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1. Explain the difference between a database administrator and a data administrator.
Database Administrator :- A person (or group of people) responsible for the maintenance and performance of a database and responsible for the planning, implementation, configuration, and administration of relational database management systems.
Data Administrator :- The individual or organization responsible for the specification, acquisition, and maintenance of data management software and the design, validation, and security of files or databases. The DA is in charge of the data dictionary and data model.
2. Explain the difference between an explicit and an implicit lock.
Explicit Lock :- Lock is explicitly requested for a record or table.
Implicit Lock :- Lock is implied but is not acquired
3. What is lock granularity?
There are many locks available for the database system to have like
Intent Shared, Shared, Intent exclusive, exclusive and Shared Intent exclusive.
Locking granularity refers to the size and hence the number of locks used to ensure the consistency of a database during multiple concurrent updates.
4. In general, how should the boundaries of a transaction be defined?
A transaction ensures that one or more operations execute as an atomic unit of work. If one of the operations within a transaction fails, then all of them are rolled-back so that the application is returned to its prior state. The boundaries that define a group of operations done within a single transaction.
5. Explain the meaning of the expression ACID transaction.
ACID means Atomic, Consistency, Isolation, Durability, so when any transaction happen it should be Atomic that is it should either be complete or fully incomplete. There should not be anything like Semi complete. The Database State should remain consistent after the completion of the transaction. If there are more than one Transaction then the transaction should be scheduled in such a fashion that they remain in Isolation of one another.Durability means that Once a transaction commits, its effects will persist even if there are system failures.
6. Explain the necessity of defining processing rights and responsibilities. How are such responsibilities enforced?
One of the reason to define rights is the security in the database system. If any user is allowed to define the data or alter the data then the database would just be of no use and so processing rights and responsibilities are clearly defined in any database system. The resposibilities are enforced using the table space provided by the database system.
7. Describe the advantages and disadvantages of DBMS-provided and application-provided security.
DBMS provided security :- Any database system requires you to login and then process the data depending on the rights given by the DBA to the user who has logged in. The advatage of such a system is securing the data and providing the user and the DBA the secured platform. Any user who logs in cannot do whatever he want but his role can be defined very easily. There is no major disadvantage about the DBMS provided security apart from overhead of storing the rights and priviledges about the users.
Application-provided security :- It is much similar to the DBMS provided security but the only difference is that its the duty of the programmer creating the application to provide all the seurities so that the data is not mishandled.
8. Explain how a database could be recovered via reprocessing. Why is this generally not feasible?
If we reprocess the transaction then the database can be made to come to a state where the database is consistent and so reprocessing the log can recover the database. Reprocessing is not very feasible for a very simple reason that its very costly from time point of view and requires lots of rework and many transaction are even rollback giving more and more rework.
9. Define rollback and roll forward.
Rollback :- Undoing the changes made by a transaction before it commits or to cancel any changes to a database made during the current transaction
RollForward :- Re-doing the changes made by a transaction after it commits or to overwrite the chnaged calue again to ensure consistency
10. Why is it important to write to the log before changing the database values?
The most important objective to write the log before the database is changed is if there is any need to rollback or rollforward any transaction then if the log are not present then the rollback rollforward cannot be done accurately.
Most asked DBMS interview questions with answers part 2
Posted by
Shashank Krishna
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Hi
Tks very much for post:
I like it and hope that you continue posting.
Let me show other source that may be good for community.
Source: Administrative interview questions and answers
Best rgs
David
thanks