物理データベース設計<br>Physical Database Design: The Database Professional's Guide to Exploiting Indexes, Views, Storage, and More (The Morgan Kaufmann Data Management Systems")

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物理データベース設計
Physical Database Design: The Database Professional's Guide to Exploiting Indexes, Views, Storage, and More (The Morgan Kaufmann Data Management Systems")

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 448 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780123693891
  • DDC分類 005.74

基本説明

Discusses a variety of systems, and includes examples for DB2 for zOS v8.1, DB2 Universal Database for Linux, Unix and Windows v9.1, Oracle 10g, SQL Server 2005, Informix Dataserver, and NCR Teradata.

Full Description


The rapidly increasing volume of information contained in relational databases places a strain on databases, performance, and maintainability: DBAs are under greater pressure than ever to optimize database structure for system performance and administration.Physical Database Design discusses the concept of how physical structures of databases affect performance, including specific examples, guidelines, and best and worst practices for a variety of DBMSs and configurations. Something as simple as improving the table index design has a profound impact on performance. Every form of relational database, such as Online Transaction Processing (OLTP), Enterprise Resource Management (ERP), Data Mining (DM), or Management Resource Planning (MRP), can be improved using the methods provided in the book.

Contents

1 Introduction to Physical Database Design2 Basic Indexing Methods3 Query Optimization and Plan Selection4 Selecting Indexes5 Selecting Materialized Views6 Shared-nothing Partitioning7 Range Partitioning8 Multidimensional Clustering9 The Interdependence Problem10 Counting and Data Sampling in Physical Design Exploration11 Query Execution Plans and Physical Design12 Automated Physical Database Design13 Down to the Metal: Server Resources and Topology14 Physical Design for Decision Support, Warehousing, and OLAP15 Denormalization16 Distributed Data AllocationAppendix A A Simple Performance Model for DatabasesAppendix B Technical Comparison of DB2 HADR with Oracle Data Guard for Database Disaster Recovery