry in a specific column and row, such as "John Doe" or "35".

A tuple is basically the same thing as a row, except in an SQL DBMS, where the column values in a row are ordered. (Tuples are not ordered; instead, each attribute value is identified solely by the attribute name and never by its ordinal position within the tuple.) An attribute name might be "name" or "age".

A relation is a table structure definition (a set of column definitions) along with the data appearing in that structure. The structure definition is the heading and the data appearing in it is the body, a set of rows. A database relvar (relation variable) is commonly known as a base table. The heading of its assigned value at any time is as specified in the table declaration and its body is that most recently assigned to it by invoking some update operator (typically, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE). The heading and body of the table resulting from evaluation of some query are determined by the definitions of the operators used in the expression of that query. (Note that in SQL the heading is not always a set of column definitions as described above, because it is possible for a column to have no name and also for two or more columns to have the same name. Also, the body is not always a set of rows because in SQL it is possible for the same row to appear more than once in the same body.)

[edit] Alternatives to the relational model

Other models are the hierarchical model and network model. Some systems using these older architectures are still in use today in data centers with high data volume needs or where existing systems are so complex and abstract it would be cost prohibitive to migrate to systems employing the relational model; also of note are newer object-oriented databases, even though many of them are DBMS-construction kits, rather than proper DBMSs.
A recent development is the Object-Relation type-Object model, which is based on the assumption that any fact can be expressed in the form of one or more binary relationships. The model is used in Object Role Modeling (ORM), RDF/Notation 3 (N3) and in Gellish English.

The relational model was the first formal database model. After it was defined, informal models were made to describe hierarchical databases (the hierarchical model) and network databases (the network model). Hierarchical and network databases existed before relational databases, but were only described as models after the relational model was defined, in order to establish a basis for comparison.

[edit] History

The relational model was invented by E.F. (Ted) Codd as a general model of data, and subsequently maintained and developed by Chris Date and Hugh Darwen among others. In The Third Manifesto (first published in 1995) Date and Darwen show how the relational model can accommodate certain desired object-oriented features.

[edit] SQL and the relational model

SQL, initially pushed as the standard language for relational databases, deviates from the relational model in several places. The current ISO SQL standard doesn't mention the relational model or use relational terms or concepts. However, it is possible to create a database conforming to the relational model using SQL if one does not use certain SQL features.

The following deviations from the relational model have been noted in SQL. Note that few database servers implement the entire SQL standard and in particular do not allow some of these deviations. Whereas NULL is nearly ubiquitous, for example, allowing duplicate column names within a table or anonymous columns is uncommon.

Duplicate rows
The same row can appear more than once in an SQL table. The same tuple cannot appear more than once in a relation.
Anonymous columns
A column in an SQL table can be unnamed and thus unable to be referenced in expressions. The relational model requires every attribute to be named and referenceable.
Duplicate column names
Two or more columns of the same SQL table can have the same name and therefore cannot be referenced, on account of the obvious ambiguity. The relational model requires every attribute to be referenceable.
Column order significance
The order of columns in an SQL table is defined and significant, one consequence being that SQL's implementations of Cartesian product and union are both noncommutative. The relational model requires there to be no significance to any ordering of the attributes of a relation.
Views without CHECK OPTION
Updates to a view defined without CHECK OPTION can be accepted but the resulting update to the database does not necessarily have the expressed effect on its target. For example, an invocation of INSERT can be accepted but the inserted rows might not all appear in the view, or an invocation of UPDATE can result in rows disappearing from the view. The relational model requires updates to a view to have the same effect as if the view were a base relvar.
Columnless tables unrecognized
SQL requires every table to have at least one column, but there are two relations of degree zero (of cardinality one and zero) and they are needed to represent extensions of predicates that contain no free variables.
NULL
This special mark can appear instead of a value wherever a value can appear in SQL, in particular in place of a column value in some row. The deviation from the relational model arises from the fact that the implementation of this ad hoc concept in SQL involves the use of three-valued logic, under which the comparison of NULL with itself does not yield true but instead yields the third truth value, unknown; similarly the comparison NULL with something other than itself does not yield false but instead yields unknown. It is because of this behaviour in comparisons that NULL is described as a mark rather than a value. The relational model depends on the law of excluded middle under which anything that is not true is false and anything that is not false is true; it also requires every tuple in a relation body to have a value for every attribute of that relation. This particular deviation is disputed by some if only because E.F. Codd himself eventually advocated the use of special marks and a 4-valued logic, but this was based on his observation that there are two distinct reasons why one might want to use a special mark in place of a value, which led opponents of the use of such logics to discover more distinct reasons and at least as many as 19 have been noted, which would require a 21-valued logic. SQL itself uses NULL for several purposes other than to represent "value unknown". For example, the sum of the empty set is NULL, meaning zero, the average of the empty set is NULL, meaning undefined, and NULL appearing in the result of a LEFT JOIN can mean "no value because there is no matching row in the right-hand operand".
Concepts
SQL uses concepts "table", "column", "row" instead of "relvar", "attribute", "tuple". These are not merely differences in terminology. For example, a "table" may contain duplicate rows, whereas the same tuple cannot appear more than once in a relation.

[edit] Implementation

There have been several attempts to produce a true implementation of the relational database model as originally defined by Codd and explained by Date, Darwen and others, but none have been popular successes so far. Rel is one of the more recent attempts to do this.

[edit] Controversies

Codd himself, some years after publication of his 1970 model, proposed a three-valued logic (True, False, Missing or NULL) version of it in order to deal with missing information, and in his The Relational Model for Database Management Version 2 (1990) he went a step further with a four-valued logic (True, False, Missing but Applicable, Missing but Inapplicable) version. But these have never been implemented, presumably because of attending complexity. SQL's NULL construct was intended to be part of a three-valued logic system, but fell short of that due to logical errors in the standard and in its implementations. See the section "SQL standard", above.

[edit] Design

Database normalization is usually performed when designing a relational database, to improve the logical consistency of the database design and the transactional performance.

There are two commonly used systems of diagramming to aid in the visual representation of the relational model: the entity-relationship diagram (ERD), and the related IDEF diagram used in the IDEF1X method created by the U.S. Air Force based on ERDs.

The tree structure of data may enforce hierarchical model organization, with parent-child relationship table.

[edit] Example database

An idealized, very simple example of a description of some relvars and their attributes:

  • Customer(Customer ID, Tax ID, Name, Address, City, State, Zip, Phone)
  • Order(Order No, Customer ID, Invoice No, Date Placed, Date Promised, Terms, Status)
  • Order Line(Order No, Order Line No, Product Code, Qty)
  • Invoice(Invoice No, Customer ID, Order No, Date, Status)
  • Invoice Line(Invoice No, Line No, Product Code, Qty Shipped)
  • Product(Product Code, Product Description)

In this design we have six relvars: Customer, Order, Order Line, Invoice, Invoice Line and Product. The bold, underlined attributes are candidate keys. The non-bold, underlined attributes are foreign keys.

Usually one candidate key is arbitrarily chosen to be called the primary key and used in preference over the other candidate keys, which are then called alternate keys.

A candidate key is a unique identifier enforcing that no tuple will be duplicated; this would make the relation into something else, namely a bag, by violating the basic definition of a set. Both foreign keys and superkeys (which includes candidate keys) can be composite, that is, can be composed of several attributes. Below is a tabular depiction of a relation of our example Customer relvar; a relation can be thought of as a value that can be attributed to a relvar.

[edit] Example: customer relation

Customer ID     Tax ID              Name                 Address                 [More fields....]
==================================================================================================
1234567890      555-5512222         Munmun               323 Broadway            ...
2223344556      555-5523232         Vijeta               1200 Main Street        ...
3334445563      555-5533323         Ekta                 871 1st Street          ...
4232342432      555-5325523         E. F. Codd           123 It Way              ...

If we attempted to insert a new customer with the ID 1234567890, this would violate the design of the relvar since Customer ID is a primary key and we already have a customer 1234567890. The DBMS must reject a transaction such as this that would render the database inconsistent by a violation of an integrity constraint.

Foreign keys are integrity constraints enforcing that the value of the attribute set is drawn from a candidate key in another relation. For example in the Order relation the attribute Customer ID is a foreign key. A join is the operation that draws on information from several relations at once. By joining relvars from the example above we could query the database for all of the Customers, Orders, and Invoices. If we only wanted the tuples for a specific customer, we would specify this using a restriction condition.

If we wanted to retrieve all of the Orders for Customer 1234567890, we could query the database to return every row in the Order table with Customer ID 1234567890 and join the Order table to the Order Line table based on Order No.

There is a flaw in our database design above. The Invoice relvar contains an Order No attribute. So, each tuple in the Invoice relvar will have one Order No, which implies that there is precisely one Order for each Invoice. But in reality an invoice can be created against many orders, or indeed for no particular order. Additionally the Order relvar contains an Invoice No attribute, implying that each Order has a corresponding Invoice. But again this is not always true in the real world. An order is sometimes paid through several invoices, and sometimes paid without an invoice. In other words there can be many Invoices per Order and many Orders per Invoice. This is a many-to-many relationship between Order and Invoice (also called a non-specific relationship). To represent this relationship in the database a new relvar should be introduced whose role is to specify the correspondence between Orders and Invoices:

OrderInvoice(Order No,Invoice No)

Now, the Order relvar has a one-to-many relationship to the OrderInvoice table, as does the Invoice relvar. If we want to retrieve every Invoice for a particular Order, we can query for all orders where Order No in the Order relation equals the Order No in OrderInvoice, and where Invoice No in OrderInvoice equals the Invoice No in Invoice.

[edit] Set-theoretic formulation

Basic notions in the relational model are relation names and attribute names. We will represent these as strings such as "Person" and "name" and we will usually use the variables r, s, t, \ldots and a,b,c to range over them. Another basic notion is the set of atomic values that contains values such as numbers and strings.

Our first definition concerns the notion of tuple, which formalizes the notion of row or record in a table:

Tuple
A tuple is a partial function from attribute names to atomic values.
Header
A header is a finite set of attribute names.
Projection
The projection of a tuple t on a finite set of attributes A is t[A] = \{ (a, v) : (a, v) \in t, a \in A \}.

The next definition defines relation which formalizes the contents of a table as it is defined in the relational model.

Relation
A relation is a tuple (H,B) with H, the header, and B, the body, a set of tuples that all have the domain H.

Such a relation closely corresponds to what is usually called the extension of a predicate in first-order logic except that here we identify the places in the predicate with attribute names. Usually in the relational model a database schema is said to consist of a set of relation names, the headers that are associated with these names and the constraints that should hold for every instance of the database schema.

Relation universe
A relation universe U over a header H is a non-empty set of relations with header H.
Relation schema
A relation schema (H,C) consists of a header H and a predicate C(R) that is defined for all relations R with header H. A relation satisfies a relation schema (H,C) if it has header H and satisfies C.

[edit] Key constraints and functional dependencies

One of the simplest and most important types of relation constraints is the key constraint. It tells us that in every instance of a certain relational schema the tuples can be identified by their values for certain attributes.

Superkey
A superkey is written as a finite set of attribute names.
A superkey K holds in a relation (H,B) if:
  • K \subseteq H and
  • there exist no two distinct tuples t_1, t_2 \in B such that t1[K] = t2[K].
A superkey holds in a relation universe U if it holds in all relations in U.
Theorem: A superkey K holds in a relation universe U over H if and only if K \subseteq H and K \rightarrow H holds in U.
Candidate key
A superkey K holds as a candidate key for a relation universe U if it holds as a superkey for U and there is no proper subset of K that also holds as a superkey for U.
Functional dependency
A functional dependency (FD for short) is written as X \rightarrow Y for X,Y finite sets of attribute names.
A functional dependency X \rightarrow Y holds in a relation (H,B) if:
  • X, Y \subseteq H and
  • \forall tuples t_1, t_2 \in B, t_1[X] = t_2[X]~\Rightarrow~t_1[Y] = t_2[Y]
A functional dependency X \rightarrow Y holds in a relation universe U if it holds in all relations in U.
Trivial functional dependency
A functional dependency is trivial under a header H if it holds in all relation universes over H.
Theorem: An FD X \rightarrow Y is trivial under a header H if and only if Y \subseteq X \subseteq H.
Closure
Armstrong's axioms: The closure of a set of FDs S under a header H, written as S + , is the smallest superset of S such that:
  • Y \subseteq X \subseteq H~\Rightarrow~X \rightarrow Y \in S^+ (reflexivity)
  • X \rightarrow Y \in S^+ \land Y \rightarrow Z \in S^+~\Rightarrow~X \rightarrow Z \in S^+ (transitivity) and
  • X \rightarrow Y \in S^+ \land Z \subseteq H~\Rightarrow~(X \cup Z) \rightarrow (Y \cup Z) \in S^+ (augmentation)
Theorem: Armstrong's axioms are sound and complete; given a header H and a set S of FDs that only contain subsets of H, X \rightarrow Y \in S^+ if and only if X \rightarrow Y holds in all relation universes over H in which all FDs in S hold.
Completion
The completion of a finite set of attributes X under a finite set of FDs S, written as X + , is the smallest superset of X such that:
  • Y \rightarrow Z \in S \land Y \subseteq X^+~\Rightarrow~Z \subseteq X
The completion of an attribute set can be used to compute if a certain dependency is in the closure of a set of FDs.
Theorem: Given a set S of FDs, X \rightarrow Y \in S^+ if and only if Y \subseteq X^+.
Irreducible cover
An irreducible cover of a set S of FDs is a set T of FDs such that:
  • S + = T +
  • there exists no U \subset T such that S + = U +
  • X \rightarrow Y \in T~\Rightarrow Y is a singleton set and
  • X \rightarrow Y \in T \land Z \subset X~\Rightarrow~Z \rightarrow Y \notin S^+.

[edit] Algorithm to derive candidate keys from functional dependencies

      INPUT: a set S of FDs that contain only subsets of a header H
      OUTPUT: the set C of superkeys that hold as candidate keys in
              all relation universes over H in which all FDs in S hold
      begin
        C := ∅;          // found candidate keys
        Q := { H };      // superkeys that contain candidate keys
        while Q <> ∅ do
          let K be some element from Q;
          Q := Q - { K };  
          minimal := true;
          for each X->Y in S do 
            K' := (K - Y) ∪ X;   // derive new superkey
            if K' K then
              minimal := false;
              Q := Q ∪ { K' };
            end if
          end for
          if minimal and there is not a subset of K in C then
            remove all supersets of K from C;
            C := C ∪ { K };
          end if
        end while
      end

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Derivability, Redundancy, and Consistency of Relations Stored in Large Data Banks", E.F. Codd, IBM Research Report, 1969
  2. ^ "A Relational Model of Data for Large Shared Data Banks", in Communications of the ACM, 1970.
  3. ^ White, Colin. In the Beginning: An RDBMS History. Teradata Magazine Online. September 2004 edition. URL: http://www.teradata.com/t/page/127057
  4. ^ Codd, E.F. (1970). "A Relational Model of Data for Large Shared Data Banks". Communications of the ACM 13 (6): 377–387. 

[edit] External links