1 / 31

Get a Lever and Pick Any Turtle

Get a Lever and Pick Any Turtle. Lifting With Metadata. Cade Roux Email cade@rosecrescent.com Web caderoux.com. Give me the place to stand, and I shall move the earth. Start Simple. Scale the Technique. Use Basic Concepts. Expand to Systems.

tory
Download Presentation

Get a Lever and Pick Any Turtle

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Get a Lever and Pick Any Turtle Lifting With Metadata

  2. Cade Roux Email cade@rosecrescent.com Web caderoux.com

  3. Give me the place to stand, and I shall move the earth.

  4. Start Simple

  5. Scalethe Technique

  6. Use Basic Concepts

  7. Expand to Systems

  8. Mixing Metaphors – We’re Going Down a Rabbit Hole Pam: And then outta that cake pops another stripper holding a smaller cake and then an even smaller stripper pops outta that one. Michael: What is that smaller stripper holding? Pam: A cupcake! It's cupcakes and strippers all the way down.

  9. Avoid Injury

  10. Metadata has always been there Codd Rule #0: The RDBMS must use the relational facilities to manage the database

  11. Metadata has always been there Codd Rule #4: There must be an active online catalog based on the relational model

  12. DBMeta DBHealth Demo

  13. Tables Views SPs

  14. SQL Server Basic Metadata Services • INFORMATION_SCHEMA contains tables and views (ANSI 92, kind of generic RDBMS model, doesn’t expose a lot of implementation details) • sys schema contains tables and views (more proprietary, particularly non-portable things like indexing features)

  15. SQL Server Extended Properties • You could make tables of additional information about database objects • DON’T • Built-in extended properties work great for this! • MS_Description: Microsoft’s standard “description” property • sp_addextendedproperty, sp_updateextendedproperty, sp_dropextendedproperty • fn_listextendedproperty • sys.extended_properties • I’ll improve this in the DBMeta schema

  16. DBMeta.Properties Layer this view on top of sys.extended_propertiesto: • Make it easier to use • Give a standard naming convention • Easier than CROSS APPLY fn_listextendedproperty

  17. DBMeta.AddXP, UpdateXP, DropXP • Easier to use than sp_addextendedproperty, sp_updateextendedproperty, sp_dropextendedproperty • The builtinprocs have some awkward hierarchy aspects: e.g. a column or trigger is defined at level 2 where the table is level 1

  18. DBMeta • With some simple tools we now have an easier way of dealing with the metadata in the extended properties • This can be expanded at will to join regular base metadata information, PIVOT with the property information and combine them in interesting ways • For instance, say your question was “I want to see NULLability (base metadata) of all money (base metadata) columns in tables in the Accounts subsystem (extended property) which have not been marked as reviewed. (extended property)” You can do that.

  19. DBHealth • Some questions about the health of the database system will be very standard • By health, I mean outside of integrity you can realistically enforce with constraints and beyond what you might use DDL triggers for • Can we use the metadata to do something generally useful? • Can we organize the health system using metadata so that it is self-maintaining as much a possible?

  20. Demo Data • Let’s create some data structures in our Demo schema – some tables and indexes

  21. Let’s Make Up Some DBA Rules • Arbitrary, but useful and chosen for variety • Rule #1: All tables should be identified with a SUBSYSTEM (Organizational Rule) • Rule #2: No unique indexes with columns which allow NULLs (Indexing Rule) • Rule #3: No varchar(N) columns where N <= 2 (Table Design Rule) • Rule #0: We only want to enforce these on schemas under management

  22. Rule #0 • We simply make a view DBHealth.MonitoredSchemas • We’ll need to remember to use this view • You could make a whole layer of views which filter through this, of course

  23. Rule #1 • Look for tables without extended property ‘SUBSYSTEM’

  24. Rule #2 • Look for unique indexes where any of the columns in the index are NULLable.

  25. Rule #3 • Find all varchar/nvarchar columns with length <= 2

  26. What about exclusions? • Let’s tag things for exclusion with extended properties!

  27. Now we have a bunch of rules • How do we organize them? • Could we put them in individual views or procedures to make them easy to use? • Then make a master procedure which runs them all. • But we’d need to make a list of all the procedures • But what did we say? • Let’s use the metadata to tag the procedures! • We’ll mark the procedures • We’ll categorize the procedures • We’ll be able to look for all the marked procedures and run them in an automated fashion – no new tables, limited maintenance!

  28. Ideas For Rules • All procs in DBHealth should have HEALTH_CHECK_PROC and HEALTH_CHECK_SET properties • Show me any unindexed tables (heap tables with no non-clustered indexes) • Show me any items tagged with a ‘TODO’ extended property • Show me all columns in the database which aren’t actually used (yes, you can do this!)

  29. Let’s use this from a client • Health Monitoring • .NET • Code Generation • T-SQL • T4

  30. Materials • http://bitly.com/bundles/caderoux/3 • 4 Part article by Adam Aspin on SQL Server Central • Article by Brent Shaub on MSSQLTips.com • Google Code Repository of presentation and code/scripts

  31. Cade Roux Email cade@rosecrescent.com Web caderoux.com

More Related