🔒 Secure-first SQL Editor with data access control and masking 🎭

Database Glossary

A complete database term dictionary on the internet. We cover general database, MySQL, PostgreSQL as well as Bytebase specific topics.

  • A
    • General

      ACID

      ACID stands for Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, Durability. These are the key properties of a database transaction to guarantee correctness even (unexpected) failure occurs.

    • General

      Atomicity

      A in ACID, the property to guarantee all state mutation in a transaction either all happen or none happen (all or nothing).

    • General

      Audit log / Audit trail

      A set of chronological records providing documentary evidence of a series of database activities. User activities such as login attempt, DDL operations are often captured. For DML operations, due to its large volume and impact on performance, is normally sampled or not captured at all.

    • General

      Autonomous database

      A shinny concept declaring the database can operate without DBA involvement, which sounds a bit optimistic like the self-driving technology in auto industry.

  • B
    • General

      B+ tree

      The fundamental data structure used in all major database systems storing the data. B+ tree is a variation of B tree, both have a very large fanout to store indexes to the data page, which greatly reduces the number of I/O operations to find the desired data. Unlike B tree which stores data on both leaf and non-leaf node. B+ tree only stores data on the leaf node and index data on the non-leaf node, which gives B+ tree a even large fanout on the intermediate non-leaf index node.

    • GeneralBytebase

      Backup

      A copy of data taken and may be used to restore after a data loss event. Bytebase supports both the manual (on-demand) and the automatic per-database backup.

    • General

      Bloom filter

      A space-efficient probabilistic data structure commonly used by the query engine to greatly reduce I/O operations or remote data fetch involving distributed query.

    • General

      Buffer pool / Buffer cache

      A consecutive memory area to cache table and index data in memory to avoid I/O operations. The buffer pool consists of many pages of same size (normal values are 4K, 8K, 16K bytes), and a variation of LRU (Least Recently Used) replacement strategy is often used to swap buffer pages.

  • C
    • General

      Catalog (Database Catalog)

      Records the metadata of the database, which are stored in the so-called System Table. The metadata includes the database name, table name, database users and their permissions, etc.

    • General

      Change data capture (CDC)

      A process to record the data changes. It's often used to copy the data to a different system such as warehouse or a different database system in the process of migration.

    • General

      Checkpoint

      The original idea comes from the ARIES paper (see reference). For performance reason, database does not persist modified data to disk after every committed change, instead, it periodically issues checkpoint which persists the changes in batch. It's called checkpoint because when database crashes and then starts again for crash recovery, the recovery process only needs to recover the committed changes after the latest checkpoint because the checkpoint guarantees any commits before that checkpoint have been persisted already. Checkpoint is still a heavy operation and may impact database performance.

    • General

      Column

      A set of data values of a particular type, one value for each row of the database. Column can also have constraints such as non-emptiness, having a certain prefix and etc.

    • General

      Commit

      Commit marks the end of a transaction, persisting all mutations from that transaction. For performance reason, database does not persist the change to data file directly upon commit, rather, it persists the change to a commit log also called write-ahead log. Later on, database will do a checkpoint to persist those changes from write-ahead log to the data file in batch.

    • General

      Consistency

      C in ACID, database defines a set of constraints, the consistency property guarantees the same invariants before and after the transaction.

    • General

      Constraint

      Specific requirement that must be met by the value stored in the database. Typical constraints are NOT NULL constraint, UNIQUE constraint and etc.

    • General

      Cost-based optimization (CBO)

      A optimization strategy used by the query engine to pick a query plan to execute the SQL statement based on the cost estimate. It's the strategy used by all mainstream databases. It's predecessor is Rule-based optimization (RBO). The advantage of CBO is it's more adaptive than the hard-coded RBO since it's based on the actual context, the number of estimated rows to be fetched, the cost of each fetch, the index to be used and etc. Because there are quite a few factors to consider, and it's prohibitive expensive to explore all permutations, thus the database often finds the best plan among a subset of all possible plans.

    • General

      Crash recovery

      A process running upon database startup if the database is not shutdown properly (crash, power failure). The process restores the database to the consistent state by rolling back incomplete transactions and completing committed transactions. All mainstream database use the same crash recovery mechanism described in the ARIES paper (see reference).

  • D
    • General

      Data source

      A connection set up to a database from a database instance. There could be multiple data sources for the same database. e.g. one for read-only connection, and one for read-write connection.

    • General

      Data source name (DSN)

      A string describing the data source. This is the one used by the database driver code to establish the connection to the database. The format is a variation of <driver>://<username>:<password>@<host>:<port>/<database> depending on the specific driver implementation.

    • General

      Data definition language (DDL)

      The statement to change the structure (schema) of the database such as CREATE, ALTER, DROP statements.

    • General

      Data manipulation language (DML)

      The statement to query or change the data of the database such as SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE statements.

    • GeneralBytebase

      Database

      A logic collection of schema objects like tables, stored procedures, triggers, users. A database is the one created by 'CREATE DATABASE'. Bytebase also has a database concept which is a 1:1 mapping to this database definition. Database in Bytebase always belongs to a single project.

    • GeneralBytebase

      Database instance

      The complete running environment providing the database service. This is usually denoted by a host:port pointing to the running instance. When people talk about MySQL/PostgreSQL instance, they usually refer to the database instance. A single database instance can host many databases. Bytebase has an instance concept which is a 1:1 mapping to this instance definition. Instance in Bytebase always belongs to a particular environment. Bytebase also stores the database schema migration history on the instance itself.

    • GeneralBytebase

      Database-as-code

      A workflow to store database schema changes as a series of schema migration scripts in the version control system (VCS). Whenever new script committed to the VCS, a process will kickoff automatically to start the process of applying the script to the database. Thus the database schema change is managed in a very similar fashion as code. This workflow is considered superior than the classic UI based SQL review workflow. However, it requires a bit more setup and engineering discipline. Bytebase supports this workflow and helps ease the onboarding and ongoing management of using this workflow.

    • General

      Deadlock

      A situation in which multiple transactions are waiting for one another to give up locks. Transaction may acquire locks when it's accessing a resource, if one transaction accesses resource A and then B, another transaction accesses resource B and then A, they may hold lock on A and B respectively while waiting for each other to release another lock, thus a deadlock occurs. Database has a deadlock detection algorithm to find such situation and would abort one of the transactions to resolve the deadlock.

    • General

      Durability

      D in ACID, the property to guarantee the changes after the successful transaction commit will survive permanently.

    • MySQL

      Doublewrite buffer

      The InnoDB double write buffer helps recover from half-written pages. Whenever InnoDB flushes a page from the buffer pool, it is first written to the double write buffer. Only if the buffer is safely flushed to the disk, will InnoDB write the pages to the disk. So that when InnoDB detects the corruption from the mismatch of the checksum, it can recover from double write buffer. The PostgreSQL equivalent is full-page writes.

  • E
    • General

      Encryption at rest (EAR)

      Database stores data in its own format on the disk. While the data looks obscure to the humans, it can be de-obfuscated and altered with some effort. This poses a risk if malicious user has direct access to the disk, which can bypass the database ACL system to access and alter the data. EAR is the method to encrypt the data on disk (at rest) using an encryption key, which makes this attack impossible. Data is encrypted right before writing to the disk and decrypted right after reading from the disk.

    • General

      Encryption in transit

      Client normally accesses database server over a public or untrusted network, to prevents eavesdropping and man-in-the-middle attack, database client and server would first establish a secure connection by agreeing on the encryption algorithm and ephemeral encryption key to use, then client and server can securely exchange the messages with each other.

    • General

      Engine / Database engine

      Sometimes, this refers to the database type like MySQL, PostgreSQL. Sometimes, especially when we are talking about a specific database, this refers to the underlying storage engine which manages the transaction and data storage layer, see 'Storage engine'.

    • Bytebase

      Environment

      A top level model in Bytebase to model after various environments in the development pipeline such as test, staging, prod. A bytebase database instance always belong to a single environment. Bytebase owner and DBA can also configure approval policies on the environment.

  • F
    • General

      Failover

      An operation to switch to a secondary database instance when the primary database instance fails. That secondary instance is commonly known as standby, failover replica. The key metrics to evaluate the failover are RPO (Recovery Point Objective) and RTO (Recovery Time Objective).

    • GeneralMySQL

      Filesort / External merge sort

      When performing sorting operations for ORDER BY, GROUP BY and there is no sufficient memory to sort all data at once, database will partition the data, sort them batch by batch and write the intermediate sorting results to disk. Since it involves heavy I/O operations, it will drastically impact query performance.

    • PostgreSQL

      Foreign data wrapper

      A PostgreSQL specific feature to allow it access external data sources such as CSV file, MySQL database and etc. Besides, unlike MySQL, PostgreSQL does not natively support accessing different databases in a single statement, to achieve the similar result, user can also setup a PostgreSQL database as a foreign data source.

    • General

      Foreign key

      A set of attributes in a table that refers to the primary key of another table. The foreign key links 2 tables and often establishes the referential integrity rules between 2 tables. (e.g a typical referential rule is a particular row can't be removed if the row id is referenced in any foreign tables.).

    • PostgreSQL

      Full-page writes

      When full-page writes is on, the PostgreSQL server writes the entire content of each disk page to WAL during the first modification of that page after a checkpoint. This is needed because a page write that is in process during an operating system crash might be only partially completed, leading to an on-disk page that contains a mix of old and new data. The row-level change data normally stored in WAL will not be enough to completely restore such a page during post-crash recovery. Storing the full page image guarantees that the page can be correctly restored, but at the price of increasing the amount of data that must be written to WAL. The MySQL equivalent is double write buffer

  • H
    • General

      Hierarchical model

      A data model in which the data are organized into a tree-like structure. This is the first model used in database system from IBM. But it lost popularity to the relational model.

    • General

      Hint

      A hint to advice the query optimizer to use a particular optimization strategy which would be otherwise ignored. Query optimizer usually follows the hint if specified.

    • General

      HTAP (Hybrid transactional/analytical processing)

      A new term coined recently to combine the transactional and analytical power into a single system. Traditionally, transactional and analytical processing are handled by different systems, which causes the headache of maintaining 2 separate systems as well as duplicating the data and managing the pipeline to copy the data from the online transactional system to the analytical system. HTAP gains popularity because it eliminates the duplicate system and data, making near real-time analytic possible. On the other hand, the challenge still remains as how to efficiently handle both transactional and analytical workload in the same system, and how to prevent analytical workload interfering with online transactional processing.

  • I
    • General

      Index

      A data structure greatly improves the speed of data retrieval. Like the physical book index, the index helps quickly locate a particular value or a range of values (finding a needle in a haystack). While good for boosting query performance, index brings the overhead of updating the index entry whenever underlying data changes. Thus adding /removing index is a balanced art and should be evaluated carefully. maintaining index

    • MySQL

      InnoDB

      A well-engineered storage engine which is now the default storage engined used by MySQL. It's a performant storage engine providing the standard ACID-compliant transaction features. Inno stands for 'Innovation', InnoDB is the lesser hero underpinning the many web services and saving huge amount of DBA headaches.

    • General

      Isolation

      I in ACID, the property defines the behavior of how concurrent transactions sees changes from each other. ANSI/ISO SQL defines 4 isolation levels in the order of ascending strictness: Read uncommitted, Read committed, Repeatable reads, Serializable.

    • General

      Issue

      Issue is a Bytebase concept, each issue represents a specific collaboration activity between Developer and DBA such as creating a database, altering a schema. It's similar to the issue concept in other issue management tools. An issue always belong to a Bytebase Project.

  • J
    • General

      JDBC

      Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) defines a standard API for Java to access database. Different database venders implements the JDBC API so that Java programs can call the same standard API to access different databases.

    • General

      Join

      An operator in relational algebra to combine columns from multiple tables into a single table. Query engines usually fulfills the join request using one of the Nested-loop join, Merge join, Hash join methods.

  • L
    • General

      Lock

      A technique to prevent simultaneous access to data in a database to prevent inconsistent results. Modern databases all implement the granular row-level locking for performance reason. But some operations like altering the schema would still require table-level locking, which would block the normal online processing. That's the reason such operations are performed during non-business hours to reduce impact.

    • General

      LRU (Least Recently Used)

      The algorithm used by database engines to swap the buffer pool pages. Different database engines use a different variation of LRU algorithms.

  • M
    • General

      Migration (database system)

      The process of migrating the entire database from one system to another (e.g. From MySQL to PostgreSQL or vice versa). The process usually consists of 3 phase, 1) baseline phase 2) catchup phase 3) switchover phase. In the baseline phase, team creates a data dump from the source database system and loads it into the target database system. 2) In the catchup phase, team configures a change-data-capture (CDC) pipeline to stream the ongoing changes to the target database. 3) In the switchover phase, team cuts off the traffic to the original database, wait for target database to catch up all new changes from the source database, and then redirect the traffic to the target database. If executed carefully, the downtime would be limited to the blackout period in the switchover phase.

    • GeneralBytebase

      Migration (schema change)

      The process of making changes to the database schema. The process is both dangerous and hard to fix. Performing a successful schema migration requires coordination between developers, DBAs and the operating environment. Bytebase is a product built specifically for addressing the challenges involved in this database schema change process. It supports the 2 most common change workflows, 1) Classic UI-based SQL review workflow and 2) Version control based workflow (database-as-code).

    • General

      MVCC (Multi-version concurrency control)

      A method used to achieve both performant concurrent access and strict isolation level. The idea is to give each transaction a unique versioned view of the data, thus each transaction can operate on their own. Only at the commit phase, the database system will perform the resolution, the conflict might arise at this point and may cause the transaction to abort. However, the assumption is such scenario is less likely to happen and that's why MVCC is referred as optimistic concurrency control. A classic saying for MVCC is 'Reads do not block Writes, writes do not block Reads'.

    • MySQL

      MySQL

      A pragmatic, performant database secretly supporting a majority of internet services.

  • N
    • General

      Normalization

      A process of designing a database schema in accordance with a series of so-called normal forms. The design requires skillful balance among data redundancy, data integrity, performance and etc.

    • General

      NewSQL

      A class of relational database management systems that seek to provide the scalability of NoSQL systems for online transaction processing (OLTP) workloads while maintaining the ACID guarantees of a traditional database system. This emerges from the NoSQL movement which advocates scalability over classic ACID guarantees. And only after hard learned lessons, people realize the merits of the old wisdom and add ACID to the NoSQL, thus resulting in NewSQL.

    • General

      NoSQL

      A class of database management systems does not provide SQL like interface or does not employ relational model. A key difference from the relational database group is NoSQL does not enforce schema (schemaless). Notable NoSQL are Redis, MongoDB, AWS DynamoDB

  • O
    • General

      Optimizer / Query optimizer

      A key subsystem in relational database to determine the efficient way to execute a given query in a timely fashion. It transforms an input SQL query into an executable query plan. Most mainstream databases use the cost-based optimizer (CBO) which determines the best query by calculating the cost of many factors such I/O speed, number of rows to be accessed etc. Because the cost is an estimate, and also the plan needs to be generated in a timely fashion, thus the optimizer can not permutate all possible plans and pick the optimal plan.

    • General

      ODBC (Open Database Connectivity)

      A standard API for accessing database management systems. Its current usage is more limited to Microsoft ecosystems because other programming environments employ different but similar standard API (like JDBC for Java, database/sql for Golang).

    • General

      OLAP (Online analytical processing)

      A process specializing in handling multi-dimensional analytical queries efficiently. This is often used in database warehouse, business intelligence. Traditionally, a specialized system is built for this type of processing. But nowadays, many systems try to combine the OLAP and OLTP power into a single system known as HTAP (Hybrid transactional/analytical processing).

    • General

      OLTP (Online transaction processing)

      A process specializing in online transaction processing. It's optimized for serving requests in milliseconds for hundreds of thousands customers concurrently, while conforming ACID transaction properties. Nowadays, more OLTP system evolves to handle OLAP, which becomes a HTAP system.

  • P
    • General

      Page

      Both on disk and in memory, database data is stored as a consecutive byte blocks with same size. Each block is called a page. Normal page size are 4KB, 8KB, 16KB bytes. Data I/O operation is performed on the unit of pages. Most of the time, database can't hold all data in the memory, thus it employs a buffer pool to maintain a list of active pages based on LRU. The buffer pool swaps the pages continuously based on the access pattern, a process known as page-in, page-out.

    • General

      Point-in-time-recovery (PITR)

      A process to restore the database state to a particular point in time. This is often achieved by first restoring the database using a base backup (baselining) and then replaying the change-data-capture (CDC) logs up to the desired point in time.

    • PostgreSQL

      PostGIS

      An open source PostgreSQL plugin providing sophisticated geo-spatial operations. It leverages the PostgreSQL extensibilities to offer a native geo-spatial processing experience. It's one of the features setting PostgreSQL apart from other database systems.

    • PostgreSQL

      PostgreSQL

      A battle tested, well-engineered, multi-model, open source relational database. The only regret is its naming story.

    • General

      Primary key

      A set of columns that uniquely identifies a row in a table. It could be a single column such as UUID or a set of columns. Many database systems requires user to specify the primary key in the table schema, for those not specified, an internal primary key is always created since the primary key is required to identify and address a particular row.

    • Bytebase

      Project

      Project is a Bytebase top-level model and is a logic unit to model a team effort. It's similar to the project concept in other dev tools such as Jira, GitLab. Project is the container to group logically related Databases, Issues and Users together.

  • Q
    • General

      Query

      A query sometimes refers to the general SQL statement or in the more narrowed case, only refers to the SELECT SQL statement since the SELECT query requires the query optimizer to determine a performant query plan.

    • General

      Query Plan

      A sequence of steps generated by the query optimizer from the SELECT query. A particular query can often translate to a lot of query plans. The task of query optimizer is to pick a performant query plan among them. Note it's often computational and time prohibitive to permutate all possible query plans and pick the best one. What query optimizer normally does is to strategically choose a subset of query plans and pick the best one among them.

  • R
    • General

      Redo logs

      See Write-ahead log

    • General

      Referential integrity

      Declares the constraint of foreign key. Specifically, it requires when a foreign key value is used, it must reference an existing primary key in the paraent table.

    • General

      Relational model

      The model invented by Edgar F. Codd and rewrites the entire human history.

    • General

      Replication

      A process the produce a redundant copy of the primary data. The copy is also called replica. The replica can be used as a hot standby to takeover traffic when the primary fails, or it can be used as a read replica to serve read traffic.

    • GeneralBytebase

      Restore

      A process to reset the database to a state based on a backup. Bytebase supports to restore a backup to a new database.

    • General

      Rollback

      Rollback marks the end of a transaction, to discard all mutations from that transaction. A rollback can be issued by the client by rollback statement, and sometimes, database engine will rollback the transaction to resolve deadlock or resolve the conflict due to concurrent change to the same row.

    • General

      RPO (Recovery Point Objective)

      The targeted period in which data might be lost due to service disruption. For majority systems, RPO should always be 0 since data loss is unacceptable. The optimization direction is often maintaining 0 RPO while minimizing the RTO.

    • General

      RTO (Recovery Time Objective)

      The targeted duration of time within which the database must be restored to normal after a service disruption. It usually has a conflict interests with RPO. When the primary database fails, one can wait to promote the replica to serve traffic until the replica catches up all changes (longer RTO, but 0 RTO) or promote the replica immediately (shorter RTO, but non-0 RTO).

  • S
    • GeneralBytebase

      Schema

      The structure describing the data organization and integrity constraints of the database. The metadata of the database system. The schema embodies the business domain logic, reflecting the understanding of the schema designer. Changing schema is always a consequence of business requirements change or the evolve understanding of the business requirements. Schema change is a structure change, which is often non-trivial, Bytebase is specifically build to smooth the schema change process.

    • General

      Server / Database server

      This sometimes refer to the entire database like MySQL, PostgreSQL. Sometimes, it refers to the server subsystem in the database, which handling client connections, authentication/authorization, user sessions and etc.

    • General

      Sharding / Horizontal sharding

      A technique to partition a set of related data into smaller groups. Each group is called a shard, which has logically same schema as the unsharded data, the only difference is the data size. This technique is often to address scalability issue when a single database instance is incapable of serving all data, thus sharding is introduced to split the data and spread load across multiple instances. Sharding brings quite a lot overhead, so normally it's the last resort until a single instance reaches its scaling limit.

    • General

      SQL

      A better language than PHP.

    • GeneralBytebase

      SQL review

      The process of reviewing the SQL schema change. A typical SQL review starts when the Developer opens a schema change ticket, then a DBA will be assigned the ticket to review and approve/reject the change. If the change is approved, then it will be applied to the database by the tooling system. Bytebase has built-in support for this SQL review workflow.

    • General

      Storage engine

      The storage engine is one of the 3 core subsystems in a traditional database management system. The other 2 are the query engine and the server layer (managing ACL, client connections/sessions). The storage engine would expose an API for other subsystems (mainly the query engine) to interact with it. Both InnoDB, MyISAM are a storage engine of MySQL. Storage engine can also be a standalone component, in which case, it's used as a library (e.g. Berkeley DB).

    • General

      Stored procedure

      A subroutine coded and executed on the database directly. Looks handy, but always turns out to be a headache.

  • T
    • General

      Table

      A collection of related data having the same structure. A table is a 2-dimensional array consisting of columns and rows.

    • General

      Transaction

      A unit of work performed within a database system. A transaction conforms to ACID.

    • General

      Trigger

      A procedural code that is automatically executed in response to certain events on a particular table or view in a database.

  • U
    • General

      User-defined function (UDF)

      Provides a mechanism for extending the functionality of the database server by adding a function, that can be evaluated in standard query language (usually SQL) statements.

    • GeneralMySQL

      Undo logs

      A type of logs used by storage engine to guarantee transaction ACID. Not all storage engine uses undo logs. e.g. PostgreSQL does not use undo logs while MySQL's InnoDB does. Undo logs are used to revert the uncommitted changes during crash recovery or restore the data to a particular version in order to provide a consistent view for a particular transaction.

  • V
    • PostgreSQL

      Vacuum

      Whenever PostgreSQL changes a row, it creates a new version under the hood. Old versions will be needed until no active transactions refer them. And at that point, a background process called vacuuming would remove these dead rows.

    • General

      View

      A logical set that database users can query just as they would against an actual table. The view data set could come from multiple tables.

  • W
    • General

      Write-ahead logs (WAL)

      A type of logs used by storage engine to guarantee transaction ACID. For performance reason, whenever a transaction commits, the storage engine does not changes the data file directly, instead it persists the change by appending it to a log file and then signals the commit success. This process is called write-ahead because the actual change to the data file is batched at a later time, the storage engine just writes ahead to a log file to guarantee that the transaction data persists. If the database crashes in between, the recovery process will redo the changes recorded in the write-ahead logs to apply to the data file, that's why it's also known as redo logs. Another usage for WAL is for change-data-capture (CDC) since it already records all the data changes. e.g. PostgreSQL uses WAL for logical replication.

  • X
    • PostgreSQL

      XID

      The transaction ID used in PostgreSQL. Besides identifying the transaction, it's also used to determine the visible data a particular transaction can see.

Category

Subscribe to Newsletter

By subscribing, you agree with Bytebase's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.